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2/28/21

Mack's Mock Pick - #30 - LHP - Jonathan Childress

 

Jonathan Childress

 

LHP      6-4      205     TAMU

 

 Mack's spin - 

Round two starts with someone that really caught my eye last year. Childress came out of the box for TAMU with mad skills on the bump.

Many expect big things from him this year.

I do too.


2020 TAMU stat line - 4-G, 4-starts, 2-0, 1.84, 14.2-IP, 17-K 



 

1-14-21  -  Baseball America

 

Jonathan Childress

 

Texas A&M LHP

 

Ht: 6-4 | Wt: 205 | B-T: L-L

Commit/Drafted: Never Drafted

Age At Draft: 21.5

 

A decorated high school pitcher, Childress ranked as the No. 107 player in the 2018 draft class, but made it to campus after his velocity slipped during the spring of his senior year at Forney (Texas) High. Childress got off to a quick start at Texas A&M as a freshman in 2019, posting a 2.13 ERA over three starts and 12.2 innings before his season was ended after undergoing Tommy John surgery. The 6-foot-4, 205-pound southpaw went back to work in the 2020 season, posting a 1.84 ERA over four starts and 14.2 innings, with 17 strikeouts and four walks. Some scouts think he’s heading for a breakout season in 2021 if he can get a full campaign under his belt, thanks to advanced pitchability, solid stuff and deception in his delivery. Post-surgery Childress was throwing his fastball in the 88-92 mph range with excellent feel for spinning a breaking ball that tracks back to his amateur days, when he spun one of the best curveballs in the prep class. Childress can also throw a changeup and has feel to land all three offerings for strikes.

 

 12-3-20  -  Perfect Game combined their picks for the first two rounds in this mock draft  -

 

21. Chicago Cubs | Jackson Jobe, RHP, Heritage Hall (Okla.) | (2/50) Jon Childress, LHP, Texas A&M

 

A great athlete that has made a full transition to the mound, Jackson Jobe has now become one of the nation’s premier arms and lands himself in the first round in this mock to the Cubs. At 6-foot-2, 190 pounds, he looks the part with the athleticism as a sub-7.0 runner and secondary shortstop to control the limbs well, but it’s the mid-90s fastball and what may be regarded as the best slider in the class that garners this much helium. Jon Childress gives the Cubs a former Perfect Game All-American, and premier prep talent a couple years ago, as their second-round pick from College Station. The long and projectable left-hander works in the low-90s with great angle at release while showing feel for a firm cutter and an even better slider with big potential. -Tyler Russo

 

Sakowski’s Take: Jobe earns rave reviews for both the evaluation and the metrics of his stuff on the mound, highlighted by a slider that flashes 70 mph at times. He’s got tremendous upside with that combination of stuff and athleticism, while Childress, a Tommy John survivor, represents another potential upside play at pick 50. Childress has the upside to go higher if he performs in the SEC this spring, but pick 50 looks like a good spot right now based on fall intel.

 

11-11-20 - Prospects Live Top 300 Prospect List -

55. Jonathan Childress - LHP

 

Bio:

 

Height: 6-4

Weight: 215 lbs

Hits/Throws: L-L

Hometown: Forney, TX

School: Texas A&M

 

At the beginning of his Freshman campaign Childress came out the gate hot, posting a 2.13 ERA over 12 innings of work. Unfortunately an elbow injury ended his season and he spent the 2019 campaign as a red shirt. Healthy for the 2020 pandemic shortened season Childress was even better, allowing just three earned runs over 14.2 innings of work, punching out 17 batters in the process. Childress mixes mostly his fastball and his curveball using the latter as his out pitch. A lefty that had a real chance to pitch himself higher onto this list with a full season.

 

 Prospects Worldwide -

 

3. LHP Jonathan Childress, Texas A&M

 

Bat: L. Throw: L. 6’4″, 205 lbs. Born 1/22/2000. Hometown: Forney, TX

 

2019-2020: 2-1, 1.98 ERA, 0.84 WHIP, 25/5 K/BB in 27.1 IP.

