Thursday, April 11, 2013

UC Santa Barbara Series Preview

UC Santa Barbara at Titans
Friday 7 p.m.; Saturday 6 p.m.; Sunday 1 p.m.


By FullertonBaseballFan

Cal State Fullerton has had a great deal of momentum throughout the 2013 season, putting together two ten game winning streaks and taking a seven game winning streak into this week after going 4-0 last week to improve their record away from Goodwin Field to 16-1, which is the most road wins for anybody in the country.  The Titans won a matchup of top ten teams at UCLA 9-6 last Tuesday and swept their first road series on the conference schedule at UC Davis.  Things didn’t go as easy against the Aggies as it looked like they could before the series with UC Davis dropping their previous five series but the Titans ended up winning all three games by scores of 3-0, 4-2 and 5-2.  Fullerton got this week started off on the right foot by beating USC 6-4 on Tuesday to improve their record to 29-4 with their eighth straight win.

ullerton hammered the ball against Pacific on their way to scoring 45 runs and continued their onslaught against UCLA, scoring two runs in the first inning when Richy Pedroza led off with a walk, J.D. Davis doubled him in and Michael Lorenzen extended his hitting streak to thirteen games with by singling in Davis.  UCLA cut the lead by scoring a run in the second and took the lead when Pat Valaika hit a two run HR in the third off of starter Willie Kuhl.  The Titans responded as they often have this season, scoring two runs in the top of the fourth to take the lead for good when Lorenzen singled, Hutting singled him to third, a wild pitch scored Lorenzen to tie the game and an RBI groundout by Jared Deacon gave them the lead.  Fullerton added to their lead in the fifth when Carlos Lopez doubled and Davis singled him in and put the game away with four runs in the sixth when Deacon walked, Keegan Dale reached with two outs when the pitcher threw wide of first for an error on his bunt, Pedroza walked to load the bases, Lopez’s single drove in two runs, Davis walked to load the bases again and Lorenzen’s single scored two more runs.  UCLA scored a run in each of the sixth, seventh and eighth innings thanks to some help from the Titans with four errors in those innings before Lorenzen came in to finish things off in the ninth with a 1-2-3 inning for his ninth save.  Reliever Tyler Peitzmeier was the winner and improved his record to 2-0 with two scoreless innings.  Lorenzen had four hits and three RBI, Lopez and Davis both had two hits and two RBI and Pedroza had two hits and scored twice.

Fullerton once again scored in the first inning on Friday when Lopez tripled and was thrown out at home when Davis grounded out but advanced to second on the play and scored with two outs when the UC Davis SS threw Lorenzen’s grounder away.  The Titans scored in the third when Lopez walked, stole second and went to third when the throw went into CF, Lorenzen walked, Hutting was hit by a pitch to load the bases and Matt Chapman walked to force in the run.  Fullerton continued to get guys on base against Aggies starter Harry Stanwyck over the next three innings to push up his pitch count before UC Davis went to the bullpen but couldn’t get anybody across while Thomas Eshelman was his usual efficient self, allowing a single in each of the first four innings but holding the Aggies off of the scoreboard.  The Titans scored an insurance run in the eighth when Jake Jefferies led off with a single, Chad Wallach bunted over pinch-runner Keegan Dale, Austin Diemer’s infield single moved Dale to third and Lopez’s single drove in the run.  Eshelman retired the last fourteen batters he faced and Lorenzen pitched a 1-2-3 ninth for his conference leading tenth save.  Eshelman improved his record to 7-1 and lowered his ERA to 1.09 after allowing four hits in eight scoreless innings and stretching his streak without a walk to start the season to 58 innings.  Lorenzen was hitless in the game and saw his hitting streak snapped.

Fullerton had UC Davis starter Spencer Koopmans on the ropes on Saturday with two singles and a walk in the first inning but couldn’t push a run across and he traded zeroes with Justin Garza until the Aggies broke through with a run on three hits in the bottom of the fourth.  UC Davis added to the lead with a run on three hits in the fifth and it looked like the Titans might be in trouble in this one.  Fullerton finally got to Koopmans in the seventh with the help of the Aggies defense when Lorenzen reached on an error, Chapman walked and Jefferies singled in Lorenzen and the Aggies brought in closer Max Cordy, who got them out of the inning.  The Titans loaded the bases against Cordy in the eighth on a single, walk and a HBP but were unable to score.  Fullerton rallied for their third late inning comeback in two years against UC Davis in the ninth with more help from the Aggies when their SS threw away a one out grounder by Austin Kingsolver, pinch-hitter Clay Williamson walked, they moved up on a wild pitch and Pedroza’s single up the middle against a drawn in infield gave the Titans the lead and Davis’ long RBI double put Fullerton up by two runs.  Lorenzen picked up his third save of the week with his third straight 1-2-3 inning thanks to an outstanding catch by Williamson when he crashed into the RF wall and held onto the ball, turning a potential triple into a long out.  Garza went 7 1/3 innings and allowed two runs on nine hits with no walks and five strikeouts and Peitzmeier picked up his second win of the week by retiring both hitters he faced in the eighth before Fullerton’s comeback in the top of the ninth.

Fullerton jumped out to the lead in the final game of the series in the first when Pedroza singled, Lopez bunted him over, Pedroza stole third and Davis singled him in.  Grahamm Wiest pitched around doubles in each of the first two innings before the Titans put things away in the third with four runs when Pedroza once again got on base with a double, Lopez moved up to second and Pedroza scored when UC Davis starter Evan Wolf threw Lopez’s bunt away, Davis reached on an error on the SS and Lorenzen brought the hammer down when he crushed a ball to LF for a three run HR for his sixth HR of the season but that was it for the scoring for the Fullerton as they were held scoreless the rest of the way.  Wiest retired the Aggies in order in the third and fourth before allowing a run in the fifth and retired them in order in the sixth and seventh before allowing a run in the eighth, with Peitzmeier coming in to finish off the inning and Davis ended things in the ninth for his second save.  Wiest improved his record to 6-1 and lowered his ERA to 2.72 after allowing two runs on six hits with one walk in 7 2/3 innings.

Fullerton crushed the ball against Pacific when they hit .415 but that series looks like the outlier because they once again had issues hitting against weekend pitching at UC Davis.  The Titans only hit .234 in the series (25/107) and averaged four runs a game, with five of the twelve runs they scored being unearned due to a porous Aggies defense that made ten errors during the weekend.  Fullerton continued to do a solid job at working counts and taking walks and HBP’s with thirteen free passes but even that number is a little low compared to the usual six to seven free bases that the Titans usually get in games.  Despite all of that, Fullerton did have some noteworthy efforts this weekend with Lopez going 5-13 and increasing his Big West lead with three SB’s, Pedroza went hitless in the first game but went 5-8 in the final two games of the series with the game winning single on Saturday, Jefferies went 4-12 with hits in all three games and Lorenzen only went 2-13 but had the key three run HR on Sunday.  The pitchers came through this weekend and were dominant in holding a solid UC Davis offense to four runs in three games with a .208 AVG (20-96) and allowed only one walk all weekend.

Fullerton returned home to start this week and defeated USC 6-4 on Tuesday to extend their winning streak to eight games.  This game was similar to Sunday’s at UC Davis with most of the damage coming in the third inning from the long ball.  Davis hit the Titans’ fourth grand slam of the season to give them a 5-2 lead and Lorenzen went back to back with his seventh HR of the season and that was it for the scoring as the middle relievers held things down before Lorenzen finished things off for his twelfth save.  The degree of difficulty on the schedule figures to start increasing this weekend with the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos coming to Goodwin Field.  UCSB is coming off of a series win at home against nationally ranked Cal Poly and would like to make a statement that they will be a contender in the Big West this season.  The Gauchos would also like to get some revenge after losing a heated series to Fullerton in Goleta last season when one of their relievers mouthed off to the local paper after UCSB won the second game of the series about how he enjoyed making hitters look stupid and ended up being the one looking stupid when he grabbed himself below the belt while leaving the game as he heard it from the Fullerton dugout and crowd after he allowed five runs as the Titans pulled away in the final game of the series.


UC Santa Barbara Gauchos (17-14, 3-3)

·       2012 Overall Record – 28-28
·       2012 Conference Record – 10-14 (tied for 6th)
·       2012 Post-Season – None
·       2013 RPI/ISR – 110/78.  2012 RPI/ISR – 132/75
·       Pre-season/Current ranking – None
·       Predicted conf finish – 3rd by Easton College Baseball, 4th by Perfect Game, 5th by the Big West coaches and Baseball America


2012 Summary and 2013 Preview

UCSB was mediocre in 2009-2011 and went 28-23, 11-13 (5th) in 2009, 23-30, 10-14 (5th) in 2010 and 26-26, 10-14 (6th) in 2011 with a very experienced team and the result of failing to qualify for a regional for the tenth straight season in 2011 was a coaching change with longtime head coach Bob Brontsema being replaced by former UC Riverside and Oregon pitching coach Andrew Checketts, who has brought some new energy to the program that hasn’t been seen for a while with a recruiting class that arrived this fall that was ranked in the top twenty nationally by Baseball America and Collegiate Baseball.

The Gauchos were an inconsistent team in 2012 that lost four of their six non-conference series against Oregon State, LMU, Nevada and USF (the latter three on the road) but swept the other two series at San Jose State and at home against Rhode Island.  UCSB was also inconsistent in conference series, not playing well by going 1-11 against the top four teams in the Big West (Fullerton, Cal Poly, Long Beach and Irvine) while going 9-3 against the next four teams in the conference standings to finish up 28-28 overall and 10-14 and tied for 6th in the Big West.

UCSB had the worst offense in the Big West in 2010 despite playing in one of the more favorable hitting parks in the conference, their offense was a little better in 2011 and they were in the middle of the pack in most offensive categories but things changed last season and the Gauchos were second in the Big West in scoring, AVG and SLG.  UCSB tended to play for the big inning and didn’t play much little ball under Brontsema but that changed with Checketts taking over and the Gauchos bunted quite a bit and led the conference in SB’s and SB attempts but were probably overaggressive and had 37 runners caught stealing.  UCSB was a very good offensive team at home, hitting .289 and scoring 6.3 runs per game but had their issues on the road where they hit .265 and averaged 4.5 runs per game.  The numbers for the Gauchos in conference games were similar to their road numbers and they hit .262 and averaged 4.7 runs per game.

UCSB had ERA’s over 5.00 in 2009-2010 but the BBCOR bats helped to bring their ERA down to 3.63 in 2011 and the Gauchos weekend rotation lacked power arms (second fewest strikeouts in the Big West) but most of their pitchers had solid control.  That all changed in 2012 and UCSB easily led the conference in strikeouts but they also easily led the Big West in walks, HBP’s and wild pitches, the team ERA went up by about half a run to 4.14 and the Gauchos allowed at least five runs thirty-three times.

