Baseball – Fansmanship https://www.fansmanship.com For the fans by the fans Fri, 12 Mar 2021 03:58:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.7.29 For the fans by the fans Baseball – Fansmanship fansmanship.com For the fans by the fans Baseball – Fansmanship http://www.fansmanship.com/wp-content/uploads/powerpress/Favicon1400x1400-1.jpg https://www.fansmanship.com/category/baseball/ San Luis Obispo, CA Weekly-ish Podcast Episode 209 – Going on Break Edition with Matt Brown https://www.fansmanship.com/podcast-episode-209-going-on-break-edition-with-matt-brown/ https://www.fansmanship.com/podcast-episode-209-going-on-break-edition-with-matt-brown/#respond Fri, 20 Mar 2020 20:37:39 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=19601 As a photographer, Matt Brown has covered just about every major sporting event in this country, including the Big West Tournament for most of the past 2-3 decades. Matt was covering the women’s side of the bracket early last week and preparing for four games at the Honda Center last Thursday morning when the news […]]]>

As a photographer, Matt Brown has covered just about every major sporting event in this country, including the Big West Tournament for most of the past 2-3 decades. Matt was covering the women’s side of the bracket early last week and preparing for four games at the Honda Center last Thursday morning when the news came that the sports world was at a standstill. Matt talked to Owen Main and Chris Sylvester about the feeling inside the Walter Pyramid earlier in the week and what the scene was as the decision came down at the Honda Center on Thursday.

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https://www.fansmanship.com/podcast-episode-209-going-on-break-edition-with-matt-brown/feed/ 0 As a photographer, Matt Brown has covered just about every major sporting event in this country, including the Big West Tournament for most of the past 2-3 decades. Matt was covering the women’s side of the bracket early last week and preparing for fou... As a photographer, Matt Brown has covered just about every major sporting event in this country, including the Big West Tournament for most of the past 2-3 decades. Matt was covering the women’s side of the bracket early last week and preparing for four games at the Honda Center last Thursday morning when the news […] Baseball – Fansmanship 1:24:21
Podcast Episode 206 – Going on Break Edition https://www.fansmanship.com/podcast-episode-206-going-on-break-edition/ https://www.fansmanship.com/podcast-episode-206-going-on-break-edition/#respond Sat, 14 Mar 2020 03:37:57 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=19595 Owen Main and Chris Sylvester kick off the “Going on Break” edition of the Fansmanship podcast.  The mandated postponement and cancelation of so many sporting events is the best thing for everyone, but the ramifications for people whose daily life revolves around sports will be long-lasting. The “Going on Break” editions of the podcast, will explore how […]]]>

Owen Main and Chris Sylvester kick off the “Going on Break” edition of the Fansmanship podcast. 

The mandated postponement and cancelation of so many sporting events is the best thing for everyone, but the ramifications for people whose daily life revolves around sports will be long-lasting. The “Going on Break” editions of the podcast, will explore how life is changing throughout this unprecedented time from a multitude of people.

Today’s guest was Ghizal Hasan. Ghizal is the play-by-play voice of CSUN men’s basketball and UC Riverside baseball. Topics are wide-ranging as we get our footing with this new format. 

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https://www.fansmanship.com/podcast-episode-206-going-on-break-edition/feed/ 0 Owen Main and Chris Sylvester kick off the “Going on Break” edition of the Fansmanship podcast.  The mandated postponement and cancelation of so many sporting events is the best thing for everyone, but the ramifications for people whose daily life revo... Owen Main and Chris Sylvester kick off the “Going on Break” edition of the Fansmanship podcast.  The mandated postponement and cancelation of so many sporting events is the best thing for everyone, but the ramifications for people whose daily life revolves around sports will be long-lasting. The “Going on Break” editions of the podcast, will explore how […] Baseball – Fansmanship 1:15:14
Cal Poly baseball sweeps Blue/Green series https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-sweeps-bluegreen-series/ https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-sweeps-bluegreen-series/#respond Tue, 22 May 2018 21:46:25 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=19387 Behind good pitching, solid fielding, and some clutch hitting by a junior draft prospect, Cal Poly baseball swept UCSB in its final home series of the season last weekend.  Meyer gets hot For his part, catcher Nick Meyer was red-hot all week. Meyer went 5-6 in Cal Poly’s Tuesday mid-week game and followed it up […]]]>

Behind good pitching, solid fielding, and some clutch hitting by a junior draft prospect, Cal Poly baseball swept UCSB in its final home series of the season last weekend. 

