Austin Super Regional
TCU Next Faces Florida State At CWS
TCU has done the seemingly improbable. The Horned Frogs beat Texas 4-1 Sunday to win their Super Regional series
2-1 to make the first trip to the College World Series in program history. The Longhorns entered the nation with the best ERA in the nation, but TCU managed to win games one and three of the series by giving-up just a run in each game. Texas notched its only win by a 14-1 margin on Saturday.
While TCU is making its first CWS appearance, Texas has the most trips to Omaha of any other program with 33.
By clicking the “Austin Super Regional” link above this page will expand to fully support the table below.
CLICK HERE for our Super Regional Central page where you will find links to other Super Regionals.
Best two of three series (All Times Eastern)
Gm 1 – Friday - FINAL: TCU 3, Texas 1 | Final Stats
TCU Recap | UT Recap * TCU leads series 1-0
* HIGHLIGHT: Fr. Matt Purke 11 Ks, improves to 14-0
Gm 2 – Saturday – FINAL: Texas 14, TCU 1 | Final Stats
TCU Recap | TX Recap Series Tied (1-1) Series Notes
* HIGHLIGHTS: Taylor Jungmann 9 K in 8 1/3 IP
Tant Shepherd (4-5) HR, 3 RBIs
EXCLUSIVE postgame video interviews.
Gm 3 -Sunday FINAL: TCU 4, Texas 1 | Final Stats
TCU Recap | TX Recap
Series Notes
* TCU wins series (2-1)
CB360 Podcast with TCU catcher Bryan Holaday
The Skinny
Texas: (#2 National Seed) A year after finishing as the runner-up at Omaha not much has changed for Augie Garrido’s Longhorns. There was no signature 25-inning Regional game this year, but Texas still swept through the Austin Regional with wins over Rider, Louisiana-Lafayette and Rice by outscoring those three 19-3. That 3-0 stretch followed three losses at the Big 12 Tournament, which was the team’s only 3-game losing streak this year.
The Longhorns lead the nation in both ERA (2.44) and fielding percentage (.980). Closer Chance Ruffin leads the nation with a 0.73 ERA. He has 14 saves and a 6-1 record in 36 appearances. Taylor Jungmann (7-3, 2.10), Cole Green (11-1, 2.63) and Brandon Workman (12-1, 3.43) are nearly unrivaled as a weekend rotation, but the rotation they’ll see this weekend will give them a run for their money.
Texas is batting just .289 heading into the weekend, but Russell Moldenhauer’s .341 average leads six regulars who are hitting .305 or better. The home run total (79) is up from a year ago, but small ball is still in play. Texas ranks 4th in the nation with 72 sac bunts, with Brandon Loy’s 16 sac bunts tied for 6th nationally. The Longhorns set an NCAA single game record with seven sac bunts in a Super Regional game vs. TCU last year.
TCU: TCU has hosted Regionals the last two years going a combined 6-0 in the process. This is the second straight and overall Super Regional appearance for Jim Schlossnagle and the Horned Frogs. TCU was in the conversation for one of the top eight national seeds, but finds itself at #2 national seed Texas for Super Regional play for a second straight year.
While pitching is the biggest strength of the Longhorns, TCU’s staff gives them a run for their money. Starters Matt Purke (Louisville Slugger National Freshman of the Year), Kyle Winkler and Steven Maxwell are a combined 35-2 with 293 strikeouts and just 88 walks. Meanwhile, Kaleb Merck (2-1, 1.08) and Tyler Lockwood (6-2, 2.06) have combined for eight save in 43 relief outings.
Jason Coats leads the TCU offense with a .377 avg. and 65 RBIs, Matt Curry has 17 HR and a team-best 12 SB and catcher Bryan Holaday (podcast above) provides the leadership to go along with his 12 HR.
The Question: Will anyone score any runs?
Austin Super Regional
| TEAM | RECORD | CONF. | BA | Runs/ Gm. | HR | Slg% | OBP | SB-Att. | Fld% | ERA | CG | SV | K | BB | Opp. BA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Texas | 49-11 | Big 12 | .289 | 6.8 | 79 | .479 | .378 | 85-109 | .980 | 2.45 | 9 | 15 | 530 | 169 | .219 | |
| TCU | 49-11 | Mountain West | .345 | 8.9 | 90 | .566 | .420 | 71-102 | .972 | 3.48 | 3 | 10 | 497 | 173 | .252 |
Friday Regional Baseball Notebook
College Baseball 2010 Stats Leaders-April 28
Here’s a look at the official Division One NCAA baseball statistics leaders in selected categories.
