MLB Draft: Lotsa pitching and Indiana does pretty well

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Pitching was on the minds of MLB teams in the MLB draft tonight as the first three rounds transpired.  Yes, Stephen Strasburg was picked #1 by the Washington Nationals.  As the time got nearer, that was pretty evident.  Even Nats’ 3B Ryan Zimmerman weighed in on the subject after he was drafted:

"You have to do it. From what everyone is saying, if you are an organization like we are that is young and moving forward, you have to take the best guy available.

I think he is head and shoulders above the rest. You are talking about a guy that could be an impact player from the moment you draft him. If you can add that arm to our good young starting staff, we are pretty much set — knock on wood — for a long time."

After Strasburg, three position players were picked.  Dustin Ackley (a NC product and one of the best hitters in the draft), Donovan Tate and Tony Sanchez went 2-3-4.  But after that there was a run of 8 pitchers.  Fourteen of the first 20 players taken were pitchers. 

 

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Eric Arnett Josh Phegley Matt Bashore

 

Looking at the first day of the draft from a Big Ten perspective, Indiana’s baseball program has to feel pretty proud.  Three of their player were chosen in the top 50 picks.  Eric Arnett went 26th overall and now reports to the Brewers.  Poor Josh Phegley.  He was picked by the White Sox (38th overall).  Just kidding, Josh.  To round out the Hoosier trifecta, Matt Bashore was chosen 46th overall by the Twins. 

Tomorrow morning, the Draft continues.  For those on Twitter, there’s a wealth of information you won’t get from boring ol’ websites.  #mlbdraft is a good place to start. 

Some thoughts on the MLB First-Year Player Draft

MLB.com’s draft expert Jonathan Mayo takes a stab at projecting the first round of the First-Year Player Draft.  Here is his latest guess at what might go down next week.  Draft projections are always a crap shoot but it seems we as baseball fans love something to argue over so they serve a purpose. 

In Mayo’s projected draft, it is definitely pitcher oriented.  North Carolina’s Dustin Ackley is the only non-pitcher listed in the top fifteen.  Ackley plays first and outfield. 

Arizona State hurler Mike Leake would have been an interesting top pick if only because there have been three other ASU #1 picks in the history of the MLB draft.  There are no other schools who have more than one top picks in the draft.  Leake is upping his stock with his performance in the NCAA Regionals but…

… it seems the consensus so far that righty Stephen Strasburg from San Diego State is the favorite for Washington Nationals’ pick. 

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Eric Arnett pitching in the Big Ten Tournament

Big Ten fans should note that Indiana University pitcher Eric Arnett places #15 on Mayo’s projection.  As someone who saw Arnett more than a couple times this year and witnessed him mow down the opposition during the Big Ten Tournament, Mayo’s confidence in him is not misplaced.  A little off topic but Arnett, by the way, is twittering now. 

Some breaking news… Kyle Gibson a right-handed pitcher from Missouri who is/was a potential #1 pick, has suffered a setback.  He’ll be sidelined for a couple of weeks with a stress fracture in his right forearm following his last outing.  Gibson pitched shutout ball in his last two starts spanning 14 innings. 

Time will tell if this will affect his position in the draft. 

Breakdown of #1 picks in the First-Year Player Draft

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Monday:  Picked first in the first.

In one week, the 2009 First-Year Player Draft will take place.  This year, the Washington Nationals will have the top the top pick. 

How ‘bout some interesting facts/trivia about the very top picks in the 44 year history of the major league rookie draft?

Breakdown of High School/College?

Since Rick Monday was picked #1 by the A’s in 1965, 24 top picks were drafted out of high school and 20 were drafted out of college.  That’s more coming out of the hallowed halls of learning than I thought, quite honestly. 

Arizona State University had some good mojo going as far as the top pick goes.  They are the only institution (high school or university) that has the honor of more than one #1 pick… and they have three!  Monday, Floyd Bannister, who went to the Astros in 1976 and Bob Horner who got picked by Atlanta two years later all came from ASU.

Who are the only #1 picks that never made the majors?

LHP Brien Taylor picked by the Yanks in 1991 and Steve Chilcott who was chosen by the Mets in 1966 (the second year of the draft) never made it to the bigs.  I’m giving Tim Beckham and Matthew Bush (2006 and 2004 picks respectively) a mulligan here.  Let’s give them a chance. 

Which #1 pick has played the most in the majors?

Whether you’re judging on games or at-bats, 1977 pick Harold Baines wins on both counts with 2830 games and 9908 at-bats.  Ken Griffey comes in at a close second (2559 games, 9446 at-bats). 

Among pitchers, Seattle’s first round pick in 1981, Mike Moore pitched in 450 major league games and won 161 games. 

