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AG's Wildcat Report - Dispatches on the Wildcats, from Anthony Gimino

Posts Tagged ‘CWS’

More than 5,000 greet the national champions at McKale Center

Tuesday, June 26th, 2012
Kurt Heyer

Kurt Heyer in a T-shirt that athletic director Greg Byrne made a point to tell the crowd will go on sale Wednesday (on-line and in shops).

The national championship Arizona Wildcats baseball team arrived via bus at McKale Center, greeted by a water salute from the Tucson Fire Department.

The Wildcats departed the bus wearing their “Arizona Owns Omaha” T-shirts, capturing the moment with their own video cameras as fans snapped photos and chanted “U of A, U of A.”

The Cats made their way to the north side of McKale, entering, fittingly enough, through the Hall of Champions, eventually appearing inside, national championship trophy held aloft.

About 17 hours after defeating South Carolina 4-1 in Omaha to win the College World Series, the Arizona baseball team celebrated its fourth national championship, its first since 1986, with slightly more than 5,000 fans.

“Caught me completely off guard,” coach Andy Lopez said of the reception.

“I told my wife, ‘We’ll get here, there will be about 1,000 people, it will be 15, 30 minutes, we’ll go back and get a bite to eat.’ Oh ye of little faith, right?

“So, to the city of Tucson, I apologize. Please forgive me. … Thank you, thank you, thank you.”

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The joy is back: Arizona caps special season with College World Series title

Tuesday, June 26th, 2012

The Wildcats raise the trophy after beating South Carolina 4-1. Photo by Bruce Thorson-US PRESSWIRE

Arizona Wildcats coach Andy Lopez has said he knew. He knew in the preseason that this team, his 11th at UA, could be special.

Arizona would have to stay healthy, of course. It would have to get into the right regional — meaning it would be nice to play at home in the postseason. The Cats would have to catch some breaks, do the right things at the right time like all championship teams must … but these guys had a chance.

And when it was all over, when the Wildcats had finished with a 10-0 record in the postseason, after they had never trailed at the College World Series, after the players doused Lopez with ice water during his ESPN interview, after a long on-field hug with his wife, Lopez found the perfect words to describe why he had that special feeling more than five months ago.

“When your best players are your best human beings, it’s going to be a good year,” Lopez said after Arizona beat South Carolina 4-1 in Omaha on Monday night.

“It’s been a great year for us because my best players are my best human beings. … And that’s a real deadly combination when you suit up as a team.”

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The opponent’s view: South Carolina faces elimination again

Sunday, June 24th, 2012

(NOTE: Here is a South Carolina baseball story from Sunday night from our Gannett partner, the Greenville News. Find more College World Series stories here at GreenvilleOnline.com.)

South Carolina's rally caps didn't work in the ninth inning vs. Arizona on Sunday night. Photo by Matt Ryerson-US PRESSWIRE

By Willie T. Smith III
Greenville News

OMAHA, NEB. — For the second time in the 2012 College World Series, the University of South Carolina baseball team has its back to the wall.

The University of Arizona behind solid hitting and an outstanding pitching performance by starter Konner Wade, led from beginning to end in earning a 5-1 victory over the Gamecocks in front of a TD Ameritrade Park crowd of 24,748 in the first game of the best-of-three championship round.

The loss is the second for USC in Omaha this year as it had had to win three straight games in 33 hours to earn a trip to the CWS finals.

The Gamecocks got a quick pep talk from their leaders following the game.

“Our captains kind of gave us words of encouragement following the game,” said freshman catcher Grayson Greiner. “Michael Roth and Christian Walker let us know we have been in this position before and we will keep fighting.”

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Total control: Konner Wade’s postseason nearly defies explanation

Sunday, June 24th, 2012
Konner Wade

Konner Wade reacts to the final out as Arizona beat South Carolina 5-1. Photo by Harry How/Getty Images

Arizona Wildcats sophomore Konner Wade couldn’t throw strikes in preseason camp. His pitches had too much tailing action. He couldn’t control them. Andy Lopez didn’t know what he was going to do with him.

Hard to believe Wade was ever that guy.

Putting his name among the best ever on the game’s biggest stage, Wade pitched his second consecutive complete game at the College World Series on Sunday night, throwing a six-hitter as Arizona defeated South Carolina 5-1 in Omaha.

“You really are very thankful when a young guy gets better as the season goes on, which is what he’s done,” Lopez said in his postgame interview.

