Durell Holden is a standout center fielder, volunteer youth coach and aspiring veterinarian. He’s now seeking votes for a Youth Athlete of the Year contest that could win him $25,000 to apply to his studies at Albright College.
Holden is a serious student, graduating seventh in his class at Allen High School and earning an associate’s degree from Lehigh Carbon Community College, with a “booming personality” his baseball coach calls a fountain of funny, positive energy.
“You can’t be around the kid and not feel good about it,” Coach Rob Leskosky said.
That bubbly spirit has made Holden a favorite with the young athletes he mentors at camp.
“He loves the ability to teach kids,” his mother, Kathleen Holden, said, “and they really love him too, you can see it.”
Watching kids come back to camp year after year and progress in the sport is always a great time, Holden said.
“When they start getting the hang of things, then you can see their face start to glow as they kind of connect everything and it starts to work together for them,” he said.
Volunteer coaching is one way Holden gives back to the Lehigh Valley RBI program. RBI stands for Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities, Major League Baseball’s outreach program aimed at underserved youth. Holden also works with the West End Youth Organization.
“The kids always are really receptive to him and just have a fun time with him,” Leskosky said.
Holden, 18, is the youngest of three siblings, and his mother remembers when he was just a 3-pound baby, born at 33 weeks.
Holden had a condition in which his left side was frozen. He didn’t walk until he was almost 2 years old, and he underwent a lot of physical and occupational therapy as a baby.
“We really fought for him to be here,” Kathleen Holden said.
Holden is now a three-sport athlete, with soccer and track complementing his work on the baseball field.
He plans to play baseball and study biology at Albright College. Working toward veterinary studies is the fulfillment of a childhood ambition, he says, noting that his childhood home was filled with pets including cats, dogs, rats and fish.
“I’ve always enjoyed taking care of them, and they’ve always been there for me,” Holden said of his pets, describing veterinary studies as “my way of paying them back.”
The Youth Athlete of the Year contest Holden is competing in is run by the fundraising platform Colossal. Voters can choose to donate to the V Foundation for Cancer Research and the Why Not You Foundation.
The next round of voting closes Thursday. The winning athlete will earn a $25,000 scholarship and will be featured in a 3BRAND ad in Sports Illustrated.
©2025 The Morning Call. Visit mcall.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.






