Archive for 'Division I Postseason'
Five-Run Sixth Propels UCLA Past TCU



By Peter Wardell

LOS ANGELES – After last weekend’s strong showing, No. 2 national seed UCLA looked to be a strong favorite heading into its super regional showdown with Texas Christian. While the Bruins came away with a 6-2 victory in Friday's opener, knocking off the Horned Frogs was no easy task.

Coming off a run through the losers' bracket to win the College Station Regional last weekend,  TCU stormed out of the gate fearless and confident, unfazed by the scorching Bruins. Freshman lefthander Brandon Finnegan attacked hitters early, touching 95 mph in the first. Juniors Josh Elander and Kyle von Tungeln gave the Horned Frogs a 2-1 lead with solo home runs in the first and third, and things started to get very quiet at Jackie Robinson Stadium.

Then in the bottom of the sixth, it all unraveled for the Frogs.

Hanging onto a 2-1 lead, TCU coach Jim Schlossnagle called in junior submariner Justin Scharf from the bullpen after Finnegan walked UCLA catcher Tyler Heineman on four pitches and hit Cody Keefer to start the inning. Scharf loaded the bases with another hit batsman before allowing a game-tying single to UCLA junior second baseman Trevor Brown. Sophomore shortstop Pat Valaika put the Bruins ahead for good with a run-scoring groundout to first base, and after freshman pinch-hitter Brenton Allen was walked intentionally, junior first baseman Cody Regis came to plate.

After looking overmatched in his first two plate appearances, Regis again fell behind in the count but found a fastball outside with two strikes and crushed it into the left field gap for a bases-clearing double, extending the lead to four. [...] Continue Reading »



Friday Super Regional Roundup



Here's a quick recap of Friday's super regional action:

Baton Rouge Super Regional

Friday's most dramatic game has yet to reach a conclusion. Upstart Stony Brook carried a 2-1 lead into the ninth inning in Baton Rouge, but JaCoby Jones led off the bottom of the ninth with a game-tying solo homer—and that was just the beginning of the drama. Stony Brook regained the lead with a run in the top of the 10th—and LSU answered again with a solo homer by Tyler Moore to tie the game in the bottom of the frame. The Seawolves took the lead yet again in the top of the 11th—and LSU answered yet again with a third solo homer, this time off the bat of Mason Katz to lead off the frame. The game was halted by rain in the top of the 12th and will be resumed at 11:05 ET on Saturday. Game Two will start 50 minutes after the conclusion of the first game.

Los Angeles Super Regional

UCLA erased a 2-1 deficit with five runs in the sixth to beat Texas Christian 6-2. After TCU elected to intentionally walk Brenton Allen (who has just 14 at-bats on the season) to load the bases in the sixth, Cody Regis hit a three-run double to highlight UCLA's rally. Adam Plutko (7 IP, 2 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 7 K) allowed just a pair of solo homers and improved to 11-3 on the season. [...] Continue Reading »


Senay, Wilkins Lead Wolfpack To Super Regionals



RALEIGH, N.C.—The Raleigh Regional essentially boiled down to a three-game series between North Carolina State and Vanderbilt. But that was all it needed to be. If you were looking for emotion, drama and some unlikely heroes, it was all there.

The Wolfpack and Commodores played their third straight classic in the decisive seventh game of the regional on Monday, as the Wolfpack rallied from a 7-3 deficit with six runs in the last two innings to take a 9-7 win and earn a trip to Gainesville for a super regional with Florida. All three games saw a team overcome a deficit of at least four runs, and all three were decided in the winning team’s final at-bat.

“Every time you win a game like this, it makes you a little bit tougher,” N.C. State head coach Elliot Avent said. “It makes you believe you can do anything.”

[...] Continue Reading »


Monday Regionals Roundup: Five Teams Emerge From Losers’ Brackets



After an exciting Monday that saw five teams complete triumphant runs through losers' brackets, champions have been crowned in all 16 regionals. We'll recap Monday's action shortly, but first let's cut to the chase. Here are the matchups and schedules for next weekend's super regionals:

Friday Through Sunday

The following four best-of-three super regionals will be played Friday, Saturday and Sunday (if necessary). All times are Eastern. National seeds indicated.