“I mean, there’s a couple days early in the season where you would have never said this would be occurring right now.”

It is … and the Wildcats are one win away from their fourth national championship.

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College World Series game blog: Wade pitches Arizona to Game 1 victory

Sunday, June 24th, 2012
Robert Refsnyder

Safe! Robert Refsnyder slides in for Arizona's final run in a 5-1 victory over South Carolina. Photo by Harry How/Getty Images

Arizona sophomore Konner Wade continued his stellar postseason run, pitching a six-hitter to lead UA to a 5-1 victory over South Carolina in the first game of the championship series of the College World Series in Omaha.

Wade allowed a leadoff single in the ninth, but got a long fly ball for the first out, a bounce out … and then a popout to third baseman Seth Mejias-Brean.

Wade is 4-0 in the postseason, with three complete games. He has allowed five earned runs in 35 innings – a 1.29 ERA

Game 2 will be held Monday night at 5 p.m. Tucson time on ESPN. It will be the same time and channel for Tuesday, if a third game is necessary.

* * *

Konner Wade heads to the ninth with a 5-1 lead. Arizona misses another golden opportunity for runs, with the game’s hitting hero, Robert Refsnyder, striking out on a 3-2 curveball from reliever Nolan Belcher with the bases loaded in the eighth.

Still, it’s hard to complain, as the Cats are in great shape to lock down Game 1.

* * *

Arizona has scored at least four runs in all nine postseason games. On the flip side, South Carolina hadn’t given up more than four runs in 16 consecutive games until tonight.

* * *

No signs of trouble from Konner Wade in the eighth, as the Gamecocks go in order. Arizona, up 5-1, is three outs away from a win in the first game of the championship series.

Wade will be going for his third complete game in four postseason starts. Amazing.

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Staying power: Arizona Wildcats rout Florida State to advance to CWS championship series

Thursday, June 21st, 2012

Everything is looking up for Andy Lopez and Arizona, which has won nine consecutive games. Photo by Bruce Thorson-US PRESSWIRE

Last April, the Cal baseball team arrived in Tucson to the news that its program, which was facing elimination by the university because of budget problems, has been reinstated, saved by a major fundraising effort.

That got a local reporter wondering about the (perceived) fragile state of the Arizona program.

“I will never forget it,” Wildcats coach Andy Lopez told TucsonCitizen.com last week.

“Cal showed up in our facility and they were being interviewed because of the news, and there was a local newscaster who asked me, “Are you worried that this might happen to you at Arizona?’

“That was last year.”

This is this year.

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Arizona beats FSU 10-3, will play for national championship

Thursday, June 21st, 2012
Johnny Field

Johnny Field (No. 1) is congratulated by teammates after scoring as part of Arizona's six-run first inning. Photo by Matt Ryerson-US PRESSWIRE

Florida State adds a run in the ninth but it’s far from enough as the Wildcats win 10-3. Arizona will play the winner of Arkansas-South Carolina Sunday at 5 p.m. Tucson time in the first game of the best-of-three national championship series.

Arizona’s pitching staff in the CWS has given up only 6 runs, all to Florida State, in three games while the offense has scored 18 runs.

. . .

Arizona used the same formula Thursday as it has through the entire postseason: Relentless hitting, great starting pitching and superb defense.

For momentum’s sake, how big was Johnny Field’s throw from left field to catch Sherman Johnson trying to stretch a single into a double to lead off the game? Even through replays showed Johnson was safe, Field’s throw made it close enough to get the call.

And then Arizona scored six runs in the bottom of the inning.

UA is trying for its fourth title at the College World Series, winning it all in 1976, 1980 and 1986.

Check back later for postgame thoughts, pictures and quotes …

* * *

This is just the third time this season that a team has reached double-digit runs vs. Florida State.

* * *

Going to the sixth, Arizona up 10-1. Does Andy Lopez try to preserve some innings on Kurt Heyer’s arm, looking ahead to a Monday game or a Tuesday game? Does he trust his bullpen to hold the fort for a few innings?

How cool would it be if he gave his son, reliever Michael Lopez, a chance to pitch? Michael threw one inning in the regular season.

* * *

 

* * *

Third baseman Seth Mejias-Brean lays out on a bouncer in the hole and throws out the Jayce Boyd to the end the top of the fifth, saving at least one run in the process. Florida State got the first two batters on, and had a runner on third when Mejias-Brean shut the door. Not much gets past the left side of Arizona’s infield.

