Appalachian State Baseball (40-16) vs #23 Oklahoma (38-23) NCAA Tournament, Charlottesville, VA.

All of the victories have been compiled, and paired against the losses, both in and out of conference, and for Appalachian and Oklahoma, it has matriculated into a NCAA Regional match up in Charlottesville, Va, home of the Virginia Cavaliers. Both the Mountaineers and Sooners come to Charlottesville as at-large qualifiers. Appalachian finished tied for first during the regular season in the seventh ranked RPI Southern Conference. Oklahoma finished fourth in the Big XII Conference, which was ranked fourth in the RPI. Oklahoma lost in the Big XII tournament championship game to Missouri. The Sooners received the second seed compared to Appalachian who received a three seed. The difference in seeding basically determines a final at bat for the opening games of the regional.

Oddly enough, for schools located 1,010 miles apart, both schools share a common opponent. Samford finished its conference schedule against Appalachian at home and then went on the road to Oklahoma for its final regular season series. Both teams were able to defeat Samford in two out of three games. Appalachian played its series with Samford in Birmingham, and eventually lost to Samford in the Southern Conference tournament.

Oklahoma is a team that relies heavily on its starting pitching to carry them. Jordan John (8-6, 2.30) is a guy who has pitched four complete games in only ten starts. John has also made fourteen relief appearances. He has pitched more innings than any other Sooner pitcher with 109.2, and has struck out 97 batters. Opponents are only batting .235 against John this season. Dillon Overton (5-3, 3.24) has accumulated fifteen starts and five relief appearances. Overton has logged 108.1 innings, the second most innings pitched on the staff. Overton leads the Sooners with 109 strikeouts, but also has given up a team high 114 hits, 49 runs, 16 doubles, three triples and six home runs. Jonathan Gray is the only true starter on the team,  as all of his appearances (16) have been starts. Gray is 8-4 with a 3.47 ERA. Another strikeout pitcher, Gray averages a punch out an inning, but also gives up a hit an inning as well. Gray has walked more batters than any other Sooner in his 90.2 innings of work.

Besides the starters John and Overton, who have combined for nineteen relief appearances, Oklahoma is a mixed bag in the bullpen. John actually is tied for the team lead with four saves. Steven Okert leads the team in relief appearances (22) and is also tied with John with four saves. Okert is fourth on the team in innings pitched and holds an 8-7 record with a 2.92 ERA. As a team, Oklahoma has thirteen saves among six different pitchers. There is high chance Appalachian could see two starter quality pitchers in the same game. Sometimes in regional play, teams like Oklahoma will try to get by with their 2nd or 3rd starter, while Appalachian’s starting pitcher on Friday will undoubtedly be Ryan Arrowood.

Oklahoma is not a team that scores a ton of runs, but thanks to those pitchers, they don’t need to. Max White is by far, Oklahoma’s best player. The center fielder leads the team in mulitple categories including batting average (.356), hits (80), doubles (17), and RBI (54). Catcher Lockwood Hunter reminds me of Georgia Southern’s Chase Griffin. A guy with power (11 HR), but does not bat for a high average (.250). Similar to Griffin, Hunter has struckout 66 times in 184 at bats. Second Baseman Jack Mayfield is a speed demon with ten stolen bases and fourteen of his 61 hits being doubles. Mayfield is third on the team with 88 total bases and leads the team with 42 runs.