 

Jonathan Childress is yet another player following the three major themes on this list: a pitcher (6/8 so far) who could have been drafted high out of high school (5/8) but who lacks much of a track record so far in college (4/8). Childress was off to a hot start as a freshman in 2019 but went down with Tommy John surgery pretty quickly, then looked great in his brief return in 2020. Together, it only amounts to 27.1 innings, but he’s struck out 25 to just five walks and allowed just 25 baserunners in total. In his seven career appearances, the toughest lineups he’s had to face were Houston (2019) and Rice (2020), but there is a lot to like regardless.

 

The big lefty who grew up on the eastern edge of Dallas-Fort Worth makes for a very uncomfortable at bat. Coming from a crossfire delivery, he hides the ball very well and puts nice angle on the ball. His fastball velocity has fluctuated over the years, climbing as high as 94 in high school, but he didn’t maintain that velocity as the 2018 draft neared and since returning from Tommy John, he’s sat around 90 for the most part. Childress’ two plane curveball is his best and most consistent pitch, a plus breaker that he can backdoor for strikes and change the shape of for a different look. He also tosses a solid changeup, and in his small sample in college, he has shown the ability to command all three pitches very well. Fully healthy now, he has a chance to really elevate his stock this spring simply by pitching how he’s capable of, and any uptick in velocity should send him moving up boards in a hurry. Aside from a lack of track record, there is no reason to believe Childress can’t be a mid-rotation starter.

Click here for the full list of Mack's MLB Draft Scouting Reports.         

Mack's Mock Pick - 1.29 - OF - Robby Martin


 Robby Martin

 

OF      6-3     200     Florida State

 

 Mack's spin - 

I have Martin taken as the last pick in the first round.

Martin was a speed first offensive machine who came to camp this year with 30 more pounds of muscle. 

O expect them to translate in his slugging percentage this season at FSU.

 

1-28-21 - ncaa -

 

Robby Martin took a different approach with his offseason, focusing on shedding bad weight and becoming leaner and more athletic. Now listed at 6-foot-3, 210 pounds, Martin is a hard-contact machine, with one of college baseball’s sweetest lefthanded swings. Look for his power numbers to spike as well in his third year at FSU. Albert is another instinctive natural hitter with a pretty lefthanded stroke, solid power and speed that plays in center field. He’s got All-America potential if he can avoid the shoulder issues that hampered him in the past, and he’s a perfect fit in the 2-hole behind Tyler Martin. The son of the head coach, Tyler might not have the big, sexy tools of some of the other guys in the lineup, but he’s a high-energy scrapper with a little whip in his swing, and he just has a knack for finding his barrel and moving the ball around the field. He also has the best plate discipline in the lineup (as evidenced by his 16-8 BB-K mark last year) and might prove to be one of the toughest outs in the ACC. He’s just a winning player and an ideal catalyst.

  

1-20-21 - D1 Baseball's top 100 College Prospects -

 

38 Robby Martin OF Florida State ACC

 

 1-14-21  -  Baseball America

 

Robby Martin Florida State OF

 

Ht: 6-3 | Wt: 210 | B-T: L-R

Commit/Drafted: Marlins 2018 (37)

Age At Draft: 21.9

 

Martin was a solid draft prospect out of high school—ranking No. 390 on the 2018 BA 500—but his value then came primarily from an impressive run tool and offensive upside, with a slap-and-run approach at the plate. He’s added about 30 pounds of muscle since then and is now listed at 6-foot-3, 215 pounds. Martin has played exclusively left and right field for Florida State and has grown into more power since his prep days, while being one of the Seminoles’ most reliable bats in each of his two seasons with the club. In 2019 Martin hit .315/.398/.449 with four home runs and 17 doubles and in 2020 he led the team in hitting with a .324/.439/.412 line through 17 games. Martin’s hitting track record with a wood bat on the Cape isn’t quite as loud (.167/.265/.233) but he only played a brief 14 games. Martin has shown a solid understanding of the strike zone and has walked at a solid 13.3% clip, but teams would like to see a full season where he establishes more in-game power production to go along with an advanced hit tool.

