Ten Reasons why I like college baseball (and the Illini)

 

In celebration of opening day of college baseball I present to you my top ten list of what makes college baseball (and Illinois baseball in particular) so fun. 

1.  It’s affordable. 

In this day of rising costs of attending Major League Baseball games, you can’t discount this.  I can’t speak for other Big Ten teams but at the University of Illinois, you can get into a game for six bucks or so.  Parking is thrown in for free.

And, if you’re lucky enough (and smart enough) to get the Go Illini family card for $50, it gets your whole family into all home games for the season.  Whatta deal!

2.  You can get so close to the action.

099

  3.  It’s my style of baseball.

While the major leagues have gravitated toward power, power and more power, I find that college baseball has a more balanced attack maybe even favoring the “small ball” style of play.

I like the homerun just as much as everybody else but I also enjoy a well-executed hit-and-run or a double steal. 

A perfect example of this small ball action was two years ago in a non-conference game against Robert Morris College when Shawn Roof took it upon himself to score the winning run in the bottom of the eighth. 

From an article I wrote after the Robert Morris game:

Shawn Roof led off the bottom of the 8th. Robert Morris pitcher Chris Murchek plunked Roof in the upper arm and Roof took his base. I leaned over to Brando and said, ā€œHere he goes!ā€. And Roof stole second on the first pitch. Brando and I wondered to each other will batter Ryan Hastings bunt in this situation? In a lot of situations, it would make sense but Hastings has been good with the stick so I didnā€™t think he would. Hastings didnā€™t square for the next pitch, he took it for a strike.

The next pitch, though, he squared for the bunt and the thirdbaseman rushed to cover for the bunt. The key here is that the shortstop didnā€™t cover third and Roof was banking on that. He stole third easily.

The very next pitch Murchek threw a wild pitch and Roof scored what proved to be the winning run.

Now THAT’S exciting!

Another point, since not all college hitters are sluggers, it gives more value to the homerun capability of those cleanup hitters in the college ranks.  You really fear them! 

 

4.  The players are friendly.

Ok, maybe that’s a generalization but in my experience, many I’ve met have been nice and some have been downright decent.  A couple that I’ve met I’ve maintained friendships after they’ve left the U of I. 

5.  It brought back my “school spirit”.

I’ll admit it.  I root for the Illini football and basketball teams but I don’t intensely follow them like some of my sports fan friends follow their alums.  Illini baseball is MY college sport that I follow. 

When I’m asked at work, “Did you hear how the Illini did last night?”.  I’ll go on about the slugfest this or the one-run game that and get a quizzical look.  Then I realize they were talking about the OTHER sport. 

I don’t care.  Baseball is my college sport.

6.  No salaries, no contract disputes, no arbitrations

It’s true, college baseball players play baseball for different reasons.  Those with a future ahead of them are looking ahead to a possible MLB draft.  Others are just playing because they love the game. 

But what’s really great is when you see the really rare player who steps up and assumes a leadership role on the team.  Those players are destined to go somewhere in baseball. 

7.  Gametracker

If it’s a road game and I can’t be there, at least I can follow the game via CSTV’s Gametracker which rivals MLB’s Gameday…sorta.

8.  Meeting the players’ parents

I’ve enjoyed meeting the moms and dads of the players the last few years.  I don’t restrict myself to Illinois parents either.  Sometimes I’ll introduce myself to the opposition’s parents sometimes and (if it’s a home game) welcome them to Illinois Field.  I almost always get a good conversation going and learn something I didn’t know before. 

Like players, parents come in different varieties.  There are competitive types and then the more laid back types.  Interesting to see the similarities (and differences, I guess) between parent and son. 

9.  No Wisconsin

Haha!  Just kidding, Badger fans!

10.  Just try to show me a better time!

For my money, there’s not a better time.  Whether I’m hanging with my buddies, taking my family or just taking in a game by myself, it’s a lot of fun.  The baseball program at the University of Illinois have done a fantastic job putting a quality product on the field not to mention a fun time all round (yes, they do promotions… the days when the players play wiffleball with the kids after a game are a big hit, so to speak). 

So before you complain to me about those outrageous prices of major league games and the exorbitant salaries the big league athletes make, try a college baseball game on for size. 

It might be a perfect fit.

Heads up, Illini baseball fans! Illinois Baseball Report is online!

It’s hard to believe that you can see actual live baseball in less than a week.Ā  And most of us can’t… unless you’re lucky to enough to live in the the south.Ā  But true enough, the college baseball season does start this Friday.