UCSB started this season by winning a series at Fresno State before returning home and splitting a four game series with USF and sweeping San Jose State.  The Gauchos tested themselves by traveling to Texas but didn’t pass that test, getting swept by the Longhorns, and won their series against Sac State when they returned home.  UCSB’s final non-conference series was against their central coast rivals from Cal Poly and the home team won each game with the Mustangs winning two games in SLO.  The Gauchos continued to have trouble on the road when they opened up the Big West schedule by losing their series at Hawaii before winning an additional non-conference game on the islands.  UCSB returned home and played well against Cal Poly in their second series in three weeks against the Mustangs and won the first two games of the series, one a 4-2 pitchers’ duel and the other a 13-2 blowout, before losing the final game 7-6 when they were down big early and came back to almost pull the game out with two runs in the eighth and two runs in the ninth.

UCSB has good team speed and has continued to play an aggressive style of ball this season on the bases and is among the conference leaders in SB’s but they are much more efficient (40-56 SB’s) than they were in 2012 and they have also hit into the fewest DP’s in the Big West.  They are bunting less and swinging away more but that hasn’t always worked out, especially on the road.  The Gauchos are 12-6 at home, where they are hitting .290 and scoring 5.6 runs per game, and they are 5-8 on the road where they are hitting .234 and scoring 4.7 runs per game.

UCSB had two of the biggest power arms in the Big West in 2012 but one of them moved on and the other one hasn’t been effective and the result has been some regression in the number of strikeouts back to the middle of the pack in the conference.  However, that has also meant that the Gauchos pitchers haven’t been nearly as wild and have gone from the bottom of the Big West to the middle of the pack in walks and they have thrown the second fewest HBP’s.  The UCSB pitchers have been giving up more hits due to pitching to contact more but the end result with less runners getting on base due to free bases has been a team ERA that is about the same as it was in 2012.


Offense

·       Park Factor according to Boyd’s World – 102 (increases offense by 2%).  UCSB only plays day games because they don’t have lights and the winds coming in from the ocean are usually blowing out.
·       Batting Average – .267 (6th in the Big West/161st nationally).  .277 in 2012 (2/141).
·       Scoring – 156 (3/144), 5.2 runs per game.  302 (2/145), 5.4 runs per game in 2012.
·       Home Runs – 8 (5/173).  17 in 2012 (4/214).
·       Slugging Percentage – .350 (7/186).  .376 in 2012 (6/157).
·       On Base Percentage – .364 (4/112).  357 in 2012 (5/165).
·       Walks – 103 (4/163), 3.4 per game.  195 in 2012 (4/160), 3.5 per game.
·       HBP’s – 53 (2/12).  58 in 2012 (6/131).
·       Strikeouts – 165 (6/xx), 5.5 per game.  298 in 2012 (6/xx), 5.3 per game.
·       Stolen Bases – 40-56 (2/85).  58-95 in 2012 (1/129).
·       Sac Bunts – 22 (6/135).  56 in 2012 (4/65).

Infield

UCSB lost three SR starters in their infield at C, 2B and 3B but the team has become more athletic with the incoming FR and transfers that have taken over in those positions.

C – JC transfer #14 Jackson Morrow (RH – .247/.360/.299, 0-7-4) took over for Bryce Tafelski and has been an upgrade offensively and defensively before slumping recently, going 2-22 in the first two conference series.  He has been an iron man and has started 29 of 31 games.  Morrow has good speed for a C and is third on the team in SB’s.  He only has a little bit of power with four extra base hits (three 2B’s, one 3B) but has some trouble with making contact and leads the team with 22 strikeouts.  He has been hitting all over the lineup, even leading off five times, but has been batting seventh lately.  Morrow has hit .276 at home but has had issues on the road, hitting .205.

1B – Soph #18 Tyler Kuresa (LH – .299/.371/.419, 1-24-1) was an 11th round draft pick out of HS and decided to go to Oregon instead of signing but things didn’t go well for him as a FR and he only hit .191 in 89 AB’s and transferred to UCSB and had to sit out in 2012.  He was one of the better hitters on the team in the fall and has continued to hit well in the middle of the lineup, batting cleanup most of the season before settling into the fifth spot the last couple of weeks.  Kuresa is a productive hitter and one of the main sources for power who is third in the conference in RBI, 18 of them at home and six on the road.  He has solid plate discipline for a tall man with a bit of a long swing with a 9/13 BB/K ratio.

2B/LF – Soph #5 Joe Woodward (RH – .361/.471/.472, 0-10-4.  ’12 – .259 in 27 AB’s) missed a couple of weeks with injuries before returning to the lineup last week.  He has split time between 2B and LF and has started at 2B the last six games while batting second.  Woodward is a sparkplug and would be among the conference leaders in AVG, OBP and SLG if he had enough AB’s to qualify.  He played a big role in the series win against Cal Poly by going 7-13.  Woodward has hit .389 at home with .500 OBP and SLG but has hit a more pedestrian .278 in road games.  He doesn’t walk much with only six BB’s but is among the Big West leaders with nine HBP’s.  Woodward has good speed and has four SB’s.

SS – JR #16 Brandon Trinkwon (LH – .267/.368/.362, 2-19-6.  ’12 – .347/.460/.490, 2-32-7.  ’11 – .253/.318/.329, 1-6-0) platooned at SS as a FR before he missed most of the latter part of the season when a batted ball hit him in the face and fractured several bones.  He became a full-time starter in 2012, splitting time between 2B and SS, and was 2nd team All-Big West after ending up among the conference leaders in AVG, SLG, OBP, BB, R, H, RBI and TB.  Trinkwon has excellent plate discipline and had a 40/24 BB/K ratio in 2012 and is at 17/12 this season.  He was hitting second for a couple of weeks but has settled into the three hole over the last month.  Trinkwon was in a 10-55 slump before finding his hitting stroke against Cal Poly and went 5-10 with three RBI last weekend.  He has struggled in road games, hitting only .196, while hitting .314 at home.   Trinkwon is one of the better SS prospects in this year’s draft class and is projected to be drafted in the first few rounds in June.  He has hit well against Fullerton, going 5-11 with three RBI last season at home and has gone 8-19 in his career against the Titans.

3B – FR #13 Ryan Clark (RH – .250 in 28 AB’s, 0-5-3) only had eight AB’s in the first 25 games before starting the last seven games.  He was moved into the lineup due to a wrist injury to SR #9 Marc Venning (RH – .235 in 34 AB’s.  ’12 – .262/.308/.372, 1-30-3), who split time last season between 1B and 3B, sharing time at 3B with three year starter Ryan Palmero.  Clark hit well last weekend and had two hits in both of the games that UCSB won against Cal Poly and has been hitting ninth.  He has good speed and is a threat to run.

2B/3B – Soph #3 Peter Maris (LH – .182/.288/.303, 2-14-1.  ’12 – .186/.271/.221, 0-3-1) and 2B – JC transfer #31 Parker Miles (RH – .216/.392/.297, 0-5-2) were playing more earlier in the season due to the injuries to Woodward and Venning but with Clark moving into the lineup and Woodward returning from his injuries both of them have been moved to the bench and neither of them started in the last six games.

Outfield

UCSB lost all three outfielders from last season – 1st team All-Big West Brett Vertigan, HM All-Big West Lance Roenicke and Joey Wallace – so it has been tryout time in the outfield with things settling down in CF and RF over the last month of the season.

LF – FR #10 Dalton Kelly (LH – .346 in 26 AB’s, 0-8-0) only had six AB’s over the first 22 games but has moved into the lineup since conference play started two weeks ago with Woodward shifting to 2B and has been a hot hitter with two hits in three different games while hitting in the bottom part of the order.  He is a good athlete with quite a bit of upside.

CF – JC transfer #12 Cameron Newell (LH – .278/.363/.343, 0-12-8) played well in the fall and won a starting job over some highly rated recruits and has helped to ignite the offense while usually hitting leadoff.  He is one of the faster runners on the team and is second in the Big West in SB’s and is also a good bunter who will try to use his speed to beat out bunts and leads the team with five SAC’s.  Newell does a good job of setting the table with a solid 12/16 BB/K ratio and is fourth in the conference in runs.  Unlike most of his teammates, he has hit much better on the road with a .326 AVG and has only hit .242 at home.  Newell has gone 8-24 in the first two conference series.

RF – Soph #26 Luke Swenson (LH – .307/.386/.352, 0-13-6.  ’12 – .198/.280/.222, 0-7-3) was a part-time player in 2012 and has worked his way into a regular role by outplaying some of the other players he was competing with for playing time.  He is a little guy with good speed who doesn’t have much power with most of his extra-base hits coming due to his wheels.  Swenson has good plate discipline with a 10/12 BB/K rate.  He has only gone 3-18 over his last five conference games.

JC transfer #23 Joey Epperson (RH – .250 in 28 AB’s) is the fourth outfielder who occasionally starts against LHP’s because all three OF’s are LH hitters.

DH/P – FR #6 Robby Nesovic (RH – .372/.440/.487, 1-19-0) was rated among the top 100 HS players in CA and recruited mostly as a pitcher who might be given a chance to hit.  He only had three AB’s in the first nine games but once he moved into the lineup, the big man has been a force in the middle of the lineup and would be among the Big West leaders in AVG and SLG if he had more AB’s.  Nesovic is third on the team in RBI despite the limited playing time over the first three weeks of the season.  He has been a monster at home with a .463 average but has only hit .250 on the road.  He has gone 8-22 in the first two conference series and hit his first HR of the season on Tuesday at P’dine.

DH/P – Soph #11 Greg Mahle (LH – .143 in 35 AB’s.  ’12 – .347/.411/.379, 0-35-0) was 2nd team All-Big West and a FR All-American last season in his dual role as a 1B/DH and a closer but has been going through a sophomore slump at the plate and on the mound.  He was the DH earlier in the year, struggled from the start and lost his job to Nesovic and hasn’t made a plate appearance in a month.


Defense

Fielding % – .974 (3/42) with 30 errors.  2012 – .968 (5/109) with 70 errors.  UCSB plays on an uneven playing surface that is known for being difficult for infielders to get true bounces on grounders, which makes how their defense has played until last weekend, when they made six errors, even more impressive.  UCSB has been much better defensively this season after they allowed 53 unearned runs in 2012.  Trinkwon is one of the best shortstops in the country and leads the conference in assists and UCSB leads the Big West in double plays.  Kuresa is solid at 1B and Clark has been solid at 3B.  Woodward and Miles at 2B and Maris at 2B/3B have been shaky and have combined for 13 errors.  All three OF’s have good range, especially Newell and Swenson, without any standout throwing arms.

Stolen Base Attempts – 19-33 (3/xx).  2012 – 38-64 (3/xx).  UCSB played three catchers in 2012 who ranged from decent to below average against the running game but Morrow has been excellent and runners are 15-25 against him and he also has three pickoffs.

WP’s/PB’s Allowed – 22 (2/xx).  2012 – 82 (9/xx).  UCSB’s catchers did a poor job of keeping the ball in front of them in 2012 but their jobs weren’t made easy due to the wildness of the pitching staff.  Morrow has been excellent at blocking pitches.


Pitching

·       ERA – 4.06 (4/127).  4.14 in 2012 (7/).
·       AVG – .265 (3/115).  .256 in 2012 (4/).
·       HR – 12 (9/xx).  14 HR in 2011 (4/xx).
·       Walks – 93 (5/68), 3.2 BB/9 IP.  263 (3rd), 4.7 BB/9 IP in 2012.
·       HBP – 32 (3/xx).  99 in 2012 (1/xx).
·       OBP – .344 (4/xx).  .375 in 2012 (7/xx).
·       SLG – .374 (5/xx).  .348 in 2012 (4/xx).
·       WHIP – 1.38 (5/91).  1.47 in 2012 (7/153).
·       Strikeouts – 195 (5/149), 6.7 K/9 IP.  451 (1/13), 8.1 K/9 IP in 2012.