BATTING AVERAGE
1. Tom Clayton-Youngstown State .474
2. Sean Allaire-Central Connecticut St. .473
3. Effrey Valdez-New York Tech .472
4. Jonathon Kaskow-Stanford .462
5. Phil Cerreto-Longwood .457
6. Joe Leonard-Pittsburgh .455
7. Gary Brown-Cal State Fullerton .454
7. Kevin Tokarski-Illinois State .454
9. Paul Hoilman-East Tennessee St. .452
10. Casey Jones-Southeast Missouri St. .449
HOME RUNS
1. Jordan Ribera-Fresno State 20
2. Jacob Tanis-Mercer 19
3. A.J. Kirby-Jones-Tennessee Tech 18
4. J.D. Ashbrook-Morehead St. 17
4. Alex Dickerson-Indiana 17
6. Jordan Ballard-VMI 16
Chris Duffy-Central Florida 16
Paul Hoilman-East Tennessee St. 16
Matt Leeds-College of Charleston 16
Justin Miller-Middle Tennessee St. 16
Peter O’Brien-Bethune-Cookman 16
Dan Paolini-Siena 16
Kyle Parker-Clemson 16
Nate Woods-Belmont 16
RBIs
1. Jacob Tanis-Mercer 71
2. Mac Doyle-Wofford 63
3. Drew Lee-Morehead St. 62
3. Matt Leeds-College of Charleston 62
3. Jake Overstreet-South Alabama 62
3. Greg Wallace-Evansville 62
7. Nate Woods-Belmont 61
8. Chris Duffy-Central Florida 60
8. Connor Powers-Mississippi St. 60
10. Danny Brock-St. Louis 58
Justin Miller-Middle Tennessee St. 58
Anthony Ottrando-Eastern Kentucky 58
Brandon Williams-Georgia State 58
ON-BASE PERCENTAGE
1. Taylor Dugas-Alabama .575
2. Nate Roberts-High Point .573
3. Michael Choice-UT Arlington .571
4. Kevin Tokarski-Illinois St. .570
5. Effrey Valdez-New York Tech .561
6. Jonathon Kaskow-Stanford .551
7. J.D. Ashbrook-Moorehead St. .548
7. Yasmani Grandal-Miami (FL) .548
9. Paul Hoilman-East Tennessee St. .542
9. Shane Brown-Central Florida .542
SLUGGING PERCENTAGE
1. Paul Hoilman-East Tennessee St. .890
2. Mac Doyle-Wofford .876
3. A.J. Kirby-Jones-Tennessee Tech .854
4. Chris Duffy-Central Florida .836
5. J.D. Ashbrook-Morehead St. .834
6. Rob Segedin-Tulane .830
7. Phil Cerreto-Longwood .829
8. Wes Cunningham-Murray St. .827
9. Dan Scheffler-Florida Atlantic .825
10. Jayson Langfels-Eastern Kentucky .818
RUNS
1. Nate Roberts-High Point 65
2. J.D. Ashbrook-Morehead St. 62
3, Ryan Aguayo-New Mexico St. 61
3. Dallas Poulk-North Carolina St. 61
5. Jeff Rowland-Georgia Tech 59
6. Tyler Holt-Florida St. 58
7. Wes Cunningham-Murray St. 57
8. Jared Andreoli-Western Kentucky 56
8. Mark Micowski-Georgia St. 56
8. Jonathon Ross-Savannah St. 56
1. Georgia State .375
2. Pittsburgh .369
3. Utah Valley .361
4. Southeast Missouri St. .357
5. New Mexico St. .356
6. New Mexico .350
7. Auburn .349
8. Central Connecticut St. .347
9. Arizona .346
10. Dallas Baptist .345
WINS
1. Corey Baker-Pittsburgh (9-1)
1. Cole Green-Texas (9-0)
1. D.D. Hanks-South Alabama (9-2)
1. Alex Wimmers-Ohio St. (9-0)
5. Jake Borup-Arizona St. (8-1)
Blake Cooper-South Carolina (8-0)
Justin Jones-California (8-3)
Merrill Kelly-Arizona St. (8-0)
Anthony Meo-Coastal Carolina (8-1)
Shawn Teufel-Liberty (8-1)
Asher Wojciechowski-The Citadel (8-1)
Brandon Workman-Texas (8-1)
* 25 pitchers are tied for 13th with seven wins
ERA
Minimum 40 IP & Pitchers must have 1.0 IP for every game played by team
1. Chance Ruffin-Texas 0.88
2. John Stilson-Texas A&M 1.17
3. Adam Izokovic-Gardner-Webb 1.43
4. Nathan Forer-Southern Illinois 1.48
4. Nathan Kilcrease-Alabama 1.48
6. Alex Wimmers-Ohio St. 1.61
7. Josh Slaats-Hawaii 1.71
8. Chase Whitley-Troy 1.74
9. Anthony Meo-Coastal Carolina 1.79
10. Cole Green-Texas 1.82
STRIKEOUTS
1. Asher Wojciechowski-The Citadel 98
2. Drew Pomeranz-Mississippi 93
2. Chris Sale-Florida Gulf Coast 93
4. Josh Smith-Lipscomb 89
5. Barret Loux-Texas A&M 88
6. Taylor Jungmann-Texas 87
7. Gerrit Cole-UCLA 86
8. Trevor Bauer-UCLA 85
9. Daniel Bibona-UC Irvine 84
10. Eric Cantrell-George Washington 83
