Showing posts with label Tip of the Cap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tip of the Cap. Show all posts

Saturday, May 25, 2013

A Tip of the Cap: And the Winner Is...

On the final day of our 2013 Tip of the Cap series, we take note of some of the special achievements by players, fans, media and others involved with the Tigers' 2013 season.

Best reason to watch a game from the third base line
3rd Base Sliders

If you went to SEC weekend series at Taylor Stadium all year and never wandered down by the pavilion, you didn't discover the Third Base Sliders concessions stand, and you missed some of the best food served at Simmons Field since Johnny's Beanery ran the concessions back in the 90's.  Chef Travis Taylor served up fresh grilled philly cheese and ham and cheese sliders, Chicago dog sliders, grilled corn on the cob, and more.  Mmm good, but you missed it.  Sorry.

And now they're already working on a new building and seating area in that spot, which I suppose means they probably won't be back next season.  But I'll be following my nose on that first SEC Friday night next season, just to make sure.

The Ian Kinsler Base Cadet Award

I'm really tempted to give this annual award for creative base-running to Dylan Kelly. We were warned early on about the catcher when Rob Z told KBIA Sports Extra “He may run a little weird, but he is a phenomenal teammate.” Watching DK run the bases or run down an errant baseball was like watching a Teenage Mutant Ninja Hermit Crab chasing down a meal.

But considering Kelly only attempted one steal all season (at which he failed), he hardly qualifies. Dane Opel actually lead the team in base-stealing blunders, but wasn't particularly spectacular in doing so.

And besides, the most spectacular base running catastrophe I saw all season was the now-famous slide into third by the orginal Mizzou Base Cadet, who face-plowed his way into reclaiming the award that bears his name:


Black & Gold Glove

Josh Lester not only played four different infield positions for the Tigers in 2013, he also led the team with the fewest errors (4) among Tiger infielders.

Among the outfield, Dane Opel had only 2 errors, and led the nation with 15 outfield assists.

And then there's Dylan Kelly, who committed only 1 error the entire season, and ably handled his duties as a backstop and handler of pitchers.

On a team that gained a reputation for sometimes catastrophic defensive failures, there really were a lot of amazing plays this season.  Keaton Steele made an acrobatic stop at first in one game that took my breath away.

Here's a tip of my cap for all the times this team flashed the leather like pros.

John McKee HBP Award

Dane Opel led the squad with 13 HBP, followed closely by Keaton Steele with 12.  Between the two of them, they accounted for about a third of the team's "accidental" plunkings".

Mark Alexander Phoenix Award
On May 17, 2010, Anderson had surgery to repair a torn labrum in his right shoulder.

On May 17, 2012, Anderson had surgery to replace the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow.

On May 17, 2013, Anderson's right arm helped the Tigers clinch a spot in their first Southeastern Conference Tournament (Columbia Tribune, 5/18)
Eric Anderson has impressed everyone with his bulldog determination to get past all the injuries and be the pitcher he once was.  He has definitely earned the come-back player award this season.

Nattering Nabobs

Without a doubt the best coverage of MU Baseball this season was provided by Alex Silverman of the the Columbia Missourian.

I was most impressed by the way he treated Mizzou Baseball the same way beat writers cover Mizzou Football or Basketball, as an important part of MU Athletics.  Many writers treat Baseball as one of the "unimportant" sports, and they treat it with kid gloves because it's not worth their time to dig and expose and question.  As a result, fans, players and coaches may come to expect more positive reporting and are a bit disturbed when someone plays a different tune.

Alex Silverman marched to the beat of an aspiring serious sportswriter, though, chasing down leads and calling things like he saw them.
"Root, root, root for the road team."

This could have been the refrain Saturday at Taylor Stadium, where No. 2 LSU clobbered the Missouri baseball team 8-0. Even after a five-hour rain delay, which several LSU fans spent tailgating under cover in the parking lots along Carrie Francke Drive outside the stadium, hundreds of purple-and-gold clad fans filled the seats behind the LSU dugout along the first-base line.

"We want a home-field advantage and, hell, we felt like we were in Alex Box," MU outfielder Logan Pearson said. "Their fans stomped our fans today." (Columbia Missourian, 3/31)

That apathy seemed evident following Tuesday’s loss. Outfielder Case Munson, who made a tremendous diving catch in the contest, was all smiles with reporters after the game despite the result. (Missourian, 4/3)

It was Missouri third baseman Shane Segovia’s shot at redemption. A base hit in the bottom of the 15th inning Saturday would make it all OK.

The ball he bobbled half-an-inning earlier that lead to Florida’s go-ahead run wouldn’t matter.
...
The night before, Missouri head coach Tim Jamieson pinch-hit for Segovia in the bottom of the ninth, a decision that haunted him after his replacement, Jake Ivory, struck out looking.

“I second guessed it,” Jamieson said. “Even though Shane’s struggling, he probably was still the best option at that point.” (Missourian, 4/21)

The Missouri baseball team's postgame reaction Sunday at Taylor Stadium was an unusual sight. The Missouri players were uncharacteristically jubilant after sweeping Auburn in a doubleheader Sunday, 3-1 in the first game and 4-1 in the second game, to take its first Southeastern Conference series win at home.

There were high fives all around, pitcher Keaton Steele and infielder Gavin Stark shared a chest bump-based dance, and infielder Mike McGraw rode on the shoulders of outfielder Brannon Champagne. (Missourian, 4/29)

"Pregame I didn’t sense it," Jamieson said. "Anytime that happens, it’s lack of focus, not good enough focus. I can’t explain it."

Jamieson has been at a loss throughout the season, which is on pace to be his worst at Missouri since his first season in 1995. Missouri signed Jamieson to a contract extension through 2015 following the team's Big 12 Conference tournament title last season. (Missourian, 4/30)

Honorary mention goes to Jack Witthaus, writing for The Maneater, who often was competing with Silverman for the same stories, and sometimes beating him to the punch.  He caught the attention of this Mizzou Baseball history buff, though, with a profile of former Tiger Jim Doerr.  If you haven't rad it, click the link and learn.
Doerr, donned in a bright green sweater with yellow pants, arranges a simple display on one of his couches. He’s collected a few framed photos, an autographed bat and some worn articles printed on computer paper. A fat, jewel-incrusted ring emblazoned with an “M” is wedged on his finger.
Number Cruncher

Sam Nasci
Sam Nasci is, as Bill Connelly of RockMNation calls it, a Numbers NERRRRD.  A Junior this year at Mizzou, his dream is to be a sportswriter focusing on statistical analysis of sports, especially baseball.  Sabermetrics, as the nerds like to call it.