Most are aware what Appalachian has to offer, but for our new readers, I will give you some insight. Appalachian keeps a very tight lineup as far as the hitters are concerned. Leading off, you will see Hector Crespo (.317, 42 BB, 30 SB). Following Crespo is center fielder Tyler Zupcic (.338, 17 2B, 12 SB, 14 HBP) who is swinging a very hot bat right now and leads the team with four triples. Batting third is the shortstop Will Callaway, (.330, 4 HR, 52 RBI, 23 SB) who has been tailing off of late. Callaway was batting above .400 at one point of the season, but has gotten better in the field as the season has progressed. The designated hitter is Daniel Kassouf (.345, 17 HR, 60 RBI) who charged hard at the SoCon triple crown before enduring a late season slump. Kassouf set a single season school record for home runs. Batting fifth is the right fielder, Tyler Tewell (.375, 6 HR, 43 RBI, 17 2B) who is the hardest Mountaineer to strike out. Tewell only has 18 K’s in 208 plate appearances. Catcher Jeremy Dowdy (.271, 3 HR, 37 RBI)  bats sixth and can run well for a catcher with ten stolen bases. Dowdy has also thrown out 12 of 30 runners trying to steal on him. Batting seventh is the first baseman Trey Holmes (.249, 6 HR, 37 RBI), who has some power, but is mostly known a great fielding first baseman. Trey has committed five errors in 545 chances for .991 fielding percentage. Preston Troutman (.280, 24 RBI) has extra base hits on eleven of his forty hits. Troutman rested an injured hamstring in the middle of the season and split some time with Brandon Burris, who is most likely the first pinch hitter off the bench. Batting ninth is third baseman Noah Holmes (.229, 9 2B), who like his brother, is another terrific fielder on the left side of the infield. Holmes leads the team with seven sac bunts. The final three hitters in the Mountaineer lineup are left handed.

Much like the batting order, Appalachian has started the trio of Ryan Arrowood, Seth Grant and Rob Marcello the entire season for weekend series. Jamie Nunn and Jeffrey Springs are a pair of freshman who can really deliver the ball to the plate and have started ten games combined. As previously mentioned, Arrowood is the likely start against Oklahoma. Arrowood is 10-0 on the year with 4.03 ERA. Arrowood is Appalachian’s all time wins leader with 27. In the bullpen is closer Nathan Hyatt (1-0, 15 S, 3.46) who has high 90’s speed on his fastball, but can be a little wild. Tyler Moore and David Port have been the regular set up men who have pitched the most in relief, but both have been erratic of late. Coming on has been Jordan Jessup and Ryne Frankoff. Will Helms is a left hander who comes on in situational appearances.   

 *NOTE*

Appalachian’s game against Oklahoma which was originally scheduled for Friday at 8pm, was moved up a few hours pending inclement weather. The weather was so bad, it delayed both games on Friday. Virginia & Army are still stuck in the first inning and will start at 1pm while Appalachian and Oklahoma will get started at 6pm on Saturday.

 

Appalachian’s Ryan Arrowood took a no-hit bid into the seventh inning and Ryne Frankoff held off Oklahoma in the ninth inning to win their opening game of the NCAA Charlottesville Regional. Oklahoma’s Caleb Bushyhead singled up the middle in the seventh inning to break up the no hitter and Arrowood received a standing ovation from a crowd of 2,084. Arrowood allowed another hit and a run in the 8th inning, but that was all Oklahoma could handle from Arrowood, who became the nation’s winningest pitcher at 11-0. Nathan Hyatt came in for the extended save in the 8th, but ran into trouble in the ninth. Frankoff came on and finished off the Sooners with a walk and a strikeout. Oklahoma scored three runs in the bottom of the ninth before falling to Appalachian 5-4.

The Mountaineers began the scoring in the third inning when Trey Holmes led off the inning with a double. Preston Troutman was able to bunt Holmes to third base. A single by Noah Holmes scored Trey Holmes. Tyler Zupcic singled sharply to give Appalachian runners on first and second base. Will Callaway reached on error, scoring Noah Holmes, but Zupcic was gunned down at the plate trying to score from first base.

The score remained 2-0 for Appalachian until the the eighth inning when Appalachian and Oklahoma traded runs. The Mountaineers would score two more runs in the ninth inning which was just enough insurance to hold off the Sooners 5-4, for the Mountaineers first NCAA win since 1973. The win also gave Appalachian their first 40-win season since 1986. Appalachian advanced in the winners bracket to play regional host Virginia.

NCAA Division I Baseball Selection Show, Noon, ESPNU

Sometime after 12pm on Memorial Day, Appalachian State Baseball will discover whether or not there is more baseball to be played for them in 2012. Appalachian certainly has a resume that looks like an at large candidate, but the last couple weeks have been up and down. An early exit from the conference tournament also created doubt that the Mountaineers would be selected.