Starters

UCSB had four pitchers who took turns in the weekend rotation and two of them were SR’s, Kevin Gelinas and Zak Edgington.  The Gauchos thought they would have a good rotation with the other two SP’s returning and moving their closer into the rotation, with one of the pitchers leading the team in wins in 2012 and the other two were FR All-Americans, but things didn’t turn out that way with the two of them pitching their way out of the rotation.

Soph #34 Austin Pettibone (RHP – 4-2, 2.86 ERA, 8 GS, 1 CG, 1 SHO, 57 IP, 58 H, 13 BB, 27 K, .276 BA, 4 HR, 2 HBP, 3 WP, 0-4 SB.  ’12 – 8-3, 4.44 ERA, 1 save, 17 apps, 13 GS, 79 IP, 102 H, 24 BB, 33 K, .331 BA, 4 HR, 6 HBP, 4 WP, 2-7 SB) started in the first eleven series as a FR before being bumped to the bullpen/midweek SP spot for the last month of the season and led the team in wins.  He started on Sat in the opening series at Fresno but has been the Friday starter since then.  Pettibone has usually given UCSB a chance to win with three starts in which he allowed two runs or less, including last week’s start against Cal Poly when he allowed 2 R on 6 H in 8 IP, but has also been able to be hit at times, allowing four runs in three of his starts and six runs in his start at Cal Poly a couple of weeks ago.  He is prone to giving up hits because he has very good control and is usually around the plate but he is not overpowering with an upper 80’s fastball that he sinks to go along with a solid curveball, slider and changeup to get batters to pound the ball into the ground and has only had more than four strikeouts in two of his starts.  Pettibone has been excellent at home, where he is 3-0 with a 0.84 ERA, but has struggled on the road and gone 1-2 with a 5.55 ERA.  He does an outstanding job of holding runners and has only allowed 2-11 SB’s over the last two seasons and did not pitch against Fullerton in 2012.

FR #44 Justin Jacome (LHP – 3-2, 3.67 ERA, 8 GS, 49 IP, 48 H, 11 BB, 36 K, .262 AVG, 0 HR, 5 HBP, 2 WP, 1-3 SB) was the Sunday starter at Fresno but moved into the Saturday spot the next weekend and has been there the past seven weekends.  He has been very consistent in allowing three runs or less in seven of his starts, including allowing two runs in 6 2/3 IP at Texas, three runs in 6 1/3 IP in winning his first start against Cal Poly, three runs in 6 1/3 IP at Hawaii and two runs (one earned) in 8 IP in winning his second start against Cal Poly.  Jacome was ranked among the top 150 HS players in CA and is tall at 6’6” and tough on LH hitters but doesn’t throw hard with a mid 80’s fastball and a good curveball and has very good control.  His stats at home and on the road are similar and he has a 2.51 ERA in his two conference starts.

The Sunday starting spot has been a revolving door for UCSB and they have lost the third game of their last four series.

FR #6 Robby Nesovic (RHP – 0-1, 7.30 ERA, 6 apps, 2 GS, 12 IP, 16 H, 4 BB, 11 K, .314 AVG, 0 HR, 6 HBP, 1 WP, 1-3 SB) was the latest guy to take a shot at the Sunday starter spot when he started last weekend against Cal Poly and he allowed 6 R (2 ER) in 3 1/3 IP after allowing 4 R in 4 IP in the non-conference fourth game at Hawaii so it remains to be seen if he will get another shot this Sunday.  He is a big guy with a good arm with a fastball that touches 90 and throws from a 3/4 arm slot that can make him tough on RH hitters.

FR #36 Kenny Chapman (RHP – 3-0, 4.68 ERA, 9 apps, 3 GS, 25 IP, 21 H, 10 BB, 14 K, .241 AVG, 2 HR, 3 HBP, 2 WP, 3-5 SB) was ranked among the top 100 HS players in CA and verbally committed to Fullerton but ended up going to UCSB as part of their large recruiting class.  He threw seven scoreless innings over three relief appearances and took his shot at the Sunday SP spot at Hawaii and allowed 4 R in 4 2/3 IP with Nesovic replacing him last weekend.  Chapman has a good arm with a fastball that sits around 90 and a good breaking ball.

Soph #25 Andrew Vasquez (LHP – 1-2, 4.70 ERA, 5 apps, 4 GS, 15 IP, 11 H, 16 BB, 16 K, .204 AVG, 1 HR, 5 HBP, 2 WP, 5-6 SB.  ’12 – 6-4, 1.93 ERA, 15 GS, 89 IP, 58 H, 63 BB, 104 K, .190 AVG, 1 HR, 17 HBP, 15 WP, 9-11 SB) was the Friday SP as a FR in 2012 and led the Big West in ERA and was second in strikeouts on his way to earning 2nd team All-Big West and FR All-American honors.  However, he also had major control issues and led the conference in walks and HBP’s and those issues came back this season without the effectiveness to pitch around them.  Vasquez wasn’t able to go longer than 5 1/3 IP in any of his four starts in the first month while averaging a walk per inning and was removed from the rotation and has only made one appearance over the last month, facing two batters in relief at Cal Poly two weeks ago and walking both of them.  He allowed one run on three hits and six walks in 4 1/3 IP in his start against Fullerton in 2012.

Relievers

UCSB primarily had a four man bullpen in 2012 with the closer duties being handled by Mahle and fellow 2nd team All-Big West reliever Matthew Vedo, who led the conference in strikeouts and had a propensity to say stupid things to the media.  Mahle has moved back into the bullpen in middle relief and it has been a kiddie corps with mostly FR getting the ball late in games.

FR #4 Dylan Hecht (RHP – 0-1, 1.86 ERA, 3 saves, 16 apps, 19 IP, 9 H, 4 BB, 25 K, .141 AVG, 0 HR, 1 HBP, 0 WP, 4-4 SB) has taken over as the closer and has been lights out in his last five appearances, striking out ten batters and allowing two hits.  He has a live arm with a fastball that sits in the 92-94 range and a good slider.  Hecht is second in the Big West in appearances.

FR #41 Connor Baits (RHP – 0-0, 4.20 ERA, 1 save, 12 apps, 15 IP, 19 H, 3 BB, 9 K, .311 AVG, 2 HR, 3 HBP, 3 WP, 0-0 SB) is another FR with a live arm who was drafted in the 23rd round out of HS with a fastball that sits in the 92-94 range while pitching in middle relief.  He has good control but when his fastball straightens out he can get hit.  Baits made the midweek start at P’dine and went six innings, allowing three runs on nine hits with no walks and six strikeouts.

Soph #11 Greg Mahle (LHP – 4-4, 4.08 ERA, 1 save, 14 apps, 4 GS, 29 IP, 32 H, 9 BB, 21 K, .288 AVG, 1 HR, 1 HBP, 2 WP, 2-3 SB.  ’12 – 3-4, 3.88 ERA, 21 apps, 3 GS, 5 saves, 46 IP, 40 H, 18 BB, 45 K, .247 AVG, 1 HR, 15 HBP, 3 WP, 3-3 SB) split time as a closer as a FR and ended up being 2nd team All-Big West and a FR All-American who was expected to move into the rotation but wasn’t throwing well going into the season.  He made Sunday starts in the last two weekends before conference play started and allowed 8 R (3 ER) in 1/3 IP against Sac State and 5 R (3 ER) in 3 2/3 IP at Cal Poly and was moved back into the bullpen.  Mahle can be tough on LH hitters because they have trouble picking up the ball coming out of his hand due to his short arm delivery.  He allowed one hit in two innings in two appearances against Fullerton in 2012.

FR #33 Domenic Mazza (LHP – 1-0, 5.27 ERA, 11 apps,14 IP, 14 H, 6 BB, 14 K, .269 AVG, 0 HR, 1 HBP, 0 WP, 1-2 SB) is the other LHP in relief along with Mahle.  He doesn’t throw hard with a low 80’s fastball but has a good curveball and changeup with good command.

SR #22 Jared Wilson  (RHP – 0-0, 4.91 ERA, 12 apps, 15 IP, 19 H, 12 BB, 15 K, .322 AVG, 1 HR, 2 HBP, 4 WP, 2-2 SB.  ’12 – 0-1, 4.63 ERA, 24 apps, 1 save, 35 IP, 34 H, 28 BB, 30 K, .256 AVG, 3 HR, 10 HBP, 3 WP, 3-5 SB) has a solid fastball that sits around 90 and was drafted in the 35th round but came back and was expected to have a bigger role in the bullpen but he has way too wild to be relied on in critical situations.


Outlook

Fullerton has responded to every challenge that they have faced this season and found ways to win even when they haven’t played well.  The Titans haven’t always had consistent hitting but with their patient approach of grinding out at bats, they have still been consistently finding ways to score runs and they have had a killer instinct with six series sweeps in eight weekends.

Fullerton has controlled the series with UCSB over the last eleven years, going 26-7 and winning each of the last five series.  The Titans split the first two games and won the third game handily in each of the last three series played at UCSB and they have swept the Gauchos in four of the last five series that have been played at Goodwin Field.

Fullerton has the potential to score a good amount of runs this weekend with the way that they have started to hit the ball at home and facing a pitching staff that is young and talented but inconsistent.  UCSB also has the potential to score some runs but they haven’t been nearly as potent away from home, an issue they need to resolve if they are going to take the next step forward as a contender in the conference.

Fullerton has had a much better pitching staff than UCSB.  The Titans have lights out control, leading the country in BB/9 IP and WHIP, and are able to use three effective starters as well as several reliable relievers.  The Gauchos have usually gotten solid outings from their first two starters, especially at home, but they haven’t been able to find an effective third starter on Sundays.

UCSB has improved the talent level in their program but they are still going through some growing pains, especially on the road.  It wouldn’t be much of a surprise if the Gauchos were able to win a game in this series but between playing at home, being more experienced, playing at a higher and more consistent level and having a sizeable pitching advantage, this is a series that Fullerton should win.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Riding a Long Way for Another Sweep

Titans at UC Davis: Won 3-0 (Friday), 4-2 (Saturday), 5-2 (Sunday)


By Don Hudson

DAVIS - The Cal State Fullerton Titans continued their road success (now 16-1) by sweeping the UC Davis Aggies at Dobbins Baseball Stadium in Davis, CA.  The Titans improved their overall record to 28-4 and 6-0 in the Big West Conference.  They are currently on a seven-game winning streak, having already had two ten-game winning streaks earlier this season.

Despite the 4-0 week following the sweep of UCD and last Tuesday’s win at UCLA, the Titans remained #4 in the Baseball America rankings (all the big boys had good weeks) and took a little hit in RPI (dropped from fifth to eighth based on weakness of opponent UC Davis.)