Stony Brook (50-12) at No. 7 Louisiana State (46-16)
Noon (ESPN2HD), Noon (ESPN2HD), 1 p.m. (ESPN2HD)

St. John’s (40-21) at Arizona (41-17)
3 p.m. (ESPN2HD), 3 p.m. (ESPN2HD), 4 p.m. (ESPN2HD)

Stanford (41-16) at No. 3 Florida State (46-15)
7 p.m. (ESPN2HD), 6 p.m. (ESPN2HD), 7 p.m. (ESPN2HD)

Texas Christian (40-20) at No. 2 UCLA (45-14)
9 p.m. (ESPNHD), 9 p.m. (ESPN2HD), 10 p.m. (ESPN2HD) [...] Continue Reading »



UCLA Eliminates ‘First-Class’ Creighton



LOS ANGELES—Creighton earned a lot of admirers over the last two weeks for its resilience and heart. The Bluejays also won over observers by simply playing very well in the Los Angeles Regional, knocking out San Diego and New Mexico to reach the championship round.

But Creighton ran into a buzzsaw Sunday night.

UCLA steamrolled its way through the regional, completing a 3-0 run with an overpowering 13-5 win Sunday against the Bluejays. The Bruins won their second regional in three years and will host Texas Christian or Mississippi in a super regional next week. If they play like they did this weekend, they'll be a very difficult out in supers, and in Omaha.

"I think we are playing pretty good baseball," Bruins second baseman Trevor Brown said. "This is the time of year we want to be playing our best baseball. We pitched pretty well, we swung the bats pretty good and ended on a pretty good note."

Regional MVP Jeff Gelalich led the UCLA offense, going 3-for-3 with three runs, two homers and four RBIs. His first homer came in the bottom of the first inning after the Bluejays had jumped on UCLA starter Zack Weiss for two runs in the top of the frame. Gelalich's two-run shot into the hitting structure behind the right-field fence tied the game at 2-2 and seemed to help the Bruins find their groove.

"I think the momentum definitely shifted in their favor a little bit after the bottom half of that first inning," said Creighton cleanup man Anthony Bemboom, who led the Bluejays by going 5-for-5 in the finale. [...] Continue Reading »


Sunday Regionals Roundup: 11 Teams Advance To Supers



Eleven of the 16 regionals were decided Sunday, and the final five will be settled Monday. Just three super regional matchups are set: Kent State will head west to face Oregon, Florida State will host Stanford in Tallahassee, and St. John's will make the cross-country trip to Tucson to face Arizona.

A quick breakdown of the 11 teams that have already clinched spots in super regionals:

• Six national seeds have advanced (Florida, UCLA, Florida State, Oregon, LSU, South Carolina). One national seed was eliminated (North Carolina) and the final one will play a decisive seventh game Monday (Baylor).

• Two other hosts completed 3-0 runs through regionals (Stanford and Arizona).

• Arkansas is the lone No. 2 seed that won a regional Sunday.

• Two No. 3 seeds won regionals to secure their first trips to super regionals (Kent State and St. John's).

Conference breakdown:

• Four of the five Pac-12 teams in the tournament have already won regionals (UCLA, Oregon, Stanford, Arizona). Oregon State lost in the regional final at LSU. The Pac-12 finished 14-2 in regionals.

• Four SEC teams have advanced (Florida, South Carolina, LSU, Arkansas), and two more will play decisive games Monday (Vanderbilt, Mississippi). Kentucky lost in a regional final; Mississippi State was the lone SEC team that failed to reach its regional finale. Overall, the SEC is 19-6.

• Florida State is the lone ACC team that has won a regional, and North Carolina State is the only other ACC team left standing, out of the seven that made regionals. Three other ACC teams lost in regional finals (Georgia Tech, Clemson, North Carolina), while Miami and Virginia fell short of regional finals. The ACC is 13-11. [...] Continue Reading »


N.C. State Edges Vanderbilt To Stay Alive



RALEIGH, N.C.—For the second straight night, North Carolina State opened up a lead on Vanderbilt. And for the second straight night, the Commodores stormed back. The story had a different ending this time, though.

After Vanderbilt had rallied from a 5-1 deficit to tie the game, Wolfpack second baseman Matt Bergquist’s RBI single in the bottom of the eighth put N.C. State back in front and reliever Ryan Wilkins made it stand up for a 6-5 win, forcing a decisive seventh game in the Raleigh Regional on Monday night.