 

 12-18-20 -

 

college baseball info - top player from each school -

 

10. Florida State

 

Robby Martin, OF (2021): Martin started hitting the day he arrived in Tallahassee and hasn’t stopped. If the changes he made to his body during the pandemic prove sustainable, he may play himself into the 1st round.

 

 12-15-20  -  247 sports -

 

MLB.com unveiled their Top 100 Draft prospect for 2021. A current Florida State player, as well as a commitment, made an appearance on the list.

 

FSU outfielder Robby Martin checks in at No. 51 on the list. The scouting report on him is below:

 

A solid high school player in the Tampa area, Martin hit the ground running when he got to Florida State after the Marlins took him in Round 37 of the 2018 Draft. The outfielder was named to multiple Freshman All-American teams after hitting .315/.398/.449 in 2019, and he was batting.324 as a sophomore before the shutdown following an unproductive, albeit brief, turn in the Cape Cod League. Martin made up for some lost time by continuing to hit well in the Florida Collegiate League, hitting .313 over 19 games while playing alongside fellow Florida college outfield prospect Jud Fabian.

  

The left-handed hitter has added a lot of muscle to his 6-foot-3 frame since joining the Seminoles. He’s been more hit over power to date, with more doubles pop than over-the-fence power. He does make consistent hard contact and could reach average power in the future.

 

Martin has only manned outfield corners during his time in college, with a slightly above-average arm that plays well in either spot. He lacks the pure speed to play center and scouts aren’t sold on his overall defense, thinking left field is likely his best spot at the next level. Behind Adrian Del Castillo and Martin's summer ball teammate Fabian, Martin is the next best college bat in Florida, and it’s that bat that will get him drafted in the top few rounds.

 

 11-11-20 - Prospects Live Top 300 Prospect List -

54. Robby Martin - OF

 

Bio:

 

Height: 6-3

Weight: 200 lbs

Hits/Throws: L-R

Hometown: Tampa, FL

School: Florida State

 

Martin was a standout in FSU's lineup the last two seasons, and arguably their best his freshman season when he slashed .315/.398/.449. He has the prototypical frame of a power hitting corner outfielder with the profile at the plate to match. One of the better college bats in the class. Reports are he's put on good weight and improved his speed this fall. One to watch.

 

 Next On Deck -

 

19. Robby Martin, OF, Florida State

 

6-foot-3, 200 pounds. Proportionally strong frame, broad shoulders. Left-handed hitter. Bat travels on an uphill path through the zone, gets extension and creates natural loft. Some swing-and-miss issues could lower the overall hit tool. Prototypical corner outfield profile.

 

 Fish Stripes -

 

Robby Martin, COF, Florida State University

 

A big-bodied, slugging lefty, Martin shares similarities with Twins 2018 first round pick Trevor Larnach, who was a top-20 selection out of Oregon State. Standing 6’3” with a broad build, Martin has plus raw power and a discerning approach, giving him a classic middle-of-the-order profile. As a freshman starter for the Noles in 2019, Martin immediately made himself at home in the ACC, registering 257 plate appearances with a .315/.398/.449 line and four home runs. He decided to try to carry the momentum into the offseason in the Cape Cod League, but didn’t end up getting much playing time, recording just 34 trips to the dish in 14 games. In those contests, he struggled to the tune of a .167/.265/.233 line with 11 strikeouts, but it’s difficult to glean much from such a small sample.

