Friday, March 15, 2013

Series Preview: Wichita State @ Dirtbags, 3/15-17



I had a "shocker" related clip I wanted to play but it wouldn't load, so here's my default backup: Troll 2. Enjoy.

Overview
Travel has forced me to write much of this the Thursday before last weekend’s series against Arizona State, so my analysis here will be a bit brief and somewhat vague. I’ll make up for it in this week’s edition of “Dirty Talk.”

What’s At Stake
Things have gone so far south lately that this series may not matter in the end. Barring some remarkable situation in which the Dirtbags would crush conference competition yet still fail to grab the automatic bid, an at-large selection isn’t happening this year. Either way, the Dirtbags have held a nice rivalry with the Wichita State Shockers (11-5) over the years, so this is always a series worth watching. A series victory for Long Beach State would also be nice to get things back on track before conference play opens in two weeks.

Tale of the Tape
Pitching Match Ups
Friday: RHP Cale Elam (3.26 ERA, 17:5 K:BB, 19.1 IP) vs. RHP Shane Carle (1.82 ERA, 17:6 K:BB, 24.2 IP)

Saturday: LHP Kris Gardner (4.91 ERA, 6:1 K;BB, 11 IP) vs. LHP Jake Stassi (6.00 ERA, 8:6 K:BB, 9 IP)

Sunday: RHP AJ Ladwig (3.86 ERA, 18:4 K:BB, 21 IP) vs. RHP David Hill (4.60 ERA, 10:5 K:BB, 15.1 IP)

Ten days ago I, half-jokingly, said on twitter that Stassi needed to be starting weekend games based on his fantastic relief outing against UCLA (4 IP, 7 K). Long Beach State, totally seriously, decided to go ahead and start him last weekend. The results weren’t great (3 ER, 3.1 IP) but Stassi may get a longer leash in his second start of the year this weekend.

I have mixed feelings about the switch to the Sunday spot. Jon Maciel’s results weren’t great (5.48 ERA) but his peripheral stats were strong (20 K, 7 BB, 21.1 IP) implying he should have better luck soon. However, Coach Buckley has said for some time that he sees Maciel as a reliever long-term. On the flip side, it’s exciting to see Hill finally get his first career start. It’s probably a good bet at this point that Hill will have a permanent weekend job by next season with a slim, but not outlandish, possibility that he’ll be pitching on Fridays.

Lineups
I won’t say too much commentary on this for now so we can hurry up and get to “Dirty Talk”, but the Shockers’ have gone heavy on the platooning thus far, with 11 players having started at least seven of the team’s first 16 games. Regulars include switch-hitting senior third baseman Erik Harbutz, left-handed catcher Tyler Baker, and the team’s 3-4 hitters, first baseman Casey Gillaspie and designated hitter Johnny Coy.

The Dirtbags lineup… well, there’s not much to talk about so I’ll be brief. Jeff Yamaguchi is predictably seeing his strong early season numbers regress a little, and should probably be dropped in the order. Michael Hill is the only hitter swinging the bat right now, and really needs to be moved to the heart of the order very soon. Juan Avila and Ino Patron… get it together, guys. And Colby Brenner (.446 OPS) has really struggled, to the point where I may have to resign as president of his fan club very soon…

Dirty Talk
This week I’m thrilled to have the commentary of WSU Director of Operations, broadcaster, and former All-American pitcher Shane Dennis. Really makes up for the crappy 500 words I threw together, which preceded

Dirtbag Blues: First off, what the hell’s going on with the weather out there?

Shane Dennis: WSU played opening weekend but it was tough; temperatures in the high 30s with plenty of wind that made it uncomfortable. (Pittsburgh) made it uncomfortable, too. WSU got swept in a home series for the first time since 1970. A trip to Tulsa netted a win against Oral Roberts on the 19th. Then, between the 21st and the 27th, Wichita got 21 inches of snow, 14 inches on the 21st and that wiped out what amounted to eight games. Biggest snowfall in Wichita in years.

DB: Between the Pittsburgh series and all those canceled games, is there much cause for concern over how slowly this season has started for the Shockers?