Meyer gets hot

For his part, catcher Nick Meyer was red-hot all week. Meyer went 5-6 in Cal Poly’s Tuesday mid-week game and followed it up with a great series against UCSB. On the week, he went 9-17 with three doubles, five runs, and three RBI’s, including a game-winning RBI double on Saturday afternoon on a pitch around his eyeballs. 

Meyer was named the Big West Field Player of the Week on Monday. 

Meyer, who was named to Team USA during the summer of 2017, was already rated as an above-average defensive catcher. He’s been red-hot at the plate over the past month or two as well, probably solidifying a relatively high-round pick in the upcoming Major League Baseball Draft. 

Senior Day

Trent Shelton has been flat-out terrific all season for Cal Poly. Photo by Owen Main

Sunday was senior day and six players were honored. Austin Dondanville, Kyle Smith, Elijah Skipps, Josh George, Colby Barrick, and Trent Shelton all saw their final games at Baggett over the weekend. 

Shelton pitched a great game on Friday night, a healthy Skipps was a key cog in Cal Poly’s offensive output all weekend, and Dondanville and Smith both saw action on the mound as well. George was the senior day darling, going 3-4 with 2 RBIs in Sunday’s victory. 

So long to some juniors?

As happens every year, Cal Poly will have some juniors drafted this year. The question will be which ones leave. 

The two likely candidates are, in likely draft order, are Alex McKenna and Nick Meyer, though Kyle Marinconz is also a candidate to be drafted and turn pro. If you’d asked me before the season, Michael Clark would have also been high on this list. Last season’s closer, Clark’s role changed this season and his workload was less. After pitching 48 innings in 30 games with a 2.58 ERA last season, Clark’s workload has increased to over 65 innings (nine games started) with a 5.79 ERA. Clark’s k/bb percentage also went from 2.12 in 2017 to 1.84 this year. 

That said, Clark pitched a gem on Sunday afternoon, lasting 7 1/3 innings while giving up just a pair of earned runs en route to the win. It was Clark’s longest and probably most productive outing of the season. 

We’ll wait to see where and how these guys get drafted and what decisions they make as far as coming back to school. If it was their last weekend series at Baggett, it was pretty special. 

A great finish

The level of play this weekend could be seen as bittersweet. This team has talent that has been playing much closer to their true talent level over the course of Big West play. 

As they’ve been prone to do over the past few years, Cal Poly is playing its best baseball at the end of the season. As has also happened in recent years, that great baseball doesn’t have any postseason implications. For the third time in four years since the program hosted a regional in 2014, Cal Poly put up a losing non-conference record this season, including losses to Gonzaga, Grand Canyon, New Mexico, a series split to Pacific, a mid-week split with San Jose State, losing two of three at home to San Diego State, losing three of four at Nebraska, and being swept at home by UCLA.  

With the exception of UCLA, Nebraska, and Maybe San Diego State, a regional team doesn’t have that many losses against middling or low level Division I teams on the west coast. The Big West wasn’t really great this season either. Preseason favorites like Long Beach State and UCSB flamed out, but losses in series at CSUN and a sweep in Fullerton took Cal Poly out of the race. The conference will only have a single program — Cal State Fullerton — in this year’s NCAA Tournament. 

Under construction

While the bleachers were ready for the home season in 2018, the second phase of construction – demolition of the current clubhouse — looks like it’s starting soon. On Friday, fans noticed some portable buildings far down the first base line at Baggett. The project had originally been scheduled for groundbreaking right after last season, but I believe that the new clubhouse will still be under construction during the 2019 season and be ready for 2020. 

Photos below from Friday night’s game by Owen Main. Find more photos at photos.fansmanship.com, or you can show love by contributing to the cause via Venmo @Owen-Main or paypal owen@fansmanship.com. 