 

Heading into 2020, Martin projected as a central cog in the FSU offense, and started the season on a torrid pace, reaching base at a .439 clip in 82 PAs. If there was a blemish on his line before the season was shut down, it was that he didn’t manage a home run, and his overall power production was below what would be expected of him. Martin’s swing is clean and easy with a simple load and footwork and above average bat speed, with few questioning his ability to make contact and reach base. If there’s a question about Martin’s profile as of now, it pertains to how much of his raw power he will get to in games, but given his proclivity for hard liners and his natural strength, I’d expect that he’ll end up getting to a good amount of it. Martin projects long term as a right fielder who could be a 5-hole type hitter, or more of a fourth outfielder type if the power doesn’t fully blossom.

 

He projects to be picked somewhere between the top 20 and the top 50 depending on how his 2021 season goes.

 

 Diamond Digest -  

  

7) Robby Martin, OF, Florida State

 

Martin is a projectable bat-first corner outfielder who has done nothing but hit in his brief time at Florida State. Standing at 6’3 and weighing in at 200 pounds, he has some present strength but his frame also suggests he could continue to put on muscle, which will be important for him as he needs to develop his power (he has only hit four homers at FSU). Martin has a pretty left-handed swing with solid bat path and a great approach, as he does a nice job of battling during at bats and drawing walks. In his two seasons in Tallahassee, Martin has posted a fantastic 13.2% walk rate. His natural loft in his swing is conducive to power, which I believe is still on the way. However, he doesn’t do a great job of delaying torso rotation, taking away some of that barrel whip through the hitting zone. While Martin presents an intriguing potential OBP/power profile, there are some significant swing and miss issues. His long arms create some big holes in his swing, and he has been prone to strikeouts. However, as a young player in the ACC his strikeout rate waOverall Martin projects as a high OBP corner OF who has a chance to develop into 12-17 homer pop, but the swing and miss issues make him a more volatile college bat.

 

 

Prospects Live -

 

Standout(s): Robby Martin, FSU - The Marlins selected Martin 1107th overall in the 2018 draft, but he chose to hit campus at Tallahassee, and hit campus is what he did, as Martin slashed .345/.426/.503 with four homers and an 11.9 BB%. At the moment he’s considered to be the front-runner to be the first college position player selected in the 2021 draft.

 

 

213 Miles From Shea - Get To Know A 2021 Non-Roster Invitee: Marcel Renteria


 Posted on  by Elliot Teichman

Marcel Renteria might not be a household name, but he’s been with the Mets for a while and if there was a time for him to get a Non-Roster invite to Mets camp, it’s now. He was drafted in 6th round in 2017 out of New Mexico State and has moved up through the minors considered his age. With the exception of one inning of work in Binghamton in 2019, he has been above the average age for a player at level from New Mexico Sate until now.

He had a rough start as a Met in Brooklyn in 2017, 0.7 years older than the average player, pitching in 9 games over 11.1 innings. He allowed 15 hits and 12 earned runs. He bounced back the following year though in Columbia (1.1 years older than the average player) making 15 starts totaling 76.2 innings with a 4.23 ERA. He had similar numbers the following year in St. Lucie as a reliever pitching 62.1 innings over 37 games with a 4.62 ERA.

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Pitching Stats:



Mike's Mets - Coming Soon to a Ballpark Near You, Baseball That Looks Familiar

 

By Mike Steffanos February 27, 2021

2020 will always be remembered as a bizarre baseball season, by far the weirdest of my lifetime. The only seasons that approached it in sheer peculiarity were 1981, where a strike shut the game down for two months from June 12 - August 9, and 1994, when baseball just packed up and shut down for the rest of the year without crowning a champion. Still, at least to my mind, 2020 stands alone. Not only for the dramatic accommodations MLB had to make to play an abbreviated season at all, but how very weird all of our lives became outside of the game itself.

