Sports Roundup: Late innings vex ‘Hoos

  • Houston joins GMU staff : George Mason men’s basketball coach Paul Hewitt has announced the addition of Roland Houston to his coaching staff.
  • Keys rally, stun P-Nats : Trevor Holder overpowered the Frederick Keys for seven and two thirds innings on Monday night.
  • Blue Rocks handle Sox : Two tough innings plagued starter Ryan Pressly and guided the visiting Blue Rocks to a 7-3 victory.
  • Penning blame: Can Cavs overcome shaky late innings? : UVa. baseball coach Brian O’Connor can now officially start worrying.
  • OT goal lifts #7 UVa. in NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Tournament : Tewaaraton finalist Steele Stanwick found Matt White for the game-winning goal with 2:33 left in overtime.
  • Penning blame: Can Cavs overcome shaky late innings?

    Branden Kline

    UVa. baseball coach Brian O’Connor can now officially start worrying. The one chink in the armor of the top-ranked Cavs’ otherworldly 45-6 run to this point in 2011 is the bullpen, specifically the situation in the ninth inning, which on paper looks quite good with sophomore Branden Kline sporting a tidy 3-0 record, 2.03 ERA and 15 saves.

    But a look inside the numbers is revealing as to O’Connor’s worries about the ninth inning. Kline has issued 14 walks in 31 innings spread across 24 appearances out of the pen. His 42 strikeouts and .200 opponents’ batting average notwithstanding, Kline is a closer with a 1.13/1 WHIP (35 baserunners in 31 innings) who can get burned in one-game situations because of all the activity he sees on the bases when he’s on the mound. Continue reading “Penning blame: Can Cavs overcome shaky late innings?” »

    Break time: #1 UVa. takes time off for exams

    Tuesday’s 14-3 win over Virginia Commonwealth in front of a state-record baseball crowd at The Diamond pushed top-ranked Virginia’s record in 2011 to 43-5. The grind of a season that began back in February will now come to a screeching halt as the schedule has come to the annual nine-day exam break that coach Brian O’Connor has had eight years to figure out how to turn into an advantage for his team.

    “I’ve tweaked it every year on how we handle this time. I think that we’ve found the winning recipe of what we need to do over these nine days and have it figured out pretty good, and that is to have practices on about half the days, keep it short and concise and intense when they are out there, and try to make it as game-realistic as possible,” O’Connor said.

    From the outside looking in, the last thing the coach of the hottest team in America would seem to want is nine days off before a pair of weekend series with top-flight ACC foes (Miami at home May 13-15, on the road at UNC May 19-21) and then the beginning of the postseason. Not that O’Connor has a choice in the matter. “That’s just the way it is at UVa.,” he said of the exam break, an anomaly among top-tier D1 teams.

    O’Connor has put together a schedule of practices and intrasquad games around study and exam time aimed at keeping his weekend starting rotation (Danny Hultzen, Tyler Wilson, Will Roberts) on their normal throwing schedule. There’s an obvious added benefit to keeping his pitchers on a schedule. “Looking at all the guys who had at-bats tonight and all the different pitchers that we have, our intrasquad scrimmages are pretty darn competitive. Our hitters get a chance to face one of the top pitching staffs in the country. So it can be a really good thing for us,” O’Connor said.

    The players are sold on the break being a positive and not a drawback to their effort to reach their second College World Series in three years.

    “I think it will be good for us. It will give some people some time to recover, some guys who maybe are banged up a little bit will be able to get some rest,” said junior catcher John Hicks, who is second on the team in hitting (.359) and RBIs (44) and tied for the team lead in homers (5).

    “It’s a big time of the year for us as students,” Hicks said. “We’ve got to take care of our exams. We’ve got to take care of stuff in the classroom before we can worry about being on the field. We’re going to have practices a couple of days, and we’re going to go at it hard those days, and we’ll be ready to go.”

    O’Connor is confident that his team will come out of the break ready for its stretch run.

    “I just talked to the team about it after the game, and I told them that this is a real advantage for us, and that this is the way we have to look at it. We have a chance coming out of final exams to have fresh legs and be well-rested for basically the second part of the season. I know the players will look at it that way, and hopefully it’s something that will work to our advantage,” O’Connor said.
     


    More sports at VaSportsOnline.com.

    Break time: #1 UVa. takes time off for exams

    Tuesday’s 14-3 win over Virginia Commonwealth in front of a state-record baseball crowd at The Diamond pushed top-ranked Virginia’s record in 2011 to 43-5. The grind of a season that began back in February will now come to a screeching halt as the schedule has come to the annual nine-day exam break that coach Brian O’Connor has had eight years to figure out how to turn into an advantage for his team.