Sam came to me before the season and offered to help me out by writing previews of each MU Baseball opponent this season, and we cut a mutually beneficial deal:  less work for me, experience and exposure for him

I received several comments this season, telling me, I really liked that preview you did of this weekend's series!  It wasn't me, folks.  Sam I am not, but I tip my cap to him for adding a different flavor to SimmonsField.com this season with his Mizzou Matchup pieces.


That's it for the 2013 season.  The results were disappointing, but it's still baseball.  Put two teams of nine kids on a field with a ball and a bat and I'll be glad to watch.

There is one last Tip of the Cap post.  Check back here Monday morning.

Friday, May 24, 2013

A Tip of the Cap 2013: Word on the Tweet

Tweet of the Year:


You thought you deleted that one, didn't you?

Snow Days






#superdk




Life in the SEC




Just Another Bunch of College Guys





Tex & Hunter







Thursday, May 23, 2013

A Tip of the Cap 2013: By the Numbers

288th  Mizzou's RPI ranking on March 4th, out of 296 D-1 teams (BoydsWorld.com RPI)

139th Mizzou's official NCAA RPI ranking  on May 21st.

7 MU's Strength of Schedule ranking among D-1 teams (BoydsWorld.com, 5/22)

18-32  Final W-L record, fewest wins since 1975; Tim Jamieson's fewest wins as head coach

.360  Lowest winning % since 1995

5  Games cancelled

12  Games postponed or rescheduled

20.5 Inches of snow in in the last 8 days of February in CoMo

33.7  Average temperature in March in CoMo

3  Longest MU winning streak, 3/6-3/8 vs. Eastern Michigan (DH) and San Francisco

6  Longest MU losing streak, the first two weekends of the season vs. Southern Mississippi and Memphis

2 Number of games MU lost by just 1 run

15 Home runs for the team, fewest since 1973

64 Doubles, fewest since 1975

205  Runs, fewest since 1973

402 Hits, fewest since 1983

185  RBI, fewest since 1973

161  walks, fewest since 1973

2-9 Rob Zastryzny's W-L record

3.38  Earned runs given up by Rob Z per 9 innings

1.92  Average runs scored by MU in Rob Z's 13 starts

228 Career strikeouts for Rob Z, tied for 8th all-time at Mizzou (tied with Rob Pietroburgo, father of current assistant coach Dan Pietroburgo)

3.87 Team ERA, surpassed only by the 2004-2006 Max Scherzer teams since 1981

484 Hits allowed, fewest since 1993

242 Runs allowed, fewest since 1983

189 Earned Runs allowed, fewest since 1983

152 Walks allowed, fewest since 1983

15  Outfield Assists for Dane Opel in 2013, 1st place in Division 1 for the regular season


30  Career Stolen Bases for Brannon Champagne, tied for 9th all-time at MU

4  Infield Positions played by Josh Lester: 23 1B, 7 2B, 6 SS, 7 3B

30 Games Jake Walsh appeared in, out of 50

.193 MU's batting average in the 2013 SEC Tournament

.359  MU's batting average in the 2012 Big 12 Tournament

1.11  MU's ERA in the 2013 SEC Tournament

2.83 MU's ERA in the 2012 Big 12 Tournament

8 NCAA Regional appearances in 10 years from 2003-2012

1 NCAA Regional appearance in 4 years from 2010-2013

622 Career wins by Tim Jamieson

Conference ISR rankings, as of 5/22/2013
1 114.5 ACC
2 113.0 SEC
3 112.7 PAC 12
4 109.0 Big West
5 108.6 Big 12
3,145 Biggest Crowd at Taylor Stadium in 2013, also biggest regular season crowd ever

127  Smallest Crowd at Taylor Stadium in 2013

19,561  2013 Total Attendance

752   2013 Average Attendance

Past Years' Regular Season Home Attendance
2012: Total: 26,357; Average: 824
2011: Total: 13,334; Average: 476
2010: Total: 19,310; Average: 715
2009: Total: 23,848; Average: 852
2008: Total: 30,687; Average: 1,136
2007: Total: 14,190; Average: 645
2006:Total: 23,906; Average: 885
2005:Total: 16,965; Average: 707
2013 Home Attendance Detail
ATT - DAY DATE OPP3,145 - Fri 3/15 S. Carolina
2,563 - Sat 4/20 Florida
1,263 - Fri 3/29 LSU
1,107 - Sun 3/31 LSU
1,018 - Sun 4/21 Florida
945 - Sat 3/30 LSU
886 - Sun 5/18 Kentucky
879 - Sun 4/28 Auburn G1
879 - Sun 4/28 Auburn G2
850 - Sat 5/17 Kentucky
840 - Fri 4/19 Florida
826 - Sat 3/16 S. Carolina G1
826 - Sat 3/16 S. Carolina G2
750 - Tue 4/30 SEMO
654 - Fri 5/16 Kentucky
544 - SatT 3/9 SF
480 - Fri 3/8 SF
431 - Wed 3/13 Truman St
423 - Tue 3/12 Jackson St
400 - Tue 3/19 Arkansas St G1
400 - Tue 3/19 Arkansas St G2
306 - Wed 4/24 Missouri St
291- Fri 4/26 Auburn
227 - Wed 3/6 E Mich G1
227 - Wed 3/6 E Mich G2
127 - Wed 3/27 Neb-Omaha
Top 10 All-Time Home Attendance
6/2/07 Louisville (Regional) 3,630
6/1/07 Kent St (Regional) 3,481
6/3/07 Louisville (Regional) 3,457
3/15/13 South Carolina 3,145
5/17/08 Nebraska 3,126
5/18/08 Nebraska 2,418
4/25/98 Texas 2,347
4/24/98 Texas 2,372
5/5/12 Texas 2,2104/5/08 Okla St 2,205
6/4/07 Louisville-MU (Regional) 2,199

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

A Tip of the Cap 2013: Season Interrupted


The theme of 2013 was supposed to be Mizzou Baseball building on that Big 12 Championship and proving to the SEC and that they do belong, that they can compete. The catch phrase before the season began was "Embrace the Underdog".

