Showing posts with label Anthony Ranaudo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Ranaudo. Show all posts

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Top 20 College Players

Doing a good season preview is painstaking and laborious; I will only do a preseason top 25 and a list of the best players in the nation. The various college baseball sites out in the interwebs do a magnificent job putting out the preview content anyway. In particular, check out Baseball America, College Baseball Today, and Rivals for the lowdown on the 2010 season. Without any regard to draft status or professional future, here's my list of the best D-1 college players for 2010. (Keep in mind that this is an inexact overview of the college landscape, and there is a preponderance of great players beyond this list.)

Anthony Rendon, 3B, Rice
Sophomore is capable of hitting .400/.500/.800 with 20+ homers and solid defense.

Anthony Ranaudo, rhp, LSU
Top draft prospect with excellent size and stuff.

Christian Colon, ss, Cal State Fullerton
Gamer embodies Titan baseball, is dangerous on both sides of the ball.

Bryce Brentz, of, Middle Tennessee State
Hit an astonishing .465/.535/.930 with 28 homers last season.

Deck McGuire, rhp, Georgia Tech
Proven ACC ace with plus stuff.

Josh Spence, lhp, Arizona State
Crafty Aussie toys with batters and will be crucial for ASU this season.

Drew Pomeranz, lhp, Ole Miss
Has devastating fastball-curve combo, was great in the postseason in '09.

Chris Sale, lhp, Florida Gulf Coast
Talented lefty could help FGCU take the Atlantic Sun title.

Daniel Bibona, lhp, UC Irvine
The Anteaters are thrilled their dependable ace is back for his senior season.

Tyler Holt, of, Florida State
Leadoff man compiled .520 OBP and 34 SBs last season.

Jarrett Parker, of, Virginia
Lacks control of the strike zone, but is an all-around beast at the college level.

Daniel Renken, rhp, Cal State Fullerton
Steady righthander will be a key cog in Fullerton's weekend rotation for the third year in a row.

Danny Hultzen, lhp, Virginia
Primed to build on his phenomenal freshman season. Three solid pitches, nifty first baseman on the side.

Alex Wimmers, rhp, Ohio State
K machine with plus curveball. Watch out for the Buckeyes.

Trevor Bauer, rhp, UCLA
Long-toss freak with nasty stuff, deception.

Gerrit Cole, rhp, UCLA
Now that Stephen Strasburg has moved on to bigger and better things, Cole has the most electric arm in the nation.

Taylor Jungmann, rhp, Texas
Showed in Omaha last year why many think he's on the verge of superstardom.

Tony Thompson, 3B, Kansas
Will miss first several weeks of '10 with injury, but hit .389/.442/.753 with 21 bombs last season.

Zack Cox, 3B, Arkansas
Big-time power from the left side, strong arm suits him well at third and in the bullpen.

Sleepers
B.A. Vollmuth, ss, Southern Miss
Levi Michael, 3B, North Carolina
Preston Tucker, 1B, Florida
Sam Gaviglio, rhp, Oregon State
Todd Cunningham, of, Jacksonville State
Sonny Gray, rhp, Vanderbilt
Robert "Bullet Bob" Morey, rhp, Virginia
Mike McGee, of/rhp, Florida State
Gary Brown, of, Cal State Fullerton
Sammy Solis, lhp, San Diego

Who else do you think deserves a spot?

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

LSU Wins the National Championship


The LSU Tigers outlasted Texas tonight, beating the Longhorns 11-4 to bring another national title to Baton Rouge. This is the 6th championship in the program's history, the first since 2000, and the 1st career title for coach Paul Mainieri. The Tigers (56-17) lost just once in the season's final month.
The game was actually much closer than the final score indicates. LSU got up early on a 3-run homer off the bat of CWS Most Outstanding Player Jared Mitchell, and they had that advantage for a couple of innings. That's when starter Anthony Ranaudo got very shaky in the middle of the game. He walked 4 in the 3rd inning and surrendered a 2-run home run to Texas OF Kevin Keyes in the 5th. Ranaudo had an elevated pitch count, UT starter Cole Green had already been lifted, and it looked like anybody's game.
The turning point came in the 6th. LSU OF Mikie Mahtook lined a 2-strike pitch from Brandon Workman into center for a double, driving in Mitchell. The Tigers tacked on more with an error, sac fly, 2 HBPs, and a 2-run single from Sean Oc
hinko. (All year long I was on the Ochinko bandwagon, and he definitely came through tonight; 4-for-5 with a HR and 3 RBI.)
LHP Chad Jones, the football safety/outfielder continued to emerge in a setup role. He recorded 5 outs of relief (and 2 strikeouts) with a fastball for strikes up to 92-93 mph and a pretty nice breaking ball. Fittingly, though, Mainieri put Louis Coleman on the mound for the last two innings. Coleman is probably the team MVP. He's a senior who came back to school specifically to get another chance to win a national championship, he was the SEC Pitcher of the Year, and he was extremely consistent and reliable all year long. The 6-4 righty got Texas OF Connor Rowe to wave at a slider for the final out of the game, and set off a wild celebration for the Purple and Gold and their thousands of rabid fans. It was a great end to a great CWS and a great season. Here's the box score from the game, which, unfortunately, will be the last for awhile.
College-wise, we've got the Cape Cod League and recruiting/draft signing to look forward to. Other than that, I'll just start counting down the days till the next season.