 

 

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Anteaters squash Mustang postseason hopes https://www.fansmanship.com/anteaters-squash-mustang-postseason-hopes/ https://www.fansmanship.com/anteaters-squash-mustang-postseason-hopes/#respond Mon, 14 May 2018 17:14:32 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=19377 Coming into this past weekend’s Big West Conference baseball series, there was still an outside shot for both Cal Poly and UC Irvine. After the Anteaters won the series two games to one, both teams fell in the standings and, barring a complete collapse, the split series secured Cal State Fullerton’s spot as the frontrunner in this […]]]>

Coming into this past weekend’s Big West Conference baseball series, there was still an outside shot for both Cal Poly and UC Irvine. After the Anteaters won the series two games to one, both teams fell in the standings and, barring a complete collapse, the split series secured Cal State Fullerton’s spot as the frontrunner in this season’s Big West title chase.

The Mustangs dropped the opener on Friday night, scoring just a single run and failing to back-up a solid pitching performance from lefty Trent Shelton. On Saturday evening, Cal Poly got on the board early with the help of a fly ball that was lost in the lights in the first inning and went on to win 4-3. On Sunday, the Mustangs lost the rubber game, scoring just a single run again in a 4-1 loss. 

The series loss to UC Irvine evened Cal Poly’s Big West record at 9-9 with six conference games (two weeks) to play. It also dropped them from a second place tie to a fourth place tie in conference play. UC Irvine moved to 10-8, four games behind Cal State Fullerton in the loss column (3 games overall).

Giving up 10 runs in three games is often enough in college baseball, but UC Irvine pitchers shut the Mustangs down to the tune of just six runs of their own in the three games.

Anteaters pound the zone

UC Irvine pitchers did a nice job throwing strikes when they had to. Anteater pitchers walked just six Mustangs all weekend and there were many fairly short at-bats in the innings I saw in-person. Kyle Marinconz didn’t seem to mind, going 7-11 in the series. 

No fun league

One thing Cal Poly players credited their mid-season turnaround to was having more fun. Players (mostly relief pitchers) have been dancing in the dugout and bullpen for nearly two months during rallies. Their coordination has been top-notch and added a really fun element to the game. 

On Friday night, Big West home plate umpire Scott Letendre put an end to all that. Letendre’s attention was on everything from shutting down the dancing multiple times to talking to Mustang starter Trent Shelton about where he needed to put the rosin bag on the mound. Did it make a difference as to who won the game? Almost definitely not. But nobody — opposing players or any of the umpires — has had a problem with it for weeks and it comes off looking like baseball is not a place to have fun. Not a great look for that ump. 

Seven more games

Cal Poly (23-27 overall) has seven games remaining this season, including four at home this week. On Tuesday, they’ll play their final mid-week game at home against Pepperdine. This weekend, they’ll finish their home schedule against rival UCSB, including the senior day game on Sunday afternoon. Seniors on this year’s roster include Josh George, Colby Barrick, Trent Shelton, Elijah Skipps, and Kyle Smith. Other Mustangs who you might have your last chance to see in a Cal Poly uniform include juniors Alex McKenna, Nick Meyer, Kyle Marinconz, and Michael Clark. Juniors are eligible for the Major League Baseball draft, which will take place June 4-6.

The Mustangs will finish their season next weekend (May 24-26) at UC Riverside. 

 

Photos by Owen Main

For more photos click here. If you just want to contribute to the cause, Venmo @Owen-Main or paypal owen@fansmanship.com. 

 

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Cal Poly baseball hosting a TV game on Friday https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-hosting-a-tv-game-on-friday/ https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-hosting-a-tv-game-on-friday/#respond Thu, 19 Apr 2018 18:30:57 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=19366 Cal Poly baseball (16-19, 3-6) will host defending Big West champs Long Beach State this weekend at Baggett Stadium. After a renovation to the seating/bleacher area, the game will be the first television game in the new stadium. The 7pm game will be televised nationally on ESPNU.  While the new bleachers are beautiful and bigger […]]]>

Cal Poly baseball (16-19, 3-6) will host defending Big West champs Long Beach State this weekend at Baggett Stadium. After a renovation to the seating/bleacher area, the game will be the first television game in the new stadium. The 7pm game will be televised nationally on ESPNU. 