And then, it seemed that everything that could go wrong did go wrong.  The team hit at an historic low production level.  The defense struggled to maintain leads.

The two players in that intro video who said, "I won't back down" and "I will make plays", weren't even on the active roster by season's end.

What was the problem?
It was the weather.

Specifically, it was the cancelation of four nonconference weekend home games in March. When SEC play started, the Tigers were a step behind. Not only have they have not been able to catch up, it seems that everything that could go wrong has gone wrong.

"I mean, I know this is not a great team, but we've been good enough to be right there," Jamieson said last week, "and you wonder, 'OK, if we'd been able to tweak a few things or get guys more prepared by playing more games, could it have been different?' It's not a great team, but it could have been a .500 club. It could have been a club that at least gives you some positives." (Columbia Tribune, May 16, 2013)
Perhaps we all should have been recognized it as a bad omen when Hattiesburg, MS, the site of the Tigers' season opening series, was hit by a tornado 5 days before Game 1.  The weather man was not kind to Mizzou Baseball in 2013.

The schedule seemed to stumble along in fits and starts all season long.
  1. Entire home opener series vs. Northwestern: cancelled due to huge snow.  Three games lost.
  2. Game 1 at Memphis was pushed to a later start time due to weather.
  3. 2-day series against Eastern Michigan pushed to a double header (7 innings each) on Wednesday, in bitter cold.
  4. Game 3 vs. San Francisco: cancelled
  5. Game vs. D-II Truman State cobbled into the schedule.  One game added, but it doesn't really count in the official RPI.
  6. Game 3 vs. South Carolina moved up to be part of a Saturday double-header ... in bitter cold
  7. Two-game set against Arkansas State was moved forward to a double-header, due to weather.
  8. Game 3 vs. Tennessee moved up to part of a Saturday double-header
  9. Tuesday game against Nebraska-Omaha was pushed back to Wednesday, due to yet another big snow.
  10. Game 2 against LSU was pushed back from 1:00 to 6:00 due to rain, wiping out a scheduled national TV broadcast.
  11. Missouri State at Mizzou was postponed a week due to severe thunderstorms
  12. Murray State game was cancelled outright due to heavy rains in the forecast
  13. Saturday game vs. Auburn postponed to later in the day, then postponed to be part of a 7-innings double header on Sunday.
That's a total of 17 games that were either cancelled, postponed and/or rescheduled.  Five were cancelled altogether.  The Tigers only managed to play 48 Division I games, as opposed to the normal 56 game schedule.  

Tim Jamieson does have a point, that the constant interruptions made it hard for the Tigers to get going..


On the other hand, Mizzou Softball saw 14 games cancelled outright, plus many more postponed and rescheduled, including weather delays in their SEC Tournament.  They finished 35-11, 15-8 in the SEC, won the Regional they hosted in Columbia and at this writing are preparing to host a Super Regional.  And they did that even with their pitching staff in disarray.

So, yes, the weather problems were hard to deal with.  But that doesn't really explain this season.

The Best of Times, The Worst of Times

The 2013 Tigers were a bipolar team, proving themselves to be both one of the best and one of the worst Tiger squads in decades.

This season's pitching staff has proved themselves to be one of the best and deepest Mizzou fans have seen in quite a while.  The team ERA of 3.87 is surpassed only by the Max Scherzer teams of 2004-2006 during the Tim Jamieson era of the past two decades, and prior to that you have to go back to 1981 to find a better pitching staff..

The offense, however, stands out historically in a way not as admirable.  The Tigers' team batting average of .245 is the worst team BA since 1969, when the Tigers managed a weak .230 average.

The final game of 2013 summed up the entire season in 17 long innings.  Rob Z pitched a masterful 9 innings, Keaton Steele followed up with 7 more scoreless innings, and it was a run given up by Jake Walsh in the 17th inning that ended the Tigers' season.  That incredible pitching performance just wasn't good enough to make up for the Tiger lineup's .193 batting average for the game, getting their only run on a wild throw.  It was an exhilarating game and a frustrating game.

And it was an exhilarating and frustrating season.


Leaving the Zou














Tuesday, February 12, 2013

HI NOTES: Roster Cuts, More SEC Dominance, More Jersey #s, More Preseason Season

ROSTER

At Saturday's First Pitch Celebration, 38 players were introduced.  The roster on mutigers.com now lists 35,  the mandated limit for roster size.  Missing from the list are Senior LHP Kyle Barbeck, Sophomore LHP Tyler House, and Junior RHP Jeff Oracion.  Here's a SimmonsField.com Tip of the Cap to those three Tigers, for all the effort they've put in.  There may be a Jake Walsh in that group.

SOUTHERN EXPOSURE

The SEC "Numbers Game": The Beginning (SECDigitalNetwork.com)
The SEC is pretty good in football, right?

Anyone familiar with the SEC has heard the laundry list of achievements experienced in football. Seven straight National Championships, the reigning Heisman Trophy winner and unmatched depth. Many argue that this year was the SEC's most dominant, with at one point six of the top nine teams in the Bowl Championship Series standings coming from this conference.

Consider this though. Is the SEC just as dominant in baseball?

SEC baseball teams have won nine of the last 22 national championships, having finished runner-up six times during that span. That includes South Carolina in 2012, which fell two wins short of winning their third straight title. Although LSU and the Gamecocks have won eight of those championships, this isn't a case of two teams dominating while the rest coast on that reputation...
Realignment Shuffles Plenty Of Conferences (Baseball America)
BOTTOM LINE FOR BASEBALL: The rich get richer with these additions...So while Mizzou should reap some recruiting advantages by moving to the league's best conference, this move is a net loss for it...