My best guess is the Mountaineers make it and will be sent to Columbia, SC.

Official National Seeds:

1. Florida

2. UCLA

3. Florida State

4. Baylor

5. Oregon

6. North Carolina

7. Louisiana State

8. South Carolina

Not happening in Raleigh, NC. Wolfpack gets Vandy, Sacred Heart and UNCW

Its going down in Charlottesville, VA. Virginia/Sacred Heart, Appalachian/Oklahoma

Appalachian vs. Oklahoma, June 1st, 8pm

Appalachian State Baseball (39-16) vs Furman (28-30) SoCon Tourney

Due to a conflict, pregame article could not be completed. A short summary is provided.

A day after Appalachian gave up the most runs and hits of the season, Furman decided to up the ante, and scored 13 runs on 17 hits. Appalachian started the game with a 3-0 lead in the top of the first, but Furman answered with seven runs in the bottom of the first inning. Rob Marcello managed one out, and surrendered six earned runs. Marcello’s 18 pitches was by far a season low. The day after Seth Grant laid an egg on the mound, Marcello took his performance to unfathomable low.

The Moutaineers were defeated 13-4. Will Callaway and Tyler Tewell had two hits and two RBI each. The Moutaineers will wait until Monday to discover their fate for postseason play. A regional with a high seed was considered a lock before the tournament, but Appalachian put up two stinkers in back to back games and exited the conference tournament a lot earlier than expected. The Mountaineers RPI dropped to 40, which is securely on the bubble, but hopefully, winning the regular season of the 7th rated RPI conference will be enough to keep Appalachian in consideration.

99 days!!!

#99 Lanston Tanyi
Position: Defensive Line
Height: 6’2″
Weight: 250
Year: Senior
City/State: Shelby, N.C.
High School: Shelby

Obviosuly, a question mark whether or not Tanyi even suits up, but in the mean time, this is what we have.

 

 

Appalachian State Baseball (39-15, 21-9 SoCon) vs Samford (37-21, 19-11 SoCon) SoCon Tourney

Samford advanced in the winners bracket with a 7-0 shutout of Western Carolina, in a game that started two hours late and ended at approximately 12:30 AM on Thursday morning. Chances are high that the scheduled 8 PM start of tonight’s game will also be pushed back. Samford will most likely start Charles Basford, who did not factor into the decision in a 7-4 Appalachian win two weeks ago in Birmingham. Last year, Basford struck out a career high ten batters and pitched 8.1 innings in a win at Appalachian.

Appalachian won two of three games at Samford this year in a series that was a very back and forth affair. Appalachian won game one with four runs in the ninth inning. The second game featured Samford scoring four runs in the eighth inning to win 4-2. Appalachian won the rubber match 9-7 in a game that featured three lead changes. Last year against Samford, Seth Grant took a loss, despite holding Samford to one earned run and five hits in six innings. Grant has not recorded a decision in five straight starts and his last win came in the home series against Charleston.

Probable Starters

ASU Sr. RHP Seth Grant (6-3, 2.70) vs SU Sr. RHP Charles Basford (8-2, 4.04)

If Appalachian had any answers to Samford’s pitching on Thursday evening, the Samford offense seemed to come up with more answers than the Mountaineers could muster. Samford pounded the Appalachian pitching staff for 16 hits and 12 runs, the second highest run total the Mountaineers had allowed all season, in a 12-7 win. Seth Grant was tagged with an ugly loss, giving up eight earned runs in only 4.2 innings, on only 77 pitches. Both numbers were season lows for Grant. It was easily his worst performance of the season.

The seven runs the Mountaineers produced came from Trey Holmes, who hit his sixth home run of the season on a two run shot in the fourth inning. Mostly, Appalachian took advantage of four Samford errors which led to five of the Mountaineers runs. Hector Crespo, Tyler Zupcic and Daniel Kassouf had two hits each. Tyler Tewell hit his 16th double of the season. Appalachian will now face Furman for the fifth time this season, and second time in this tournament in a losers bracket game.