What position was picked the most as the top pick?

Not surprisingly, pitchers were high on the list,

  • C- 5
  • 1B- 4
  • SS- 10
  • 3B- 4
  • OF- 9
  • P- 13 (4 lefties, 9 righties)

Interestingly, no players were drafted as secondbasemen.  Keep in mind that these figures are the positions they were drafted at not necessarily where they ended up playing.  B.J. Surhoff at short? Hah!

Which teams had the most first picks since 1965?

No, it’s not the Rays (who had four).  The San Diego Padres and New York Mets tied for this honor with five apiece. 

How many top picks eventually became major league All-Stars?

Among the 44 first picks to date, twenty have appeared in a major league All-Star game.  At this point, no first pick has gotten in the Hall of Fame but for my money, Ken Griffey Jr and Chipper Jones both have a good chance to make it. (update- Arod too, if voters forget about the PED thing).

Texas, Austin Wood top BC in longest NCAA affair

A fine job by appropriately-named Texas reliever Austin Wood on Saturday.  In a 25 inning, 7 hour affair, Texas defeated Boston College 3-2 in the longest NCAA game on record.  

Wood pitched 13 innings of scoreless ball.  More impressively, he allowed no hits for 12 1/3 innings of it.  Wood struck out 14 and threw 169 pitches.

Here’s the box score from University of Texas’ web site.

And kudos to the 7000+ fans who stayed with the game for seven hours. 

The mercy rule… Kentucky-style

On April 1, the Kentucky State baseball team probably wishes it hadn’t gotten out of bed. 

According to AP, they allowed 22 runs to Eastern Kentucky, in the first inning.  After the first five innings, the score was an incredible 49-1.  At that point, the game was cancelled and so was the second game of the doubleheader. 

Don’t blame EKU Coach Jason Stein.  He did right by putting in second-string players after the first inning.  But the runs kept coming.

Since the game was cancelled, you won’t find an official boxscore out there.  However, Jayson Langfels of EKU went 7 for 8 with 2 homers and 11 rbis.  It was also reported that Kentucky State committed 9 errors which in their coach’s eyes, “was generous”.

It’s quite a story.  I’ve certainly heard of the mercy rule being invoked before.  But I’ve never heard of it affecting future games (in this case, cancelling the second game of the doubleheader). 

Ten Reasons why I like college baseball (and the Illini)

 

In celebration of opening day of college baseball I present to you my top ten list of what makes college baseball (and Illinois baseball in particular) so fun. 

1.  It’s affordable. 

In this day of rising costs of attending Major League Baseball games, you can’t discount this.  I can’t speak for other Big Ten teams but at the University of Illinois, you can get into a game for six bucks or so.  Parking is thrown in for free.

And, if you’re lucky enough (and smart enough) to get the Go Illini family card for $50, it gets your whole family into all home games for the season.  Whatta deal!

2.  You can get so close to the action.

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  3.  It’s my style of baseball.

While the major leagues have gravitated toward power, power and more power, I find that college baseball has a more balanced attack maybe even favoring the “small ball” style of play.

I like the homerun just as much as everybody else but I also enjoy a well-executed hit-and-run or a double steal. 

A perfect example of this small ball action was two years ago in a non-conference game against Robert Morris College when Shawn Roof took it upon himself to score the winning run in the bottom of the eighth. 

From an article I wrote after the Robert Morris game:

Shawn Roof led off the bottom of the 8th. Robert Morris pitcher Chris Murchek plunked Roof in the upper arm and Roof took his base. I leaned over to Brando and said, “Here he goes!”. And Roof stole second on the first pitch. Brando and I wondered to each other will batter Ryan Hastings bunt in this situation? In a lot of situations, it would make sense but Hastings has been good with the stick so I didn’t think he would. Hastings didn’t square for the next pitch, he took it for a strike.

The next pitch, though, he squared for the bunt and the thirdbaseman rushed to cover for the bunt. The key here is that the shortstop didn’t cover third and Roof was banking on that. He stole third easily.

The very next pitch Murchek threw a wild pitch and Roof scored what proved to be the winning run.

Now THAT’S exciting!

Another point, since not all college hitters are sluggers, it gives more value to the homerun capability of those cleanup hitters in the college ranks.  You really fear them! 

 

4.  The players are friendly.

Ok, maybe that’s a generalization but in my experience, many I’ve met have been nice and some have been downright decent.  A couple that I’ve met I’ve maintained friendships after they’ve left the U of I. 

5.  It brought back my “school spirit”.

I’ll admit it.  I root for the Illini football and basketball teams but I don’t intensely follow them like some of my sports fan friends follow their alums.  Illini baseball is MY college sport that I follow. 