10. Luke Irvine-Northwestern St. 83
10. Jason Mitchell-UT Arlington 83
SAVES
1. Kevin Arico-Virginia 13
1. Chris Patterson-Appalachian St. 13
3. Matty Ott-LSU 11
4. Ryan Duke-Oklahama 10
Neil Holland-Louisville 10
Kevin McKague-Army 10
Jordan Swagerty-Arizona St. 10
8. Andrew Burkett-Cincinnati 9
Lenny Linsky-Hawaii 9
Andy Mee-Florida Atlantic 9
Brooks Pinckard-Baylor 9
Chance Ruffin-Texas 9
Chad Sheppard-Northwestern St. 9
1. Texas 2.30
2. UCLA 2.80
3. Coastal Carolina 3.02
4. Oregon 3.14
5. Arizona State 3.21
6. Vanderbilt 3.29
7. South Carolina 3.31
8. Portland 3.39
9. Louisiana-Lafayette 3.47
10. Connecticut 3.56
10. TCU 3.56
College Baseball Notebook-Week 9
Big Pitching Performances Headline The Week
2…Wins by Oregon over #2 UCLA to give the Ducks their second Pac 10 series win of the season (they took two games at Stanford last week).
0…Pac 10 series wins by Oregon last year. The Ducks are now 6-4 vs. ranked teams in 2010.
1…Loss this season by UCLA’s Gerrit Cole. It came in Friday’s loss to the Ducks. Cole (6-1) gave-up five runs in 5 IP.
7…Different pitchers who earned their Division One leading eighth win of the season. Pittsburgh’s Corey Baker was
the first to do it Friday afternoon. He was followed by: Alex Wimmers-Ohio St., Cole Green-Texas, Justin Jones-Cal, D.D. Hanks-South Alabama, Merrill Kelly-Arizona St., and Asher Wojciechowski-The Citadel.
1…Freshman among that group of eight game winners-Cal LHP Justin Jones (8-2, 2.62 ERA), who has both of his team’s complete games this season.
12…Strikeouts by Wojciechowski in his Friday complete game 4-2 win over Furman.
4…ACC series lost by North Carolina this season after being swept in Miami over the weekend.
4…ACC series lost by the Tar Heels over the previous three seasons combined. UNC lost three conference series last year, none in 2008 and one in 2007. They also lost just two in 2006 for a total of six ACC series defeats from ‘06-’09 en-route to four trips to the College World Series.
7…RBIs by Hurricane catcher Yasmani Grandal, who homered to help his team to the weekend sweep of the Tar Heels.
7…Perfect innings pitched by Miami’s David Guetierrez in Wednesday’s 9-0 win over Florida Gulf Coast. The senior struck out seven and retired all 21 batters he faced in just his second start of the season before leaving the game after throwing 84 pitches. Hurricane reliever Eric Whaley lost the perfect game and no-hitter when he hit a batter and gave-up a single in the 8th inning.
3…Wins by #6 Georgia Tech over visiting #16 Clemson. The sweep was sparked by Friday’s 10th inning walk-off home run by Yellow Jacket right fielder Chase Burnett.
15…Consecutive games in which a Georgia Tech player has homered after second baseman Jacob Esch went deep in Sunday’s 11-3 series finale, which gave Clemson its fifth straight loss.
9…Of Clemson’s 13 losses this season (including three in its five-game slide) which have been decided by one or two runs.
5…Runs scored by #25 Virginia Tech in the top of the 9th inning in Sunday’s 8-5 win over #3 Virginia, which avoided a 3-game sweep. The rally was capped by Buddy Sosnoskie’s 2-out bases clearing double.
3…Walks issued in just 1/3 of an inning by Cavalier closer Kevin Arico, who had earned his Division One leading 12th save earlier in the series, in that Hokie rally.
4…Walks issued by Arico (0-1) in 20 innings pitched prior to Sunday’s outing.
0 & 23…Runs allowed and strikeouts totaled in 25 combined innings by Texas starting pitchers Brandon
Workman, Taylor Jungmann and Cole Green in the Longhorns’ weekend sweep of arch rival Texas A&M. The trio also surrendered a grand total of seven hits on the weekend.