And to correspond with that, I’ve decided to create a new blog focused on the University of Illinois Baseball team.Ā  I’ve imported all the Illini Baseball content from The Baseball Zealot to the new site which is called Illinois Baseball Report.Ā  I spent some time tagging the posts so they’re good and indexed.

I’m looking forward to the new season and beyond.Ā  Illini fans, stop by and hi (and don’t forget to bookmark the site).

Illinois Baseball Report

Ultimate Act of Sportsmanship

tucholsky I was watching ESPN last night when a story came on which caught my eye. The story was talking about a women’s college softball game played between Western Oregon University and Central Washington University. 5’2″ Sara Tucholsky had never hit a home run in high school or college ball, but on this day she got hold of one, and drove it over the fence. In her excitement she missed firstbase, when she went back to touch it, something popped, it was her ACL.

While she lay on the ground in agony, her coach contemplated what to do, if a pinch runner was inserted, she would be credited with a single. She’d be ruled out if her teammates assisted her in any way. But then, miraculously, her opponents did an amazing thing. They asked the umpires if they could carry her around the bases. The umps told them, there was no rule against that. So two players from the opposing team carried Tucholsky around the bases, tapping her foot down on each base, as they rounded the bases. They’d said, she earned it.

This is much more than, who won the game? That fact will soon be forgotten, but this act of true sportsmanship will live on.

Penn State Baseball goes Green

Penn State’s stadium has been making the news lately.  First, they made Rivals.com’s top ten list of best college baseball stadiums and now it’s number one for being green. 

Penn State University’s rag, the Daily Collegian reports that Medlar Field at Lubrano Park has become the first LEED-certified stadium in the world.  LEED stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design and the certification deems it an environmentally friendly facility. 

Some facets of the park that helped it get certified:

Features that earned Medlar Field points include automatic lights throughout the park that turn off after five minutes of no movement and waterless urinals in men’s restrooms, McCoy said. The stadium is also connected to a gray water system, which allows for reuse water that is less refined for field irrigation and other uses.

Medlar Field is also the home to the State College Spikes. 

PSU stadium makes the grade

Rivals.com lists their top ten best college stadiums.

When I think big time college baseball, the south comes to mind geographically.  And not surprisingly, the stadiums of teams like Rice, Florida State, Texas and Baylor are representative of this list.  Kudos to University of Arkansas for getting top nod for their Baum Stadium. 

But look at who occupies the # 10 spot… a Big Ten park.  

 
Lubrano Park — Penn State

Penn State is one of several trendsetters in college baseball. The Nittany Lions got a jump-start in the facilities race by constructing a beautiful facility that came with a $31.4 million dollar price tag. Opened in ’06 and first used by the Nittany Lions in ’07, Lubrano Park has a capacity of 6,000. In addition to having a spacious concourse and press/luxury suites area, Lubrano Park also provides a spectacular view of Mount Nittany, which sits in the distance behind the center field wall. It’ll be interesting to see if the ballpark eventually helps PSU become a national player.

via The College Baseball Blog

NCAA Custom APBA Cards Available!

hastingsapba My buddy CLuke purports to not care so much for college baseball but I’m beginning to think otherwise.  Every time I hear from him, he’s talking about something related to the topic. 

This time it’s pretty exciting.  Not only is it about college baseball but it pertains to another baseball interest of mine… APBA. 

Chuck pointed me to Steve Guthrie’s web site.  Steve has custom-made APBA baseball cards based on the 2007 NCAA season.

Wow! 

Steve pumped in the stats to Brian Davis’ APBA Card Generator for most of the Division I teams in the NCAA.  There are nine sets available:

    • Set 1: SEC, Atlantic 10, Wright State, Hawaii-Hilo
    • Set 2: ACC, Ohio Valley, Oral Roberts, Bethune-Cookman, Florida A and M, North Carolina A and T, Dallas Baptist, Prairie View A and M
    • Set 3: Big XII, Sun Belt, Mountain West
    • Set 4: PAC-10, Missouri Valley, Southern
    • Set 5: Big East, Ivy League, America East, Texas-Pan American
    • Set 6: Conference-USA, Colonial, West Coast
    • Set 7: Big West, WAC, Metro Atlantic, Army, Navy
    • Set 8: Big 10, Big South, Atlantic Sun
    • Set 9: Southland, Mid-American, Illinois-Chicago, Lafayette, North Dakota State, South Dakota State

Each set is available for download from Steve’s web site and can be printed with minimal configuration. 

Me?  I got the Big Ten :)

 

 


THUMBS UP FRESNO STATE

Fresno State has defeated the University of Georgia 6-1 in game three to take the best of three series 2-1. They are the lowest seed ever to win the College World Series. 33 losses is the most ever by a championship team. But this team would not be denied, beating Georgia two out of three games, after Georgia hadn’t lost a single game in the tournament before this series.