While the new bleachers are beautiful and bigger and steeper than many imagined, Baggett Stadium hasn’t been full yet with the new seating. The team, which hasn’t made a regional appearance since they hosted in 2014, hasn’t played consistently well and some weather has probably been a factor too. 

Trent Shelton (2-2) will start in front of the TV cameras on Friday for the Mustangs. Despite missing time due to appendicitis, Shelton has been Cal Poly’s most consistent starter. The lefty has a 3.98 ERA and 45 strikeouts in 40.2 innings. 

At 3-6 in Big West play, Cal Poly is tied for last place with UC Davis. The good news is that they are still only three games out of first place. The Dirtbags are 16-21 overall and 3-3 early in conference play. 

For their part, Cal Poly has put together a smart marketing campaign to ramp up to the game. 

I wouldn’t expect a sellout or anything close. Capacity is over 3,000 at Baggett and Friday night’s forecast says that it will likely be under 50 degrees at first pitch. But the marketing department at Cal Poly Athletics is certainly doing everything they can to hustle more people for the TV game.

While bleachers were renovated prior to the season, the clubhouse facility is scheduled to be demolished and rebuilt as well. Construction is likely to last through next season. 

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Cal Poly baseball kicks-off a road series in Fullerton https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-kicks-off-a-road-series-in-fullerton/ https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-kicks-off-a-road-series-in-fullerton/#respond Fri, 06 Apr 2018 17:15:10 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=19328 Big West baseball is one week in, and it’s still wide-open. After losing a road series in Northridge last weekend, Cal Poly can do a lot to improve their conference outlook with a conference win at Cal State Fullerton this weekend. It won’t be easy.  The Titans are the highest profile team in the conference. Over […]]]>

Shortstop Kyle Marinconz leads Cal Poly with four home runs this season. By Owen Main

Big West baseball is one week in, and it’s still wide-open. After losing a road series in Northridge last weekend, Cal Poly can do a lot to improve their conference outlook with a conference win at Cal State Fullerton this weekend. It won’t be easy. 

The Titans are the highest profile team in the conference. Over the past 10 years, Rick Vanderhook’s team has six Big West titles, two second-place finishes, a third, and a fourth. In other words, despite a series loss for the Titans last week, the Big West baseball title goes through Fullerton. 

For Cal Poly, consistency will be key. Pitching has been OK at times — Cal Poly has given up the third most runs and earned runs in the Big West. Hitting has exploded in some games — the Mustangs are second in the Big West in runs. Defense has been a rough spot for Larry Lee’s team. Cal Poly has given up 29 unearned runs, second only in the conference to Long Beach State’s 30. Long Beach State has played 29 games while Cal Poly has played 27.

Fullerton has also given-up nearly one unearned run per game on average. It’s one of the reasons that those three perennial Big West contenders find themselves looking up in the standings to Hawai’i, UC Riverside, and CSUN early in the season. 

Only one week into the conference, Cal Poly has everything in front of them. The Big West has no clear frontrunner. A series win against the Titans would feel pretty good going into a stretch of the schedule where four of six conference series are at home. Make no mistake though, losing back-to-back series to CSUN and Fullerton to start the season would not bode well for whatever Big West or Postseason dreams Cal Poly has.  

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Cal Poly baseball starts Big West play at CSUN this weekend https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-starts-big-west-play-at-csun-this-weekend/ https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-starts-big-west-play-at-csun-this-weekend/#respond Wed, 28 Mar 2018 16:46:58 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=19313 After starting the season 11-12, the Cal Poly baseball team’s regional goals aren’t totally lost. But they’ll have to probably do even better than their 16-8 Big West conference season a year ago to make the postseason.  Larry Lee’s team will start Big West play Thursday afternoon in Northridge (3:00pm). CSUN doesn’t have lights, so […]]]>

After starting the season 11-12, the Cal Poly baseball team’s regional goals aren’t totally lost. But they’ll have to probably do even better than their 16-8 Big West conference season a year ago to make the postseason. 