12 & 6…Consecutive wins by Texas and losses by Texas A&M, respectively, after the Aggies’ fourth sweep at the hands of the Longhorns in the last five seasons. The sweep keeps Texas 2 1/2 games ahead of Kansas State in the Big 12 Conference standings.
14…Big 12 leading home runs hit by Nebraska’s Adam Bailey this season.
1…Hit by Bailey in 13 at-bats vs. Kansas (not a home run), while the Jayhawks took two of three games in the series from the Cornhuskers.
1996…The last time Kansas won a series in Lincoln prior to the weekend’s wins.
1,000…Career wins by Rutgers head coach Fred Hill after his Scarlet Knights beat South Florida 6-1 Saturday en-route to a 3-game weekend sweep of South Florida. The wins move RU into a first place tie with Connecticut atop the Big East Conference standing.
1…Home run this season by LSU sophomore Grant Dozer-a walk-off shot that ended Sunday’s 6-5 14-inning win over Alabama to cap a 3-game weekend sweep.
2002…The last time LSU (30-6, 11.4) swept a series from Alabama (22-15, 5-10).
7…Ride or die innings pitched by LSU closer Matty Ott to earn his first win of the season. The sophomore allowed two runs on four hits in the longest outing of his career. He gave-up the runs in the 8th inning and then proceeded to toss six scoreless frames.
32…Division One leading wins by Coastal Carolina, which beat Gardner-Webb 13-0 Sunday for its 13th straight win.
4…Third inning home runs hit by UC Riverside in Sunday’s 7-5 win over Long Beach State.
3…Hits by Duke second baseman Marcus Stroman in Saturday’s upset of #8 Florida State.
3…Scoreless innings pitched by Stroman, who moved to the mound and earned his fourth win in relief in that same game.
4…RBIs along with a home run hit by Arkansas’ Brett Eibner in Saturday’s win over Georgia. He is tied for the team lead with 11 HR this season.
7…Innings pitched in that game by Eibner, who earned his third win in his ninth start of the season.
11…Straight wins by the Razorbacks (31-6, 12-3) after Sunday’s 13-5 win over the Bulldogs. Arkansas has the most overall wins and conference wins of any team in the SEC.
20…Combined strikeouts by starting pitchers Blake Cooper of South Carolina and Drew Pomeranz of Ole Miss in Friday’s Gamecock win over the Rebels. Cooper (7-0) scattered four hits with 10 K in the complete game effort to help
South Carolina win two of three games in the series.
9…Straight South Carolina batters who reached base safely in a seven-run 2nd inning-capped by Christian Walker’s grand slam-in Saturday’s 9-5 win over the Rebels.
4…Runs scored by Arizona in the bottom of the 9th inning to rally to beat Washington State 12-11 Sunday in Tucson.
11…Straight wins by the home team in the series between the Wildcats and Cougars.
14…Strikeouts in 8 2/3 IP by Arizona’s Kurt Heyer in Friday’s 5-3 win over Wazzou.
18…Scoreless inning streak by Pepperdine’s Matt Bywater that ended when Gonzaga scored a 1st inning run en-route to a 16-3 win.
8…Runs scored by Miami (OH) in the bottom of the 9th inning of Tuesday’s 12-11 win over Xavier.
College Baseball Notebook-Week 3
A By The Numbers Look At The Weekend’s Action
1…Run allowed in 7 IP by Wright State starter Alex Kaminsky in Friday’s 2-1 win over #1/#2 Virginia. Kaminsky struckout 7 to earn his first win of the season in a head-to-head dual with UVA sophomore ace Danny Hultzen.
2…Wins in the last two years by the Raiders on a top ranked team’s home field. WSU beat #1 Georgia last year in Athens.
10…Runs and hits allowed in 2 1/3 innings by Kentucky starter Taylor Rogers in Saturday’s 14-13 win over Monmouth.
0 & 9…Hits allowed & strikeouts recorded in 4 IP by Wildcat reliever Matt Little, who earned the win in that game after allowing just two hits.
10…Hit batters by Monmouth pitchers in the loss to Kentucky to tie an NCAA record. It’s just the third time a pitching staff has hit 10 batters in a game.
4…Straight hit batters by Monmouth pitchers Andy McDonnell (1) and Stephen Prosapio, who hit Kentucky’s Braden Kapteyn with the bases loaded and the score tied 13-13 to give the Wildcats the winning run.
1…Career home run by 5′9-160 pound Kentucky redshirt junior Neiko Johnson, whose long ball on a 2-2 pitch in the bottom of the 9th inning tied the score at 13 just before the four straight hit batsmen.
103…Runs scored by Georgia State in a 4-game series vs. North Carolina Central.
14…Of the runs scored by Georgia State junior Mark Micowski, who transferred to the school this year after Vermont disbanded baseball last year. Micowski hit for the cycle in the first four innings of Friday’s 32-3 victory. He batted .636 with 10 RBIs in the four games.
