Author Archives | Kenny Jacoby

Oregon cruises past Canisius, stays alive in loser’s bracket

The Oregon Ducks (38-24) rolled over the Canisius Golden Griffins (34-30) to survive their first game in the elimination bracket of the Springfield Regional. The Ducks will take on the loser of No. 1 Missouri State (46-10) and No. 2 Iowa (40-16) (tonight at 6 p.m.) tomorrow at 2 p.m.

Oregon dropped its first game to Iowa 3-1 on Friday and must win four straight to advance to Super Regionals.

Oregon got off to an insurmountable lead before Canisius scored its first run. Scott Heineman opened the scoring with a two-run double. Shaun Chase followed with a two-run home run to left center, providing starting pitcher Conor Harber a 4-0 advantage in the first inning.

Harber made his second start since losing his spot in the rotation to hybrid-pitcher/catcher Josh Graham a month ago. Canisius knocked Harber around for four earned runs on five hits and six walks in 4.1 innings, but the Ducks provided Harber plenty of run support.

Austin Grebeck drove an RBI-double down the right field line in the second, and Daniel Patzlaff converted a successful safety squeeze in the third. Mitchell Tolman delivered an RBI-single in the fourth, and Scott Heineman scored his fourth run on Patzlaff’s swinging strikeout in the fifth. Oregon led 8-0 when Canisius mounted its only attack.

Three singles, three walks and two wild pitches translated into four runs for the Golden Griffiths in the fifth. Reliever Trent Paddon inherited the bases loaded and retired two batters, but two runners scored before he escaped the threat. Paddon settled in over the ensuing 4.1 innings and was credited with no runs or walks and just three hits. He and Harber struck out six batters each.

Mark Karaviotis and Tolman contributed RBI-singles, while Heineman added his third RBI on a groundout in the sixth. Tolman crushed an RBI-ground rule double in the eighth. Tolman, Heineman, Grebeck and Chase all finished with multiple runs batted in. Heineman, Grebeck and Karaviotis scored three runs apiece.

Canisius cut the deficit to 12-6 with a string of singles in the ninth, but Paddon squashed the rally. Paddon earned his first win since defeating New Mexico State on February 21. Because he and Harber went the distance today, Stephen Nogosek’s and Garrett Cleavinger’s arms will be fresh for Oregon’s second elimination game tomorrow at 2 p.m.

If Oregon defeats the loser of Missouri State/Iowa tomorrow, it will battle the winner in the championship game shortly thereafter at 7 p.m. A potential “what-if” game would be played Sunday at 1 p.m., should Oregon win again. All games would be televised on ESPN3/WatchESPN.

Follow Kenny Jacoby on Twitter @KennyJacoby

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A look back at Oregon’s rocky road to the NCAA baseball tournament

50 games into the 2015 college baseball season, the Oregon Ducks lacked an identity. They ranked as high as eighth nationally when they boasted a 13-2 record to begin the season. Then they fell off the map almost completely, dropping 10 of their next 14 games and falling out of Pac-12 title contention rapidly. The Ducks found themselves on the outside looking in at an NCAA tournament berth, with a 28-22 record and ten regular season games to play.

During its final 10-game stretch, Oregon clinched five series wins, including the final series of the season against No. 1 UCLA in back-to-back walk-off efforts. The Ducks won nine of 10 games and earned a three seed in the Springfield Regional this weekend.

Regardless of its last second surge into the postseason, the Ducks collectively underperformed in 2015. When the season began, manager George Horton described his team as one of his best ever on paper. With nine former MLB Draft selections rostered, Oregon was voted to finish second behind UCLA in the Preseason Pac-12 Coaches Poll. Oregon ended with a 16-14 record in conference, good for sixth place.

Had Mitchell Tolman, who walked onto Oregon baseball and now owns four all-time records, not put the offense on his shoulders down the stretch, certainly Oregon would not have landed a spot in the NCAA tournament. When third baseman Matt Eureste was benched, Tolman slid from second base to the third. Since then, his massive 381/.480/.560 line in the Ducks’ last 21 games propelled them to a 15-6 record. Tolman, along with junior Garrett Cleavinger, earned first-team Pac-12 honors and will hear their names called at the MLB Draft in June.

Scott Heineman also contributed a .562 batting average in Oregon’s last four games, all versus ranked teams. He hit two home runs versus No. 1 UCLA as Oregon took two out of three. Heineman earned Pac-12 Player of the Week honors.

Despite the two corner infielders’ late-season heroics, Oregon hit a dismal .254 as a team this season. Oregon’s bullpen is what kept it competitive.