Game 1: Titans 3, UC Davis Aggies 0

(Photo Gallery)

On paper, this seemed a pitching mismatch favoring the Titans’ Thomas Eshelman over the Aggies’ junior right-hander Harry Stanwyck, who entered play 3-3 with ERA of 5.70.  But it ended up a very formidable pitching duel, with Eshelman scattering four hits early before locking in and retiring the last fifteen batters he faced in eight shutout innings of mound work.  Stanwyck was nearly as good, especially noting that the Titans’ offensive juggernaut had produced 54 runs in their four previous games.  The Titans worked the pitch count against Stanwyck, who was outstanding for six innings, allowing just two runs (one earned) before leaving after throwing 118 pitches.

The Titans scored an unearned run in the first.  Carlos Lopez hit a one-out sinking line drive to centerfield.  Rather than play it safely and give up a single, UCD outfielder Kevin Barker got caught in “no man’s land” and the ball skipped by him for a triple.  Lopez was retired in a rundown on a “contact play”, with J.D. Davis making it to second-base.  Stanwyck should have been out of the inning when he got Michael Lorenzen to ground to shortstop, but the throw was in the dirt for a run-scoring two-base error by the Aggies’ Tino Lipson.

Hook gets a quick hook
Coach Rick Vanderhook was given a quick hook in the second inning by plate umpire Jeff Henrichs.  (More on that later.)

The Titans’ plate patience produced a run in the top of the third inning to make it a 2-0 lead.  Lopez walked, stole second and went to third when the catcher’s throw went awry.  With two outs, Lorenzen walked and Anthony Hutting was hit by a 1-2 pitch to load the bases.  Matt Chapman walked on four pitches to drive in the run.

Eshelman allowed one hit in each of the first four innings – and then none for the next four innings.  He bends but doesn’t break: it’s hard to remember many times where he has allowed multiple hits in an inning.

The Titans added an insurance run to make it 3-0 in the top of the eighth on a single by Jake Jefferies, a sacrifice by Chad Wallach, an infield single by Austin Diemer and a clutch two-out RBI single by Lopez.

Still walk-less Eshelman
Although Eshelman had thrown just 86 pitches (62 strikes, 24 balls) and retired fifteen straight, closer Michael Lorenzen was summoned to pitch the ninth inning.  It took just four pitches for Lorenzen to post his tenth save of the season, tying him for fifth place with Ted Silva with 26 career saves as a Titan.

The Titans had just seven hits, with two each by Lopez and Diemer.  Lopez also had a walk, an RBI and two stolen bases.  Lorenzen’s 13-game hitting streak was stopped.


Game 2: Titans 4, UC Davis Aggies 2

(Photo Gallery)

The Titans overcame a frustrating afternoon and scored three unearned runs in the top of the ninth for a 4-2 comeback win over the Aggies.  It was the Titans’ first win of the season when trailing after eight innings.

Fullerton’s Justin Garza locked horns in a pitchers’ duel with the Aggies’ Spencer Koopmans, who helped himself with a good defensive play that prevented the Titans from scoring early.  After Pedroza led off the game with a single, Lopez lined a ball back through the box.  Koopmans protected his feet and reached down and snared the line drive and easily doubled Pedroza off first-base.  The double-play was huge, as Davis followed with a single and Lorenzen walked, but both were stranded.

UCD plated the game’s first run in the bottom of the fourth.  Tino Lipson led off with a single to right-centerfield and advanced to second when Lorenzen misplayed the ball.  John Williams promptly drove in Lipson with a RBI-single that looked to me (and probably most onlookers) like a pure “E3”.  Garza got tagged with an earned run when, with better fielding support, the first batter would have been on first and the second would have hit into a double-play.  Baseball.

Meanwhile, Koopmans was allowing few base-runners: he set the Titans down 1-2-3 in the second, fourth, fifth and sixth innings.  In the top of the fifth, Jefferies led off with a single but was thrown out trying to stretch it into a double.

The Aggies added a second run in the bottom of the fifth on a double, single and double-play.

The Titans finally scored in the top of the seventh to reduce their deficit to 2-1, but probably should have had more.  Lorenzen led off and hit the ball hard to the left side and reached on an error by third-baseman Paul Politi.  Koopmans made another good defensive play on a hard hit ball by Hutting on a hit-and-run play, with Lorenzen advancing to second.  After Chapman walked on four pitches, Jefferies delivered an RBI-single to make it 2-1.

Keegan Dale pinch-ran for Jefferies.  (Trailing in the seventh, I found it curious to insert a defensive specialist when that spot in the order would inevitably need to hit again if the team were to come back and win.)

After the hit by Jefferies, UCD brought in “long closer” Max Cordy, perhaps their most effective pitcher this season.  Pinch-hitter Austin Kingsolver hit a chopper towards second-base and appeared to have a good chance to beat it out, but Dale collided with the fielder and was ruled out for interference.

Chapman had come around to score but was required to return to second-base.  Cordy worked out of the jam with no further harm.

The misery continued for the Titans in the eighth inning.  As Garza continued to keep the game close, his offense just couldn’t put up one of the big crooked numbers that we’ve seen so often this season.

Pedroza led off with a single.  With the tying run on base, Lopez squared to bunt and then executed a perfect “slash” play, bouncing the ball over the third-baseman’s head for a single.  Davis failed to bunt on two pitches before hitting a line drive to rightfield.  Pedroza played it halfway, thinking the ball might drop in, and was unable to tag and advance to third after it was caught.

Lorenzen then reached on a fielder’s choice which would have scored Pedroza had he been able to get to third on the previous play.  Hutting was hit by a 0-2 pitch to load the bases, but Cordy again escaped on a foul pop-out by Chapman.

Garza was relieved in the bottom of the eighth by lefty Tyler Peitzmeier after giving up a two-out single.  Peitzy did his job – he got a double-play ball on his second pitch to get out of the inning.

Williamson and Kingsolver
Leading off the ninth, Dale tried to bunt his way on.  Politi charged from third-base and made a great spinning throw to get the first out.

Kingsolver then grounded to shortstop.  King’s speed may have made the shortstop rush his throw, which was low and got past the first-baseman, allowing Kingsolver to reach second.  Clay Williamson was dispatched to pinch-hit for Jared Deacon and he drew a five-pitch walk.

The wheels on the Aggies’ wheel became looser when Cordy uncorked a wild pitch, allowing Kingsolver and Williamson to move into scoring position.

With the infield drawn in, Pedroza delivered a huge two-run single, smashing the ball to the left of the shortstop.  The Titans had turned a 2-1 deficit into a 3-2 lead and the Aggies’ faces looked ashen.

After Lopez erased Pedroza on a fielder’s choice, he stole second base to get into scoring position.  Lopez is now 12-for-13 on the year in stolen bases.  Davis then crushed a ball over the head of the rightfielder – which is an extraordinary accomplishment the way the wind blows at Dobbins Stadium.  Lopez scored on the double by Davis to give the Titans an insurance run, 4-2.

Lorenzen came in to try for his second save of the series.  He received outstanding support from rightfielder Williamson, who made an UNBELIEVABLE catch of a ball that looked like it would be at least a double if not a home run.  Playing in because of field conditions (wind) and with the ball hit way over his head, Williamson sprinted back and made a great over-the-shoulder grab and held onto the ball when he crashed into the fence with its shanty padding.  Lorenzen got the next hitter to hit a routine flyball to centerfielder Kingsolver to end the game.

Peitzmeier earns 2-pitch win
The Titans got eight hits, all by four players: two each by Pedroza, Lopez, Davis and Jefferies.  Garza was hit somewhat (nine hits allowed in 7-1/3 innings), but he hung tough, kept his team in the game and struck out five without walking anybody.  Peitzmeier (3-0) got the win and Lorenzen notched his eleventh save.

Game 3: Titans 5, UC Davis Aggies  2

(Photo Gallery)

The Titans completed the sweep and extended their current road winning streak to eleven games by jumping out to an early 5-0 lead and then holding on as the Aggies fought hard to battle back.

The Titans looked like their momentum from the Saturday comeback win would carry over as they scored right away on a single by Pedroza, sacrifice by Lopez and RBI-single by Davis.

UCD threatened in the bottom of the first inning with a double and walk off starter Grahamm Wiest, but he worked out of it with two groundballs to end the threat.

The Titans got a double from the resurgent Pedroza leading off the third.  Lopez tried to bunt him to third, but ended up beating it out for a single and advancing to second on a throwing error by the UCD pitcher.  Pedroza scored on the play to make it 2-0.

Davis then hit a ball sharply that shortstop Lipson made a nice backhand stop deep in the hole, but his throw was errant and Davis reached on a two-base error, with Lopez going to third.

Lorenzen with a 3-run homer
Despite strong wind blowing straight in from leftfield, Lorenzen launched his sixth home run of the season to that field, giving the Titans a 5-0 lead and the game had a feeling of a blowout in the making.

But give UC Davis credit for not folding up their tent after the devastating loss the previous day and the quick deficit in this game.  They held the Titans scoreless the rest of the game and had a few mild threats of their own.

In the bottom of the fifth, the Aggies touched up Wiest for a single run on a double, hit-batsman and RBI-single.  Meanwhile the Titans were unable to capitalize on multiple UCD errors: they committed five errors in the game, including one in the seventh and two in the eighth inning.

UCD scored again in the bottom of the eighth on a double, single and double-play to make it 5-2.  With two outs and the bases loaded, Wiest appeared to have escaped, but he hit the next two batters to bring the tying run to the plate.  Exit Wiest, enter Peitzmeier, who struck out Spencer Brann to snuff the rally.

With a three-run lead and Peitzmeier pitching lights-out all season, the Titans opted not to use closer Lorenzen a third straight day.  Peitzmeier struck out the first two hitters and should have had a save when the next batter hot a high flyball to left-centerfield, but the wind and momentary uncertainty allowed the ball to fall between Kingsolver and Lorenzen for a double.  J.D. Davis was brought in and he did his job, retiring the final batter of the game and posting his second save of the game.

Wiest earns another win
Wiest improved his record to 6-1: he is a great advantage over most opponents’ Sunday starters.  He allowed six hits in 7-2/3 innings with just one walk, but he also had three hit-batsmen.

The Titans had ten hits, led by Pedroza with three.  Lorenzen and Wallach had two each, with Lorenzen driving in three runs with his towering home run.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

So what did we learn this weekend?

The Titans have swept four consecutive weekend series, beating Oral Roberts, Long Beach State, the University of the Pacific and UC Davis in successive weekend three-game sets.  There were several times during that streak where they could have lapsed and lost, but they always found a way to win.

As much as we all love sweeps, I was even more impressed by the early season weekend series wins against teams from the Big 12 (Texas Christian University), Pac-12 (Oregon) and Southeastern Conference (Texas A&M), although only one (vs. TCU) was a sweep.

Good teams find ways to win when they don’t play their best games – this series demonstrated that truth.  The pitching was stellar throughout, the defense was “okay” and the offense sputtered against a team whose pre-series ERA was 5.27 with an opponent batting average of .303.  Only Lopez (5-for-13 with three runs scored, a double, triple and three stolen bases) and Jefferies (4-for-12) had hits in all three games.  Wallach (3-for-6) had hits in both games he started.  Pedroza went 0-for-5 in the opener but bounced back and went 5-for-13 for the series, including the clutch game-winning hit on Saturday.