PRESEASON SEASON

Only 3 days until the end of the Pre-Season Season

20 Mondays - No. 1 (College Baseball Today)
Check out Eric Sorenson's first "Baldcast" video of the season. He talks about the new RPI formula that rewards wins on the road.
♦ More Eric Sorenson in College Baseball's Preseason Top 25 for 2013 (Athlon Sports)

♦ And the absurdity begins, before a single game has even been played: 2013 NCAA Baseball Preseason Regional Projections (College Baseball Daily)
The season hasn’t kicked off yet but it is time to start looking at how a potential 64 team bracket would look right now based on our preseason expectations of each conference. The last two years, we have hit on 20 out of 31 hosts (ASU appeal is the outlier). Remember, that these are just based on our projections and expectations for what we will happen come May 27th. We will release our new projections every Tuesday until the end of the season.
And, don't even ask where Mizzou fits in on the bracket.

JERSEY NUMBERS

♦ Thanks to MU Journalism grad and CNN photojournalist Jeremy Harlan for providing me with some jersey numbers from the early 90's, which I've updated on our historical list of Mizzou Baseball Jersey Numbers. Anyone else who has some jersey numbers to add to our list, let me know at simmonsfield@hotmail.com.
#3 - Justin Towe '93-'96
#4 - Jeff Terrell '95-'97 Drafted Phillies
#10- Justin Hellman '96
#14- Chris Giuliani 94-96
#15- Tom Buchman '95-'96 Drafted Twins
#16- Jay White '93-'96
#22- Brian Jorgensen- 93-96
#23- Aaron Akin '96 Drafted Marlins
#24- Bryan Seymour '94-'97
#26- Matt Nivens 94-97
#30- Keith Massa- 93-96

Friday, June 15, 2012

A Tip of the Cap 2012: And the Winner is . . .

On the final day of our 2012 Tip of the Cap series, we take note of some of the special achievements by players, fans and others involved with the Tigers' 2012 season.



The Ian Kinsler Base Cadet Award
The nimble Ben Turner

For the first time in years there was no one player who stands out in my mind as being a true "base cadet" on the basepaths.  Sure, there were players who got caught between bases, but you never really know whether that was their fault or if the batter didn't come through on a called play.  Even the time Jake Ivory was inserted as a pinch runner and almost immediately got himself caught in a rundown between first and third - even that wasn't extraordinary.

And while the biggest base running blunder of the year was probably the full-speed-ahead charge toward home by Andreas Plackis in the season's final game, I think I'd have to give that award to Coach J.

So this year we're awarding the coveted honor to the Tiger who was without a doubt the most entertaining base-runner on the team:  Ben Turner.  The 6'4" catcher runs somewhat better than most catchers, but the sight of him lumbering around the bases at full speed would be enough to make any infielder or catcher think twice about getting in his way.  Kind of like trying to reason with a stampeding rhinoceros.

So here's a tip of the cap to "Big Ben", less of a Porsche and more of a Hummer on the basepaths.

Black & Gold Glove

I could go the easy route and pick Blake Brown for this one: 1 error in 59 games.  He's surely deserving.

But I doubt even Blake will blame me for choosing instead the player who is now playing with him in the Atlanta Braves organization:  Eric Garcia. The Tiger player with the most errors on the season: 22.

Garcia started at shortstop in every game of the season from Auburn through Tucson.  In the first 22 games, he piled up an incredible 13 errors.  Much of that was played out during the long March home stand, in front of the home town crowd.  That fumbling streak stuck in the minds of many fans, who remember only the missed grounders, the overthrown balls past first base.

But starting with the two games against Central Arkansas, and carrying on through the bulk of the Big 12 season, Garcia was a different man.  (See Garcia uses glove, bat to lead MU Baseball, Columbia Tribune)  He made some amazing plays so deep you'd have thought he was the left fielder.  And no one who was at the 2nd game of the Tigers' sweep of Kansas State will forget the incredible grab-and-flip play behind second base (see video below).

He did make another 9 errors . . . in 39 games.  But for a college shortstop and the most demanding position on the field, that's a great achievement.

Garcia's glove work in the Big 12 Tournament was as impressive as his .500 batting average, and probably went a long way to getting the attention of the scouts and boosting his draft ranking a bit higher.

So here's a Tip of the Cap and a Black & Gold Glove to Eric Garcia, the Tiger player with the most errors.



Jay Bell Award

This award is given annually to the player who achieves the greatest success against the Kansas Jayhawks, named in honor a former Tiger pitcher who mowed down the KU batters during a mid-week game back in the 90s.

Dane Opel (#47) and teammates
The final conference match-up between Missouri and Kansas turned into a depressing experience for the first two games, as the Mizzou offense picked a poor time to be "off again" rather than "on again".  They did salvage Game 3, though, which was billed as the final match-up between the two Big 12 rivals.

Except it wasn't.  MU and KU met again in the semi-final game of the Big 12 Tournament.  OF Dane Opel led the Tigers' charge, going 3-for-5 with 5 RBI and 3 runs scored.  He lacked just a home run in a shot at hitting for the cycle.

Dane earned the Jay Bell Award for that performance, but especially for driving the nail in the coffin of the rivalry, scoring the final run that put the Tigers up 12-2, run-ruling the Jayhawks.

John McKee HBP Award

Dillon Everett got himself hit 15 times in 2012, accounting for over 17% of the team's 86 HBPs.   Missouri led the Big 12 in offensive HBPs.

An example of the value of an HBP came in the March 9th game against Charlotte, when the Tigers racked up 5 HBP.   In the second inning, Dillon Everett reached base with one out after getting hit by a pitch, then stole second on the following pitch. Everett reached third on Brown's groundout to the left side, and Champagne walked to put runners on the corners with two outs. Mach's single to center scored Everett

Mark Alexander Phoenix Award

A year ago in my 2011 Tip of the Cap series, Jake Walsh's picture was prominently featured, sitting with some of his fellow former Tiger players, holding up the tradition of the "Simmons Savages" heckling group. Apparently, between opportunities to sit in Taylor Stadium's Section B and laugh at the Tiers' opponents, Walsh was dominating opponents as a member of the Missouri Club Team.  So much so that when he convinced Tim Jamieson and the MU coaching staff to give him a tryout, they were impressed by his newfound discipline and improved "stuff".