Vanderbilt’s resilience has been on full display the last two nights—the resilience that helped it recover from a 7-15 start to make regionals and then pull out a stirring 9-8 win against the Wolfpack on Saturday after falling behind by five runs. But the Wolfpack showed plenty of fortitude of its own on Sunday, putting the emotion of Saturday’s loss behind it by first pounding out 17 runs in the afternoon elimination game against UNC Wilmington and then by pulling out a pulse-pounding win of its own against Vandy in the nightcap.

[...] Continue Reading »


St. John’s Captures First Regional Since 1980



CHAPEL HILL, N.C.—For the first time since 1980, St. John’s will advance out of regional play after knocking off top-seeded North Carolina for the second time in as many days at the Chapel Hill Regional. Junior Robert Case delivered a pinch-hit, two-out double with the bases loaded in the seventh inning to give the Red Storm the lead for good, as it held on to win 9-5.

"We had that storybook ending yesterday and maybe took the wind out of their sails," St. John's coach Ed Blankmeyer said. "Sometimes, it's destiny. I thought we brought our 'A' game. I thought we were playing our best baseball coming into this."

Tar Heels coach Mike Fox relied on three freshmen pitchers during the game after sophomore righthander Shane Taylor (5-1, 3.48) was forced from the game after giving up four runs on seven hits in just two innings. Fox went to righthander Luis Paula to come in and give the Tar Heels a fighting chance. Paula, who has emerged as a important short reliever in recent weeks, pitched the next 4 1/3 innings, giving up three runs on five hits while striking out seven. It was his second-longest outing of the season and longest since March 6.

In the top of the seventh inning, Fox called upon righthander Mason McCullough with runners on second and third. With the infield at medium range depth, McCullough induced a ground ball to freshman shortstop Michael Russell, who made a nice play on a ball to his right for the second out. But McCullough walked the next batter to load the bases. Fox went to righthander Chris McCue to face the pinch-hitter, Case, who was 1-for-15 in Big East Conference play. On a 1-2 offering, Case sent a line drive into the left-center-field gap to score a pair of insurance runs to give the Red Storm a 7-4 lead.

[...] Continue Reading »



Creighton Puts End To Banner Year For Lobos



LOS ANGELES—Ray Birmingham was understandably emotional after his New Mexico team was eliminated from the Los Angeles Regional with a 7-2 loss against Creighton on Sunday. Losing in the postseason is never easy for any coach, but for a core group of UNM seniors, Sunday was the end of an incredible three-year run.

"I lose a group of seniors this year that have been to three regionals, have won two conference tournaments and a conference (regular-season) championship," Birmingham said. "They've made a big impact on a program that is growing fast and getting after it. So it's kind of a hard day for me."

Before 2010, New Mexico hadn't been to a regional since 1962. The Lobos earned an at-large bid in 2010, then caught fire in the conference tournament to capture the Mountain West's automatic bid in 2011. This year they put everything together, tying perennial power Texas Christian for the regular-season title, then blowing through the MWC tournament as well.

Birmingham said a few weeks ago that he really believed his team was good enough to win a regional, and the Lobos headed into the postseason overflowing with confidence. But they failed to carry over their offensive fireworks from the MWC tourney, mustering just seven runs in three games at Jackie Robinson Stadium. On Sunday, Creighton righty Erik Mattingly held UNM to two runs (one earned) over six innings before handing off to Reese McGraw, who worked three perfect innings of relief. [...] Continue Reading »


Raleigh Regional: Wolfpack Bounces Back In Big Way



RALEIGH, N.C—Third-seed UNC Wilmington and host North Carolina State could have traveled down more divergent paths to enter Sunday’s elimination game at the Raleigh regionals. Saturday afternoon UNC Wilmington eliminated fourth-seeded Sacred Heart with a resounding 13-4 victory in which the Seahawks hit five home runs. After a strong start by NC State lefthander Carlos Rodon, the Wolfpack led second-seed Vanderbilt with an 8-3 lead in the seventh inning. The Wolfpack allowed six runs in the last two innings to lose 8-9 on Vanderbilt outfielder Tony Kemp’s walk-off single that left the home crowd speechless.

“I talked to them in the locker room and I told them the toughest game we played all year was this one,” NC State Head Coach Elliott Avent. “They knew they outplayed the other team but crazy stuff happened.”