* * *

Joey Rickard greets FSU’s fifth pitcher, Gage Smith, with an RBI single to left to push Arizona’s lead to 10-1 in the bottom of the fourth.

The Cats end up with four runs in the fourth, leaving the bases loaded for the second time in the game.

* * *

And another one is going, going, gone. Bobby Brown hits Arizona’s second home run of the fourth inning, this one with a runner on, to give the Cats a 9-1 lead and forcing Florida State to go to the pen for the second time.

The Cats are absolutely rolling as the ‘Noles bring in freshman lefty Kyle Bird.

* * *

What!? A home run? Robert Refsnyder takes a pitch that is diving down and in and drives it well over the fence in left field. It’s his seventh of the season, and it gives UA a 7-1 lead in the bottom of the fourth.

* * *
Florida State gets on the board in the top of the fourth. Jayce Boyd started the inning with a single, and he came all the way around on a one-out double to the wall by Justin Gonzalez. That makes the score 6-1 and ends Arizona’ streak of 18 1/3 scoreless innings at the College World Series.

That all that Kurt Heyer allows, though.

* * *

Arizona keeps grinding away at the Florida State pitching staff, but thee Cats leave the bases loaded in the bottom of the second when Joseph Maggi flies out to left on a 3-2 pitch. Two FSU pitches have combined to throw 77 pitches in two innings.

* * *

The first inning is over. Arizona is well on its way, taking a 6-0 lead, capped by a two-out, two-run single from second baseman Trent Gilbert off relief pitcher Luke Weaver.

* * *

And Arizona leads. After the hit and the error, shortstop Alex Mejia takes a hack at an outside pitch and bloops it into right field for an RBI single.

Continuing the theme …

Robert Refsnyder walks to load the bases, and Seth Mejias-Brean hits a ball to medium center field that is good for a sacrifice as Johnny Field scores without a play.

A double steal and then a walk to Bobby Brown from the slow-working Brandon Leibrandt reloads the bases for Joseph Maggi, who gets a single past shortstop Justin Gonzalez for an RBI. When left fielder Jose Brizuela fails to field the ball cleanly, Refsnyder scores, too, as he beast the throw homes

The ball gets past the catcher for the third error of the inning, as the runners advance to second to third.

And that is it for Leibrandt, who throws 31 pitches.

* * *

Joey Rickard, Arizona’s leading hitter in the postseason, coming in with a .429 batting average (12 of 28), leads off the game with a single.

Johnny Field follows by hitting a potential double-play ball back to starter Brandon Leibrandt, who throws just a bit outside to second base. As the ball zooms into centerfield, Rickard races to third.

More defensive problems for FSU, which had two errors vs. Arizona last week.

The quality of defensive throws in the first inning is already huge.

* * *

How’s that for a good start? Sherman Johnson leads of the game by lacing an opposite-field hit to left, but left fielder Johnny Field comes up throwing, firing the ball to second baseman Trent Gilbert. Johnson goes in head-first to second, trying to stretch it into a double, but he is called out.

Replays showed he got his hands on the bag before the tag.

Arizona will take it. Threat averted. Kurt Heyer needs only 13 pitches to get through the first inning.

* * *

 

* * *

The Arizona Wildcats try to clinch a berth in the championship series of the College World Series with a win today over Florida State.

It will be a pitching rematch of last Friday’s meeting in the first round of the Series, with Arizona’s Kurt Heyer (12-2, 2.22 ERA) opposing Seminoles’ freshman left-hander Brandon Leibrandt (8-2, 2.65).

Neither factored in the decision as the Cats won 4-3 in 12 innings.

If Arizona wins, it moves on to Sunday’s first game of the best-of-three championship series against either Arkansas or South Carolina. If FSU wins, these teams will play again Friday in an elimination game.

Coach Andy Lopez is putting out his usual lineup for Arizona, which is the home team today:

1. CF Joey Rickard
2. LF Johnny Field
3. SS Alex Mejia
4. RF Robert Refsnyder
5. 3B Seth Mejias-Brean
6. DH Bobby Brown
7. 1B Joseph Maggi
8. C Riley Moore
9. 2B Trent Gilbert

Arizona undergraduate assistant Josh Garcia waits in the dugout for the start of the game against Florida State at TD Ameritrade Park. Photo by Bruce Thorson-US PRESSWIRE

The opponent’s view: FSU, Arizona set for rematch

Thursday, June 21st, 2012

(NOTE: Here is a Florida State baseball story from our Gannett partner, the Tallahassee Democrat, which runs nolesports.com. The Seminoles will take on Arizona at 2 p.m. Tucson time on Thursday.)