Walsh went on to post the third best ERA on the team, 3.44, and led the team in appearances on the way to a  2-3 record with 8 saves.  He had the 2nd best opponents' batting average at .240.

Read the details of Jake's comeback at Missouri Student Athlete Spotlight: Jake Walsh (Big12Sports.com)

Here's a hearty tip of the cap to the Cinderella Man, Jake Walsh.

Stand By Your Son Award

I have to tip my cap to all the parents of the Tiger ballplayers.  They go to the games, they support their sons, they talk proudly about them with a light in their eyes that has been burning for 18+ years.    Dave and Regina Mach have been driving to Columbia and following their sons, Kyle and Conner, around the country for more than half a decade.  Elwood and Robin Brown, along with others, have been organizing tailgates and picnics and other events to support not only their son, but the Mizzou Baseball program.

But the parents who stand out in my mind are Tim and Sheryl Clubb.  They've been showing up at Ryan's ballgames for four years now, faithfully.  Even over the past two years, when they knew very well that it was a near certainty that their son would not be playing, they have been there week after week, supporting him and cheering on his team.

Here's a Tip if the Cap to the Clubbs, and to all the parents who have given so much to their sons.

Superfan Award

Brandon Weiss and Gracie Duggan, spurred on by Baseball SID Shawn Davis, created a new student fan group for MU Baseball, Tigers on Deck.  Here's a tip of the cap for their efforts and strong hopes taht they will continue to develop the program leading up to the Tigers' first SEC season.

"by a landslide"
The day after the final home game, Brandon tweeted the following "Non-Important Baseball Team Superlatives":

Best walk-up (batters): 1) Scott Sommerfeld 2) Blake Brown 3) Ben Turner

Best walk-up (pitchers): 1) Jake Walsh 2) John Miles 3) Dusty Ross 4) Jeff Emens 5) Rob Z. Solid showing from pitching staff.

Worst walk-up (batters): 1) Patrick Quintanilla 2) Dane Opel 3) Decades Weekend (all of them were bad, considering what could have been)

Worst walk-up (pitchers): All solid, but have to go with Ryan Yuengel for a two-year-old song that lacks creativity.

Worst Headshot: 1) Ben Turner (by a landslide), 2) Nick Moore. Everyone else looked like a real headshot.

Most Memorable Game
I already talked about the run-rule drubbing of the Jayhawks above, so instead I'll recall a game much earlier in the season that had all the drama, action, and occasional slapstick humor that any sports fan could ask for. 
The Charlotte 49ers came to Taylor Stadium on a chilly Friday night (March 9th).  The Tigers were ready to avenge the arrogant running up of the score by the 49ers a year ago.

Eric Anderson started the game, but he left in 5th with an elbow problem (the beginning of the end for EA's season).

Jeff Emens took over, pitched through to the 9th, giving up just 4 hits and a single run.  At one point a ball was hit like rocket back to the mound.  Emens dropped his glove hand down behind him and the ball hit the glove and dropped to the mound.  Emens calmly picked it up and threw the runner out at 1st.

The whole game was a comedy of errors by the 49ers (4 official, several more not classified as an error).  More than one 49er ended up on the ground due to collisions or missteps on the basepaths.

Ben Turner had a memorable, albeit painful, game.  At one point a batter hits a short dink in front of the plate and runs into Ben Turner, the immovable force. Turner threw out the runer going from 1st to 2nd, and the ump called out the batter for interfering with Ben's right to field and throw the ball.

Another batter overswung (overswang?  overswinged?) and lost hold of the bat, which went spinning into Turner, hitting him in the face and body.  Ben shook it off and got back behind the plate.

Just a minute or so later, a runner coming from third came in hard to the plate and bowled Turner over.  Ben tagged him out.

The Tigers won, 10-4, and went on to sweep the series.

Most Memorable Defensive Play
Many of the Tigers made great plays in 2012 (see Eric Garcia's above), but only one of them ended up on ESPN SportsCenter's Top 10 Plays.   First baseman Gavin Stark, in the seventh inning of the Tigers' 4-1 victory over Oklahoma State, chased after a foul ball into foul territory and flipped head over heels into the dugout while making the catch for the out. That earned him the No. 5 spot on SportsCenter's Top 10 plays that night.
TAKE TWO: MU first baseman earns his 15 minutes of fame (Columbia Tribune)

"We were all going crazy. I was on the phone with my mom," Stark said. "The first thing she asked was if my teeth were OK."

Roommate Turner was not among the crowd.

"I went to bed," the senior said. "He said, 'Dude, I'm going to be on "SportsCenter." ' I was like, 'I'm going to bed, dude.' "

Junior outfielder Brannon Champagne got his own dig in.

"I said, 'Way to make "SportsCenter." Way to make the Top 10. But you didn't have to jump.' It was awesome, though," he said.
Pwned 
Michael Wacha, Texas A&M's #1 pitcher, was drafted by the At. Louis Cardinals in the 1st round, the 19th overall pick.  It's a good pick for the Cards.  Wacha had an impressive 2.06 ERA on the season. 

On the other hand, in the two times Wacha faced the the Tigers, back on March 30th for 6.1 innings and then again at the Big 12 Tournament for 7 innings, he limped away with a 5.50 ERA
Worst Ballpark
It's a toss-up between the second place the Tigers played in 2012 vs. the last place they played.

Back on the second weekend of the year, the Tigers traveled to the University of San Francisco and Benedetti Diamond, a ballpark without field lights, with an off-center press box, and with the surrounding neighborhood so close the entire field was surrounded with high fences like acage match.  See some pictures HERE.

But that ballpark seemed absolutely hospitable compared to the brand spanking new Hi Corbett Field in Tucson, with a playing surface as hard as rock.  The Arizona Wildcats had spent all season long getting used to the heat and to the playing surface, learning to take advantage of the hard earth in the infield to deliver multiple Baltimore chops bouncing over the heads of the fielders.  Dan Pietroburgo's tweet while watching the Tucson Super Regional says it all:

"Hi Corbett strikes again... #worstfieldever #joke #waterplease"
Mizzou '39 Award

Andreas Plackis
Mizzou first baseman Andreas Plackis was the recipient of the 2012 Mizzou `39 Award, an award given to 39 seniors at the University of Missouri based on their outstanding service, academic achievement and leadership.  By the end of the season his teammates and the fans were calling him "Doc" and "Doctor Plackis", after he let it be known he would forego playing baseball next year in his final season of eligibility, in order to devote himself fully to Medical school.