It would be nice if I could believe that 2021 will feature a return to normalcy in all respects, but we all know that's not going to happen. 2021 will be a hybrid year, straddling two realities — one foot stuck within the ongoing pandemic, but the other foot taking the first step into a post-pandemic reality. I still have to wear a mask to go food shopping, yet it's quite likely that before the summer is over, I will be sitting maskless in a pub, enjoying some long overdue cold ones with equally maskless friends. Perhaps I may even find myself in Citi Field at some point this summer, cheering on the Mets in person. Simple dreams like those make the drudgery of living a full year in a COVID-19 dominated world a bit easier to take.

I have a pretty good idea of what my life will be once I and the majority of my neighbors are vaccinated. It will be as absolutely close to what my life was before last March as is possible. Still, I'm smart enough to realize that there will be no return to exactly the life I was living. Too many things have changed over the past year, including my current employment status, for that to happen. I'm not going to feel too sorry for myself over that, however. There were over half a million Americans who aren't going the chance to pick up their lives. For myself, my big resolution is not to take for granted what I am blessed with. I don't care if that sounds a little corny.

As for the game that I love, Major League Baseball will be going through its own hybrid experience. Right now, very few in the game have been vaccinated, and burdensome health and safety protocols are still in place. While there will be some fans in the stands once the games get underway in earnest, there won't be anything approaching full ballparks this spring. Whether there are by the end of the season remains to be seen, I wouldn't be shocked if that was the case. Whatever the numbers, baseball will be a better game with real human being cheering their teams on rather than cardboard cutouts and canned cheers.

They started spring training on time last week, and the plan is to play a full 162-game schedule. Teams will likely be playing in front of more fans as the weather gets warmer. Still, some significant differences will result as a consequence of the short 60-game schedule last season. One of the biggest will be how pitchers — both starters and relievers — will be handled. We're hearing a lot about "workload management" right now, and it will continue to be an issue right up through October.

The reason is common sense, of course. Teams worry about ramping back up to a normal full season of work for pitchers when none of them came close to those numbers in 2020, not even the pitchers who threw for teams who made it far into the postseason. Peter Gammons in The Athletic had an interesting look yesterday at some of the things teams will be doing to ensure that their prized pitchers survive the upcoming season.

Gammons started off the piece by quoting Andrew Friedman, PBO of the Dodgers, that he had "no idea how this season plays out," specifically speaking on the uncertainty surrounding playing a season that will be more than 2-1/2 times longer than last year's. Friedman went on to say:

"My fondest hope right now is that five years from now we don't look back and see a serious health issue stemming from this season, whether it's the Dodgers or the industry. We're coming off a 60-game season that was extremely difficult for everyone and now are hoping to play 162 games. There is so much that is consequential, to players and to the game, and there is no way we can anticipate them right now."

As for pitchers, Gammons notes that MLB teams are looking to open the year with 7-10 starting pitchers and 10-15 relievers, expecting to use all of them to manage the innings in 2021. Strategies for protecting starters include 6-man rotations, while bullpens are likely to feature a constant shuttle between a club's Triple-A franchise and the Major League ballclub. As I've previously written, players with minor league options left — and the Mets have stockpiled a few of those — are going to be crucially important.

There was thinking that there would be an NL DH this season, mostly to protect starting pitching. That still is possible, but it hasn't happened yet and seems more and more unlikely. MLB owners thought the DH was more valuable to the players because it added 15 starting position players in the NL, so they tried to trade the DH for expanded playoffs, which the players turned down. For the life of me, I don't understand why they felt they could trade something both sides wanted for something owners wanted.

What made more sense to me, but never seems to have been discussed, was MLB offering the players the NL DH and some kind of increased active roster size for 2021 in exchange for expanded playoffs. The owners could have gotten the money-maker they desired in exchange for a couple of more low-paid players on the active roles if they used the 28-man roster from last season. MLB clubs would have benefited from two extra players with a little extra flexibility to keep highly-paid players healthy, with fewer moves between the Triple-A and active rosters. Sadly, accommodations that make sense for both sides never seem to see the light of day in negotiations between MLB and the Players Association.