SD: With eight days to sit around with a 1-3 start, it was rough. Forced indoors, soul-searching after four games is never fun and now you have to just practice and practice and no opponent to try and beat. There was (and is) plenty of concern. That’s not how it goes around here. It’s win or…..win. No other recourse. Plus, with three straight years of no NCAA, EVERYONE is antsy around here when you’re scuffling.

DB: LBSU’s struggles have been a bit more pronounced, but it looks like both programs have taken a bit of a dip in the last couple years. What’s been the biggest cause for the Shockers’ recent downturn and how far is the program from getting back to Top-25 territory?

SD: I think WSU is just about always on the cusp of top 25s to start seasons, if for no other reason Gene Stephenson’s track record. His clubs will get the benefit of the doubt, and in a particular year, if they have a lot of returners they’ll at least be receiving votes or in the top 30. I think the biggest reason that’s tangible for a downturn is the college baseball programs that are more interested in fielding competitive teams, frankly. More people over the last 10 years have seen that college baseball can become somewhat lucrative and if you build some good facilities you can parlay that into a good program. Many programs somewhat close to Wichita State have put more and more money into their baseball budgets and perhaps start to attract more prospects because of that and it’s leveled the playing field, somewhat.

How far is the program away? Hard to quantify but two of the last three years, the RPI of WSU has been right on the edge of NCAA-at-large-worthy, so I guess there’s that. But Wichita State isn’t used to depending on at-large berths. Conference championships and conference tourney championships are what WSU is used to locking up and that’s been rarer the last three years.

DB: What can you tell me about that dynamic duo in the middle of the order, Casey Gillaspie and Johnny Coy?

SD: Casey Gillaspie is a lot like his brother Conor when he was here, in that they both have incredible batting eyes. They rarely chase pitches, rarely strike out and almost always have a quality at-bat. Difference is, Casey has more raw power at this point in his college career and is a switch hitter. Every team likes to have a guy or two in the lineup that makes you say, “Good, we got our guy up there now”. Casey is one of those guys right now, because of what I mentioned.

Coy is an interesting guy because he was our main threat last year, leading the team in homers, RBI, average, slugging and on-base %. Unlike Gillaspie, he’ll overswing now and then and get himself out more. But mistakes to him go a long, long way. Like Gillaspie he has true game-changing, raw power but has a few more holes in his swing. If he’s going well or on a hot streak, you don’t want to be a third baseman or a pitcher. When he barrels balls up, it comes off his bat differently than other college players.

DB: How has Cale Elam’s transition to the rotation been going? In general, what kind of year do you expect from an experienced Shocker staff?

SD: Cale Elam was a lockdown closer for WSU for two years. Due to a junior college signee going pro instead, the staff decided to have Elam start. He has a good sinking fastball, down movement on all his pitches and really good makeup, along with being a good athlete on the mound. It’s hard to say if he was a better reliever because he could go max effort for as long as needed, but so far he’s still trying to settle into the starter’s role. The team is confident when he goes out there because he competes, but he isn’t that power arm that WSU has historically rolled out on a Friday. The jury is probably still out on Elam being a Friday-caliber guy, but he’s not a guy that normally will beat himself. In my opinion, because of the BBCOR bats and Elam’s ability to throw strikes consistently, that’s a start.

The staff as a whole doesn’t have big arms, but like I said, strike-throwers can get you by today. That’s not to say WSU is without ability. Albert Minnis and closer Brandon Peterson probably have the most electric stuff. Minnis is a long-to-middle relief guy with a great sinker slider combo from the left side and induces one ground ball after another when he’s right. Peterson is the guy most likely to sit at 90-92 with his heater. TJ McGreevy is a big-framed strike thrower that has done a better job eating up the middle innings. Lefty Aaron LaBrie is an innings eater in the mid-innings. Overall, very good at throwing the ball over the plate, but most will need help from the defense.

DB: What's the biggest challenge this year's team faces as it tries to get back to the regionals?

SD: I think the biggest challenge for WSU this year is simply this: get back to winning the (Missouri Valley Conference) and win the conference tourney. WSU tries every year to get good RPI games but because the schedule is made sometimes two years out, that’s sometimes a crapshoot. The leadership on the team has to come from within. For the first time ever, no one on a roster has played in the NCAAs. That has to make the players hungry. In turn, they don’t have that NCAA experience to draw on, so they need to get back to having a hunter mentality. Against most teams, WSU will be the hunted, in that it’s still a big deal for other programs to beat Wichita State. Getting that edge back will be a huge start.