Great Ballpark Conversations


  1. Tim Wolfe, University of Missouri President
  2. Frank Graham, former Tiger pitcher (1940-1942)
  3. Robert J. Lipscomb, Kansas State Superfan:  I sat near Robert during the Sunday K-State game and asked him about the teams, players and coaches he'd seen.  He declared Mizzou's Mike Kelly "the best radio announcer in the conference."
  4. A family from Iowa, here with their son on an official recruiting visit, who asked a lot of questions about Mizzou Baseball, and told me a lot about the unusual summer schedule of high school baseball in Iowa.
  5. The Tri- Delta sorority, the whole lot of them, who showed up for a mid-week game en masse and chose to fill Section E - except for my seat and the seat next to me.  Heard and participated in some unexpected ballpark conversations while I tried to keep my allergies from going crazy amid the excess of perfume.
  6. Flavio Garcia, Tim Clubb, Elwood Brown, and many other family members of the ballplayers.
  7. Tyler McSparran, the Mizzou student from San Diego who I catapulted into his 15 minutes of fame as a new MU Baseball recruit last November.  We laughed, we talked about how crazy it all was, we went back to watching the game.
  8. The Tigerboard All Sports guys in Section B - "where everybody knows your name, but not your real name"
  9. Larry Wyatt II - a true Mizzou Baseball treasure, and a true friend.  Always good for a chat about the team, or whatever else is on his mind.  And always enthusiastic about the Missouri Baseball Tigers.


That's it for the 2012 season.

Bring on the SEC.

Bring on some fresh faces and another shot at living the dream.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

A Tip of the Cap 2012: Getting the Word Out

Every year we tip our cap to the folks in the media who cover and promote Missouri Tiger Baseball.

Viral Mizzou

2012 was the year Mizzou Baseball went viral.  The media that got people's attention the most this season weren't the newspapers or the TV stations or even the blogs and websites online.

My Twitter feed was exploding this season with information and promotions and links to other media about Missouri Tiger Baseball.  Some of the tweets originated within the MU Athletic Department - the Ticket office, Strategic Communications (even the new title reflects a new approach), the Baseball office.  But others originated with members of the team, the Tiger Crew, student fans, the new Tigers on Deck and more.

If you wanted to know about a rain delay or a schedule change or special events, the place to be the first to know was on Twitter.

And online videos also came into their own for Mizzou this season.  The Mizzou Network literally flooded their website with updates, interviews and features.  And other videos popped up all season long on YouTube and other venues.

And so we tip our cap to some of the people who made Mizzou Baseball "pop".

Shawn Davis, leaning on what
appears to be a toilet.
ShawnDizzle

I reflexively think of Shawn Davis as ShawnDizzle, because I see/read/interact with him most on Twitter, where he goes by @ShawnDizzle77.  I have to be honest that at first this 55 year old traditionalist thought Shawn was a little too "out there" to be an SID.  Of course, he's not an SID, he is an Assistant Director of Strategic Communications - Media.  And, of course, he's he's exactly the kind of young lunatic MU Baseball needed.

I've complained for years that the Baseball program doesn't get enough promotion and publicity.  Here's a Tip of the Cap to "Big Time" Shawn Davis (as Tex and Hunter call him) and to the rest of the staff and interns in the "Strategic Communications" department for daring to think outside the box.

@ShawnDizzle77 on Twitter:
June 3rd: 'Tiger' is trending nationally on twitter. People really must be pumped up for our game against Loisville today. Watch live on ESPN3
June 2nd: Arizona: Where umbrellas are sold for sun instead of rain.

June 1st: I love baseball more than any sport I think.

June 1st: I can't believe I had to leave the pool to go write a press release. #ToughLife

May 29: Screw nameplates...this is how people know who's office this is http://t.co/Zfk3hEpI

May 27th: I love the fire that Ben Turner plays with.

May 15th: In honor of that walkoff, I am shaving my head and growing a mohawk like #Yadi

May 13th: The best part of #Mizzou baseball games is when the crowd gets loud and proud for the Stadium grill t-shirt toss.

May 1st: I think Tex just insulted me on the air. Something about my height

April 28th: Tex makes like 19 different noises when he snores. #HowAmISupposedToSleep

April 13th: Awesome. Tornadoes and baseball.

April 5th: Alright tweeps: What are some of the best songs you like to hear at baseball games?

MArch 21st: Apparently my students thought it would be a good idea to create a twitter with the crazy things I say. Follow it @IshShawnSays
Ashley Arp
Ashley Arp
I've never actually spoken to Ashley Arp, but I've seen her a lot.  I've seen her at nearly every home game as co-captain of the Tiger Crew.  I saw her on TV, celebrating at Bricktown after the Tigers won the Big 12 Championship.

Mostly, though, I've seen through her videos.  She's a broadcast journalism major at MU, and has produced several videos promoting Mizzou Baseball this year, which have found their way onto Twitter (@AshleyArp92), YouTube, to her own blog, and anywhere else modern media could take them.

Here's some samples of her work (you can see more at her blog):




And an attention-grabbing still shot promo by Ashley:

So here's a Tip of the Cap to Ashley Arp.  This summer she's a media intern with the Texas Rangers.

While we're on the subject, here's a Tip of the Cap to the rest of the hard-working ladies of the Tiger Crew. They not only are bat girls, but they do the promotional games and t-shirt tosses and such during the games, they assist the grounds crew, and they do a lot more to promote Mizzou Baseball. They even were represented at the Big 12 tournament.


2012 Tiger Crew

Tiger Crew on Twitter:
@B_Turner18: Big shout out to @mutigercrew for there great work this weekend. #MIZ

@MUTigersOnDeck: We will be handing out flyers and candy with @mutigercrew today in Speakers Circle at 1:30 Stop by and see us! #OneTeam #OneField #OneMizzou

Word on the Tweet
Hunter Mense: Go ahead everyone and jump on that @MUTigerBaseball bandwagon. There's still some room...