Closer Cleavinger and set-up man Stephen Nogosek formed Oregon’s devastating one-two punch, and Cooper Stiles has excelled as a middle reliever using his new sidearm delivery. Oregon’s starting rotation struggled for much of the year but came up huge when the team needed it most. Against UCLA, the starting trio of Cole Irvin, David Peterson and Josh Graham combined to allow just seven earned runs in 22.1 innings for a 2.82 ERA. In the last three weeks combined, the UO starters have a 2.19 ERA allowing just 15 earned runs in 61.2 innings pitched.

Fresh off of Tommy John Surgery, ace Cole Irvin took all of nine starts to finally throw six full innings. Easing into his role paid off, however, as he threw 27.2 innings and ended the regular season with four straight quality starts and a 2.93 ERA vs. Stanford, WSU, Utah and UCLA.

Freshman David Peterson endured a five-game losing streak, but turned the tables and threw five straight quality starts to finish the regular season. During that time he’s struck out 32 batters while walking ten and compiling a 3.08 ERA.

Josh Graham, who was recruited to Oregon to play catcher, filled the large void Conor Harber left in the starting rotation. After throwing 11 innings in two appearances in relief of Harber, the Ducks leaned on Graham to throw 29.2 innings in five starts, including nine and a career-high 11 strikeouts versus UCLA. Graham has a 1.71 ERA over his last three starts with back-to-back quality starts, and all this came after he put together a 2-0 record and 1.84 ERA in 13 relief appearances as a reliever.

Because the regional tournament consists of four teams and a double-elimination bracket, three consecutive wins or a loss and four wins would secure Oregon a spot in the super regional. In the history of the program the Ducks have never faced any team in its bracket, which includes No. 4 Canisius, No. 2 Iowa and host No. 1 Missouri State.

Fortunately Oregon has experience on its side. Horton is making his 16th regional appearance as a head coach, where he’s compiled a 40-17 record. Horton teams have won at least one game every year and advanced to the College World Series six times. Horton won the 2004 NCAA Division I title with Cal State Fullerton.

Oregon has qualified for the postseason four straight years, including five times in the last six years, in which its gone 10-6 with multiple wins each year. The Ducks advanced to the super regional in 2012.

Oregon’s tournament opener tomorrow versus Iowa will be televised on ESPN3 at 11 a.m.

Follow Kenny Jacoby on Twitter @KennyJacoby

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Frequent lineup changes may be harming Oregon baseball

Matt Eureste, a junior transfer from San Jacinto College in Texas, started at third and hit lead-off in Oregon’s first 40 games. He has made just one start since.

With 10 errors and the lowest fielding percentage on the team, Eureste was a liability in the infield. Manager George Horton’s solution was to substitute freshman outfielder Jakob Goldfarb for Eureste and slide Mitchell Tolman from second to third base, where he has played throughout most of his college career. Since then, the Ducks have gone 13-6 and inserted themselves back into the NCAA tournament conversation.

But did Horton make the right move?

Horton has altered the Ducks’ batting order from that of the previous game in 51 of 57 games this season. The fact he didn’t replace Goldfarb after his first seven games at lead-off was surprising. A lead-off hitter’s job is to get on base, but in 34 plate appearances, Goldfarb amassed just three hits and six walks.

Nevertheless, the coaching staff rode him out and the decision appears to have paid off. Goldfarb erupted for four hits the next game against Oregon State and has a .317/.349/.419 line since. The curious aspect of the move, however, is that Matt Eureste was still producing offensively when he was pulled. He went 2-4 with a double and walk the night before and hit .263 the eight previous games before he was benched. Despite not appearing in six games, Eureste’s seven steals are third-most on the team.

Eureste may not be the lead-off hitter Oregon was hoping for, but he still has value on the field. Pinch-hitting doesn’t seem to be his bread and butter. He has hit .143 since his role became situational. Going from everyday contributor to nothing could have temporarily shattered his confidence. Still, his .257/.337/.345 line this season is a large improvement over that of incumbent starter Daniel Patzlaff.

Moving Tolman to third base left a void at second base. Horton has since settled on Patzlaff to fill it. He has Patzlaff hitting seventh, where he’s propped a meager .194 average.

Why not try out Kyle Kasser?

“Kasser’s a kid that’s worked awfully hard,” Horton said. “Hasn’t had a lot of chances, but he definitely has the respect of all the coaches and players because of his work ethic.”

Horton called pinch-hitter Kasser, who had just 10 plate appearances to his name, with the bases loaded and a 2-2 tie in the bottom of the ninth against Oregon State. Kasser drew a full-count, two-out walk-off walk and the Ducks won 4-3.

Kasser has made the most of his chances. He’s pinch-hit in two more two-out bases loaded situations with the game on the line since. He delivered the go-ahead single in the 10th inning against Washington State, then drove a two-run double in Oregon’s comeback win over Utah. With a .526 on base percentage in 19 plate appearances, Kasser could be the spark plug Oregon’s offense needs.

So was Horton’s move to bench Eureste a good one?