Steve Detwiler the rightfielder for Fresno State was the difference in this one at the plate. Detwiler hit a two run homer just out of the rightfielder’s leaping grasp in his first at bat. His second time up he doubled home a run. Then he capped off his night with a three run no doubt about it blast to left, to account for all the Fresno State runs. The most amazing thing about Steve’s heroics is that he needs surgery to replace a completely torn ligament in his left thumb. This sophomore was in agony whenever he swung & missed, maybe that was motivation for him to connect.

Meanwhile lefthanded starter Justin Wilson had the game completely in hand, with pinpoint control, he dominated Georgia, allowing only a solo home run to Gordon Beckham in the 8th inning. A defining moment happened in the first inning when Wilson was forced to pitch out of a bases loaded jam in which his defense let him down, two errors. I shouldn’t be surprised to see the Pirates drafted Justin, especially because of their tendancy to draft lefthanded pitchers. This kid has alot of moxy and it’s good to see he can pitch around errors, seeing he might be with the Buccos. Wilson reminded everyone of a young David Wells.

As a freshman Gordon Beckham grounded into a doubleplay to end his tournament dreams. This time he hit his 28th homer in his final trip to the dish, but it didn’t matter as Georgia lost to Fresno State. Still Beckham had a great year and I look forward to seeing him on the Southside of Chicago, maybe as early as next year.

LOTTA FIGHT LEFT IN THAT BULLDOG

Fresno State was down 5-0 in game 2 of the best of three game series, after losing the opener the night before. Although Georgia might’ve thought it was over, Tommy Mendonca had other ideas as he blasted a three run shot deep over the rightfield wall in the bottom of the 3rd with two aboard to make it 6-5 Fresno State. In the top of the 4th Gordon Beckham singled home the tying run from 2nd to knot the game at 6.

The wheels came off for Georgia in the bottom of the 4th as Fresno State exploded for five more runs, and then added four more in the bottom of the 5th to make it 15-6. Georgia scored four times in the top of the 7th, but when Fresno State tacked on another three in the bottom of the 7th, it was pretty much over 18-10, after seven. The final score ended up being 19-11. Can’t wait to see the finale tonight.

One thing that was kind of frustrating was when Georgia had runners on 1st & 2nd, one out, and the batter popped up a bunt, Orel Hershiser said, “The umpire should’ve called the infield fly rule”. The infield fly cannot be called on a bunt. Come on Orel, know your rules!

DAWG EAT DOG

I’m watching the 2008 NCAA Baseball World Series in part because of Gordon Beckham. The White Sox drafted the University of Georgia SS Beckham with the 8th pick in the draft. Although he hasn’t yet signed with Chicago, not until after the College World Series is over, I still consider Gordon a member of my Southside club. Can’t wait till he’s playing SS at the Cell.

Even if there wasn’t a future White Sox star playing I’d probably be tuned in, my dream is to one day go to Nebraska, and watch the World Series in person. This one would have been a good one to be at. Kind of a weird twist to an old dream, Chicago boy goes to Nebraska, to make dream come true. Anyway I’m a baseball geek, what can I say?

So I’m up in Waupaca and turned the game on TV in the living room at our cottage. The Fresno State Bulldogs (I can’t believe they made it to the finals) jump out to a 6-3 lead in game one of the best two out of three series. It’s already the 7th inning, things aren’t looking good for the Dawgs, as the wounded Fresno State players are coming up with some big blasts. Anyway a bloop & a blast later in the 8th inning, and it’s 6-5.

Following the bloop hit, Beckham greeted Fresno State closer Brandon Burke with the blast. Maybe if Burke had been brought in before the bloop, things might’ve been different, but MO was on Georgia’s side now. Before the dust had settled the Bulldawgs from Georgia were leading 7-6, Joshua Fields closed out the 9th, and the series stands at 1-0 the University of Georgia.

But don’t count Fresno State out, they are fighters, who will not give up. They have left many good ballclubs along the side of the road on their way to this Championship Series.

Keeping up with the College World Series

For those interested, by the end of the night, the College World Series will be down to four teams.  Georgia, Stanford, Fresno State and the winner of tonight’s North Carolina-LSU game will go on to the semi-finals. 

You can see the NCAA’s interactive tournament bracket at the NCAA web site.

Tonight’s game has just started but NC has already scored 2 runs in the top of the first.

Do I have a favorite?  Not particularly.  Any team I remotely have an interest in has been knocked out.  I would recommend checking out The College Baseball Blog as I’m sure they’re working overtime covering the CWS.