Jesse Santo: @BSQUARED39 1....parking garage 0.

James Abey: @MUTigerBaseball do me a huge favor and sweep the trash talkin chicken hawks #MIZSEC#big12bust

@MZUMAT: Mizzou probably won't win this game, but it's better than being kansas.

@Hunter_Mense: Tremendous effort from the Tigers today... I get goosebumps watchin stuff like that!

@B_Turner18: Unbelievable game today. Great win with everyone battling. #winaseries #hewasout #MIZ

@KendallRogersPG: #Mizzou takes both ends of a doubleheader at #Auburn to win that series today. Tim Jamieson always has his #tigers ready to play. #Big12

@EASports44 (Eric Anderson): A cowboy rode into town on Friday, stayed 3 days and 3 nights and left on Friday.. how is this possible??

@GavinStark30: To all the people who watched me push my car off stadium today in traffic. You suck.

Dan Pietroburgo: Just found a bum sleeping in our stadium... That's a first! Kinda looked like this guy... pic.twitter.com/NKlQg9VN

Talking Heads

James Abey, aka Jim Shorts, debuted this year as the PA Announcer at Taylor Stadium.  He brought some life and energy to the job, perking up the stadium atmosphere.

@JimShorts923:

  • Watching baseball should be a requirement to even be American #lovethisgame
  • Baseball is a great way to spend the evening


Hunter Mense and Tex Little
at 2012 Big 12 Tournament
Tex & Hunter

Tex Little & Hunter Mense gelled in their second season together in the KTGR broadcast booth.  So much so that sometimes they sound like big brother and little brother, pushing each other's buttons, needling each other.  And Hunter figured out how to tactfully and gently correct the occasional malapropism that escapes Tex's lips (although now and then, like a true sibling, Hunter uses the skewer a bit more directly).  All in all, it makes for a great listen for MU Baseball fans.

No word yet on whether Hunter will be back - not sure he himself knows.  But considering it has taken him 8 years to get this far in his pursuit of a degree, we should maybe expect to have him around for awhile longer.

Tex Messages

A few of my favorite quotes from Tex on the air this years:

  • "That's a hooker down the left field line!"
  • "Swing and a smash hit to Conner Mach at third!   He rights himself and throws to first for the out.  That ball was hammered! Conner hung in there and put his nose on it and picked it cleanly."
  • "He fills that uniform out very nicely!"

And a tweet from @Hunter_Mense:
This kid has been staring at @TexLittleSS with the "Are you my daddy" look for the entire game.


Nattering Nabobs of the Press

Caitlin Sweica
Columbia Missourian
Best Newspaper Article of 2012
Missouri baseball player prepares to move on to medical school
(by Caitlin Swieca, Columbia Missourian)

When Plackis was a redshirt freshman, he traveled with the baseball team to a series at Kansas State because the team needed a bullpen catcher. Wiederholt made the trip to Manhattan and invited her son out for dinner after the game.

"He said, 'I can't, I've got two tests on Monday, but I'm going to stay in my room and you can bring me a sandwich,'" Wiederholt said.

Sure enough, when Wiederholt found his hotel room, Plackis was sitting with his computer, studying. His teammates were nowhere to be found. (5/8)
Quotes and Snippets from 2012

Columbia Daily Tribune
"When I heard someone was trying to bring shells on the plane, I was thinking, 'OK, it's gotta be Dusty,' " sophomore pitcher Rob Zastryzny said. "Because he's the most country kid I know. His name's Dusty."

Although teammates say they never know what kind of high jinks to expect from Ross off the field — a dollar bill, a fourth-floor perch, a reel of fishing line and Nebraska hotel bar patrons feature prominently in another tale — once the senior right-hander enters the game, they know they can breathe easy (4/27)
Columbia Missourian
“Do you ever get tired of chasing foul balls?” an usher asks as a winded Joens jogs back into the stadium.

“Never,” he says. He returns to his post in the right bleachers.

A lot goes into Joens’ ballhawking hobby.

Whether it means scaling fences, sprinting across parking lots or outwitting a kid or two, Joens is willing to do almost anything to get that elusive foul ball. He even disguises himself by staying clean-shaven and wearing ball caps and T-shirts from his high school to make himself look younger. Kids get more tosses from players. (4/26)

The Maneater
With the bases loaded and two outs, Champagne walked up to the plate. He fell behind the count early but battled back to earn a full count. In front of a jam-packed Taylor Stadium and with the game on the line, Champagne watched as the 3-2 pitch came in and a ball was called and the winning run walked to the plate. The run sealed the team’s first sweep of a conference opponent since 2010.

“Any way you get the win is always nice,” Champagne said. “You want to hit and you want to be aggressive but you also have to keep the same mindset and be patient.”

Champagne’s streak of reaching base in 30 straight games is the second-longest active streak in the Big 12, a feat Jamieson said is a result of all of Champagne’s attributes. (4/24)
It’s opening day for the Missouri baseball team, and it finds itself inside Samford Stadium in Auburn, Ala., facing its Southeastern Conference foe, Auburn.

The teams played in front of 3,577 people into the late afternoon, and Auburn walked away with the 5-2 win. Of the 44 games Missouri has played this season, most would view its first contest simply as one extra tally in the loss column. For Shawn Davis, the team’s sports information director, something else was taken from that game.

“They had a great student section,” he said. “They were loud. They had pom-poms and T-shirts, and they were cheering. The thing I noticed was that they really added to the overall feeling of the ballpark.”

Following the Tigers’ opening road stretch, the atmosphere changed when Davis and the team returned to Columbia. Soon after the trip, Taylor Stadium hosted a two-game set with Central Arkansas that attracted an average attendance of just 376.

“If you talk to people who are really attracted to collegiate sports, they come for the atmosphere,” Davis said.
. . .
An SEC-type atmosphere is exactly what Tigers on Deck is striving for, Davis said.

“We want to start doing tailgates,” Davis said. “We want to encourage kids to come out to the games and tailgate, grill out, have a barbecue, play catch in the parking lot, play washers or play bags. We want to create a football Saturday type of atmosphere. That’s the way it is in the SEC.”

