Nike Baseball Camp at George Fox University
George Fox University, 414 N. Meridian St., Newberg, OR 97132
About
Nike Baseball Camp at George Fox University offers All Skills Camp and Youth Camp sessions focused on general baseball skills. Campers take part in activities listed as All Skills Camp, Youth Camp, and General Skills over the course of each session.
• Ages: 5–12 years old
• Schedule: All Skills Camp and Youth Camp each run as 5-day camps from 07/20/26–07/24/26, with All Skills Camp meeting Days 1–4 from 9:00am–2:00pm and Day 5 from 9:00am–12:00pm, and Youth Camp meeting daily from 9:00am–12:00pm
• Price: All Skills Camp (Boys Ages 9–12), General Skills Day, 5-day camp: $409 (includes all fees). Youth Camp (Boys Ages 5–8), General Skills Half Day, 5-day camp: $319 (includes all fees).
The camp groups players by age and ability and uses low camper-to-coach ratios. It uses excellent training facilities and provides a Nike Baseball Camp T-shirt and other prizes. Parents are allowed to stay and watch, and the camp offers separate age groups while housing campers in the same facility.
Nike Baseball Camp at George Fox University is led by Kevin Kopple, Head Coach and Director of the camp and head baseball coach for the George Fox University Bruins. Kevin Kopple enters his seventh season leading Bruin baseball in 2026 after first joining the program as an assistant in 2007. The camp is staffed by a professional coaching staff and student athletes who participate in baseball, and these professional coaches and student athletes are described as very knowledgeable about the sport and passionate about it.
Parent feedback describes “skills development, fun, and inspiration from college level coaches and players” and notes that some campers return year after year. Parents report that the camp is organized, that coaches are friendly to all players, and that groups rotate through multiple centers to practice skill development each day. One parent shared that their 12-year-old “caged out” and that coach and staff ratios, diversity, and attention to specific skill sets were strong while keeping an element of fun. Other parents mention that having two sons in different age groups in the same facility worked well, that their children admire and look up to the coaches, and that a 5-year-old’s first camp experience was supported by helpful and patient coaches. Parents also highlight seeing their children excited to go to camp, talk about what they learned, and work directly with college players to improve skills.
Last updated June 12, 2026.
• Ages: 5–12 years old
• Schedule: All Skills Camp and Youth Camp each run as 5-day camps from 07/20/26–07/24/26, with All Skills Camp meeting Days 1–4 from 9:00am–2:00pm and Day 5 from 9:00am–12:00pm, and Youth Camp meeting daily from 9:00am–12:00pm
• Price: All Skills Camp (Boys Ages 9–12), General Skills Day, 5-day camp: $409 (includes all fees). Youth Camp (Boys Ages 5–8), General Skills Half Day, 5-day camp: $319 (includes all fees).
The camp groups players by age and ability and uses low camper-to-coach ratios. It uses excellent training facilities and provides a Nike Baseball Camp T-shirt and other prizes. Parents are allowed to stay and watch, and the camp offers separate age groups while housing campers in the same facility.
Nike Baseball Camp at George Fox University is led by Kevin Kopple, Head Coach and Director of the camp and head baseball coach for the George Fox University Bruins. Kevin Kopple enters his seventh season leading Bruin baseball in 2026 after first joining the program as an assistant in 2007. The camp is staffed by a professional coaching staff and student athletes who participate in baseball, and these professional coaches and student athletes are described as very knowledgeable about the sport and passionate about it.
Parent feedback describes “skills development, fun, and inspiration from college level coaches and players” and notes that some campers return year after year. Parents report that the camp is organized, that coaches are friendly to all players, and that groups rotate through multiple centers to practice skill development each day. One parent shared that their 12-year-old “caged out” and that coach and staff ratios, diversity, and attention to specific skill sets were strong while keeping an element of fun. Other parents mention that having two sons in different age groups in the same facility worked well, that their children admire and look up to the coaches, and that a 5-year-old’s first camp experience was supported by helpful and patient coaches. Parents also highlight seeing their children excited to go to camp, talk about what they learned, and work directly with college players to improve skills.
Last updated June 12, 2026.
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