In Saturday’s elimination game, there was no question which team outplayed its opponent as NC State beat UNC Wilmington 17-5. The Wolfpack's 17 runs scored was a season high and the regional host has scored 41 runs over the last three days. [...] Continue Reading »


Tar Heels Rebound To Eliminate Pirates



CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Coming off a crushing loss to St. John’s on Saturday night, North Carolina bounced back Sunday behind freshman righthander Benton Moss to beat East Carolina 5-3. The Tar Heels provided just enough offense for Moss, who was extremely efficient in his first appearance of the Chapel Hill Regional. The righthander threw six innings, giving up one run on six hits.

“We knew that we were on the ropes, and I knew we were too,” Moss said. “ECU knows how to put the bat on the ball . . . We had to play defense today, and that we did. Key pitches in key situations with key outs really helped us today.”

The ECU offense put together 10 hits, three of which came from left fielder Tim Younger, but were never able to string enough together to pose a serious threat. Jharel Cotton took the loss for East Carolina. He pitched 5.1 innings, giving up two runs while allowing three hits and walking three.

Tommy Coyle started the fourth inning with a single and eventually came around to score on a sac fly from Cody Stubbs, giving the Tar Heels a 1-0 lead. Brian Holberton would give North Carolina another run in the top of the sixth inning with a two-out RBI single. Ultimately it was North Carolina’s defense that made the difference, as the Tar Heels completed three double plays and had no errors.

“Today was very typical of a lot of our wins," UNC coach Mike Fox said. “We don’t look the best in the batter’s box but we somehow got it done . . . That’s very typical of how we’ve won some games and how we need to win some games.” [...] Continue Reading »


Palo Alto: Cardinal Tops Waves In Wild Saturday Game



By Mike Lemaire

PALO ALTO, Calif.—In a game between two teams known for their timely hitting and talented pitching, it was only fitting that the deciding play would be a bases-clearing wild pitch that would spur Stanford to a comeback victory.

Trailing 4-1 entering the top of the sixth inning, The Cardinal scored three runs on the same wild pitch to tie the score. Two innings later, shortstop Kenny Diekroeger gave his team its first lead with an RBI double down the left-field line and freshman reliever A.J. Vanegas slammed the door on the exciting 5-4 win, striking out eight in 3.2 innings, including the final five Waves of the game.

Desperately looking for runs entering that pivotal top half of the sixth inning, Stanford sandwiched a hits batsman and two singles around an Austin Wilson strikeout, loading the bases for the scuffling Tyler Gaffney. But before Gaffney could play hero, Pepperdine starter Scott Frazier bounced a breaking ball that skipped under the glove of catcher Miles Silverstein.

Brian Ragira scored easily and headed for the dugout just as Silverstein was wheeling around to throw the ball to Frazier who was covering home plate. Seeing Ragira in his throwing lane, Silverstein tried to stop the throw, but the ball squirted free from his hands and in the commotion that followed, Ragira unwittingly kicked the ball into his own dugout. After some discussion, the umpires got together and awarded all three runners home plate. [...] Continue Reading »


Nick Vander Tuig Dazzles For UCLA



LOS ANGELES—UCLA has picked a good time to play its best baseball of the year.

A day after Adam Plutko delivered perhaps the best outing of his career (a two-hit shutout against Creighton), fellow sophomore righthander Nick Vander Tuig turned in what was unquestionably the best start of his career. Facing one of the nation's most explosive offenses in the winners' bracket of the Los Angeles Regional, Vander Tuig carried a no-hitter into the eighth inning and finished with a career-high 11 strikeouts, leading UCLA to a convincing 7-1 win.

Eleven different Bruins recorded hits, as they out-hit the Lobos 17-2. The UCLA offense has looked great through two postseason games, sticking to a disciplined middle-to-away approach. Its defense has looked very strong as well. But Vander Tuig was the story Saturday.

"It was Nick's night," Bruins coach John Savage said. "He really came out and was very aggressive with all his pitches, established his fastball again like we did last night (with Plutko). You've just got to give him a lot of credit. He's one of the hardest working guys in our program, and he came out and set the tone this evening."