17…Combined strikeouts by George Washington pitchers Matt Branham and Scott DeCecco in Friday’s 5-1 win over USC Upstate. The combined effort tied a school record.
210…Career Ks by Branham-whose career high 12 strikeouts in the win made him the 3rd pitcher in GW history to top the 200 K mark.
6…Straight wins by USC Upstate prior to the loss-a record for the Spartans since joining the Division One ranks.
1…Hit allowed by West Virginia’s Jarryd Summers in 8 innings in a 1-0 loss to Western Carolina. Summers fanned 11 in the loss. The only hit he allowed was a solo home run by WCU third baseman Tyler Kirkpatrick.
3…Hits allowed by Catamount starter Jason Sullivan-who struckout 8 in 9 shutout innings to improve to 3-0 on the season with the win over the Mountaineers.
9…Strikeouts by Houston’s Michael Goodnight in Saturday’s 1-0 win over Texas at the Houston College Classic.
1…Wild pitch by Longhorn starter Brandon Workman-after a triple by Houston’s Blake Kelso-which allowed the game’s only run to score.
2…Losses by Cal State Fullerton in a 3-game series at Arizona to fall to 4-6 on the season. The Titans started the year ranked in the top 10 in every poll.
1…Inning pitched by Titan All-American Daniel Renken in Friday’s 8-7 loss to the Wildcats. Renken was lifted after hitting Wildcat CF Joey Rickard to lead-off the 2nd inning.
3…Walk-off wins by Arizona this season after freshman Seth Mejias-Brean singled home classmate Alex Mejia in the bottom of the 11th inning in that win over the Titans.
8…Strikeouts in 5 2/3 innings by Florida starter Alex Panteliodis in Friday’s 7-1 series-opening win over Miami (FL).
7…Strikeouts in 3 1/3 scoreless, hitless innings pitched by Gator reliever Nick Maronde to earn his first save of the season in that same win over the Hurricanes.
4…Shutout innings pitched by Florida reliever Kevin Chapman in Sunday’s series-clinching 4-2 win over Miami. Chapman gave-up just one hit with two strikeouts to earn his second save of 2010.
17…Combined strikeouts in 12 innings pitched by Duke starters Eric Pfisterer (10) and Michael Ness (7) who each tossed six shutout innings to help the Blue Devils to a 3-game sweep of Temple.
11…Strikeouts in 6 IP by Florida Gulf Coast ace Chris Sale in a 7-2 win over Wichita State.
2…Home runs hit over the weekend by Middle Tennessee State’s Bryce Brentz. The outfielder led the nation with 28 HR last year, but he had been shutout through the first two weeks of the season.
1…Loss this season by Washington State after falling 4-1 in Sunday’s finale of a 4-game series with Utah. The Cougars had started 9-0 for their best opening to a season since 1988.
138…Pitches thrown by Santa Clara starter Alex Rivers in a 4-0 win over San Jose State. Rivers scattered seven hits with five strikeouts for his third career complete game.
5…RBIs by St. Louis redshirt freshman Steve Fernandez to help St. Louis down Ohio State 10-9 on Saturday.
109…Pitches thrown by West Virginia’s Chris Enourato, who struckout 9 in seven innings of relief to help the Moutaineers to an 11-8 win over Illinois. Enourato retired 16 of the first 17 batters he faced.
3…Wins by WVU (with seven losses) this season. Enourato has earned two of the wins and a save in his five relief outings.
16…RBIs in five games by New Mexico State’s Wade Reynoso. He batted .522 (12-23) with 3 home runs and 11 runs scored as well in wins over New Mexico and St. Joseph’s.
Around The Bases-March 3
A Look At Who’s Hot & Who’s Not In College Baseball
March is here and week three of the college baseball season is underway. Most parts of the Midwest and Northeast are still digging out of the snow, but it’s only a matter of time before it melts and spring officially gets here. It won’t be long until everyone is smelling the green grass that’s taken for granted in the nation’s sunbelt states.
With more games under everyone’s belts we’re getting a better gauge for what each team has. Here’s a look at this week’s Stock-Up/Stock-Down around college baseball.
Stock-Up
TCU: The Horned Frogs went to Cal State Fullerton and took two of three games from the Titans to improve to 5-1. They did it by out-scoring Fullerton 13-3 in their two wins. Those wins were against All-Americans Daniel Renken and Tyler Pill. TCU is batting .341 with a .943 team OPS, while the pitching staff has a 2.82 ERA with 47 Ks in 51 IP.
Coastal Carolina: The Chanticleers were already ranked, and then they went and swept two games from UC Irvine last Saturday. It wasn’t like they were facing the Anteaters’ 3rd & 4th starters either. Coastal beat Daniel Bibona and Eric Pettis on the same day. Bibona was 12-1 last year with a 2.63 ERA, while Pettis was 5-2 with 17 saves as Irvine’s closer.
