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Baseball Ends Regular Season With Trip To Duke
May 19, 2004
Series Notes in PDF Format
Clemson vs. Duke The Tigers will play in either the first game (10:00 AM) or last game (8:30 PM) of the day in the first round of the ACC Tournament on Wednesday, May 26. Clemson can be anywhere from the #3 to #6 seed, depending on the results from its series with Duke along with the results from the Florida State-at-Wake Forest series and N.C. State-at-North Carolina series this weekend. All three games will be broadcast live on the radio by the Clemson Tiger Sports Network and can be heard live via the internet at ClemsonTigers.com. Live stats will also be available on Clemson's website for all three games.
The Series The Tigers hold a 40-24 lead over the Blue Devils all-time in games played at Duke. Clemson also holds a 79-29-1 advantage in games played in the ACC regular season. Tiger Head Coach Jack Leggett is 23-9 against Duke as Clemson's head coach, including a 10-5 record at Jack Coombs Field.
The Starting Pitchers In game two, the Blue Devils are tentatively scheduled to start junior righty Greg Burke (5-6, 4.42 ERA). The Bellmawr, NJ native has started 10 games and relieved in eight others. He also has thrown two complete games and has two saves. In 75.1 innings pitched, he has allowed 82 hits and 19 walks while striking out 66. In game three, Duke is tentatively scheduled to send out senior righthander Zach Schreiber (4-4, 4.75 ERA). The Cedar Rapids, IA native has made 13 starts and two relief appearances for a total of 77.2 innings pitched. He also has a complete game to his credit. Schreiber has allowed 89 hits and 28 walks while striking out 68. Clemson will start lefthander Robert Rohrbaugh in one of the games. The other two starters have yet to be determined. The order of the starters has also yet to be determined. Rohrbaugh (4-4, 3.45 ERA), a sophomore lefthander from Littlestown, PA, has made nine starts and seven relief appearances this season. In 60.0 innings pitched, he has allowed 58 hits and 16 walks while striking out 33.
Duke Overview The Blue Devils are hitting .268 as a team, led by Javier Socorro's .378 batting average. The sophomore outfielder from Miami, FL is second in the ACC (behind Brad McCann) in batting average. Tim Layden, who pitched a no-hitter against Old Dominion on April 13, has hit a team-high six homers, 45 RBIs, and a .328 average. He has also walked 43 times and has a .451 on-base percentage. Jonathan Anderson has a team-best 16 stolen bases as well. The pitching staff sports a 4.80 ERA and .288 opponents' batting average. Six different pitchers have accounted for the team's 11 saves. The team has walked just 153 batters in 50 games is fielding at a .958 clip. Jon Smith, who was a catcher on four Clemson baseball teams (1999-02), is also an assistant coach on the Blue Devil staff.
Clemson Overview Freshman Andy D'Alessio is the hottest Tiger over the last month. He has raised his batting average to .343, including a team-best .371 average in ACC games. Another freshman, Tyler Colvin, is second in the team in average in ACC play with a .365 mark. The Tiger pitching staff has a 4.27 ERA and .262 opponents' batting average. The Tigers' fielding percentage stands at .961. After its series at Duke, the team will depart directly to Salem, VA for the ACC Tournament, which will begin Wednesday, May 26 for the Tigers.
Yellow Jackets Stay On a Roll With Sweep In game one, Georgia Tech got 8.0 strong innings from Micah Owings to down the Tigers 8-3 Friday. Owings allowed two runs on four hits to earn the victory, as the Tigers totaled just seven hits in all. Lou Santangelo hit a two-run homer in the first inning, but the Yellow Jackets responded with three runs in the bottom of the first and never looked back. Brad McCann was hit by a pitch in the first inning and had to leave the game with a bruised arm. Josh Cribb suffered the loss in his first start of 2004. Andy D'Alessio led the Tigers with two hits, including a double. Steven Blackwood led Georgia Tech with three hits and two RBIs, while Brandon Boggs blasted a three-run homer. The win broke Clemson's five-game winning streak in the series. In game two, more effective starting pitching led to the Tigers' demise. Andrew Kown allowed one run on six hits in 8.0 innings pitched in the Yellow Jackets 11-3 victory Saturday. Kown allowed one walk while striking out nine. The 5-8 hitters in Georgia Tech's lineup had all eight of the team's hits, including three by Clifton Remole and another long three-run home run by Boggs. Tyler Colvin went 4-for-4 with a double and his first career homer, while D'Alessio added a solo homer and single to lead the Tigers' nine-hit attack. McCann missed his first game of 2004 with the aforementioned injury. Clemson committed four more errors, while starter Robert Rohrbaugh suffered the loss. In game three, Georgia Tech completed the sweep with an 8-4 win Sunday. Two costly errors led to five runs for the Yellow Jackets, including three runs in the bottom of the seventh after the Tigers had cut the lead to 5-4 in the top of the seventh. Clemson scored a run in the first on one of Kris Harvey's two doubles. But Georgia Tech scored four in the bottom of the first thanks to just one hit, an sloppy defense, and control problems on the mound. Down 5-1, Clemson chipped away at the lead thanks to solo, opposite-field homers by Santangelo and Garrick Evans. Senior Brian Burks earned the win, while Tyler Lumsden walked four and suffered the loss. Russell Triplett and Travis Storrer also had two hits along with Harvey's run-scoring doubles.
Clemson #15 in Unofficial RPI In the May 17 release (listed at BoydsWorld.com), his RPI index has Clemson #15. The Tigers play one of the toughest schedules in the nation during the 2004 season. Clemson can thank a tough non-conference schedule for its high RPI ranking. Through the Tigers' first 53 games, 32 have been against teams ranked in the top 31 of the RPI. The RPI only counts games against Division I teams and is for games through May 16.
McCann Goes 6-for-6, Named National POTW Against Furman the night before, he went 2-for-4 with three runs scored, two RBIs, and two walks. Therefore in just over two games that week, he was 8-for-10 with eight runs scored, a double, two homers, eight RBIs, two walks, and a stolen base. He also reached base in 11 of his 13 plate appearances and was named one of five National Players-of-the-Week by Collegiate Baseball for his efforts. McCann was hit by a pitch in the first game at #15 Georgia Tech on May 14. After scoring on Lou Santangelo's home run, he left the game with a bruised arm and did not play again in the series.
McCann Up For Golden Spikes, Dick Howser On May 13, McCann was named one of 30 semifinalists for the 2004 Dick Howser Trophy, also given to the top collegiate baseball player. The winner will be announced at the College World Series on June 18. The trophy is given in memory of the former Florida State All-America shortstop and Major League manager who died of brain cancer in 1987. McCann was also named a first-team junior All-American in Baseball America's midseason report. It lists its top players by position and by class, and he was its pick at third base among juniors.
McCann leads the Tigers and the ACC with a .388 batting average, 13 homers, 17 doubles, and 54 RBIs in 51 games. Former Tiger shortstop Khalil Greene won both of the aforementioned awards in 2002.
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