So what are we likely to see this season from the Mets to keep their pitchers healthy? For the starters, I'd bet against a 6-man rotation. For a great pitcher like Jacob deGrom, this would mean fewer starts and a break in his normal routine, and that's just not ideal at all. Nor would it make much sense to keep deGrom pitching every fifth day and putting the rest of the rotation on an every sixth-day routine. That would be disruptive to other pitchers that the team is counting on, like Marcus StromanCarlos CarrascoTaijuan Walker, and Noah Syndergaard when he returns.

What I believe we'll see is starting pitchers starting the season with restrictive pitch counts for the first 3 or 4 outings at least, liberal use of the 10-day injured list to give pitchers who are showing signs of fatigue a break, and an extra day or two of rest when the schedule allows it. Perhaps starters outside the top 3 might see some time in long relief as somewhat of an in-season break. Openers and bullpen games are certainly a possibility.

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College Baseball Top 25 Results - Week 2

 


Top 25 College Baseball Teams {Baseball America)

 

 Ole Miss  (5-2)

Sun vs, Texas Tech (W - 5-4)

Mon vs. Texas (W - 8-1)   

Wed vs. Arkansas State (W - 12-1)

Fri & Sat vs. UCF  (Fri G1 - L 3-2 - Sat G1 W 6-5 - Sat G2 L 7-2)

RHP Gunnar Hoglund - Sun: 5.1-IP, 3-ER, 11-K, WIN (1-0)

Fri: 7-IP, 2-ER, 10-K

LHP Doug Nikhazy - Fri - 6.1-IP, 2-ER, 10-K, LOSS (0-1)

RHP Braden Forsyth - Sun: 0-1-IP, 0-R


Virginia (3-3)

Sun vs. UConn (W: 4-2)

Tue vs. VMI   (W - 14-5)

Fri/Sat vs. North Carolina (Fri: Postponed - Sat: L  2-1)

LHP Brandon Neeck -

RHP Mike Vasil - Sun: 6-IP, 0-R, 6-K, WIN (1-0)

 

Miami (3-2)

Sun vs. Florida (W: 8-6)

Fri and Sat vs. Virginia Tech (Fri: L 5-3 - Sat: W 3-0)

RHP Jake Smith -

Sun: 0.2-IP, 0-R, K

C Adrian Del Castillo -

Sun:  2-3, 2-R, 2B

Fri:  1-3 Sat  2-4, R

1B Alex Toral -

Sun: 0-3

Fri:  0-3 Sat  0-2

 

Vanderbilt (4-1)

Mon vs. Wright State DH - W: 14-1, W: 1-0

Wed vs. Western Kentucky - W: 12-1

Fri & Sat vs. Georgia State - Fri - L 4-2   Sat -W 5-4

RHP Kumar Rocker - Mon G1 - 4-IP, 0-R, 8-K, WIN (1-0)

RHP Jack Leiter - Mon G2 - 5-IP, 0-R, 8-K, WIN (1-0)

RHP Ethan Smith - Fri - 1-IP, 2-ER, 2-K

RHP Luke Murphy - Mon G2 - 1-IP, 0-R, 3-K

  Fri - 1-IP, 0-R, 3-K   Sat - 2-IP, 0-R, 2-K

LHP Hugh Fisher - Wed - 1.0-IP, 0-R, 2-K

C C.J. Rodriguez

Mon G1 - 0-4, R  -  Wed - 1-3, R

Fri - 0-1  -  Sat  1-2, R

OF Isaiah Thomas

Mon G1: 3-5, 3-R, 3B, HR - G2: 1-4

Fri - 1-5   Sat  0-4

 

Louisville (6-1)