Texas: After losing two of three games at home to New Mexico to open the season the Longhorns swept a Stanford team that had swept Rice on opening weekend. The vaunted Longhorn pitching staff showed why it’s considered the best in the nation in the process. Taylor Jungmann, Cole Green, Chance Ruffin, and Brandon Workman combined to give-up just two runs with 26 strikeouts in 21 1/3 innings during the series.
East Carolina: Typically a 4-3 team wouldn’t be considered one whose stock is rising, but the Pirates have essentially played two Super Regionals to open the season. They lost two of three vs. a loaded Virginia team and then then took two of three from a very good South Carolina squad. ECU will rack-up a lot of wins by season’s end.
St. John’s: The Red Storm is off to a 6-0 start with wins over New Orleans (3), Minnesota, Michigan, and Illinois. They won their three games at the Big Ten/Big East Challenge by a total of four runs. The biggest long-term question Ed Blankmeyer’s team would appear to have is pitching. Bruce Kern and Nick Cenatiempo have both been good so far, but while it’s still early, neither has gone deep into a game yet. In their combined four starts neither has pitched more than five innings.
Washington State: The Cougars’ 6-0 start is their best since 1988. They have a staff ERA of 3.74 and a batting average of .363 in those six games. Wins over the likes of Seattle, Bethune-Cookman and Texas Tech haven’t been the stiffest of tests, but it’s been more than 20 years since they started as well against similar schedules as well.
Southeastern Louisiana: A 3-game sweep at Mississippi State last week has earned the Lions (8-0) the program’s first ever national ranking (#29 in this week’s Collegiate Baseball Poll). They’ve done it with good pitching and a well-rounded offense. Tyler Watkins and Brandon Efferson have each made two starts and have totaled 14.0 and 12.0 innings, respectively. Three relievers have also combined to post four saves for a staff with a 2.70 ERA. Meanwhile, the team is hitting .304 and 11 different batters have at least 3 RBIs.
Tim Esmay: One of the questions we raised coming into the season was whether Esmay could continue what Pat Murphy had done for the last 15 years. ASU is 7-0 in Esmay’s first seven games as head coach at his alma mater. Northern Illinois and Towson haven’t provided high-octane competition, but games vs. Cal Poly, Oregon State and Florida International this week should test the Sun Devils more.
Stock Down
UC Irvine: In addition to the previously mentioned losses to Coastal Carolina the Anteaters also lost to North Carolina State last weekend at the Baseball By The Beach Tournament in Myrtle Beach. They also lost 6-0 Tuesday
night at Pepperdine to fall to 4-4. Irvine is built on pitching, but it must improve its 6.75 staff ERA.
Cal State Fullerton: First the Titans lost to Oregon and Pepperdine on opening weekend, then they suffered two more home losses to TCU last weekend. The four losses at Goodwin Field are half as many as they had all of last year. Stud pitchers Daniel Renken, Tyler Pill and Noe Ramirez are a combined 1-4, while the offense has hit just .236 during the 3-4 start.
Minnesota: The Golden Gophers’ 0-3 performance at the Big Ten/Big East Challenge was probably the shocker of the event. They did face arguably the toughest slate of anyone in the field with losses to St. John’s (5-4), UConn (8-2) and Louisville (5-4). Those could be the top three teams in the Big East by season’s end. Minnesota has a solid 2.89 staff ERA, but like St. John’s their starters have not gone deep into games yet. The offense is hitting just .273 during a 2-4 start, but the Gophers should still be alright once Big Ten play starts.
Oregon: Yes, I did have the Ducks on the “Stock-Up” list last week after wins over Cal State Fullerton, Long Beach State and Loyola Marymount, but I also warned not to get too excited too quickly. Sure enough, Oregon went to Hawaii and lost 3 of 4 games to the Warriors. It’s likely to be a roller coaster ride again for the Ducks in George Horton’s second season.
Southern Mississippi: The curse of a Cinderella going to the College World Series is the expectation(and bulls eye on the back) it brings the following year. That appears to be what happened to the Golden Eagles after they dropped 2 of 3 home games last weekend to LeMoyne. They also lost at home to Northwestern State on opening weekend. USM is hitting and pitching solidly, but they’re going to get the best effort of every team they play all season.
Golden Spikes Award Preseason Watch List
Six 2009 Semifinalists On 2010 List
USA Baseball announced Thursday its preseason Golden Spikes Award Watch List, marking the organization’s first step toward identifying the top amateur baseball player in the country. Sponsored by Major League Baseball, the Golden Spikes Award will be presented in 2010 for the 33rd time.