Larry Lee’s team will start Big West play Thursday afternoon in Northridge (3:00pm). CSUN doesn’t have lights, so all baseball games there are day games.

Jarred Zill has come back this season to be the team’s ace. He’ll take the hill Thursday night in Northridge. Photo by Owen Main

The Mustangs have scuffled this season, playing well in some individual games, but lacking the consistency to grind-out wins on a daily basis as of yet. They beat Arkansas and Michigan in individual games, but split a four-game series with Paicfic (RPI of 187 of 297 Division I teams), and lost games to Grand Canyon (237) and San Jose State (209). At Nebraska, a top-100 team right now, the Mustangs won the first game of a four game series before losing the final two games during a Sunday doubleheader by a combined score of 35-5. 

Their only series win of the year so far came last weekend at home against Dartmouth (whose current RPI is 279). 

RPI is a measure that traditionally doesn’t favor west coast teams, but the Big West conference, a league that usually sends multiple teams to the NCAA Tournament, hasn’t helped itself this season. Only three teams (Hawaii (88), Cal State Fullerton (91) UC Irvine (95)) sit in the top-100 in the RPI and conference favorite Long Beach State is at 108. None are sniffing the top-25 at the moment. The other five teams sit between 150 and 218, with the Mustangs at 192, second from the bottom in front of cellar dwellers UCSB. Hawai’i and UCI are the only two schools in the conference with a winning record at the moment. The conference could get multiple teams into the tournament this year, but there is a real possibility that only one team could find their way into the postseason. 

The RPI can be useful, but it’s not everything. No Big West team has played a conference game yet, and Cal Poly can be optimistic. Last season, they won all but one of their conference series en route to a 2nd place finish in the Big West and a 16-8 conference record. The Mustangs will likely have to do better than that this year, win most of their mid-week games, and win an important home series against UCLA at the end of April. The best way for the team to keep a regional in its sights would be to win the conference outright. 

 Who to watch for

Alex McKenna and Nick Meyer are the names people heard a lot about in preseason. They are, predictably, the team’s two leading hitters. Tate Samuelson, a freshman from San Diego, has found comfort in the middle of the lineup. Samuelson, who played for the SLO Blues this summer, is second on the team with six doubles and a pair of home runs. Dylan Doherty has shown some offensive consistency and bat to ball skills. Bradlee Beasley and Kyle Marinconz are reliable batsmen who can be very dangerous. Cal Poly’s offense has averaged 5.3 runs per game. 

For up-to-date Cal Poly stats, click here. 

On the mound

Cal Poly’s rotation has been a little fluid. Jarred Zill returned to the mound and will be the presumed ace going into Big West play. Trent Shelton has looked good, but had appendicitis and his early-conference availability is in question. Michael Clark started as the Friday starter, but hasn’t started for a few weeks and looks like he may be in the new in-vogue multi-inning relief role. Thomas Triantos looked really sharp against Dartmouth and freshman Darren Nelson, who has been a two-way player, has looked good as a Sunday starter. Cal Poly’s relief squad is young — maybe a good reason to keep Clark in the bullpen — and their collective ability to get out of tough high-leverage situations could be a big key to the Mustangs making some noise in conference play.

For Cal Poly baseball photos, click here

Make them EARN it

There are lots of reasons a team can win or lose a baseball game, but the week-to-week stat that I’ve been looking at is errors and unearned runs. The Mustangs have played 23 games so far and have made 37 errors (11 more than their opponents) and have given up 27 unearned runs. If they keep giving up more than a single unearned run per game, they will stay a talented team with middling results. If Cal Poly can manage their defensive play and continue to improve on defense, they can once again compete for a Big West title. 