*Photo courtesy of www.espn.go.com

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Standout Performances: Regionals

This weekend was even more chock-full of great performances than usual because of the amount of games played in regionals. Here are some of the most notable:

Mike Leake, rhp, Arizona State
Again? Leake posted another ridiculous outing in the Tempe Regional, throwing his 3rd consecutive complete game, surrendering just 1 run, and striking out 15. If you think about it, Leake has perhaps had a better year than Stephen Strasburg: 15-1, 1.23 ERA, 7 CGs, .169 OBA, and a 143-20 K-BB ratio in an incredible 124.2 innings.

Sonny Gray, rhp, Vanderbilt
The freshman utterly dominated a red-hot Indiana team on Saturday to send the Hoosiers home winless. Gray threw 8 scoreless innings and struck out 10.

Matt Cerione, of, Georgia
I'm not a big Matt Cerione fan, but I do have to acknowledge the great game he had on Friday. The junior went 5-for-6 with 2 homers.

Rich Poythress, 1B, Georgia
Even better for the Bulldogs was the drubbing Poythress laid on Ohio State on Friday. He crushed 3 homers as part of a 4-for-4 afternoon. That pushed the junior first baseman up to .376 with 25 dingers.

Tom Belza, ss, Oklahoma State
Friday was a night of multi-homer games, and Belza was one of many who did the trick. Although the Pokes shouldn't even be in the NCAA tourney, they took a game from Alabama as Belza drilled 3 home runs. He drove in 6 and drew 2 walks for good measure.

Bennett Davis, 2B, Elon
The senior second baseman cracked 3 homers against Southern Miss in a wild 17-15 loss on Friday. The Phoenix hit 5 round-trippers total, and Davis went 4-for-4. OF Bo Davis powered 2 homers for the Golden Eagles.

Brandon Meredith, 1B, San Diego State
Meredith clocked 2 homers against Fresno State on Saturday as the Aztecs sent the defending champs home early. SDSU starter Tyler Lavigne also did well, throwing 7.2 innings and allowing just 1 run.

Shaeffer Hall, lhp, Kansas
The crafty lefthander staved off elimination against Dartmouth on Saturday, tossing a complete-game shutout. He allowed 5 hits and fanned 6 in a 16-0 Jayhawks win.

A.J. Morris, rhp, Kansas State
I don't care if he gave up 6 runs and 13 hits, Morris had a valiant effort to beat Rice. The junior righthander threw 143 pitches over 9 innings to propel the Wildcats into super regional contention.

Danny Hultzen, lhp, Virginia
I really liked Virginia as a dangerous sleeper, but winning the Regional of Death? That's impressive. Hultzen led the Cavs to a Game 2 victory over #1 seed UC Irvine on Saturday with a dazzling, 7.1 shutout inning performance.

Anthony Ranaudo, rhp, Louisiana State
Ranaudo (8-3, 3.09) was magnificent against Baylor in a winner's bracket game on Saturday night in Baton Rouge. He completed 9 innings, allowed 1 earned run on 3 hits, and struck out 14 Baylor batters. The 6-7 sophomore is one of the main reasons why LSU is such a dangerous threat in the postseason.

Chad Cregar, of, and Wade Gaynor, ss, Western Kentucky
Cregar (.325 with 19 HRs) and Gaynor (.375 with 25 HRs) led the Hilltoppers, an offense-crazy outfit, to an excellent showing in the Oxford Regional. WKU has to be considered one of the nation's premier mid-majors.

Caleb Cotham, rhp, Vanderbilt
Cotham was just ridiculous against a hard-hitting Middle Tennessee State offense on Sunday. He threw a complete-game shutout (the first Commodore ever to do so in the postseason), struck out 8, and didn't walk a batter. He even held MTSU superstar Bryce Brentz hitless!

Florida State Offense
The Seminoles scored 37 runs on 38 hits (including 15 doubles), so I think the whole team deserves to be here. Rather than listing the bevy of amazing individual feats, I'll just direct you to the box score.

Others:
Austin Wood, lhp, Texas
Justin Bloxom, 1B, Kansas State
Griffin Benedict, c, Georgia Southern
Daniel Bibona, lhp, UC Irvine
Kyle Gibson, rhp, Missouri
David Gutierrez, rhp, Miami
Scott Weismann, rhp, Clemson
Chris Dwyer, lhp, Clemson
Taylor Wall, lhp, Rice
Drew Smyly, lhp, Arkansas

Mike Leake

Sonny Gray
*Photos courtesy of vucommodores.cstv.com and thesundevils.cstv.com