The Watch List features 50 of the nation’s top amateur talents, and it will be a “rolling” list to ensure that athletes can play themselves into consideration for the Golden Spikes Award, to be presented live on Tuesday, July 13, at the 2010 Major League Baseball All-Star FanFest in Anaheim, Calif.
Headlining the 2010 Watch List are six athletes who were among the 30 semifinalists for the 2009 Golden Spikes Award. Those players are Daniel Bibona (LHP, Sr., UC Irvine), Bryce Brentz (OF/RHP, Jr., Middle Tennessee), Deck McGuire (RHP, Jr., Georgia Tech), Addison Reed (RHP, Jr., San Diego State), Anthony Rendon (3B, So., Rice) and Alex Wimmers (RHP, Jr., Ohio State).
“We’re very pleased to announce the 50 members of the preseason Watch List for the 2010 Golden Spikes Award,” said Paul Seiler, Executive Director/CEO of USA Baseball. “The level of amateur baseball talent in our country continues to rise each year, and there is no greater evidence of this than seeing six 2009 semifinalists named to the 2010 Watch List.”
The list of 50 names also features Bryce Harper of the College of Southern Nevada, a junior. The freshman catcher is the only junior-college player named to the list. Alex Fernandez, as a sophomore pitcher for Miami Dade Community College (now Miami Dade College) in 1990, stands as the only junior-college player to ever win the Golden Spikes Award.
LSU leads all schools with four players named to the Watch List. Texas is second with three, and Alabama, Arkansas, Cal State Fullerton, Coastal Carolina, Florida State, Georgia Tech, University of Miami, Rice and Virginia have two apiece.
The SEC tops all conferences with 15 Watch List players. Other leading conferences include the ACC with 10 athletes, the Big 12 with five, and the Big West and Conference USA with three each. Juniors dominate the list with 35 players named. Sophomores are next with nine players, there are five seniors, and Harper is the lone freshman.
On Tuesday, June 1, USA Baseball officials will cut the list of players to 30 names. The final list of 30 will then be sent to a voting body consisting of select professional baseball personnel, past USA Baseball National Team coaches, select members of the media, former USA Baseball sports information directors, and current USA Baseball staff — about 150 voters in total.
All voters will be asked to choose five players from the list of 30 names. Fan voting will once again be a part of the Golden Spikes Award in 2010. June 1 will also mark the day when college baseball fans from across the country will be able to vote for their favorite player for the Golden Spikes Award on goldenspikesaward.com. On Tuesday, June 8, USA Baseball will announce the five finalists, and voting for a winner will commence that same day.
The 2010 USA Baseball Golden Spikes Award will be presented nationally July 13 on an award show via live telecast from Anaheim on goldenspikesaward.com, USABaseball.com and MLB.com in conjunction with All-Star FanFest.
Past winners of the Golden Spikes Award include Terry Francona (1980), Will Clark (1985), Robin Ventura (1988), Jason Varitek (1994), J.D. Drew (1997), Mark Prior (2001), Jered Weaver (2004), Tim Lincecum (2006), David Price (2007), Buster Posey (2008) and last year’s winner, Stephen Strasburg.
2010 USA Baseball Golden Spikes Award Important Dates
Thursday, Feb. 18 – 50-player Watch List released, shaped by USA Baseball officials, advisors and college SIDs
Tuesday, June 1 – 30 semifinalists announced, selected by USA Baseball officials; semifinalist voting begins; voters select five
Friday, June 4 – Deadline to vote for finalists, 5:00 p.m. ET
Tuesday, June 8 – Five finalists announced; finalist voting begins; voters to select one
Friday, June 18 – Deadline to vote for winner, 5:00 p.m. ET
Tuesday, July 13 – Golden Spikes Award presentation live at All-Star FanFest in Anaheim
Complete 2010 preseason Golden Spikes Award Watch List:
Name, School, Position, Class (in order of name)
Chad Bettis, Texas Tech, RHP, Junior
Daniel Bibona, UC Irvine, LHP, Senior
Bryce Brentz, Middle Tennessee, OF/RHP, Junior
Michael Choice, Texas-Arlington, OF, Junior
Gerrit Cole, UCLA, RHP, Sophomore
Christian Colon, Cal State Fullerton, SS, Junior
Zack Cox, 3B/RHP, Arkansas, Sophomore
Todd Cunningham, OF, Junior
Blake Dean, LSU, Jacksonville State, 1B/OF, Senior