Kudos to Shane for putting up with Pittsburgh, snow, and a second-rate blogger these first few weeks of the season. Be sure to check him out on twitter for additional commentary on Shocks baseball.

Dirtbags’ Keys to the Series

The Offense
This has really turned into the key to the season, at this point. The offense needs to start seeing more from their most talented hitters, Patron, Avila, and Richard Prigtano. Freshman Eric Hutting and Zach Rivera are more than holding their own thus far, and juniors Michael Hitt, Jeff McNeil, and Jeff Yamaguchi are having breakout seasons. The ‘Bags have a legitimate potential to be a solid hitting team, but right now they may have the worst offense among the mainland Big West teams.

A New Look Bullpen
The one sure benefit from the recent rotation shake up is it allows Maciel and lefty specialist Landon Hunt to return to the relief corps. While the rotation on Saturdays and Sundays may continue to be a questions mark, stabilizing the back end of the bullpen could be a huge step forward for a pitching staff that, as Coach Buckley puts it, needs more “defined roles.”


Up Next: Cal State effing Fullerton. Oh and San Diego State, too, but who cares.

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Series Preview: Dirtbags @ Arizona State, 3/8-10


In Soviet Russia, the Dirtbags follow me... I guess.

Summary
My blog efforts have been about as productive as the Dirtbags’ offense against a left-handed pitcher (get use to hearing about that), but it’s not going to get much better this week (well, hopefully the Dirtbags’ offense will), as I’ll be abroad for the next few days. You’ll have to forgive any typos for now, as I likely won’t have a chance to correct them anytime soon.

The Dirtbags enter their final non-conference road series of the year with a mark of 6-7.

Arizona State is coming off a huge weekend in which they beat vaunted SEC club Arkansas twice and currently have a record of 7-2-1. They’re ranked 20th in the nation by Collegiate Baseball.

What’s at Stake
Our hopes at an at-large bid. That’s probably a bit of a hyperbole, but this weekend presents the Dirtbags best opportunity to inflate their non-conference achievements of the year, which could be vital to their post-season hopes if they fall short of a Big West title. 3.9 “RPI wins” are up for grabs.

Tale of the Tape
Pitching Match Ups
House of Sparky writer Nick Marek had a few comments on each of the Sun Devil starters, below. See this week’s “Dirty Talk” segment for more from Nick.

Friday: RHP Trevor Williams (1.29 ERA, 21:3 K:BB, 21 IP) vs. RHP Shane Carle (1.00 ERA, 14:5 K:BB, 18 IP)

“Trevor Williams is hands down the ace of this staff and he was awarded with many preseason awards including All-American honors and he was placed on the Golden Spikes Award Watch list which is given to the nation's best collegiate baseball player.”

Saturday: LHP Ryan Kellogg (1.20 ERA, 13:1 K:BB, 15 IP) vs. TBA; Projected: LHP Nick Sabo (1.86 ERA, 9:4 K:BB, 9.2 IP)

“Kellogg… can throw gas. Kellogg basically earned his spot in the rotation after his second appearance and  [pitched] against No. 1 Arkansas on Saturday.”

Landon Hunt came out of the pen this week against UCLA, so his weekend status is in question for now. If he does start he’ll need to get things turned around soon to keep that rotation position. If he doesn't start this weekend look for Sabo to start, or RHP David Hill to get his first career nod.

Sunday: LHP Adam McCreey (6.57 ERA, 11:7 K:BB, 12.1 IP) vs. RHP Jon Maciel (5.00 ERA, 18:6 K:BB, 18 IP)

Two lefties? Crap…

“McCreery did not pitch much his freshman year because he suffered an arm injury and pitched out of the pen. This year, he has struggled a bit with his command and could be at risk of losing his spot in the rotation to freshman Brett Lilek if he doesn't turn things around soon….

Head coach Tim Esmay is not afraid to utilize all of his options and if someone is struggling, then he will replace them. Plain and simple. He is very good about playing the hot arm or the hot bat and this year he has turned a lot to the pitching. ASU's bullpen has been phenomenal thus far.”