    “I’ve tweaked it every year on how we handle this time. I think that we’ve found the winning recipe of what we need to do over these nine days and have it figured out pretty good, and that is to have practices on about half the days, keep it short and concise and intense when they are out there, and try to make it as game-realistic as possible,” O’Connor said. Continue reading “Break time: #1 UVa. takes time off for exams” »

    The World According To ChrisGraham.com: The team that revived Wahoo Nation

    The loss itself was a shock. That’s one thing Brian O’Connor has done to us. He has us expecting a win in the big game.

    That’s counter to our nature as UVa. sports fans. We’re so used to losing the big game that the question isn’t whether we’re going to win or lose, it’s how are we going to blow it this time. O’Connor had everybody but the OU fans in attendance last night convinced that Game 3 of the Super Regional was going to be little more than a coronation that was going to end with a dogpile of orange and blue.

    Link to column on TheWorldAccordingToChrisGraham.com.

    A sad end to a stellar season: OU stuns UVa. in Super Regional finale

    Story by Chris Graham
    freepress2@ntelos.net
     

    Cody Reine hit two more home runs, including a three-run shot in the first on the heels of a controversial call on a 3-2 pitch to Tyler Ogle by home-plate umpire Chuck Lyon that extended that inning, and Bobby Shore pitched eight strong innings for Oklahoma as the Sooners punched their ticket to Omaha with a surprisingly easy 11-0 win over Virginia in the finale of the Super Regional best-of-three Monday night in Charlottesville. Continue reading “A sad end to a stellar season: OU stuns UVa. in Super Regional finale” »

    The World According To ChrisGraham.com: Two out of three

    Win another weekend series. That’s all Brian O’Connor’s UVa. baseball has to do to get back to the College World Series.

    “We’ve won every series we’ve played in this season except one, and it comes down this weekend to a three-game series. We’ve got to approach it the same way, and if we do, hopefully we have a chance to advance on,” O’Connor said yesterday.

    Only N.C. State, now out of the NCAA Tournament itself, can claim any sort of conquest over the Cavs, taking two of three from Virginia earlier in the spring in Raleigh.

    Link to column on TheWorldAccordingToChrisGraham.com.

    Two out of three

    Column by Chris Graham
    freepress2@ntelos.net
     

    Win another weekend series. That’s all Brian O’Connor’s UVa. baseball has to do to get back to the College World Series.
     

    TheWorldAccordingToChrisGraham.com has the column.

    The World According To ChrisGraham.com: No sense of history

    This group of guys in orange and blue clearly isn’t a bunch of history majors. I say that because the UVa. baseball team, to a man, doesn’t seem to know that they’re supposed to blow the big game.

    #1 in the country all season heading into the NCAAs – OK, great, done that before, think back to the Ralph Sampson years, when we were just as likely to lose in the second round as we were to make it to the Final Four.

    At home and #1 in a big game – and hey, how about a 28-14 lead at the half while you’re at it? (That 1990-1991 Georgia Tech national championship was ours.)

    Link to column on TheWorldAccordingToChrisGraham.com.

    Chris Graham: No sense of history

    Column by Chris Graham
    freepress2@ntelos.net
     

    This group of guys in orange and blue clearly isn’t a bunch of history majors. I say that because the UVa. baseball team, to a man, doesn’t seem to know that they’re supposed to blow the big game.
     

    TheWorldAccordingtoChrisGraham.com has more.

    #1 UVa. looking to ignite another long postseason run

    Story by Chris Graham
    freepress2@ntelos.net
     

    #1 Virginia enters the 2010 postseason in a vastly different place than it entered the 2009 postseason.

    The ’09 Cavs had apparently played their way out of the strong postseason run that had seemed to be in the cards with the hot start and a top-10 national ranking most of the season with struggles down the stretch in ACC play. Then came their magical run through the ACC Tournament in Greensboro toward the ACC title, the upset feelings over being shipped out west to play at #1 Cal-Irvine, the win out there, the thrilling comeback in the Super Regionals at Ole Miss, and the program’s first College World Series appearance. Continue reading “#1 UVa. looking to ignite another long postseason run” »

    ‘Hoos, Hokies renew rivalry on diamond

    Story by Chris Graham
    freepress2@ntelos.net
     

    You don’t have to tell UVa. baseball coach Brian O’Connor that Virginia Tech is ranked 20th in the Baseball America national poll this week to get him to think about how good the Hokies are on the diamond.

    That lesson came last spring when Tech took two of three on the final weekend of the regular season from a Virginia team that promptly won nine of its next 10 to earn its first College World Series trip. Continue reading “‘Hoos, Hokies renew rivalry on diamond” »