Rounding out the OOC series previews
are the road trips for the Dirtbags, which all feature opponents who
traveled to Long Beach in 2013.
Wichita State (ISR: 92, RPI: 103) –
Last year nearly turned into a
nightmare of a season for our (partially) cross-country rival, who
started the year dropping three games to Pittsburgh, then losing four
games to the snow. However, the Shockers, rebounded to win 39 games
and the Missouri Valley Conference tournament.
The Dirtbags have
won their last three series against WSU, including a sweep in Blair
Field last year, and a near-sweep in their 2012 trip to Eck Stadium.
However, the 2014 Shockers could be a dangerous club, as they retain
several key players including their top four hitters; 1B Casey
Gillaspie (.299/.447/.517), C Tyler Baker (.328/.394/.466), OF
Garrett Bayliff (.379/.439/.425), and 2B Tanner Dearman
(.301/.404/.335); and their entire weekend rotation;
closer-turned-starter RHP Cale Elam (3.17, 75/30, 93.2 IP), RHP A.J.
Ladwig (4.54, 68/15, 85.1 IP), and RHP Garrett Brummett (1.16, 24/11,
38.2 IP). This experienced team will be lead by new Head Coach Todd
Butler, former assistant and recruiting coordinator for two
Omaha-bound Arkansas squads. Add the fact that this is easily the
Dirtbags' longest road trip of the regular season, geographically
speaking, and this could be another tough test for Troy Buckley's
boys.
Arizona (ISR: 34, RPI: 59) – two
game mid-week series – Long
Beach State split two home mid-week games last season against the
then-defending champion Wildcats. That series was the first test of
the pitching depth for a team that had no healthy returning starters.
Though the 2014 Dirtbags return LHPs Jake Stassi and Ryan Strufing,
this two game set in Tucson could serve as a similar measuring stick
for the rotation, with returners LHP Nick Sabo and RHP Ryan Millison
(the starters from last year's series) and newcomers RHP Christian
Belleque and LHP Cameron Pongs potentially getting the nods.
Most of the major players from the Wildcats' Omaha team are gone but
they return a large portion of last year's lineup, including dynamic
middle infielders 2B Trent Gilbert (.344/.407/.448) and SS Kevin
Newman (.336/.398/.392). It will be interesting to see how the
Dirtbag lineup, particularly players like Michael Hill and Richard
Prigatano, approach hitting in Hi Corbett, where the speed/gap power
combo remains U of A's M.O..
Cal State Fullerton (ISR: 2, RPI: 6)
– In what is typically the
final warmup before conference play, this series could be the
Dirtbags' most difficult of the season as Fullerton is likely to be a
top five team in the pre-season rankings. Some wins in this series
would be a big boost to the RPI and would look great on LBSU's
regional bid resume, but I don't really care about that.
After losing 22 of
25 to the Titans (3-15 in the Troy Buckley-era), the six meetings
this season have to take on a greater significance. How Long Beach
State performs on the road against likely one of the better Fullerton
teams in recent years will serve as a strong indicator of the
strength of the Dirtbag moniker.
They will be
combated with one of the best rotations in the nation, RHP Thomas
Eshelman (1.48, 83/3, 115.2 IP), RHP Justin Garza (2.03, 95/17, 115
IP) coming off all-universe freshman seasons, RHP Grahamm Wiest
(3.27, 76/13, 104.2 IP), not to mention about 12 other All-Big West
arms.
If there's a
weakness to be found, it could be Fullerton's comparatively unproven
lineup. Gone is a large portion of last year's lineup, including Big
West players of the year Michael Lorenzen and Carlos Lopez, though
they do retain legitimate conference POY candidates 1B JD Davis (.318/.407/.436)
and 3B Matt Chapman (.285/.415/.457). Though the Titans always have a
steady pipeline of talent, the 2014 outfield and shortstop positions
will have a hard time replicating the production of their
predecessors (not that they'd necessarily have to).
LBSU's best chance
here is to be able to exploit that new-look lineup behind strong
pitching and grind out some low-scoring victories.
It's regional or
bust next year for Long Beach State, but while simply earning a bid
would seem to make 2014 a successful enough campaign, if the Dirtbags
can get through this gauntlet of a schedule there's no telling how
they can go. The key, of course, will be surviving the regular
season.