Lineups
The Sun Devils have boasted a solid offensive club thus far, with three everyday players posting on-base percentages over .400 (Kasey Coffman, Max Rossiter, Michael Benjamin) and four players slugging better than .450 (Coffman, Rossiter, Trever Allen, James McDonald). Their usual lineup looks like this, with a few variations:

CF Kasey Coffman, LH
SS Drew Stankiewicz, LH
C/DH Max Rossiter, RH
2B James McDonald, Switch
RF Trever Allen, RH
C/DH Nathaniel Causey, LH
3B Michael Benjamin, RH
LF Jake Peevyhouse, LH
1B David Graybill, RH

As for the Dirtbags, Zach Rivera has been emerging as a valuable piece to the Dirtbags’ lineup, posting an .888 OPS in limited action, though he hasn’t secured a spot in the field just yet. For all I’ve said in support of CF Colby Brenner, his OPS is just .486, though he remains a solid table setter with an on-base percentage .386. I’d be nice to see him get more of chance against left-handed pitching, but Rivera may force him out of the lineup for now. It’ll be interesting to see who gets leadoff duties against the southpaws this weekend. So far the games have been split between OF Josh Guerra and 2B Jeff McNeil. McNeil will keep batting in the top two spots no matter what.

No other new developments with the lineup seem to be on the horizon, although if Michael Hill keeps up his hot hitting (1.093 OPS) he may find himself batting in the middle of the order soon.

Dirty Talk
This week I’m happy to be joined by Nick Marek, writer for House of Sparky, part of SB Nation. Nick's also a broadcaster for the ASU men's hockey team, which recently finished third in the ACHA Nationals. He’s what Nick had to tell us about ASU (baseball, that is)…

Dirtbag Blues: What's the general state of the program as it comes out of its post-season ban?

Nick Marek: Honestly, this team has already moved past the post-season ban and during the preseason press conference, the players showed that they are more than ready to get back to the NCAA baseball tournament. The one noticeable thing about the Sun Devil's roster is that there are so many freshmen.

As of February 28, 12 freshmen have seen playing time for ASU and they are going to be an important part of ASU's success this season. People have been overly alarmed about the state of ASU baseball when honestly there is nothing different about the program. The only difference between 2012 and 2013 is that the team can compete in the National Tournament.

DB: What can you tell me about that freshman class? Looks like ASU has a pretty talented crop of outfielders joining the program.

NM: The freshman class was a top-20 recruiting class compared to the rest of the NCAA and the strength of the class was on the pitching end, which is ASU's highest need. Ryan Kellogg, Ryan Burr, and Brett Lilek are unreal pitchers and Tim Esmay is using Kellogg as the team's Saturday starter and he said in a press conference that Lilek and Burr will both be starters for ASU in the future but he loves using them in the bullpen because they are a second threat to opposing lineups.

Eric Melbostad is the other freshman pitcher who eats quite a few innings in the pen and will be used in late inning roles (possibly a set-up man like Burr)…

As for the offense, David Graybill and RJ Ybarra are the two immediate stand outs of the offensive group. Graybill has already started a few games and he has a ton of raw power who can be used at first or DH. Graybill, in my opinion, has the tools to be a Pac-12 first team All-Freshmen as does Ybarra. Ybarra plays behind the dish but the problem is that Rossiter and Causey can both steal his time as catcher. Rossiter is a senior leader and one of the better players on the team so he should play 2-3, if not all three of the teams' games behind the plate… I would not be surprised if Tim Esmay moves Causey to a different position (maybe 1B in the future) to clear room for Ybarra. But that's probably looking to next year.

DB: The 3-0-1 weekend speaks for itself, but what more can you tell me about ASU’s strong showing in the Coca-Cola Classic? The Sun Devil’s gotta have some sort of weakness, right?

NM: The biggest thing from the Coca-Cola Classic was sweeping the two game series against Arkansas and beating Ryne Stanek (a first round MLB Draft potential pitcher). ASU played very well in Surprise and no matter whom they beat the rest of the season, no win will beat sweeping No. 2 Arkansas. Sure sweeping UCLA or Oregon or Stanford or Arizona will be nice and a very good piece to add to the post-season resume, but it is not very often teams can say they swept a team in the SEC. Not to mention that team is a top five team in the country.