When I’m asked at work, “Did you hear how the Illini did last night?”.  I’ll go on about the slugfest this or the one-run game that and get a quizzical look.  Then I realize they were talking about the OTHER sport. 

I don’t care.  Baseball is my college sport.

6.  No salaries, no contract disputes, no arbitrations

It’s true, college baseball players play baseball for different reasons.  Those with a future ahead of them are looking ahead to a possible MLB draft.  Others are just playing because they love the game. 

But what’s really great is when you see the really rare player who steps up and assumes a leadership role on the team.  Those players are destined to go somewhere in baseball. 

7.  Gametracker

If it’s a road game and I can’t be there, at least I can follow the game via CSTV’s Gametracker which rivals MLB’s Gameday…sorta.

8.  Meeting the players’ parents

I’ve enjoyed meeting the moms and dads of the players the last few years.  I don’t restrict myself to Illinois parents either.  Sometimes I’ll introduce myself to the opposition’s parents sometimes and (if it’s a home game) welcome them to Illinois Field.  I almost always get a good conversation going and learn something I didn’t know before. 

Like players, parents come in different varieties.  There are competitive types and then the more laid back types.  Interesting to see the similarities (and differences, I guess) between parent and son. 

9.  No Wisconsin

Haha!  Just kidding, Badger fans!

10.  Just try to show me a better time!

For my money, there’s not a better time.  Whether I’m hanging with my buddies, taking my family or just taking in a game by myself, it’s a lot of fun.  The baseball program at the University of Illinois have done a fantastic job putting a quality product on the field not to mention a fun time all round (yes, they do promotions… the days when the players play wiffleball with the kids after a game are a big hit, so to speak). 

So before you complain to me about those outrageous prices of major league games and the exorbitant salaries the big league athletes make, try a college baseball game on for size. 

It might be a perfect fit.

Illini baseball to compete in BIG EAST/Big Ten Challenge

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Next February, the Illini will compete in a tournament between the Big Ten and BIG EAST conferences.  The inaugural BIG EAST/Big Ten Challenge will take place February 20-22, 2009 and will be hosted by the St Petersburg/Clearwater Sports Commission.  All teams of the Big Ten and BIG EAST will take part.

The tournament will take place on the same date that Major League pitchers and catchers report for spring training. 

Here is the proposed schedule:

BIG EAST/BIG TEN CHALLENGE MATCHUPS

Day 1 – Friday, February 20
Ohio State vs. Notre Dame
Penn State vs. St. John’s
Illinois vs. Iowa
Michigan State vs. Connecticut
Michigan vs. South Florida
Northwestern vs. Georgetown
Minnesota vs. Seton Hall
Indiana vs. West Virginia
Purdue vs. Cincinnati

Day 2 – Saturday, February 21
Michigan vs. Cincinnati
Purdue vs. South Florida
Penn State vs. Northwestern
Ohio State vs. Connecticut
Indiana vs. Georgetown
Illinois vs. Notre Dame
Minnesota vs. West Virginia
Michigan State vs. Seton Hall
Iowa vs. St. John’s

Day 3 – Sunday, February 22
Michigan vs. St. John’s
Ohio State vs. Cincinnati
Minnesota vs. Michigan State
Northwestern vs. Connecticut
Indiana vs. South Florida
Iowa vs. Georgetown
Purdue vs. Notre Dame
Penn State vs. Seton Hall
Illinois vs. West Virginia

Update: I asked Brian from The College Baseball Blog why the BIG EAST was in ALL CAPS while the Big Ten wasn’t in all the press releases I read.  He simply said, "He simply said, It’s because they’re the BIG EAST."

‘Nuff said.

Baseball Zealot Radio interviews Brian Foley from The College Baseball Blog

I’ve said it before but one thing I like about doing a podcast is being in contact with other baseball people. I’ve been emailing and chatting online with Brian Foley from The College Baseball Blog for over a year and a half but this is the first time I’ve talked to him.

Brian warned me ahead of time about his Boston accent. Funny, I didn’t notice it at all (that’s a joke if you don’t get around to listening to the podcast. He’s got a wonderful one).

For those who are into college baseball and haven’t seen The College Baseball Blog, please take five minutes and do so. You’ll thank me later.

Now, the show notes…

Hosts: Tom:

Summary: I interview Brian Foley from The College Baseball Blog. Brian chats a bit how The College Blog came about, sums up the 2007 college postseason and gives us a pre-season look at this year’s college baseball. Finally, we discuss where college baseball is headed as a college sport.

Links:

The College Baseball Blog

Time: 28:39

Date Recorded: 2/10/08

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