Vander Tuig set the tone by retiring the first 12 hitters he faced, including five straight via strikeouts in the third and fourth. The Lobos got their first baserunner on an error when Cody Keefer lost a pop-up in the twilight sky in the fifth, but they didn't record their first hit until Trey Porras jumped on Vander Tuig's first pitch of the eighth inning, slapping it down the left-field line for a double. [...] Continue Reading »


Regionals Roundup: Thrillers In Carolinas Highlight Saturday Slate



All but one of the 16 regionals have completed two days of action (Friday's games were postponed in the Charlottesville Regional, so no team has been eliminated yet and no team is 2-0 yet in that one). Since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1999, teams that have won the first two games of their regionals have gone on to win the regional more than 80 percent of the time. Last year's results were right in line with that figure: 13 of the 16 teams that started 2-0 went on to win regionals (81 percent).

We'll get to highlights below, but first here's a quick breakdown of which teams are sitting pretty in their regionals, and which have been eliminated: 

Teams that are 2-0:

• Eight No. 1 seeds (including six national seeds, indicated in parentheses): (1) Florida, (2) UCLA, (3) Florida State, (5) Oregon, (7) Louisiana State, (8) South Carolina, Arizona, Stanford.

• Four No. 2 seeds: Arkansas, Central Florida, Dallas Baptist, Vanderbilt.

• Three No. 3 seeds: Kent State, Mississippi, St. John's.

Teams that have been eliminated:

• One No. 1 seed: Miami.

• Two No. 2 seeds: New Mexico State, San Diego.

• Four No. 3 seeds: Belmont, Indiana State, Michigan State, Texas-Arlington.

• Eight No. 4 seeds: Alabama-Birmingham, Bethune-Cookman, Cornell, Dayton, Manhattan, Prairie View A&M, Sacred Heart, Valparaiso. [...] Continue Reading »


Vanderbilt’s Surge Continues After Epic Rally



RALEIGH, N.C.—The words “Vanderbilt” and “comeback” just seem to go hand-in-hand these days, and the Commodores are fast becoming the story of the 2012 college baseball season. But the 'Dores outdid themselves in Saturday night’s winners’ bracket game at the Raleigh Regional, rallying from deficits of 6-1 and 8-3 in the late innings against host North Carolina State before Tony Kemp’s walk-off single brought home the winning run for a 9-8 final.

One of the funny things about baseball is how the course of a game can change on what seems like an innocent play when it occurs. Saturday night, that play was a third-strike wild pitch that extended the bottom of the eighth inning with Vanderbilt trailing 8-4 at the time.

The Wolfpack had summoned lefthanded reliever D.J. Thomas to face lefty-hitting Mike Yastrzemski with a man on second and two outs. With an 0-2 count, Thomas got Yastrzemski to chase a breaking pitch that bounced at the front of the plate. But the bounce came from so far in front of catcher Danny Canela that it hit high on his chest protector and took a hard carom, which he couldn’t track down in time to throw out Yastrzemski. Instead of the Wolfpack going back to the dugout with an 8-4 lead and three outs to go, the inning continued.

[...] Continue Reading »


Bluejay Day



LOS ANGELES—Creighton went 22-28 in the regular season and struggled mightily to score runs for most of the season. San Diego won 40 games and fielded one of its best offensive teams in years.

But the Bluejays and Toreros were moving in opposite directions down the stretch. Creighton finally got its bats going during a surprising 4-0 run through the Missouri Valley Conference tournament and headed to regionals brimming with confidence. USD, meanwhile, struggled in all facets during the final month and lost the West Coast Conference title with a loss in the season finale at Pepperdine.

Each team continued its trend in Saturday's elimination game, as the Bluejays cruised to an 8-2 win, ending San Diego's season.

"I think teams go through different peaks and valleys during the season," said a thoughtful USD coach Rich Hill. "Towards the end of this deal, we just weren't at our best, weren't firing on all cylinders. We haven't really examined the rhyme or reason for that, we were just immersed in the moment, trying to get better each day . . . 

"We really didn't play defense all year. Our starting pitching was solid but not spectacular, our bullpen was spectacular, and our offense was up and down. So I think we just willed ourselves to that 40-win plateau." [...] Continue Reading »


Chapel Hill Regional: St. John’s Stuns Tar Heels; ECU Survives



CHAPEL HILL, N.C.—St. John’s is the lone unbeaten in the Chapel Hill regional after defeating North Carolina in dramatic fashion Saturday night. With the Tar Heel faithful on their feet in the ninth inning, Danny Bathea launched a two-run walk-off home run over the left-field fence at Boshamer Stadium, propelling St. John’s to a 5-4 victory.

