If an event can take on the persona of one
individual, the Colt World Series is embodied in this man. He is its
heart. Bradway has lead this tournament for over 30 years
in Lafayette. Bradway is a native of Akron, Indiana, 10 miles east of
Rochester. Because Akron High School only had a basketball team, Bradway
did not play baseball until after graduating from Akron when he played
baseball for the Rochester Merchants and softball for the Rochester Moose.
After graduating from high school in 1937, Bradway worked the next 12 years
in the printing business for the Akron News, a weekly newspaper. He spent
1949-52 in Marion, Indiana and Seymour, Indiana while working in newspaper
and radio. Bradway moved to Lafayette in 1952. Until his retirement in
1982 Bradway worked in radio and television, broadcasting and telecasting
Purdue University and high school athletic events.
In his early years in Lafayette, Bradway helped from a Colt League for
those players who were too old for Pony League and did not make the American
Legion baseball team. In 1958, the first Colt League was formed. Bradway
was happy that it was his team that won the last game of the season to force
a three-way tie with three teams at 8-7. Bradway's team finished 6-9.
Lafayette made its first Colt Tournament appearance in 1959 with Bradway
serving as manager. Though Lafayette did not win, Bradway know that it
could serve as the site of first-round and second-round tournaments. The
idea to hold the World Series in Lafayette surfaced when Bradway and John
Eberle, not only his coaching opponent but longtime friend, traveled to
Riverside, California to watch the 1968 tournament.
Bradway and Eberle knew Lafayette could host the World
Series. In 1969 Steve Bartowski, who later played professional football for
the Atlanta Falcons, led Santa Clara, California to the first World Series
Championship played in Lafayette. Lafayette served as host in 1970 and
1971, before the Colt World Series moved to Tampa, Florida in 1972. At that
time Pony Baseball preferred that no city hold the tournament or more than
three consecutive years. However, after Tampa could not continue as host,
the Colt World Series returned to Lafayette in 1973 and hasn't left since.