Sam Dyson, South Carolina, RHP, Junior
Brett Eibner, Arkansas, RHP/OF, Junior
Micah Gibbs, LSU, C, Junior
Sean Gilmartin, Florida State, LHP, Sophomore
Yasmani Grandal, University of Miami, C, Junior
Sonny Gray, Vanderbilt, RHP, Sophomore
Justin Grimm, Georgia, RHP, Junior
Jedd Gyorko, West Virginia, 2B/3B, Junior
Rick Hague, Rice, SS, Junior
Bryce Harper, College of Southern Nevada, C/3B/OF, Freshman
Cody Hawn, Tennessee, 1B, Junior
Chris Hernandez, University of Miami, LHP, Junior
Tyler Holt, Florida State, OF, Junior
Danny Hultzen, Virginia, LHP/1B, Sophomore
Kevin Jacob, Georgia Tech, RHP, Junior
Taylor Jungmann, Texas, RHP, Sophomore
Leon Landry, LSU, OF, Junior
Deck McGuire, Georgia Tech, RHP, Junior
Hunter Morris, Auburn, 1B/OF, Junior
Jarrett Parker, Virginia, OF, Junior
Drew Pomeranz, Mississippi, LHP, Junior
Anthony Ranaudo, LSU, RHP, Junior
Addison Reed, San Diego State, RHP, Junior
Anthony Rendon, Rice, 3B, Sophomore
Daniel Renken, Cal State Fullerton, RHP, Junior
Kyle Roller, East Carolina, 1B, Senior
Cameron Rupp, C, Junior, Texas
Chris Sale, Florida Gulf Coast, LHP, Junior
Jake Smith, Alabama, 3B/RHP, Senior
Josh Spence, Arizona State, LHP, Senior
Tony Thompson, Kansas, 3B, Junior
Preston Tucker, Florida, 1B, Sophomore
Kolbrin Vitek, Ball State, 3B/RHP, Junior
Austin Wates, Virginia Tech, OF, Junior
Cody Wheeler, Coastal Carolina, LHP, Junior
Ross Wilson, Alabama, 2B/SS, Junior
Alex Wimmers, Ohio State, RHP, Junior
Mickey Wiswall, Boston College, 3B/1B, Junior
Kolten Wong, Hawaii, 2B, Sophomore
Scott Woodward, Coastal Carolina, 3B, Junior
Brandon Workman, Texas, RHP, Junior
Texas Baseball Celebrates 2009 Season
Rupp and Jungmann Named MVPs At Team’s Award Banquet
AUSTIN, Texas – Taylor Jungmann and Cameron Rupp were named the Texas Baseball Most Valuable Pitcher and Most Valuable Player, respectively, at the Longhorns’ 2009
Baseball Awards Banquet on Sunday afternoon.
Jungmann was 11-3 with a 2.00 ERA and 101 strikeouts in 94.1 innings. He was instrumental in the Longhorns’ postseason run, going 4-0 with a 0.42 ERA and 20 strikeouts in 21.1 innings in Super Regional and College World Series action. Jungmann was tabbed a Freshman All-American and earned College World Series All-Tournament Team status.
Rupp led the Longhorns with 11 doubles and 46 RBI on the season. He hit .292 and added 46 runs and 13 doubles as the Horns’ starting catcher. Rupp hit .370 with eight runs, three doubles, three home runs and eight RBI in 12 NCAA postseason games. He earned College World Series All-Tournament honors and was named All-Big 12 honorable mention.
Connor Rowe was tabbed the Lowe’s Most Improved Player. Rowe hit .277 with seven doubles, two triples, eight home runs and 40 RBI. He provided College World Series heroics, hitting the game winning walk-off home run against Arizona State to send the Longhorns to the championship series.
Travis Tucker earned the Team Captain Award. He hit .297 with a team-high 52 runs, 12 doubles, two triples, 30 RBI and 13 stolen bases as the Longhorns’ starting second baseman. Tucker remains on the squad as a student assistant following his three-year playing career.
Keith Shinaberry was voted by the players as the Teammate of the Year. Shinaberry was a four-year member of the Horns and was 1-0 with a 2.53 ERA as a senior.
The UT Athletics Student Services issued three awards for academic accomplishment. Shinaberry earned the Student Services Most Inspired Academic Performance Award, Russell Moldenhauer garnered the Academic Achievement Award and Stayton Thomas earned the Longhorn Academic Spirit Award.
The banquet concluded with the squad being presented with their College World Series runner-up rings.
(Press Release)
More Longhorns Notes
- Texas downed Texas State 9-7 on Sunday in a 14-inning exhibition game at UFCU Disch-Falk Field.
- Texas State was a 2009 NCAA Regional Team.
- The Longhorns scrimmaged Baylor last week as well. The two games count against the Longhorn’s 2010 56- game limit, so they will play a 54-game regular season.
- Tant Sheppard was 3-for-6 with a home run and five RBIs to lead Texas at the plate.
- Russell Moldenhauer homered as well. He homered vs. Baylor as well.
- Brandon Workman, Austin Dicharry and Cole Green each pitched two shutout innings.






