 

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Cal Poly Baseball in Review — Josh George and Austin Dondanville https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-in-review-josh-george-and-austin-dondanville/ https://www.fansmanship.com/cal-poly-baseball-in-review-josh-george-and-austin-dondanville/#respond Mon, 03 Jul 2017 04:06:09 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=18888 Josh George (Junior, OF) Season synopsis In his first two years in San Luis Obispo, George dealt with various injuries. In 2017, George played in all 56 games for the Mustangs, starting 49 of them. George was a contributor to the lineup, hitting .249 with nine doubles, a triple, and 24 RBI’s. He was 7-11 on […]]]>

Josh George (Junior, OF)

Josh George was an everyday contributor in 2017. By Owen Main

Season synopsis

In his first two years in San Luis Obispo, George dealt with various injuries. In 2017, George played in all 56 games for the Mustangs, starting 49 of them. George was a contributor to the lineup, hitting .249 with nine doubles, a triple, and 24 RBI’s. He was 7-11 on stolen bases and didn’t make an error in the outfield all season.

George probably didn’t have quite the junior season he thought he’d have, but he contributed to the Mustangs’ 16-8 Big West season. 

Senior Contribution

So one thing I think about in an offseason are big-picture team constructions that can lead to big-time success. Having a big-time upper-class point guard is something that you can traditionally look at in college basketball. Senior quarterbacks who coaches trust in college football are a pretty good bet for good seasons. 

In baseball, having a few seniors who are big contributors and who other younger players can take advice and mentorship from is something that probably matters. Cal Poly’s regional host roster a few years ago included Jordan Ellis, Chris Hoo, and Jimmy Allen. Maybe Josh George can up his game in the offseason before his final season and help shepherd some new guys into the fold at the same time.  

Austin Dondanville (Sophomore, Pitcher)

Season synopsis

Coming into the 2017 season, Dondanville was a pitcher who was one of many with a chance to contribute out of the bullpen. The sophomore from De La Salle High School finished the season with 15 appearances — all out of the bullpen. That number was fourth most on the team out of the ‘pen. 

Dondanville was pretty reliable, going 1-0 on the season with a 3.67 ERA  and a 1.07 WHIP. He struck out 32 and walked just 7 hitters in 29 innings. 

The more the better?

 

 While Cal Poly had to use a lot of guys throughout the season, Dondanville might be the only pitcher they could have used a little more. Trent Shelton, Michael Clark, and Slater Lee were all very good out of the pen. Dondanville was too, though he was used only about 2/3 as much. 

Stretching out

Dondanville has been starting so far this summer for the San Luis Obispo Blues in the CCL. Perhaps it means the Mustangs will try to use him as a starting pitcher next season. With their top two starters from 2017 gone, having some options for the starting rotation will be important come the fall and spring. His development could provide another shut-down reliever or, more likely, a starting pitcher with a combination of experience and stuff to match the potential role of a weekend starter on a top-3 Big West Conference team in 2018. 

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SLO Blues Kick-Off 2017 with a 6-1 Start https://www.fansmanship.com/slo-blues-kick-off-2017-with-a-6-1-start/ https://www.fansmanship.com/slo-blues-kick-off-2017-with-a-6-1-start/#respond Mon, 05 Jun 2017 02:59:41 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=18854 How do I know summer is really here? It’s usually when the SLO Blues kick-off their home schedule.  This season is already two weeks old for the Blues, who have started the season 6-1 after their Sunday afternoon win over the SoCal Halos.  The Blues schedule includes 36 home games throughout the summer. Two of those […]]]>

How do I know summer is really here? It’s usually when the SLO Blues kick-off their home schedule. 

This season is already two weeks old for the Blues, who have started the season 6-1 after their Sunday afternoon win over the SoCal Halos. 

Cooper Benson looked good on Saturday night. By Owen Main

The Blues schedule includes 36 home games throughout the summer. Two of those are fireworks games. This week, the team takes to the road for the first time this year against the Conejo Oaks. Over the weekend, they’ll return home to play three against the San Francisco Seals Friday through Sunday. 

The first fireworks game is July 3rd and the final one is July 21st. Tickets are just $8 and children 12 and under are free. 

Local as they come

With players still coming in from all over the country, the Blues often have to use some talented local players and this year is no different. Junior (high school junior) left-handed pitcher Cooper Benson, an Arizona State commit, started for the Blues on Saturday night and looked solid against an all-star team from the local men’s league. 

