METAIRIE, La. — He was 15 on a workforce with males twice his age, grizzled, smack-talking baseball gamers that included former school gamers, minor-leaguers and two of his uncles. “Then came one of the highlights of my life,” Cubs pitcher Carl Edwards Jr. remembers. The Newberry Pirates had been to date behind that Edwards lastly received an opportunity to pitch, in reduction of 1 uncle, pitching to the opposite. Maybe 100 household and buddies of gamers gathered close by to grill, hearken to music, drink beer, catch up and sometimes look on the area. That’s what it was like most weekends in small-town South Carolina’s “Bush League,” an all-black group of city groups with a century of historical