Brandon Leibrandt

Brandon Leibrandt will get his second start in a week against Arizona. Photo by Melina Vastola-US PRESSWIRE

By Ira Schoffel
Democrat sports editor

OMAHA, Neb. – So much has changed since Florida State and Arizona squared off on the opening night of the College World Series six days ago.

The Seminoles appear to have shaken off the rough start that did them in that heart-breaking, extra-inning defeat, winning two consecutive elimination games by a combined margin of 16-3. And the Wildcats also looked much sharper in their 4-0 victory against UCLA, which left them as one of two undefeated teams remaining in the tournament.

Despite those events, there should be a familiar feel to today’s game between the Seminoles and Wildcats, particularly when it comes to the starting pitching.

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Arizona’s Andy Lopez ‘leaning heavily’ toward starting Heyer on Thursday

Monday, June 18th, 2012
Kurt Heyer

Coach Andy Lopez meets with pitcher Kurt Heyer during the sixth inning of the game against Florida State last Friday. Photo by Matt Ryerson-US PRESSWIRE

The Arizona Wildcats get three days off from games at the College World Series, leaving coach Andy Lopez with the most pleasant of decisions.

Does he come back with ace Kurt Heyer on Thursday?

By winning its first two games in Omaha, UA avoids the longer, tougher road of the losers’ bracket, thereby preserving its pitching staff and putting more good options on the table for Lopez.

His choices are Heyer, who pitched 7 2/3 innings Friday night in a 12-inning win over Florida State, or sophomore James Farris.

Farris (7-3, 4.18) is the usual third pitcher in the rotation behind Heyer and Konner Wade.

“Haven’t made a definite decision,” Lopez said on Monday afternoon during an interview on 1290-AM KCUB. “But I’m leaning very heavily toward throwing Kurt.”

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College World Series game blog: Wade’s shutout puts Arizona in driver’s seat

Sunday, June 17th, 2012
Johnny Field

Johnny Field signals a runner to hold up after he scored Arizona's first run in the fourth inning. Photo by Bruce Thorson-US PRESSWIRE

Konner Wade threw the first Arizona shutout at the College World Series since 1980, leading the Wildcats to a 4-0 victory over UCLA on Sunday night.

Arizona moves into the driver’s seat in its half of the bracket, having won its first two games. The Cats are off until Thursday at 2 p.m. Tucson time, when they will play the winner of Tuesday’s elimination game between UCLA and Florida State.

If Arizona loses Thursday, the teams will play again Friday with a berth in the best-of-three championship series on the line. The championship series begins Sunday.

Wade retired the first 14 batters before allowing three consecutive hits with two outs in the fifth. He got out of the bases-loaded jam when second baseman Kevin Williams flied out to left.

Wade (10-3) finished with a five-hitter, striking out four and walking none.

The last Arizona shutout at the College World Series was accomplished by Craig Lefferts against Michigan in 1980.

* * *

Three outs away. Konner Wade gives up a single with one out in the eighth, but quickly puts out the fire by getting a groundball to third baseman Seth Mejias-Brean, who starts a double play.

* * *

Freshman catcher Riley Moore’s one-out single in the seventh chases UCLA starter Nick Vander Tuig. Moore, the eighth hitter in the order, is now 11 of 26 in the postseason (.423). Just another example of how there are no soft spots in the UA lineup.

The new pitcher is freshman lefty Grant Watson, who is 9-2 with a 4.41 ERA. He retires left-handed hitting Trent Gilbert, who does his job with a sacrifice bunt that gets Moore to second.

UCLA continues to play the matchups, bringing in freshman side-arm righty David Berg to face leadoff hitter Joey Rickard. Berg wins the battle in one pitch, getting Rickard to bounce out.

Going to the eight. Arizona up 4-0.

* * *

Konner Wade is through six scoreless innings, with only 72 pitches. He could be looking at his second consecutive complete game. His postseason ERA (four starts over two seasons) has dropped to 1.20.