The middle-of-the-order hitters (Lorenzen, Davis, Chapman and Hutting) batted a combined 6-for-43 (.140). On Friday, the bunting was horrible.  On Saturday, there were at least three glaring base-running mistakes. The Titans left 30 runners on base in the series – average of ten per game.  Against better competition, those deficiencies might have resulted in losses.  But superior talent and knowing how to overcome adversity has become the trademark of this season so far.

We also learned that Annette Spicuzza, the trigger-happy former UC Davis police chief, has been hired as interim chief of police in the small town of Pacific, Washington.  Spicuzza was suspended following an internal investigation of the pepper-spraying of UC Davis students during a peaceful “Occupy” sit-in demonstration in 2011; she subsequently “retired.”  Pacific mayor Cy Sun, an 84-year-old kook, recently fired the police chief and his lieutenant for harassment and intimidation.  Sun told the local TV station that “he knew Spicuzza’s history and hired her for her experience and expertise.”
Spraying protesters

Davis is a quintessential college town – a great place to hang on a nice spring weekend.  As somebody who attended a college with no emphasis or success in athletics – unless I mention Rensselaer’s two Division I national championships in hockey – I can appreciate a campus whose awareness and interest in intercollegiate athletics was imperceptible.  Walking around campus when I arrived, I asked several students for directions to the baseball stadium. They have no lights at the field, so you can’t use that normal “compass” to find the field when your GPS tries to take you through gates closed to the public or blocked to vehicles.  Not one student could tell me where the baseball field was, but at least a dozen nerds gave explicit directions to a guest lecturer on astronomy and astrophysics later that evening.

The long ride to Davis reinforced my appreciation for the commitment of the parents and other family members from Northern California who make that long drive so often during the season.  I am grumpy and have a sore back for a week following the annual drive to Stockton or Davis, but so many of our most ardent supporters make that journey up to a dozen times a year – my hat is off to you guys!

Eshelman’s phenomenal success has elicited great memories of Wes Roemer’s magical 2006 season when he earned Collegiate Baseball’s Co-National Player of the Year honors.  Similar to Eshelman, Roemer allowed zero walks during his first eight starts that season before his streak ended at 65-2/3 innings when he walked the leadoff man in the sixth inning of his ninth start against Cal State Northridge.

While recognizing that stats need to be interpreted differently in the BBCOR and pre-BBCOR eras (when sophomore Roemer pitched against Stanford, UNLV, UC Irvine, UCLA, Rice, East Carolina, Arizona and Long Beach in 2006), the similarities are interesting: both were amazing.

Here are the stats for each of their first eight starts during their walk-less streaks:

An interesting difference is in hit-batsmen: Eshelman has hit just one batter, while Roemer had 12 in his first eight starts and plunked another for good measure in his ninth start before allowing his first walk.  The HBP was an integral part of Roemer’s pitching make-up: he ended the 2006 season with 23 HBP, seven walks and zero wild pitches in 155 innings pitched.  He was just three shy of the all-time NCAA career record for hit-batsmen.  When a pitcher has a 21:1 ratio of walks to strikeouts and doesn’t throw a single wild pitch, you know he has pinpoint control.


Both remarkably successful, they were very different styles.  If I were to choose one word to describe them, it would be “intimidating” for Roemer and “precision” for Eshelman.  If Wes was Don Drysdale, Thomas has been Greg Maddux.

(Sidebar: thanks to FBF for his archive research.)

I love the stylish backpack look displayed by Titans coaches when banished from games this year by Blue.  The ejection of Vanderhook on Friday by plate umpire Jeff Henrichs was quick and unexpected.  Henrichs was the subject of a great human interest story when he worked at the College World Series last year less than a year after surviving life-threatening blood clots. Very interesting story.
Stylish backpacks

Coaches tend to work the umpires early trying to figure out the limitations of their strike zones.  Example of something you might hear in the first or second inning on a questionable or borderline pitch:  the coach that didn’t get the call might say something from the dugout along the lines of, “Good call.  Is that the bottom of your strike zone?”   Most umpires either ignore it or work with the coach – the earlier both teams understand the umpire’s strike zone, the less complaining there is on ball/strike calls throughout the game.

Henrichs is popular with players and coaches, but he had a short wick that day.  Hooky never left the dugout, but Henrichs shouted at him from around the foul line something along the lines of “Don’t be stupid and get tossed out.”  When Henrichs’ “One more word!” warning drew a reply of “Whatever!”, it became a short day at the office for Hooky.  He was booted without ever stepping on the field to discuss or dispute a call.  Weak sauce, in my opinion.

The Titans swept, the rainy weather forecasted never materialized and nobody got pepper-sprayed: all in all, a very successful weekend.  Let’s keep this thing going Tuesday night at home against USC and this weekend against the UC Santa Barbara Gauchos.  I hope to see you around the yard.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

UC Davis Series Preview

Titans at UC Davis
Friday 2:30 p.m.; Saturday 1 p.m.; Sunday 1 p.m.


By FullertonBaseballFan

Cal State Fullerton has been steamrolling through the first half of the 2013 season, winning their first ten games for the first time in the history of the program and putting together another ten game winning streak after sweeping Long Beach State, the first time they have won ten games in a row twice in a season since 2001.  Fullerton started last week with a midweek game against LMU and saw their winning streak snapped as the Lions put together a three run rally in the seventh inning to pull off the 3-2 upset.  The Titans rebounded from the loss to LMU by taking their frustrations out on Pacific in the first series on the conference schedule and bludgeoned the Tigers by a cumulative score of 45-8 with 9-2, 11-6 and 25-0 blowouts in the final series that the teams will play with Pacific moving on to the West Coast Conference after this season.  Fullerton improved their record to 24-4 at the halfway point of the season with the sweep of the Tigers.


Fullerton looked like they were ready to go for win #11 in a row when they scored first against LMU last Tuesday when Richy Pedroza led off the first with a single and eventually scored on a SF by Michael Lorenzen but that would be it for the scoring through the first six innings as Koby Gauna and Tyler Peitzmeier and Lions starter Patrick McGrath traded zeroes and the Titans had runners thrown out by Team USA catcher Colton Plaia in each of the first three innings.  LMU took the lead against the Fullerton middle relievers in the seventh inning with three runs on three hits, a walk and three wild pitches that brought home two of the runs.  The Titans stranded a runner at second in the bottom of the inning and scored a run in the eighth when Austin Kingsolver singled, stole second and went to third on a throwing error and scored on a Chad Wallach single but that was as close as Fullerton would get after going down in order in the ninth.

The opening game of the series last Thursday against Pacific was a pitchers duel for the first half of the game as the teams were scoreless until the Tigers took the lead with a run in the fourth and Pacific starter Michael Benson kept Fullerton off of the scoreboard until the fifth, when the Titans exploded for seven runs.  Jake Jefferies got the inning started with a single, bunt singles by Austin Diemer and Keegan Dale loaded the bases, Pedroza walked to force in a run to tie the game, a SF by Carlos Lopez gave Fullerton the lead, the runners moved up on a wild pitch, J.D. Davis’ single brought home two runs, Wallach followed with a single and Lorenzen launched one to left center for a three run HR to blow the game open.  Pacific scored a run in the sixth and the Titans scored a run in each of the seventh and eighth innings to wrap up the scoring.  Thomas Eshelman was effective once again as he improved his record to 6-1 after allowing two runs on four hits with eight strikeouts and extended his streak to 50 innings without allowing a walk.

Fullerton jumped on Pacific with four runs in the first inning, a run in the second and two more in the third to put things away early on Friday.  Lopez reached base on an error, Davis, Lorenzen and Hutting all walked to force in a run, a balk scored another run and Jefferies single drove in two runs.  The Titans scored in the second when Pedroza tripled and scored on Lopez’s ground out.  Fullerton stretched the lead to 7-0 in the third when Wallach and Lorenzen singled and Jefferies doubled them home.  The Tigers scored runs in the fourth and fifth innings before the Titans extended the lead in the fifth when Hutting walked, Jefferies tripled him in and Diemer singled in Jefferies.  The only suspense in this game came in the bottom of the sixth when Jefferies came up with a runner on and needing only an HR for the cycle and he came thru with a laser into the RF screen for a two run HR to become what is believed to be the only player to hit for the cycle in Fullerton history as he finished up with seven RBI on the night.  Justin Garza improved his record to 6-0 with the win after allowing three runs on seven hits and one walk with seven strikeouts.

The final game of the series was pretty much over before Pacific even got off of their team bus after Fullerton scored nine runs in the first inning and piled on with eleven more runs in the sixth as the Titans scored in six of eight innings in which they came up to bat and Fullerton scored their most runs in one game since 2004.  The highlight of the opening inning barrage was back to back HR’s by Lorenzen (his was a grand slam) and Hutting.  Pedroza had four hits, four runs and four RBI, Lorenzen had three hits and four RBI, Dale had three hits and four runs, Lopez had three hits and backup catcher A.J. Kennedy had two hits and three RBI.  Grahamm Wiest was the beneficiary of the scoring bonanza and threw seven shutout innings in improving his record to 5-1.

Fullerton hasn’t usually had too many standouts in weekend series with the team’s average often hovering around the .240’s but there were plenty of players who padded their stats against Pacific as the team hit .415 in the series with 51 hits and also continued to show good patience with 18 walks and seven HBP’s.  Lorenzen went 7-12 with two HR’s and seven RBI, Pedroza went 8-15 with seven runs and five RBI, Jefferies went 7-14 with an HR, eight RBI and hit for the cycle in the second game, Davis went 5-12 with five RBI, Diemer went 4-10, Lopez and Wallach both went 4-11 and Dale went 4-13 with five runs.  The starting pitchers didn’t need to stand out last weekend with the way that the Titans were crushing the ball but they did their job with a 2.14 ERA, allowing only sixteen hits and a walk in 21 innings with nineteen strikeouts.

Fullerton started this week with a game on Tuesday at UCLA in a matchup of top ten teams and the Titans continued to hammer the ball and won 9-6 to pick up their first midweek win in Westwood since 2010.  Fullerton played some shoddy defense and made five errors but they were able to overcome that at the plate with twelve hits and eight walks as Lorenzen led the way with four hits and three RBI.  The Titans will continue to play on the road this weekend with their first conference series away from Goodwin Field when they travel up to northern California to take on the UC Davis Aggies, who won their first series of the season but have dropped their last five weekend series.


UC Davis Aggies (10-16, 0-3)

  • 2012 Overall Record – 27-30
  • 2012 Conference Record – 12-12 (5th)
  • 2012 Post-Season – None
  • 2013 RPI/ISR – 217/186.  2012 RPI/ISR – 168/95
  • Current/pre-season ranking – None
  • Predicted conference finish – 9th by the Big West coaches, Baseball America and Easton College Baseball, 10th by Perfect Game


2012 Summary and 2013 Preview

UC Davis qualified for a regional in 2008 in their first year of Division I eligibility with a veteran team in their first year as a full member of the Big West and went through a rebuilding phase after that, going 13-42 in 2009, getting off to a 12-9 start in 2010 before the pitching staff imploded due to injuries and they finished 26-29 and going 18-36 in 2011 and tied for sixth in the Big West with a 10-14 conference record.  Head coach Rex Peters left the program after the season and long-time pitching coach Matt Vaughn was promoted to the head coaching position.