Sun vs. Bellarmine (DH) - G1: W 12-1 - G2: W: 8-3

Tue vs. Eastern Kentucky -    W:  6-2

Fri & Sat vs. W Illinois  Fri: L 8-3 - Sat G1 W 4-1 Sat G2 W 9-4

RHP Glenn Albanese -

RHP Jack Perkins - Mon - 2.0-IP, 0-R, 2-K

Sat G1 - 1-IP, 0-R, K

LHP Reid Detmers -

C Henry Davis - Sun G1: 2-3, 3-R, HR - G2: 1-3, R, HR

Mon - 2-2, R, HR  Fri - 1-3  Sat G1: 1-4  G2: 1-3, 2-R

3B Alex Binelas - Sun G1: 0-3, R - G2: 1-4, R

Mon - 0-2  Fri - 1-5, R  Sat G1: 0-3  G2: 1-5, R, 2B

OF Levi Usher - Sun G1: 2-4 - G2: 2-4, 2-R, 3B, HR

Mon - -1-3, R  Fri - 0-2  Sat G1: 0-4, R  G2: 2-5, 2-R

 

Arkansas  (6-0)

Sun vs. Texas (W: 4-0)

Mon vs. TCU (W - 4-1)

Thur-Sat vs. Southeast Missouri State

(Thur: W 6-5 - W 7-3 - Sat: W 9-3)  

LHP Patrick Wicklander - Thur: 4-IP, 0-R, 3-K

C Casey Opitz -

Sun - 1-3  -   Mon - 1-4, R, 2B

Thur - 2-5, R, 2-2B  - 2-5

OF Christian Franklin -

Sun - 1-3, R  -  Mon - 1-4, R, 3B  -  Thur - 1-4, R, HR

Fri - 1-4, HR  -  Sat - 4-5, 2-R, HR

 

Florida   (5-2)

Sun vs. Miami (L: 8-6)

Tue & Wed vs. North Florida - Tue: W 9-6  Wed: W - 8-3

Fri & Sat vs. Samford - Fri: W 8-4  Sat: W: 18-2

RHP Jack Leftwich - Sat:  5.2-IP, 2-ER, 6-K, WIN (1-0)

RHP Tommy Mace - Fri - 6-IP, 0-R, 11-K

RHP Christian Scott -

Sun: 2.2-IP, 0-R - Wed: 1.0-IP, 0-R, K

Sat -  1.1-IP, 0-R, 2-K

RHP Ben Specht -  Tue - 4-IP, 3-ER, K

C Nathan Hickey -

Tue 1-5, R  -  Wed -  0-2

Fri - 0-3  -  Sat - 2-4, 3-R, 3B, HR

IF Cory Acton -

Sun: 0-2  -  Tue - 0-2

Fri - 0-1 - Sat - 1-1

OF Jud Fabian -

Sun: 0-4 - Tue - 2-6, R

Wed - 2-4, 2-R, 2-HRs  -  Fri - 2-4, R

Sat - 0-3, 3-R

 

Miss. State (4-2)

Sun vs. TCU (L: 3-2)

Mon vs. Texas Tech - W - 11-5

Wed vs. Jackson State -  W 7-3

Fri & Sat vs. Tulane - Fri  L 7-3 - Sat W  4-2

LHP Christian MacLeod - Fri - 4.0-IP, 0-ER, 6-K

RHP Eric Cerantola - Sat - 2.1-IP, 3-ER, 3-K

RHP Will Bednar-

 

Florida State (2-3)

Sun vs. North Florida (DH) G1: W: 14-4  G2: W: 8-4

Fri/Sat - Pittsburgh - Fri L 1-0 - Sat L  7-2

OF Elijah Cabell - Sun G1: DNP  Sun G2: DNP

Fri - 0-3 Sat - 2-4, R

OF Robby Martin - Sun G1: 2-3 2-R  -  Sun G2 - 1-3

Fri - 0-3 Sat - 1-5, R

 