It was good because it got Goldfarb contributing, but it also opened up a hole at second base. Either way, the Ducks are (finally) winning and, in baseball, if it ain’t broke don’t fix it. Whichever way he configures the lineup for the postseason, the players could benefit from some consistency moving forward.

Follow Kenny Jacoby on Twitter @KennyJacoby

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Several Ducks projected to be early round picks in upcoming MLB Draft

The 2015 Major League Baseball Draft begins in June, and the Oregon Ducks have been represented well in recent history.

Who will be the first off the board in 2015?

Garrett Cleavinger

Junior closer Garrett Cleavinger may boast the strongest arm on the team and certainly owns the top D-1 pitching resume. Cleavinger shattered Jimmy Sherfy’s Oregon all-time record of 77 career appearances on March 6 and currently sits at 104. As a freshman he finished with a 9-0 record and team-best 1.24 ERA, while striking out 57 in 43.2 innings. In 2015, he rocks a team-best 0.94 WHIP; his 9 saves rank fifth in Pac-12. Cleavinger has never been drafted, but with a mid-nineties fastball and consistency on his side, he may be the first Duck off the board in the MLB Draft.

Mitchell Tolman

Junior infielder Mitchell Tolman broke four Oregon all-time records in 2015: consecutive starts, career doubles, career RBIs and career multi-RBI games. He would likely break several more if he returns to Oregon his senior year. Consistent offensive production is rare at any level of baseball, yet Tolman managed to hit .315 his freshman and sophomore seasons and he’s still improving. He carries the Ducks with a .332 batting average, .467 on-base percentage and .488 slugging percentage in 2015. His durability, blue collar work ethic and ability to play second or third base are all reasons why Tolman’s name could be called in the early rounds.

Josh Graham

Josh Graham is unique in that he’s pitched, caught and hit fifth for the Ducks all throughout the 2015 season. Originally recruited as a catcher, Graham lost the position battle to Shaun Chase as a sophomore, then transitioned to the bullpen his junior year and thrived. With a fastball that touches 95 mph, he amassed a 1.83 ERA over 34.1 innings in his first 14 outings. He found himself back behind the dish and hitting fifth when Chase flamed out and the Ducks lost five of six in March, then in the starting rotation when the Conor Harber experiment went awry in April. Selected by the Minnesota Twins in 22nd round of the 2012 MLB Draft, Graham will get a call based on his arm strength alone. Surely, though, scouts will inquire about the team rule he violated in April, which prompted his ensuing three-game suspension.

Others

Cole Irvin may also receive a phone call from a team on Draft day, however, he’s spent the 2015 season recovering from Tommy John Surgery and is expected back to play another season for the Ducks. Irvin, the current ace of Oregon’s staff, was drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 29th round of the 2012 Draft, but chose college ball instead.

Turning down an MLB Draft offer is commonplace. Many players do so in efforts to save their NCAA eligibilities and improve their stock for upcoming Drafts. In fact, nine current Ducks have already been drafted 10 times. Matt Eureste turned down the Cleveland Indians in 2011; Mark Karaviotis turned down the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2013; Scott Heineman, freshmen David Peterson and Tim Susnara declined offers in the 2014 Draft; Harber rejected offers in 2013 and 2014.

Sophomore Matt Krook was drafted in the first round (35th overall) by the Miami Marlins in 2013 but a post-draft MRI revealed a slight tear in his pitching shoulder. Krook declined to Miami and came to Eugene, where, like Irvin, he won Louisville Slugger first-team Freshman All-America honors then redshirted his sophomore season. He will be eligible for the Draft again next year as a junior.

Since manager George Horton took over the baseball program in 2009, 27 of his players have been drafted 29 times, including starting pitchers Jake Reed and Tommy Thorpe in the fifth and eighth rounds last year. A record eight Ducks were chosen in the 2011 Draft, including four in the first seven rounds. Seventeen former Oregon Ducks are currently playing professional baseball: Zack Thornton of the New York Mets organization is in Triple-A, five are in Double-A, two in Class-A (Advanced), three in Class-A, two in short-season A, one in Rookie League, two in the Independent League and one in the Canadian American League.

Follow Kenny Jacoby on Twitter @KennyJacoby

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Cooper Stiles adopts sidearm delivery to save spot on baseball team

Cooper Stiles first donned a University of Oregon baseball uniform six years before he played an inning. The team’s batboy in junior high, he watched games from the dugout with the players and dreamt of one day stepping into the batter’s box for the Ducks.

Stiles hasn’t had the opportunity to fulfill that dream. Instead, he’s embraced the prominent role of “innings-eater” in the Oregon bullpen.

A first team All-State shortstop in high school, Stiles didn’t plan to pitch in college. But when he broke his foot weeks before his freshman season, Stiles reinvented himself to save his spot on the roster.