The major weakness is the team's fielding. It is atrocious. I don't know the stat on the top of my head but over the first ten games of the season, they have to have at least 15 errors. That's not Arizona State baseball and… they will focus on that in practice this week. Fielding is basically the reason they struggled against Gonzaga. They gave up five unearned runs in one inning against the Zags.

Surprisingly, ASU has shocked all of us in terms of pitching depth largely in part because of the freshmen class but I'm concerned about how long the starting pitchers are going. Trevor Williams should not be a concern but is coach only going to allow Kellogg and McCreery for pitch 5 or 6 innings? I love the bullpen but I want to get more consistency out of the rotation otherwise the bullpen could be overworked during the season. Esmay is really good about monitoring pitch counts and it is still very early in the season. I think after he saw McCreery suffer basically a season ending injury last year, he wanted to take things slow and give his young arms time to mature.

DB: Having never been there, what’s Packard Stadium like? What kind of home-field advantage (if any) does ASU get from it?

NM: Packard Stadium gives ASU a tremendous home field advantage especially since the Sun Devil faithful are called the best fans in the west coast based on attendance. The fans are very vocal and it's a very good family atmosphere as well. I think all the tradition the program has and the players that have come through Tempe (Barry Bonds, Paul LoDuca, Dustin Pedroia, Jason Kipnis, Mike Leake, etc) have caught visiting team's attention.

Keep in mind this may be the last or second to last year the Sun Devils will play at Packard. They are moving over to Phoenix Municipal Stadium (The Oakland A's spring training facility) because it will be upgraded facilities, stands and press box for ESPN and Pac-12 Network to broadcast more home games.

Kind of sad that we are saying goodbye to all of that history.

DB: I asked WildcatAuthority's Cody James Martin this same question... what can you tell me about the baseball rivalry between Arizona State and Arizona? 

NM: The rivalry is one of the best in college sports. The past decade, Arizona State has won the title of being the better team in Arizona, but fans were frustrated to see the Wildcats win in Omaha.

We are not poor sports about it because you have to give their fab five and their rotation credit for helping Arizona win the National Title. I think it's going to be even a more heated rivalry this year because of the impact that football, basketball, hockey and other sports have made in the university's sports community.

There is nothing better than a good college sports rivalry and I never get sick of hearing the "Bear Downs" and "Fork 'Ems." 

DB: Off-topic but since we may be seeing these guys on ESPN in late June, any thoughts to offer regarding Arkansas?

NM: Pitching. Pitching. Pitching. Arkansas is one of the best teams in the nation because they have some of the best MLB prospects in the starting rotation and out of the pen. Honestly, there is nothing flashy about their batting and they are a little above average and do not have a ton of power but they don't need to when they can lock down opponents to around three runs. But they are disciplined and well coach so you need to work ahead of the count…. teams need to be prepared to be perfect in all aspects of the game but they are beatable.


I'd like to thank Nick for basically writing most of my preview this week. Be sure to check out his work on House of Sparky and follow him on twitter @nmarekasu14. Nick will also be calling a couple of the games this weekend on pac-12.com.

Dirtbags’ Keys to the Series
Southpaw struggles
This is the second straight weekend that the Dirtbags will have to face a pair of lefties.  This sucks for reasons I mentioned during my recent hissy fit, but it’s an issue the Dirtbags are going to have to figure out if they have regional hopes this year.

Avila and Patron’s arrival
The leaders of the Dirtbag offense have been largely ineffective thus far, with Juan hitting just .227/.358/.250 and Ino .245/.298/.302. Long Beach State needs to start getting more out of its #3/4 hitters (against both righties and lefties).

Up Next: You guys won’t see anything from me until next week’s Wichita State Preview, which will feature some words from former All-American Shane Dennis.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Best of the Rest in the West: Week Three

Each week in the "Best of the Rest in the West" rankings we take a look at the top ten western  conference teams that failed to crack the major top-25 rankings. For last week's rankings click here.

This week's write-up is a bit bare bones thanks to a busy couple of days for me, but at least we have a ranking for this week at all. The next Best/Rest/West top ten won't be until week five, as I'll been traveling next week.

