Breaking Down The Super-Regionals
Super-Regional Preview: Part One (Friday)
Baseball America...
Oral Roberts (41-14) at No. 1 Clemson (50-14)
3 p.m. (ESPN), 4 p.m. (ESPNU), 7 p.m. (ESPN2/ESPNU)
Col. of Charleston (46-15) at No. 8 Georgia Tech (48-16)
Noon (ESPN), 1 p.m. (ESPNU), 1 p.m. (ESPN/ESPNU)
Missouri (35-26) at No. 5 Cal St. Fullerton (46-13)
10 p.m. (ESPN2), 10 p.m. (ESPN2/ESPNU), 10 p.m. (ESPN2/ESPNU)
North Carolina (48-13) at No. 4 Alabama (44-19)
7 p.m. (ESPN), 7 p.m. (ESPN2/ESPNU), 4 p.m. (ESPN/ESPNU)
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CLEMSON (50-14)
Coach (Record at school): Jack Leggett (605-257, 13 years)
CWShistory: 10 trips to Omaha, last in 2002
CWSroute: Won the Clemson regional in three games, beating Mississippi State in the final
Top Players Key players
Tyler Colvin, lf .359, 22 2B, 12 HR, 23 SB
Andy D'Alessio, 1b .321, 22 HR, 80 RBIs
Stephen Faris, rhp 9-2, 2.34, 78-16 K-BB
Jason Berken, rhp 9-3, 2.72, 74-32 K-BB
Josh Cribb, rhp 9-0, 3.09, 83-26 K-BB
Scouting Report
I thought Clemson was without question best team in (Atlantic Coast Conferene). They really pitch, and are deeper than anybody in country. The starting pitchers don't overpower you; they all come at you and throw strikes. They're bulldogs and work fast. It makes you feel uncomfortable at the plate. If you see a fastball early, be ready to hack. I thought all of them were pretty much the same: fastball, 86-88 (mph), and they all had an average slider. They threw a get-me-over slider early in count and get you to chase with two strikes. Slow the tempo down on them and have a good opposite-field approach.
The one thing that is overlooked is their catcher (Adrian Casanova) is best defensive catcher we saw all year. He can really catch and throw and he gets pitches for their guys because he's so calm. It didn't seem like they pitched on the plate much. They knocked the spots out and the umpire called it because he was doing a great job of receiving. He compliments their staff. They're all 90 with a breaking ball but they're not eye-popping stuff. They just hit their spots and have a great plan to get ground balls and have a great fielding team.
They like to put a lot of pressure on you. Really good team speed. Seven of the nine hitters can run. There's a couple that can really, really run. Everyone is good enough they can start runners and can bunt and can handle bat.
They have so many options with speed and bunting, they run a team offense really good and understand what coach Leggett is trying to do. They raked. Colvin was a first-rounder, a great hitter. We thought he was one of best hitters we've seen; he can do it all. We struggled with Harbin the most; he tore us up. He's not big or imposing, but has some sock. With Harbin, throw the first pitch out of zone because he's hacking at the first close pitch he sees. D'Alessio killed us. He has good strength, but stay away and spin breaking balls--he tries to hook everything. But if you miss, he'll kill it.
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ORAL ROBERTS (42-14)
Coach (Record at School): Rob Walton (134-45, third season)
CWS history: One trip to Omaha in 1978
CWS route: Won the Fayetteville Regional in three games, beating Oklahoma State in the final
Top Players Key Stats
Andy Bouchie, c .377, 12 HR, 53 RBI
Chad Rothford, 1b .337, 12 HR, 60 RBI
Chris Ashman, rhp 10-1, 2.02, 72-24 K-BB
Nick Jones, rhp 7-4, 3.67, 88-29 K-BB
Sean Jarrett, rhp 7-1, 1.98, 70-9 K-BB, 7 saves
Scouting Report
Rob Walton does as good a job as anybody with pitchers. They buy into that plan. They're a little bit older of a club and have those two guys on the mound who can really pitch: Jones and Ashman are legit. They pitch and they throw offspeed for strikes at will. They make you hit their pitches. They're good on the mound, and that keeps them in games. (Eric) Crichton in middle relief can throw backdoor sliders at will and a cutter and change in any count. And then you're 0-2 all of a sudden. Offensively, you have to take away their best stuff, so look for an offspeed pitch.
You can't let them hang around in games. You need to capitalize on innings and move runners when you can. If they stay in it, they have a chance to beat you because you're always down in the count to them. We got a bunch of hits, but when you get guys on base, they won't give in with a fastball. If you're not disciplined at the plate, you'll have trouble scoring crooked innings.
They get timely hitting. It's not like you see a guy swing and go 'wow.' They get a hit when they need to and they put it in play when they need to. They've got that feel going now where they think they can't lose. Rothford is definitely a guy at the plate, so is Bouchie. You can pitch to them, but they battle with two strikes, don't overswing. If you've got 91-93s, they might struggle with those velocity guys. They have good team speed. They try to run, hit and run and move runners. They're very good at giving themselves up and bunting and pushing and dragging. Their two-strike approach and two-out hits kill you. He's done a great job with that offense. All the outfielders can throw, and they do all the fundamental stuff well.
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COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON (46-15)
Coach (Record at school): John Pawlowski (260-151-1, seven years)
CWS history: None
CWS route: Won the Lexington Regional in three games, beating Kentucky in the final
Top Players Key Stats
Nick Chigges, rhp 11-1, 1.32, 94-44 K-BB
Graham Godfrey, rhp 8-2, 3.34, 96-39 K-BB
Alex Garabedian, c .364, 6 HR, 50 RBI
Larry Cobb, rf .361, 7 HR, 20 SB
Phillip Coker, cf .333, 35 SB
Scouting Report
Charleston, those kids have been in regionals for three years and are not scared. They can beat you with pitching and the short game. They're solid defensively with good outfield speed and do not do a lot to hurt themselves. Pitching-wise, they had the deepest staff of any we saw, and we played 18 games against regional teams. They've got four quality guys they can use to start games. Chigges is a legit SEC guy, and so is (Josh) McLaughlin, the closer. As a staff, they do a good job mixing it up. They're confident in throwing breaking balls in hitter's counts. They throw strikes; you've got to be ready to hit early. You don't want to put yourself in 0-1, 1-2 counts. Godfrey is the best velocity guy. He'll challenge with the fastball. Be ready to hit early against him. Make him throw the fastball down in zone, don't chase it up.
They have a lot of small guys that can run and only Garabedian can run it out of ballpark. Five or six guys in that lineup will bunt any time. They get the leadoff guy on, try to move him over, bunt, steal a bag, hit and run. Do a good job holding runners, be prepared, and make sure you get an out when they bunt to avoid the big inning. If you can keep leadoff guys off base or limit them, that's huge. Force them to beat you by stringing hits together. It's important to get a lead, take them out of that short game. They'll still do it, but put them in situation where it's three or four runs down, force them to play for more of a big inning. They don't have power they had last year in lineup, but still have good hitters. Keep Cobb off base. Coker hit a grand slam against Kentucky, but he's not typically a power guy. He's best bunter I've seen in several years.