Other local players have joined or will join the club as soon as school is over. Some local players include Dan Beavers (RHP, Morro Bay High School, Chico State), Renn Duncan (C, Mission Prep, Westmont), Andy Garretson (1B, Templeton High School, Cal State San Marcos), Nathaniel Javine (C, Atascadero High School, Oregon Tech), Jeremy Jess (RHP, San Luis Obispo High School, Pomona-Pitzer), Mac Lardner (LHP, Templeton High School, Gonzaga), Jake Niezen (RHP, San Luis Obispo High School, Western Carolina), and Robbie Silva (1B, Arroyo Grande High School, San Francisco State). 

Part-time local players include Benson (SLO High School), Steven Chippman (Cuesta), Noah Cracknell (SLO High School), Connor Maydole (IF/C, SLO High School, Cal State Monterey Bay), Marco Murillo (P/IF, SLO High School, Lewis and Clark), Nick Pagan (Cuesta), Hunter Reade (Cuesta), and Justin Wear (Cuesta).

Cal Poly players include catcher Myles Emmerson, pitchers Craig Colen, Austin Dondanville and Bobby Ay, and incoming freshman infielder Tate Samuelson from Serra high school in San Diego. Current Mustangs will start playing summer ball once their school year ends with finals the week of June 12th.

Photos by Owen Main. For more photos, click here

 

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Mustangs win first weekend series of 2017 https://www.fansmanship.com/mustangs-win-first-weekend-series-of-2017/ https://www.fansmanship.com/mustangs-win-first-weekend-series-of-2017/#respond Mon, 20 Mar 2017 01:33:40 +0000 http://www.fansmanship.com/?p=18729 The start to 2017 has been rocky for the Cal Poly baseball team. Over the weekend, Larry Lee’s team used great pitching from Erich Uelmen and Spencer Howard to win the three-game series from Wichita State two games to one. Cal Poly’s record is now 7-12 overall, with four home games against Nebraska and a […]]]>

The start to 2017 has been rocky for the Cal Poly baseball team. Over the weekend, Larry Lee’s team used great pitching from Erich Uelmen and Spencer Howard to win the three-game series from Wichita State two games to one. Cal Poly’s record is now 7-12 overall, with four home games against Nebraska and a one-day trip to Fresno standing between the Mustangs and the start of their Big West schedule. 

Starting pitchers Uelmen and Howard struck-out 21 total batters between them en route to back-to-back wins against the Shockers on Friday and Saturday. On Sunday, Wichita State scored first and held Cal Poly hitters to 

In the bottom of the sixth inning, Cal Poly’s Nick Meyer doubled with one out, but Wichita State pitcher Zach Lewis struck out two straight Mustangs. Cal Poly never really threatened after that. 

Cameron Schneider, pitching for the injured Bobby Ay, showed-out well for Cal Poly, going six strong innings, giving up just one earned run and striking out five. But the Mustang bats couldn’t respond in-kind. It was the sixth time Cal Poly has been shut-out this season. 

Michael Clark has been really good so far for Larry Lee’s Mustangs. By Owen Main

Michael Clark pitched in all three games in the Wichita State series. The sophomore right hander has been something of a revelation out of the pen for Cal Poly, becoming their most reliable right handed pitcher. As the season goes on, it seems that Clark and Trent Shelton are going to be the guys Larry Lee probably trusts the most to back-up the starting pitchers. 

The two wins against the Shockers put a Cal Poly win streak at four games, the longest of the young season for the Mustangs, before it was snapped Sunday aternoon.

Cal Poly continues to struggle fielding the ball. Though they were error-free on Saturday, they committed three errors in Friday night’s win and after the weekend have now racked-up 32 errors in just 19 games. Defense matters a little less when pitchers get more of their outs via strikeout. 

After losing to Wichita State on Sunday, the Mustangs will look to bounce back against Darrin Erstad’s Nebraska Cornhuskers. The four-game series against Nebraska includes one game each on Thursday and Friday nights and a doubleheader on Saturday, weather permitting. 

The Nebraska series comes in the midst of Finals Week at Cal Poly, with spring break following. Don’t be surprised if Lee’s team uses spring break to sharpen-up and looks a little better to start Big West play. 

 

 

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