Born with a solitary kidney, Stiles could not play high-contact sports growing up. He specialized in baseball, following in the footsteps of his brother, Taylor Stiles, and father, Dean, who played for Oregon in 1981.

Cooper was in seventh grade when his family moved to Eugene. Dean was an administrative assistant for the Oregon baseball program and spent much of his time at the field helping with camps and clinics. Endearingly called a “baseball rat,” Cooper tagged along frequently. He hung around the batting cages so often he became manager George Horton’s batboy and got his first taste of Division I baseball.

As batboy, Cooper learned the intricacies of Horton’s system. Horton, who has won an NCAA Championship and managed more than 1,100 Division 1 games, helped further Cooper’s strategic and tactical understanding of baseball. Cooper embraced Horton’s background, family-oriented personality and ideology.

“It’s about baseball, but there’s just so much more detail behind it,” Cooper said of Horton’s system. “It’s more about learning things in life and developing as a person, as well as a player.”

***

Cooper attended Sheldon High School, where he was a four-year starter on the baseball team. As a senior team captain, he led Sheldon to an Oregon state championship and was named the 2013 Class 6A Baseball Player of the Year.

Cooper garnered attention from numerous college baseball programs. Oregon offered him a chance to walk-on.

“He visited a few smaller schools,” said Cooper’s sister, Chloe, who walked onto the Oregon basketball team. “But in his mind he wanted to go to Oregon, whether he had to walk on or not.”

Cooper turned down multiple attractive offers to walk onto the Ducks roster. The challenge of competing in the Pac-12 enticed him.

“He’s the type of guy who’d rather play for a good team and not play as much than be the star on a not very good team,” Chloe said.

“I knew in my heart this was the place I wanted to be,” Cooper said.

The weekend prior to his first week of classes at UO in 2013, Cooper attended the Oregon versus Cal football game. That day, a rainstorm hit Autzen Stadium, almost on cue as the first quarter began. The storm cut power to more than 26,500 customers in Oregon and caused eight fumbles in the first half alone.

De’Anthony Thomas wasn’t the only Duck who suffered an injury from wet conditions. As Cooper left the stadium, his foot slipped off a curb and snapped. He wore a cast for the next six weeks. The break took place in his foot that had poor circulation, delaying the healing process. Cooper wore a walking boot another 12 weeks after the cast was removed.

As a walk-on with an ailing foot, beating Divison 1 recruits on a depth chart was unrealistic. Cooper understood if he couldn’t contribute to the team as a position player, he’d have to find another way. He lacked proper mechanics, but had a handful of mound appearances in high school and could hit 92 mph on a radar gun. Cooper decided pitching was his best shot.

***

Cooper pitched in seven games as a freshman, but they didn’t go as he’d hoped. He tossed 8.2 innings and allowed seven earned runs on eight hits and five walks. His role was undefined after a year on the team. The coaching staff made it clear if Cooper couldn’t find a way to contribute, he wouldn’t keep his spot on the roster.

During the offseason, Cooper went all-in on an unconventional approach to create his own niche. He dropped his arm angle down to a sidearm release, emulating the slinging motion he’d grown accustomed to making on throws to first from shortstop. He lifted weights and practiced the technique all summer.

By the time next baseball season came around, Cooper could sling a low-80s fastball with slicing downward movement, two changeups and a slider from the 9 o’clock arm slot. He’s thrown 51.2 innings in 23 relief appearances (both third-highest on the team) and established himself as Horton’s “innings-eater” for his reliability to span long middle relief outings. Despite the awkward delivery, he maintains a team best ratio of 29 strikeouts to seven walks.

Horton named Cooper the “brightest star of our team” when he allowed just four hits across 5.2 shutout relief innings versus Oregon State on April 11.

“He’s done a phenomenal job for us this year,” second baseman Mitchell Tolman said of Cooper. “He’s a guy that throws strikes, keeps the ball down in the zone and gets ground balls. Coming in he really worked hard; give a lot of credit to Cooper.”

Cooper and Dean work daily to develop the finer aspects of Cooper’s game. Although his statistics suggest otherwise, Dean said his son is still in the infant stages of pitching and still must learn how to leverage counts, vary looks and pick-offs and “bury” pitches out of the strike zone.

Having head coached four high school baseball programs and every one of Cooper’s teams until high school, Dean can push his kids like players. When they were little, he made them do 2,000 jump ropes before bed for extra self-improvement. Now, their motivation is intrinsic and Dean’s encouragement is more lenient. He and Cooper practice together daily and complications rarely disturb their coach-player dynamic.

“When it’s your son, you want to be careful that you don’t push too hard because sometimes coaches who are fathers will go too hard on their sons to show they’re trying to be fair. On the other side, you don’t want to be too easy,” Dean said. “There’s a balance, but he’s really easy to deal with.”

Follow Kenny Jacoby on Twitter @KennyJacoby