Tar Heels closer Michael Morin was the losing pitcher. Having come in to close the game in the ninth inning, Morin gave up back-to-back hits to start the inning. After striking out Zach Lauricella for the first out, Morin left a fastball up in the zone to Bathea and the junior catcher connected.

“He threw me a fastball up and in and I was fortunate enough to get my hands through,” Bathea said. “It’s something I’ll always remember. Right when I rounded first and saw the ball go over his mitt I got really pumped.”

Both starting pitchers were outstanding. St. John’s lefthander Sean Hagan pitched 8.1 innings, allowing four runs on eight hits and walking two. On the other side, Kent Emanuel was even more impressive for the Tar Heels. The sophomore lefthander pitched eight innings, giving up a single run on five hits and walking one batter.

On his decision to bring Morin in for the ninth rather than leave Emanuel in the game, Tar Heels coach Mike Fox admitted that Emanuel still had gas left in the tank.

“I thought he was throwing his best at the end,” Fox said. However, his confidence in Morin remains high. “I make that move every time, without question,” Fox said. “We wouldn’t be playing in this regional without him.” [...] Continue Reading »


Fresno State Wins Another Elimination Game



By Mike Lemaire

PALO ALTO, Calif.—Ever since it shocked the college baseball world by surviving multiple elimination games to win the 2008 national championship, Fresno State has earned the reputation as a team that is at its best when its back is against the wall. Saturday, facing elimination as they took on Michigan State, the Bulldogs lived up to that reputation.

After allowing two runs in the first inning, starter Thomas Harlan and relievers Gene Escat and Taylor Garrison combined to shut out the Spartans the rest of the way, allowing just five hits, on their way to a decisive 8-2 victory that will keep Fresno's season alive for at least one more day.

Just last weekend, the Bulldogs fought off elimination to win their seventh straight WAC championship, and this weekend they were back in survival mode, something the Bulldogs’ faithful have grown accustomed to in recent years.

“When you get your work done, you know you deserve it,” Fresno State coach Mike Batesole said. “These guys have put in an awful lot of work since August so when you get in those situations you know you have earned it, and you know you deserve it, and they are way more likely to perform.” [...] Continue Reading »


Raleigh Regional: UNC Wilmington 13, Sacred Heart 4



RALEIGH, N.C.—In the first round of the Raleigh regional on Friday, UNC Wilmington lost to second-seeded Vanderbilt and Sacred Heart was outmatched by host North Carolina State to set up an elimination game of the lower seeds on Saturday afternoon.

Despite a losing record, Sacred Heart advanced to its second straight regionals after sweeping the Northeastern Conference tournament in convincing fashion. The Pioneers’ postseason run ended Saturday with a 13-4 loss to UNC Wilmington.

After Vanderbilt held the Seahawks to two runs on Friday, UNC Wilmington’s offensive attack was the story of the game on Saturday, as the Seahawks pounded 17 hits, including five home runs.

“The coaches have been talking about our approach at the plate and having quality at-bats and we did a great job today,” Seahawks sophomore catcher Drew Farber said. “It was a great team effort.”

[...] Continue Reading »


Mark Appel Overpowers Fresno State



By Mike Lemaire

PALO ALTO, Calif.—With the 2012 draft just three days away and the No. 1 overall pick still shrouded in mystery, Stanford ace Mark Appel had one last opportunity to prove to the Houston Astros that he is their guy. Friday, facing Fresno State, the only team to beat Appel this season, Appel made the most of that opportunity.

Appel used a fastball that touched 97 mph and a darting 87-88 mph slider to keep the Bulldogs off-balance the whole game. He threw 122 pitches to beat Fresno State, allowing just four hits and one earned run while striking out 11 en route to an easy 9-1 victory.

The Bulldogs beat Appel 7-4 in early March to give the junior from Houston his only blemish of the season, and from that game, the Bulldogs knew they had to take away Appel’s fastball and make him rely on his offspeed stuff. The only problem was that, on this night, his slider and his changeup were just as good if not better.

“Last time out, we took his fastball away early and we thought he would make an adjustment this week, and surely he did,” Fresno State coach Mike Batesole said. “He came out with two outstanding breaking pitches. The kid is fantastic, he had the answer. I am pretty sure he could have won a big league game today.” [...] Continue Reading »



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  • Aaron Fitt is the lead college writer for Baseball America. If you have questions or comments about college baseball you can e-mail him at collegeblog@baseballamerica.com.

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