It looked like the Aggies would be heading for a similar season in 2012 when they started out 11-17 after being swept at Fullerton after leading late in the first two games.  The Aggies continued to struggle and only went 5-8 over the next three weeks, including series losses at UC Riverside and UCSB, before the light bulb went on and UC Davis was the hottest team in the conference in May and won series at home against the teams that finished 2nd, 3rd and 4th in the Big West – Cal Poly, Long Beach and UC Irvine – and also picked up a series win at Northridge to finish fifth in the conference at 12-12, their best Big West record since 2008.

UC Davis expected to have a solid offense in 2011 with seven starters back but they struggled with the BBCOR bats and never got untracked and had the worst offense in the Big West.  The Aggies got off to another slow start at the plate last season and only had three HR’s, were hitting .261 and averaging under four runs a game going into the Fullerton series but hit 19 HR’s, improved their average by fifteen points, their SLG % by forty points and scored five runs or more in seventeen games the rest of the way.  UC Davis was not a patient team at the plate, averaging less than three walks per game, but they led the conference and were #6 in the country at getting hit by pitches.  The Aggies did a good job of making contact and were the toughest team to strike out in the Big West.   Playing little ball wasn’t a big part of what UC Davis wanted to and they were average at stealing bases and bunting runners over.

UC Davis had a 4.41 ERA in 2011, which was over two runs better than their ERA in 2010, and their ERA was even better in 2012 with an all senior rotation that was very solid with each of the three weekend starters having ERA’s under 3.60 and they threw eleven complete games.  The Aggies had a solid closer and one decent middle reliever but had little pitching depth with no other pitcher having an ERA under 5.00, which is why their starters pitched so deep into games.  UC Davis cut down on their walks by an average of one per game to finish 20th nationally in walks per game.  The Aggies didn’t have too many big arms and were below average at striking hitters out, relying on keeping the ball down and having hitters pound the ball into ground.

Despite playing so well in the last month of 2012, expectations weren’t high for UC Davis coming into this season with most people picking the Aggies to finish in the last two spots in the conference standings after losing all three starting pitchers and five senior position players.  UC Davis started out the season by playing four game series at home against two of the lower level teams in the Pac 12, Washington and Utah, and won three of four against the Huskies when the pitching was solid before losing three of four against the Utes when the pitching was awful.  The Aggies went on the road for the first time and lost their series at Oklahoma State, returned home and lost their series to Bakersfield before playing on the road the last two weekends and losing their series at Seattle, losing the final two games by a run, and getting swept in their Big West opening series at Cal Poly, losing the opener by a run and the final game of the series in thirteen innings.

After getting their offense going in the second half of 2012, the bats have stayed hot for UC Davis despite losing so many starters and the Aggies have been in the top third of the conference in AVG and scoring most of the season and have scored at least five runs in eleven games.  Unlike when the Aggies got on a roll by hitting balls out of the ballpark in the second half of last season, UC Davis has only hit three HR’s in a ballpark where it is tough to hit them out but they are near the conference lead in doubles and have been hitting almost two doubles a game.  The Aggies still aren’t patient at the plate, aren’t afraid to take a HBP and are once again the toughest team in the Big West to strike out and they do a good job of making contact and making pitchers work.  The running game for UC Davis is virtually nonexistent and they rarely bunt runners over.

UC Davis figured they would have trouble getting hitters out after losing all three weekend starters and that has been the case with the team ERA going up by over a run per game and the Aggies have already allowed at least five runs in fourteen games.  All three starters were relievers/midweek starters in 2012 and only one of them has an ERA under 5.50.  UC Davis has been getting solid work out of their two main pitchers out of the bullpen but everybody else has an ERA over 4.00.  The Aggies are allowing teams to hit 35 points higher than they did in 2012 and have been walking more hitters and combined with a defense that has had issues that has resulted in too many runners ending up on base and eventually scoring.

Offense

·       Park Factor according to Boyd’s World – 79 (decreases offense by 21%).  410 to CF, 385 to the power alleys, plenty of foul territory.
·       Batting Average – .289 (4th in the Big West/63rd nationally).  .274 in 2012 (5/157).
·       Scoring – 139 (4/108), 5.6 runs per game.  248 (5/247), 4.4 runs per game in 2012.
·       Home Runs – 3 (9/250).  22 (2/169) in 2012.
·       Slugging Percentage – .367 (5/133).  .364 in 2012 (3/188).
·       On Base Percentage – .373 (4/78).  .356 (6/168) in 2012.
·       Walks – 76 (6/229), 3.0 per game.  159 (8/256), 2.8 per game.
·       HBP’s – 44 (3/18).  100 (1/6) in 2012.
·       Strikeouts – 121 (10/xx), 4.8 per game.  280 in 2012 (9/xx), 4.9 per game.
·       Stolen Bases – 8-14 (9/283).  37-63 in 2012 (6/234).
·       Sac Bunts – 14 (9/204).  56 in 2012 (4/65).

Infield

UC Davis lost three SR starters at C, 1B and 2B but returns a three year starter at 3B and has an experienced player back who split time at 1B/DH and two who shared time at SS in 2012.

C – JR #18 Spencer Brann (LH – .291/.418/.327, 0-6-0.  ’12 – .344/.382/.459, 1-11-0 in 61 AB’s) hit well in limited duty in 2012, was the backup C and has taken over for four year starter and 2nd team All-Big West catcher Scott Kalush.  He only hit .231 in the first two weeks of the season but has been hitting better and hit .345 over the last month while usually hitting 7th or 8th.  Brann doesn’t have much pop but has good plate discipline with a 9/11 BB/K ratio.  He went 3-8 in two starts at Fullerton in 2012.

C/DH – FR #25 Cameron Olson (LH – .343/.465/.343, 0-10-0 in 35 AB’s) has split time between DH and C, usually playing once a week behind the plate.  He does a good job of getting on base but doesn’t have any extra-base hits.

1B/DH – Soph #13 Nick Lynch (RH – .369/.455/.464, 1-16-0.  ’12 – .302/.392/.450, 4-26-0) only had 40 AB’s and 8 RBI going into the series at Fullerton while playing behind three year starter Eric Johnson but took advantage of some injuries to Johnson to get playing time and hit his way into staying in the lineup and led the team in SLG and ended up being named 2nd team All-Big West after finishing in the top ten for RBI in conference games.  Lynch has thrived with regular playing time while usually hitting 5th and is in the top five in the Big West in AVG and OBP and leads the team in SLG.  He also doesn’t mind taking a HBP and got hit 11 times in 2012 and leads the conference with 9 HBP’s.  Lynch has started 17 games at 1B and 7 at DH.  He went 2-12 at Fullerton in 2012.  SR #34 Austin Logan (LH – .304 in 23 AB’s.  ’12 – .308, 0-12-1 in 65 AB’s) has been starting once a week when Lynch moves over to 1B.

2B – #28 JC transfer Steven Patterson (LH – .333/.400/.379, 0-14-0) beat out several returning players in taking over for Ryan Allgrove and has been a force in the middle of the lineup.  He doesn’t have much power for a cleanup hitter but he does a good job of spraying the ball around and has an excellent 7-6 BB/K ratio.  Patterson got off to a hot start in the first couple of weeks before cooling off for a while but he hit well last week at Cal Poly when he went 5-12.

SS – Soph #14 Tino Lipson (LH – .257/.354/.300, 0-5-2.  ’12 – .306/.347/.344, 0-17-3) and Soph #2 Evan Heptig (RH – .263/.396/.342 in 38 AB’s.  ’12 – .163, 0-4-1 in 80 AB’s) have been platooning with Lipson getting the playing time against RHP’s and leading off due to his good speed while Heptig usually hits at the bottom of the order.  Lipson went 4-8 last weekend at Cal Poly in two starts and was 1-7 in 2012 at Fullerton.  JR #3 Adam Young (RH – .190 in 21 AB’s.  ’12 – .205 in 44 AB’s, 0-4-0) is the backup at 2B and SS.

3B – SR #24 Paul Politi (RH – .276/.350/.419, 2-19-2.  ’12 – .345/.395/.441, 3-32-2.  ’11 – .255/.319/.314, 1-10-2.  ’10 – .296/.385/.376, 1-25-2) is a four year starter who had a solid season as a FR but didn’t his as well in 2011 with the BBCOR bats and missed the last six weeks of the season with an injury.  Politi was one of the most consistent hitters on the team in 2012, leading the Aggies in RBI, finishing in the top ten in the conference in AVG and H and earning 2nd team All-Big West honors.  He was hitting well all season until cooling off last weekend at Cal Poly when he went 1-14.  Politi has excellent plate discipline with a 10/7 BB/K ratio and hits third.  He went 2-10 at Fullerton last season and is 5-32 in his career against the Titans.

Outfield

UC Davis lost four year starter LF David Popkins, who was 1st team All-Big West in 2010 and 2011, and three year starter CF Brett Morgan and has one starter back in the OF and the Aggies have been platooning several players in the corners.

LF – SR #8 Seth Batty (RH – .283/.377/.383, 0-3-3.  ’12 – Redshirt.  ’11 – .205/.308/.216, 0-4-2) is one of the faster runners on the team and has been working his way back into the lineup after missing last season with an injury.  He has good plate discipline with a 6/8 BB/K ratio.  Batty was a sparkplug last weekend at Cal Poly when he went 5-10.

LF/DH – SR #26 Mike Mazzara (RH – .293/.325/.373, 0-12-0.  .227 in 22 AB’s) has split time between LF (12 starts) and DH (8 starts) but only made one plate appearance last weekend at Cal Poly.  He goes up to the plate hacking and only has three walks.

CF – Soph #4 Kevin Barker (RH – .263/.356/.342, 0-12-0.  ’12 – .300/.370/.447, 2-19-4) started in RF as a FR and has moved over to CF.  He has some pop in his bat and good speed but neutralizes that with poor plate discipline with a 6/21 BB/K ratio and is fifth in the Big West in strikeouts, which is why he usually hits 6th or 7th instead of higher in the order.  Barker went 1-11 with six strikeouts at Cal Poly last weekend and went 3-8 at Fullerton in 2012.

RF – Soph #43 John Williams (LH – .293/.318/.415, 0-17-1.  ’12 – .182, 0-8-3 in 77 AB’s) has good speed and was starting early as a FR before getting beaten out by Barker after Williams got off to a slow start.  He has taken advantage of the chance to get more playing time this season and is second on the team in RBI while usually hitting second.  Soph #23 Austin March (LH – .105 in 19 AB’s.  ’12 – .229, 0-1-0 in 35 AB’s) and FR #20 Tanner Bily (RH – .250 in 20 AB’s) have each been starting about once a week.


Defense

Fielding % – .955 (9/252) with 44 errors.  .967 (6/128) with 73 errors in 2012.  The defense for UC Davis has regressed after losing some solid players and contributed to the pitchers allowing 29 unearned runs and the infielders have made 27 errors.  Lynch has been good at 1B, Patterson has been average at 2B, Lipson has been poor at SS and Heptig has been solid there, Politi is very good at 3B.  When the Aggies have Batty, Barker and Williams in the lineup together they have good range but runners can take extra bases on their arms.