* * *

The Arizona lineup is back to its three-up, three-down pattern vs. UCLA’s Nick Vander Tuig. Leadoff hitter Joey Rickard has struck out three times. But with a 4-0 lead going to the sixth inning, the rest of this game might be all about pitching and defense.

* * *

Andy Lopez on Konner Wade during the in-game ESPN interview: “Throwing a lot of strikes. If he throws strikes, he’s pretty effective. So far, so good.”

* * *

Konner Wade’s perfect game lasts 4 2/3 innings. He then leaves a pitch up at the top of the strike zone, and shortstop Pat Valaika takes it the other way and plops it into right field.

Just as what happened in the bottom of the fourth with Arizona, the floodgates open … and UCLA follows with two more singles to load the bases.

Wade needs only one pitch, though, to get second baseman Kevin Williams to fly out to left to end the inning.

* * *

UCLA’s Nick Vander Tuig threw 35 pitches in the fourth inning. He needed only 33 through the first three innings.

* * *

First 22 batters of the game: No hits.

Next five: All hits.

Arizona strings ‘em together with one out in the bottom of the fourth, with Seth Mejias-Brean coming up with two RBIs with a bases-loaded line-drive single just over the glove of the second baseman.

Bobby Brown follows with another two-run hit — this one a stand-up double down the right-field line.

Arizona isn’t able to do more damage, but it does bat around and will take that 4-0 lead into the fifth.

* * *

And there’s a hit. The first 22 batters of the game were retired in order until Arizona’s Johnny Field became the first baserunner when he sliced an opposite field shot just inside the right-field line with one out in the fourth.

* * *

Konner Wade makes it a fourth perfect inning. He has been working down in the zone — his pitches have natural arm-side sink — and has gotten eight of 12 outs on the ground. He had two strikeouts and two flyouts.

* * *

A pair of perfect games through three innings. Jinx!

UCLA’s Nick Vander Tuig has thrown 33 pitches. Konner Wade just 26.

* * *

Fifteen batters up, fifteen batters down. Not much more say to that.

* * *

Konner Wade needs only 14 pitches to get through two innings. He drops his postseason ERA — this is his fourth such start — to 1.38. Feeling pretty good about next season’s Friday starter?

* * *

Each team goes down 1-2-3 in the first inning. Konner Wade needed only eight pitches to get through the top of the winning, looking calm and in control.

* * *

Same ol’ Arizona lineup. You know it, you love it:

1. CF Joey Rickard
2. LF Johnny Field
3. SS Alex Mejia
4. RF Robert Refsnyder
5. 3B Seth Mejias-Brean
6. DH Bobby Brown
7. 1B Joseph Maggi
8. C Riley Moore
9. 2B Trent Gilbert

* * *

Konner Wade has made three postseason starts, including throwing seven scoreless innings in an elimination game against Seton Hall in a regional in College Station, Texas, last season.

Wade has thrown 24 postseason innings, allowing 19 hits and eight runs — only four earned. That works out to an ERA of 1.50. He has struck out nine and walked five in that span.

* * *

UCLA won the season series against Arizona, taking two of three at Hi Corbett Field in mid-April.

Of particular interest is the second game of that series, when the Bruins knocked around UA starter Konner Wade, touching him for 10 hits and six runs (five runs) in three innings. UCLA went on to make more hay against reliever Vincent Littleman.

Wade comes in confident, though, coming off last weekend’s complete game victory that clinched the Super Regional against St. John’s.

UCLA will counter with sophomore right-hander Nick Vander Tuig (10-3, 4.35), who was the winning pitcher in Tucson in the game Wade started. He went 5 2/3 innings, allowing eight hits and three runs, while striking out one and walking one.

* * *

Pac-12 co-champs Arizona and UCLA will be meeting in Omaha in a critical winners’ bracket game tonight.

The second game of a double-elimination tournament is where a team can take the easy path … or the hard path.

Consider the options:

–If Arizona wins, it is off until Thursday, having two chances to win one game to advance to the best-of-three championship series. The Cats would play either UCLA or Florida State, which eliminated Stony Brook on Sunday afternoon. If Arizona were to lose Thursday, the teams would meet again on Friday.

–If Arizona loses, it has to play Tuesday in an elimination game against Florida State. Win that game and then the Wildcats would need to beat UCLA on Thursday and Friday.

Given UA’s lack of pitching depth, Option A becomes even more desirable.