Duggan reiterated Davis’s thoughts, saying the growth of Tigers on Deck and the team as a whole depends largely on the fan base itself.

“Tigers on Deck is a step toward getting a similar atmosphere to the SEC,” Duggan said. “We realize we are starting from a very low fan base, but we know that there are students on this campus that love baseball and are interested in Mizzou baseball. We know that Taylor Stadium is not up to par with other SEC schools, but the stadium will only grow as the team and the fan base grows.” (5/4)

KBIA Sports Extra has always distinguished itself with great photos and graphics, including this one from a May 8th article:

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

A Tip of the Cap 2012: By the Numbers

Two big numbers in 2012: 18 and 39
3 Number of home games I missed this season, compared to 15 in 2011

73 Mizzou's final official NCAA RPI ranking (5/29/12)

66  MU's Strength of Schedule ranking among D-1 teams (BoydsWorld.com)

33-28  Final W-L record

18  Games in 27 days during the long March home stand.  It would have been 19, but the final game of the Charlotte series was cancelled due to weather.  The March home stand will be shorter in 2012, because of the longer SEC conference schedule.

59.7   Average temperature in March 2012 in Columbia, highest in 122 years

10  Longest MU winning streak, 3/3-3/17 vs. Ball State, Nebraska-Omaha, Charlotte, North Dakota, High Point

5 Longest MU losing streak, 4/28-5/4, against Texas Tech, Arkansas and Texas

7   Number of games MU lost by just 1 run

8   Number of games MU lost by just 2 runs

40-21   MU's record if they had won just 7 of those 15 close games

32 Consecutive games reaching base safely by Brannon Champagne, tying Aaron Senne for longest streak all-time at MU

6 Blake Brown's ranking in all-time career steals at MU (40)

8 Eric Garcia's ranking in all-time career steals at MU (38, tied with Phil Bradley)

4 Jeff Emen's ranking in all-time career pitching appearance at MU (103)

93 Percentage of innings Ben Turner caught in 2012 (495.2 of 534.1)

24  Mizzou's 2012 D-1 ranking in Hit-by-Pitch, with 86 total.  The #1 school, Delaware State collected an all-time record 152 HBPs

215-132-2   Mizzou's all-time record against Kansas

XII   Number at the end of the the Big 12's name

IX  Number of Big 12 teams actually playing baseball in 2012 (and 2013)

XIV  Number of SEC teams that will play baseball in 2013

MU's final regular season ranking in the Big 12

Tigers named to the All Big 12 Team (Dusty Ross 2nd Team; Blake Brown, Dane Opel, Ben Turner, Rob Zastryzny Honorable Mention)

1.91  Mizzou Bullpen ERA in 22 games from from April 21through May 27 19 earned runs in 89.1 innings)

2.68 MU's regular season batting average

4.16  MU's regular season ERA

.359  MU's batting average in the Big 12 Tournament

2.83  MU's ERA in the Big 12 Tournament

.265  MU's batting average in the Tucson Regional

9.96  MU's ERA in the Tucson Regional

.500  Eric Garcia's MVP batting average in the Big 12 Tournament

15-6   The score of Louisville's win over MU in the Tucson Regional


16-6   The score of Louisville's win over MU in the 2007 Columbia Regional

8   NCAA Regional appearances in the past decade

603  Career wins by Tim Jamieson, second only to Gene McArtor (733)

  Big 12's Conference RPI ranking, 2012 (1-ACC, 2-SEC, 3-PAC 12)

7,718  The difference between Mizzou's home opener crowd of 524 and South Carolina's 8,242

2,210   Taylor Stadium attendance on Saturday, May 5th, vs. Texas; 5th largest all-time regular season crowd

26,357   2012 Total Attendance

824   2012 Average Attendance

Past Years' Regular Season Home Attendance
2011: Total: 13,334; Average: 476
2010: Total: 19,310; Average: 715
2009: Total: 23,848; Average: 852
2008: Total: 30,687; Average: 1,136
2007: Total: 14,190; Average: 645
2006:Total: 23,906; Average: 885
2005:Total: 16,965; Average: 707

2012 Home Attendance Detail
ATT - DAY DATE  OPP
2210 - SAT 5/5/12  TEX
2049 - SAT 4/21/12  K ST
1387 - FRI 5/4/12 TEX
1314 - SAT 3/3/12  BALL ST
1249 - SUN 3/4/12    BALL ST
1140 - SUN 5/6/12  TEX
1072 - SUN 3/25/12  OK ST
1032 - SAT 3/24/12  OK ST
1032 - SAT 3/24/12    OK ST
1004 - WED 5/9/12  MIS ST
1003 - FRI 4/6/12 BAY
886 - FRI 5/11/12  MEM
880 - SUN 5/13/12  MEM
779 - SAT 5/12/12  MEM
752 - SUN 4/22/12  K ST
744 - SAT 3/10/12  CHAR
744 - SAT 3/10/12  CHAR
677 - SAT 4/7/12  BAY
586 - SUN 3/18/12  HIGH PT
584 - FRI 4/20/12    K ST
543 - TUE 3/6/12  NEB-O
539 - FRI 3/9/12  CHAR
524 - FRI 3/2/12  BALL ST
502 - TUE 3/13/12  N DAK
486 - THU 4/5/12  BAY
482 - WED 3/14/12  N DAK
451 - FRI 3/16/12  HIGH PT
434 - SAT 3/17/12  HIGH PT
383 - TUE 3/27/12  C ARK
370 - WED 3/28/12    C ARK
360 - TUE 4/10/12  UALR
159 - WED 3/21/12  IND ST
Top 10 All-Time Home Attendance
6/2/07 Louisville (Regional) 3,630
6/1/07 Kent St (Regional) 3,481
6/3/07 Louisville (Regional) 3,457
5/17/08 Nebraska 3,126
5/18/08 Nebraska 2,418
4/25/98 Texas 2,347
4/24/98 Texas 2,372
5/5/12 Texas 2,2104/5/08 Okla St 2,205
6/4/07 Louisville-MU (Regional) 2,199
5/14/05 Kansas 2,143 dropped out of the top 10