Stolen Base Attempts – 33-46 (10/xx).  46-69 (8/xx) in 2012.  Kalush got much better against the running game by the time he was a SR in 2012 and runners were 36-53 against him.  Runners were 10-12 against Brann in 2012 and he has been solid at throwing runners out with teams 16-27 on steal attempts against him while they are 15-17 against the backup catchers.

WP’s/PB’s Allowed – 21 (2/xx).  50 (7/xx) in 2012.  68 (8th) in 2011.

Kalush also improved at blocking pitches and went from bad to average.  Brann has done a good job at blocking pitches.


Pitching

·       ERA – 5.27 (9/235).  4.09 (5/109) in 2012.
·       AVG – .303 (9/252).  .267 (5/101) in 2012.
·       HR – 14 (10/xx).  25 (9/xx) in 2012.
·       Walks – 79 (3/80), 3.2 BB/9 IP.  154 (2/20), 2.7 BB/9 IP in 2012.
·       HBP – 26 (5/xx).  48 (4/xx) in 2012.
·       OBP – .373 (9/xx).  .333 (4/xx) in 2012.
·       SLG – .435 (10/xx).  .360 (6/xx) in 2012.
·       WHIP – 1.58 (9/204).  1.31 (4/52) in 2012.
·       Strikeouts – 125 (8/273), 5.1 K/9 IP.  336 (6/227), 5.9 K/9 IP in 2012.

Starters 

UC Davis had a veteran starting staff in 2012 with three seniors getting the ball on weekends but Anthony Kupbens, Dayne Quist and Tom Briner have moved on and the Aggies have been relying on midweek starters and relievers from last season with mixed results.

JR #31 Harry Stanwyck (RHP – 3-3, 5.70 ERA, 7 GS, 36 IP, 42 H, 14 BB, 24 K, .296 AVG, 2 HR, 0 HBP, 1 WP, 4-5 SB.  ’12 – 3-4, 2.21 ERA, 5 saves, 24 apps, 41 IP, 34 H, 18 BB, 32 K, .236 AVG, 1 HR, 0 HBP, 4 WP, 2-5 SB) was the midweek starter in 2011 but was moved to closer last season and was effective most of the time.  He is a tall guy who is the hardest thrower in the weekend rotation and usually tough on RH hitters but has struggled as a starter.  Stanwyck allowed 4 R in 5 1/3 IP against Washington, 6 R (4 ER) in 5 1/3 IP against Utah, 4 R in 7 IP at Oklahoma State, 5 R (3 ER) in 4 IP against Bakersfield, 4 R (3 ER) in 7 IP in his best start at Seattle and gave up 5 R on 8 H and 3 BB in 5 2/3 IP at Cal Poly last weekend.  Stanwyck blew the save in the opening game of the series at Fullerton in 2012, inheriting a runner at 1B in a 4-3 game and giving up a walk and a single before Clay Williamson’s bases loaded single brought home the tying and go ahead runs.

6’5” Soph #11 Spencer Koopmans (RHP – 0-4, 6.96 ERA, 7 apps, 6 GS, 32 IP, 39 H, 10 BB, 22 K, .300 AVG, 2 HR, 6 HBP, 3 WP, 8-11 SB.  ’12 – 0-2, 5.31 ERA, 1 save, 16 apps, 5 GS, 39 IP, 47 H, 14 BB, 24 K, .307 AVG, 5 HR, 5 HBP, 5 WP, 5-7 SB) is another tall thrower who pitched mostly in relief in 2012 with mixed results and he has been inconsistent this year.  He had two very good starts against Washington (6 1/3 IP, 1 R) and Utah (7 IP, 3 R, 2 ER) to start the season but has struggled since then, allowing 8 R in 1 2/3 IP at Oklahoma State, 3 R in 2 IP against Bakersfield, 5 R (4 ER) in 6 2/3 IP at Seattle and 7 R in 6 2/3 IP at Cal Poly.  Koopmans is usually around the plate but his pitches have a tendency to flatten out and get hit.

6’5” JR #36 Evan Wolf (RHP – 1-0, 3.41 ERA, 7 GS, 34 IP, 32 H, 9 BB, 7 K, .271 AVG, 1 HR, 7 HBP, 1 WP, 8-11 SB.  ’12 – 3-4, 5.82 ERA, 9 GS, 39 IP, 34 H, 14 BB, 17 K, .241 AVG, 3 HR, 6 HBP, 4 WP, 5-5 SB) split time in 2012 as a midweek and weekend starter when Quist missed a few starts and has been the most effective starter in the weekend rotation.  After starting on a pitch count and throwing three innings against Washington, he had four straight starts against Utah, Oklahoma State, Bakersfield and Seattle when he allowed either one or two runs before struggling at Cal Poly when he allowed 4 R on 8 H in 3 IP.  Wolf isn’t as hard of a thrower as the other two starters and pitches to contact.

Relievers  

With UC Davis having to bump several pitchers from relief roles to weekend starting roles, the bullpen has been in a state of flux.  The Aggies have been found a solid closer and set-up man but the rest of the relief staff has been inconsistent.  UC Davis only has one LHP in their bullpen.

FR #19 Max Cordy (RHP – 4-3, 2.89 ERA, 3 saves, 12 apps, 19 IP, 9 H, 8 BB, 12 K, .145 AVG, 0 HR, 3 HBP, 4 WP, 2-2 SB) has been a workhorse out of the bullpen and is among the leaders in the Big West in appearances and has been tough to hit.  He is able to go a couple of innings to finish things off and threw five innings in last Sunday’s marathon at Cal Poly before allowing the game winning run in his sixth inning of work.

Soph #15 Craig Lanza (RHP – 0-0, 2.11 ERA, 1 save, 11 apps, 21 IP, 21 H, 4 BB, 14 K, .259 AVG, 1 HR, 1 HBP, 1 WP, 0-0 SB.  ’12 – 1-1, 3.94 ERA, 15 apps, 32 IP, 33 H, 10 BB, 19 K, .280 AVG, 2 HR, 6 HBP, 4 WP, 2-2 SB) has been the primary set-up man and has been very effective.  He is a strike thrower with very good control and able to go a couple of innings to help shorten games to get the ball from the starters to Cordy.

Other relievers

JC transfer #9 Robert Parucha (RHP – 1-1, 4.11 ERA, 7 apps, 15 IP, 24 H, 10 BB, 12 K, .393 AVG, 1 HR, 0 HBP, 0 WP, 3-4 SB)

SR #16 Patrick Hennessey (RHP – 0-1, 0.00 ERA, 7 apps, 6 IP, 6 H, 3 unearned runs, 5 BB, 6 K.  ’12 – 1-1, 5.16 ERA, 13 apps, 23 IP, 28 H, 10 BB, 13 K, .298 AVG, 2 HR, 1 HBP, 0 WP, 4-4 SB)

SR #17 Ben Burke (RHP – 0-2, 5.79 ERA, 3 apps, 2 GS, 9 IP, 10 H, 8 BB, 4 K, .286 AVG.  ’12 – 2-3, 5.23 ERA, 16 apps, 3 GS, 33 IP, 33 H, 22 BB, 21 K, .273 AVG, 1 HR, 4 HBP, 5 WP, 9-10 SB)
 
FR #44 Spencer Henderson (LHP – 1-0, 7.36 ERA, 4 apps, 11 IP, 15 H, 2 BB, 9 K, .349 AVG, 1 HR, 1 HBP, 1 WP, 0-1 SB) is the only LHP on the pitching staff who would be likely to make an appearance this weekend.


Outlook

Fullerton has continued to play well throughout the season with only a couple of hiccups in midweek games.  The Titans were finding ways to win games with plate discipline and timely hitting earlier in the season but the bats have come alive lately and they have continued to put down the hammer when they have had the chance with five sweeps in the first seven weekends, with Pacific faring about as well as a walnut does when facing the hammer that is coming down on it.

Fullerton has owned the series with UC Davis since they moved up to Division I in 2005 and the Titans have won 22 of 24 games, including thirteen in a row, with the Aggies two wins coming at Goodwin Field in 2006 and 2008.  UC Davis gave Fullerton all they could handle last season with the Titans needing late inning comebacks to win the first two games before routing the demoralized Aggies in the final game of the series.

Fullerton has continued to stick with their patient approach at the plate and now that their bats have warmed up the offense has become explosive and the Titans should be able to score plenty of runs this weekend with a UC Davis pitching staff that has struggled to hold teams down.  The Aggies aren’t patient at the plate so they aren’t likely to draw too many walks this weekend but they do a good job of making contact and putting the ball in play and have been solid on offense.  The Fullerton pitchers will be focusing on forcing UC Davis to put string together several singles to score runs.

There figures to be a major mismatch between the two pitching staffs.  The Fullerton starting rotation has been outstanding in almost every start and the bullpen has started to throw well also after having a few issues earlier in the year.  The UC Davis starters have had difficulty getting batters out their second and third times through the lineup and the Aggies are just hoping to get their starters into the sixth inning to get the ball to their set-up man and closer.  As long as the Titans hitters continue to be patient they figure to make this a long weekend for the UC Davis pitching staff.

The formula for somebody to beat Fullerton in a weekend series figures to be a team that has strike throwers who make the Titans swing the bats, plays solid defense and squares up pitches with the Fullerton pitchers throwing so many strikes.  Of course, that’s easier said than done to find too many teams who are able to do that and UC Davis doesn’t look like one of them.  The Aggies swing the bats well but they have had issues on defense and their pitching has struggled all season and Fullerton should win this series and it wouldn’t be much of a surprise if the Titans swept their fourth straight road series this weekend.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Westwood Ho! Titans Keep On Truckin'

Titans at UCLA: Won 9-6 (Tuesday)


By Don Hudson

Cal State Fullerton Titans 9, UCLA Bruins 6

LOS ANGELES
- It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of clutch hitting, it was the age of foolish plays, it was the epoch of great pitching, it was the epoch of throwing woes, it was the season of fist bumps and high-fives, it was the season of F-bombs and glazed stares, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair.

But despite a roller-coaster ride in which the Titans played great for half the game and did their best Pacific impersonation in the latter innings – they won!

The Cal State Fullerton Titans did what no team had done since the 2011 season: they beat the UCLA Bruins in a midweek game.  The Bruins entered the game having won 14 consecutive midweek games (11-0 in 2012 and 3-0 this year) and had won 12 consecutive games against Big West Conference opponents dating back to last season.  The Bruins are ranked #10 by Baseball America, so a road victory for the Titans is good for their resume and RPI.

Baum, Hutting both know Davis was safe
The Titans continued their first-inning mastery – with two quick runs against the Bruins, the Titans hold a 37-6 advantage this season in first-inning action.  Pedroza led off with a four-pitch walk against UCLA starter Cody Poteet (now 1-3) and scored on an opposite-field double by designated hitter J.D. Davis.  Lorenzen followed with a single to rightfield, with Davis getting home just under the tag to make it 2-0.

Titans’ starter Willie Kuhl gave up a second-inning run on a walk, a sacrifice and an RBI single by Trent Chatterton.  The Bruins turned a 2-1 deficit into a 3-2 lead when shortstop Pat Valaika drove a two-out 0-2 pitch over the leftfield wall for a two-run homer that drove Kuhl from the game.  Tyler Peitzmeier came in and broke the Bruins’ momentum with a strikeout.