As for the rankings themselves, we had quite a bit of movement throughout the top ten, with the only stagnant team being the one at the top, San Diego. Cal Poly graduates to the Top 25 (NCBWA, Coaches'), no teams "drop in", and the "high potential, low performance" teams thus far (New Mexico, Dallas Baptist, New Mexico State) once again had rough weekends and finally paid dearly for them.

1. San Diego (7-4); Previous: 1; Last Week: 4-0 vs. Coastal Carolina, Gardner-Webb, UNC Wilmington, Stony Brook
2. Gonzaga, (6-4-1): Previous: 6; Last Week: 2-0-1 vs. Arkansas, Pacific, Arizona State
3. California (5-7); Previous: 3; Last Week: 1-2 vs. Baylor, North Carolina, Houston
4. Cal State Bakersfield (8-3); Previous: 9; Last Week: 4-0 vs. Fresno State, Long Island
5. Pepperdine (7-5); Previous: 5; Last Week: 1-3 vs. Baylor, Oklahoma
6. San Diego State (6-4); Previous: 10; Last Week: 3-0 vs. Seton Hall
7. Washington State (8-3); Previous: Unranked; Last Week: 3-1 vs. Cal State Northridge
8. Nevada (8-4); Previous: Unranked; Last Week: 3-1 vs. Sacramento State, Holy Cross
9. New Mexico (2-6); Previous: 4; Last Week: 0-2 vs. Nebraska
10. UC Santa Barbara (7-4); Previous: Unranked; Last Week: 3-1 vs. UCLA, San Jose State

Graduated to Top 25: Cal Poly
Dropped In: None
Dropped Out: New Mexico State, Dallas Baptist

Up Next: Check me out on twitter for any comments on the UCLA game (David Hill is starting!), otherwise, an Arizona State series preview is due up Thursday.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

A brief rant on the offense

The Dirtbags just dropped the rubber match against Seattle U., 8-3; losing their second series of the year. Obviously with an 8-3 score the blame can't entirely be pinned on the offense (frankly, "blame" should never be entirely pinned on a single thing when the games are a team effort), but this marks six straight games of scoring four runs or less for the Dirtbags. 

The struggles seem to be worse versus southpaws. When right handed pitchers have gotten the start against Long Beach State this year, the Dirtbags have a  record of 6-2 and average 4.625 runs per game. Against the dreaded lefty the 'Bags are 0-4 and are averaging 3 scores a game. 

The offense in general is going to be far from a strength for the Dirtbags this year, but against LHP it appears we don't even know what we're doing. Left-handed hitting Colby Brenner, lead-off man versus RHP, owner of a solid .385 on-base percentage, and fastest man on the team, has yet to be given a start against the lefties. Josh Guerra, a righty with an OPS of .625, was given lead-off duties versus Seattle lefty Andrew Olsen this past Friday, only to be batting 8th (traditional spot for your worst hitter) less than 48 hours later against another lefty. I can't quite fathom the logic behind this kind of turnaround but I've narrowed it down to two things: 1) LBSU scouted the Seattle pitching staff so thoroughly that it knew which pitchers Guerra was specifically most inclined to succeed against, or 2) when writing a lineup versus left handers we're just randomly throwing something together. Our only other lead-off option we've tried against the left-hander is Jeff McNeil, another lefty. So why exactly is Brenner barred from playing these games?

In addition to benching Brenner on Sunday, Michael Hill, Dirtbag leader in OBP and slugging, sat on the bench presumably also because he's a lefty. Hill has gotten a couple starts against southpaws so it's possible the starting shortstop was just getting a rest today, however I don't see why DH'ing him was off the table.

This team isn't going to be scoring a ton of runs against any pitching, but I'm not sure what we're expecting to see from the offense against LHP when the lineup is apparently written without any rhyme or reason other than: Start as few left-handed hitters as possible; play significantly different lineups each game in hopes that one of them just might produce something.

Sorry about all this, this was just a frustraiting weekend for the Dirtbags and the next three weeks could make-or-break our regional hopes this season. Looking on the bright side, as least we're not bunting as much....

Third inning of Saturday's game:
Brenner walked (3-1). McNeil grounded out to p, SAC, bunt (0-0); Brenner advanced to second. Avila grounded out to p, SAC, bunt (0-1); Brenner advanced to third.

Beautiful. As a fellow Dirtbag fan asked me, "so did they try to bunt him home with 2 outs?????"