10 TCU  (5-2)

Sun vs. Mississippi State (W: 3-2)

Mon vs. Arkansas (L - 4-1)

Tue vs. Texas Southern  (W -20-0)

Fri/Sat vs. Liberty  Fri - W 4-1  -  Sat - W 9-2   W 12-2

RHP Riley Cornelio -

RHP Drew Hill -

 

11 Duke (3-3)

Sun vs. Coastal Carolina  L - 9-7   W - 10-9

Tue vs. East Carolina  L - 6-1    

Fri/Sat vs. Boston College  L  10-3   W 10-3

RHP Cooper Stinson

SS Ethan Murray

Sun - 3-4, 2B, 3B  Mon - 0-4

Tue - 0-4 Fri  0-2 Sat  2-5, R

 

12 Texas Tech  (2-3)

Sun vs. Ole Miss (L - 5-4)

Mon vs. Mississippi State (L - 11-5)

Fri & Sat vs. Houston Baptist (Fri - W 18-3  Sat - W  8-1)

LHP Mason Montgomery - Mon: 4-IP, 1-ER, 2-K

RHP Micah Dallas - Sun: 2.2-IP, 2-ER, 2-K

RHP Hunter Dobbins -

1B Cole Stilwell -

Sun -  0-3 Mon - 1-2

Fri - 2-4, 2-R, 2B, HR Sat - 0-3

OF Dylan Neuse -

Sun: 1-3, R, HR Mon - 0-1, 2-R, 3-BB

Fri - 0-3, R Sat - 0-3, R

 

13 LSU (6-1)

Sun vs. Air Force (L: 6-5)

Mon vs. Louisiana Tech - (W: 16-7)    

Wed vs. OL-Lafayette  (W: 11-2)

Fri/Sat vs. Youngstown State Fri: W 6-2 - Sat: 5-3  W 14-0

RHP Jaden Hill - Fri: 6-IP, 0-R, 4-K, WIN (2-0)

RHP Landon Marceaux -  Sun: 5-IP, 0-ER, 4-K

Sat - 6-IP, 0-R, 10-K  Win (1-0)

RHP Ma’Khail Hilliard - Sun: 1-IP 1-ER

2B Cade Doughty -

Sun - 0-5, R  -  Mon - 1-5  -  Wed - 3-6, R, 2B  

Fri -  1-4, R, HR  Sat G1 - 3-5, R, HR  G2 - 1-1

OF Giovanni Digiacomo -

Sun - 1-2, R

OF Cade Beloso -

Sun - 0-2, R  -  Mon - 1-3, R  -  Wed - 1-3, R

Fri - 1-4, R, HR   Sat G1 - 0-3 G2 - 1-1

 

14 UCLA  (3-3)

Sun vs. San Francisco (L: 8-3)

Tue vs. Loyola Marymount   (W: 5-2)

Fr1 & Sat - UC Irvine  Fri: W 4-3  -  Sat: L 7-3

RHP Zach Pettway - Fri: 1-IP, 0-R, 2-K

RHP Michael Townsend -

Sun: 0.1-IP, 0-R, K  -  Tue: 0.1-IP, 0-R

Fri: 0.2-IP, 0-R

C Noah Cardenas -

Sun: 1-3  - Tue - 2-4

Fri: 0-4 Sat - 1-5, R, 2B

SS Matt McLain -

Sun: 2-3, R  -  Tue - 1-4 , R

Fri: 0-2 Sat - 1-3, R


15 NC State   (2-3)

Sun vs. Davidson (DH) G1: W: 13-3  -  G2: W - 6-4)

Tue vs. UNCG   L  -  16-13

Fri-Sat vs. Georgia Tech L  9-2    L  8-3

C Luca Tresh - Sun: G1: 1-3, R

Sun - G2 - 2-3, R, HR - Tue - 4-5, 2-R, 2B, HR

Fri - 0-1 - Sat - 2-4, 2-R, HR