The Titans quickly reclaimed the lead with two runs on some heads-up play and effective two-strike hitting.  Lorenzen led off with a single and induced a balk call with Anthony Hutting at the plate.  But as soon as Hutting heard Blue yell “Balk!”, he swung at the pitch and slammed a single to rightfield, with Lorenzen easily making it to third.  It was a great “nothing to lose play” that the Titans have successfully executed several times this season: the offense has the choice of taking the balk or the outcome of the play, so there is absolutely nothing to lose by swinging at the pitch.

A wild pitch scored Lorenzen to tie the score, 3-3, with Hutting advancing to second.  Jake Jefferies hit a 2-2 pitch for a flyball that allowed Hutting to advance to third, where he scored on an RBI groundout by catcher Jared Deacon.

Another big night for Lorenzen
After an easy 1-2-3 inning by Peitzmeier, the Titans added another run in the top of the fifth to stretch their lead to 5-3.  Lopez lifted a routine flyball to rightfield, but it was quickly apparent that UCLA’s Eric Filia lost the ball when it went above the lights in that difficult “high sky” period at the intersection of dusk and darkness.  It fell harmlessly around five feet away from Filia, with Lopez hugging second with a double.  Davis drove in Lopez with an RBI single.

Peitzmeier retired the first two hitters in the bottom of the sixth, but then gave up a double.  He induced a slow grounder to second-base that should have ended the inning, but it was booted by Jefferies and the inning was extended, bringing the dangerous right-handed-hitting Valaika to the plate representing the go-ahead run.   The Titans opted for righty Koby Gauna, who induced a grounder to Jefferies, who easily made the play to escape with no harm.

The Titans jumped on relievers James Kaprielian and Ryan Deeter for four runs in the top of the sixth to take a commanding 9-3 lead.  Most of the damage came with two outs.  With Deacon aboard via a walk, Keegan Dale reached with two outs on an error when he bunted and pitcher Kaprielian threw wildly to first.  Pedroza walked after a nine-pitch battle to load the bases for Lopez, who also battled hard with Kaprielian.  Lopez won the battle, ripping the eighth pitch through the vacated shortstop hole for a two-run single to make it 7-3.

The hit by Lopez brought Deeter and his herky-jerky motion from the bullpen.  He walked Davis to load the bases for Lorenzen, who slammed a two-run single to make it 9-3.  Deeter got Lorenzen to chase a couple breaking balls but then tried to throw a fast ball by him, which lately has been like trying to throw a pork chop past a hungry wolf.

I wish the story ended here – but we are about to come to the worst of times.

The leadoff batter in the bottom of the sixth hit a grounder to Dale, who threw high to first.  Lopez jumped high to snare the throw and adroitly got his feet on the bag just ahead of the batter – but it was a portent of bad throws to come.  The next batter hit a virtually identical grounder to Dale, who overcompensated for his previous high throw with a low throw in the dirt for an error.

The next batter gave the Titans exactly what they were hoping for – a one-hopper back to the mound for a likely inning-ending double-play.  Gauna fielded it cleanly, saw Pedroza coming across the bag – and then threw the ball over his head.  Jefferies was backing up the play but was probably screened by Pedroza and the runner and he didn’t see the ball until it hit him in the face.  He went down immediately and had to come out of the game.

It gets even stranger.  With one out and runners at the corners, the next batter hits a groundball to first-baseman Lopez, who attempts to start a 3-6-3 double-play to get out of the inning.  But his throw to Pedroza is wide of the bag – Blue rules the runner safe at second, but the return throw to first retired the batter while the runner from third scored to make it 9-4.  When Gauna struck out the next batter to retire the side, I was actually feeling pretty good:  “Four bad throws and we gave up only one run – it could have been a lot worse and we’ll never play that sloppy again.”

At least that’s what we hoped.

In the bottom of the seventh, UCLA’s speedy leadoff hitter, Brian Carroll, hit a high chopper that just eluded Gauna for an infield single.  It was the 23rd consecutive game that Carroll reached base. Even though they were trailing by four runs late, the Bruins called for a run-and-hit play, with Carroll moving on the pitch.  The batter hit an easy grounder to Dale, who had shifted to second-base when Jefferies left with injury.  Perhaps not realizing the runner was going, Dale eschewed the easy out at first and flipped the ball to Pedroza covering second, who had no play on Carroll.

The next batter hit a slow hopper to third-baseman Matt Chapman.  With all the recent calamity, Chapman took the sure out at first, putting runners at second and third with one out.  Valaika came up and lined the ball hard to centerfielder Lorenzen.  The runner at second apparently misread the flight of the ball and took off on contact and was almost to third-base when Lorenzen caught the ball.  He would have been easily retired with a good throw, but Lorenzen made an overthrow and the runner got back to second as the runner on third tagged up and scored to make it 9-5.  The play was ruled an error on Lorenzen and no RBI for Valaika: a justifiable and good scoring determination, but it could just as easily have been ruled a sacrifice fly for Valaika.

By now the Titans fans are looking on in disbelief and Hooky is apoplectic in the dugout.
It didn’t get much better.  The Titans had Lorenzen on third with one out in the top of the eighth on a single, stolen base and wild pitch, but reliever Zack Weiss struck out the next two to strand him.

Davis replaced Gauna in the bottom of the eighth and quickly retired the first two Bruins he faced before giving up an opposite-field double to Chatterton.  Davis got a pinch-hitter to hit a groundball to shortstop for what should have retired the side, but Pedroza’s throw was in the dirt for an error that allowed Chatterton to score to make it 9-6.  Pedroza cleanly fielded the next groundball and threw flawlessly across the diamond to shut the door.

The Titans could not score in the ninth against lefty reliever Grant Watson – who was a midweek nemesis last year against the Titans – despite a walk to Deacon and single by Pedroza.

Lorenzen came in to nail down his ninth save and struck out the first hitter with his Linda Ronstadt fastball (e.g. Blue Bayou).  After a groundout to Dale, Lorenzen struck out Valaika on three pitches to end it.

Peitzmeier (2-0) got the win with two scoreless innings of relief, with the save to Lorenzen, who also led the offense with four hits, three RBI and two stolen bases.  Ten of the Titans’ twelve hits came from the top four in the batting order: Pedroza, Lopez and Davis with two each and Lorenzen with his four.  Deacon also chipped in with three of the eight walks the Titans had.

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Did we learn anything last night?

We learned that this Titans team is talented enough to win even when playing miserably for portions of a game: it was the second time this year they committed five errors and won.  (It happened earlier against Nebraska.)

It took until the 27th game for a Titan to notch four hits in a game – now it has happened three straight games: Jefferies and Pedroza against Pacific and Lorenzen last night against UCLA.  Lorenzen extended his hitting streak to thirteen games.

Hook enters Savage Nation
The pitching was outstanding for the Titans, with relievers Peitzmeier, Gauna, Davis and Lorenzen combining for 6-1/3 innings, allowing just three hits and zero earned runs.  Kuhl was so-so in his first career start – recognition of his recent outstanding work against Oral Roberts, Nebraska and Long Beach State.  He made a lot of good pitches but made one big mistake, leaving a 0-2 pitch up against the dangerous Valaika, rather than bouncing it in like Dick Weber.

A key difference in how the Titans were able to overcome five errors and still win:  Fullerton pitchers issued just one walk, while UCLA gave away eight free passes.

When Valaika hit his home run, it gave Titan fans a sinking feeling of déjà vu all over again when we lost a lead at JRS on a blast by a middle infielder.  But as they have done throughout this magical season, the Titans quickly and powerfully counter-punched.  They may get behind, but they don’t get down.

Do you know how home stadiums often play dumb song snippets whenever an opposing pitcher gives up a walk or is taken out of the game?  UCLA starter Poteet had to know it wasn’t his night when he walked Pedroza on four pitches and the press box mistakenly played one of those cuts. (I think it was Aerosmith’s “Walk this Way”, but somebody yanked it abruptly.  Too funny – the home pitcher being mocked by his own press box.)

When Jefferies was being escorted from the field by trainer Chris Mumaw, all sorts of thoughts were going through my head about how he would be replaced with the Titans already shorthanded in the infield because of injuries to Matt Orloff and Matt Chapman.  Do you bring in Davis to play third, lose the DH and move Dale to second?  Nah – with Kuhl, Peitzmeier and Gauna already having pitched, you know they will need Davis as a bridge somewhere between the sixth inning (when the injury occurred) and the ninth (with closer Lorenzen available).  How about Greg Velazquez, who has been taking infield the past few games at third-base?

It was a pleasant surprise to see Matt Chapman bolt from the dugout and take over at third-base.  In his haste to enter the game, Chappy didn’t warm up on the sidelines and the plate umpire denied Hooky’s request to allow him to play catch a little bit once he took the field.  He didn’t get a hit, but the first pitch thrown to Chappy landed somewhere in Brentwood – a very long foul ball.

It seems like every arm that came out of the Bruins’ bullpen was more impressive than the next.  They continue to recruit great depth of big arms that throw in the 92 mph range.  The post-game ERA of each reliever the Titans faced last night:  James Kaprielian (2.57), Max Schuh (0.00), Ryan Deeter (1.64), Zack Weiss (2.93) and old nemesis, lefty Grant Watson (2.30).  Nine runs against this team is far more impressive than 25 against the University of the Pacific.

We saw the new video scoreboard installed last winter at Jackie Robinson Stadium for the first time – very impressive!  The 15HD pixel screen measures 17’ by 49’ – I want one for my den.  They are still in their infancy in terms of utilization of the technology, but I expect them to rapidly ascend through a learning curve, just as they did at Goodwin Field, where the scoreboard images and information keeps getting better and better.

The time of game was 3 hours and 46 minutes – the fastest game I ever recall seeing between these two heavyweights.  There is a large, bright digital time display in the UCLA dugout at the renovated stadium, so it erases doubt that “The Sheriff” is unaware of how his team is manipulating the game’s pace.  It bothers many; I just think it’s good baseball when you can annoy your opponents and get under their skin.

If you tried the Teenie-Weenies last night ($1 Tuesday night special), you learned that 3,275 calories (3,272 from fat) and 2,158 mg of sodium never tasted so good.  For a buck, I expected there might be 3-4 little hot dog links in a Styrofoam cup with a dab of barbeque sauce on top, but much to my delight, there were probably twenty of those little suckers bathing in a pool of heavenly nectar.

But JRS has a concession policy that I hope doesn’t spread elsewhere: they have signs advising “In order to maintain our low prices, we do not provide lids or straws for beverages.”  Getting a tray of hot or cold beverages back to your seats is an adventure.  But they also don’t provide a fork or even a toothpick to extract the Teenie-Weenies from the pool of heavenly nectar.  I didn’t mind at all getting my fingers and clothing doused in heavenly nectar, but I just didn’t see it as a ‘Westwood thing’ to be scooping greasy little hot dogs out of a vat of greasy sauce with your exposed pinkies.

Overall, it was a nice win.  I imagine the boys will be working extra hard at practice in preparation for the trip to Davis.  It would be a perfect weekend if we could come home with a sweep and nobody Tasered by UC Davis campus police.  Hope to see you there.