Thursday, June 30, 2016

Editor’s note: Thank you Arizona Baseball for the last four years

Thank you to everyone that has brought AZ Desert Swarm to this point

*This is going to be long and kind of emotional and very self-indulgent so bare with me*

Back in January of 2013, I was looking for something to do with my life. I had just completed a one year full-time zookeeper apprenticeship at Reid Park Zoo, was a year and a half removed from graduating from the University of Arizona, and was unsuccessfully interviewing at zoos around the country for my next job.

In the meantime, I sent an email to SB Nation and Kevin Zimmerman asking if I could write about the Arizona club hockey team and the baseball team, you know, just to pass the time.

Never did I think it would ever grow on me like it has.

From there, I sent an email to Sean Hogan, the head coach of the Arizona hockey team at the time. He agreed to give me whatever I needed despite not having a real track record of covering a specific team before (I had been covering random games for Stadium Journey and Paul Swaney for a year prior on my weekends at the zoo).

Thank you Coach Hogan and Paul for this initial jump start. Thank you Kevin for taking a chance on an unproven person like myself.

The next month, I was at the Arizona meet the team event. It was crowded since, well, National Champions the year before, but I was still able to get a word in with Greg Byrne. I asked him about allowing AZ Desert Swarm to cover the baseball team, and he gave me the email of Blair Willis to get the ball rolling.

I owe Blair all of the credit for this site gaining credibility. Thank you Blair.

He agreed to let me cover the team, and I rolled in on Opening Night of 2013 an hour and a half before the game, and was the first "media" member there. I sat and waited as the pregame festivities went down, and the first game of the year got started, then ended, and had my first encounter with Andy Lopez as a person working the game rather than just a fan in the stands.

I missed a good chunk of the middle part of the season (job interviews in Tulsa, San Antonio, Phoenix, Eugene and San Luis Obispo plus a trip to Vegas for the Pac-12 and Mountain West Tournaments) but came back and was welcomed back despite me just randomly disappearing.

The season came to an end, with our baseball coverage gaining some traction as Arizona was very much on the bubble during the final weekend. Of course, they didn’t make the tournament, but Blair also opened the door to the football program for me on that final day of the 2013 baseball season.

From there, it’s all been history here.

I started covering the football team, giving this site access to a revenue sport, and able to provide readers with free insight, something that has gone away just about everywhere else on the internet.

More than a year later, I was now covering basketball thanks to some relationships I was able to build covering football, and all of the sudden AZ Desert Swarm’s popularity jumped up a lot. It didn’t hurt that football was playing some of the most exciting games in the history of the program to reach the Fiesta Bowl at the same time.

In November of 2014, Kevin moved on to Fox Sports Arizona at the time, and recommended to the powers that be that I take over as the new manager of AZ Desert Swarm. I officially started on December 18th, and was suddenly faced with the reality of having to cover the Fiesta Bowl, plus men’s basketball, by myself.

I needed help.

****

This is where I’d like to thank Gabe Encinas, David Potts, and Ryan Kelapire for jumping into the fray with me in the first few weeks of 2015. National Signing Day 2015 was the next huge jump for this site, as we were able to have something written about every player who signed that day. There were other people that helped make that happen too, but these are the three that have stuck with me the entire time.

It also worked out perfectly that they all have strengths where I am weak. Ryan’s basketball knowledge is second-to-none among all Arizona writers. Gabe’s ability to track down recruits and connect with them is giving Arizona fans a place they don’t have to pay money to know about the future of the program. And David’s wit adds another layer that no other Arizona sites can offer.

As we continued to grow, and had three of us covering football games together, it also led to another staff expansion that was needed.

We added a lot of people for basketball season this year, and it paid off in a big way. We were able to give our new readership several different angles throughout the season. I’d really like to thank Matt Sheeley, especially for his work in March. He churned out Bracketologys that everyone loved, and was up late at night on those tournament nights writing about things even when Arizona been long-eliminated. I also need to thank Alec Sills-Trausch, James Schlittenhart, Brandon Hill, James Hartman, Ivan Leonard, Nick Latta and Mike Paulus. All of them picked up the slack on basketball coverage when it was needed, and I had nothing to give them for it other than gratitude and the reaction from the readers.

I also need to thank the guys at Wildcat Radio — Bryant Conger, Josh Worthington and Rick Powell. Those guys continue to crush it and have the best Arizona podcast out there for everyone to listen to, and just like everything else here, it’s free.

(in other news, we'll be looking for more writers as we head into the 2016-17 academic year, so if you're interested, especially if you live in Tucson, get in contact with me)

*****

But back to why I’m writing this on the day baseball lost a National Title game. Despite all these successes with football and basketball, I’ve always prided myself on providing Arizona baseball fans the best coverage of this team. I stuck around for the hour-plus that Lopez would go in on his team, and in the last couple years, that happened more frequently than anyone would have liked.

Then the coaching change happened, and it happened at a time when the Star didn’t have anyone to cover the team. So I was out at fall practices by myself, building relationships with the new staff, and gaining their trust so I could give you, the reader, the best insight possible into this team when it mattered most.

I knew it was going to be difficult, because I’m also back in school looking to further my life in the animal health world, while also trying to balance this site with other things going on in my life.

Before the season, the coaching staff gave their blessing to have Robby Medel, who has turned into somewhat of a star, write a weekly blog for the site, only to have Athletics shut it down a month into the year. It was another unique thing that only we could bring readers, and hopefully in the coming months, we will have something similar to it with a different Arizona athlete.

Thank you to the players and coaches that have dealt with some of my really dumb questions over the last four years and trust me to write fair things about you, and to allow me to build a relationship with you to the point where you trust me enough to have a first-person piece from a player.

I went to San Diego in the second weekend of the year, partially because I had the time, and partially because I wanted to be the first Arizona writer to see this team play a game in person. I watched seven baseball games in 72 hours that weekend, three of them Arizona’s, and one of them alongside Jay Johnson as he scouted San Diego State and Kentucky. After being around the team so much that weekend, I felt like they were going to be better than people thought. But to think they would make it to Omaha was never in my mind.

Three months later, this team made the tournament, and had a legit shot at hosting a Regional. But they were on the road, and I was unable to get to any of the postseason games.

When they advanced to the CWS, I was immediately exhausting every option I had to try and get to Omaha. The deadline to decide by was that Tuesday morning=. I was going to have to spend a ton of my own money to make it happen, drive there from Tucson, stay at a hotel half an hour away from the stadium, and would have had to leave the first Thursday of the CWS if I had gone. It killed me that I wasn’t going to be able to pull it off, because I pride myself on giving you the best baseball coverage.

It hurt watching people complain about having to stay in Omaha for two weeks for this when I was trying so hard to make it happen. Then it really stung when people who hadn’t watched this team all year tried to make assessments based on what they’d seen in only two weeks.

But I know those of you who care about Arizona baseball knew better, and would still turn to us for correct info.

Even without traveling to Omaha, we still made it happen the last couple of weeks. When I first started writing about Arizona baseball, I was lucky if 100 people would read a particular story. Now this year, there are thousands of eyeballs on all of our stuff within minutes of it posting, including recaps of a baseball game against UC-Riverside in the middle of March.

It’s been an incredible ride not only this year, but the last four years with the baseball program, and they have been at the root of us being able to provide you with the best all-around coverage of Arizona Athletics.

****

As time marches on, I know I won’t be able to do this forever. In all honesty, I’m not sure how next year will work as I close in on other life goals.

But we have plans in the works starting in the fall to expand on everything we’re doing now, to live shows on our various outlets, to original video content, to being able to give even more insight with our traditional written stuff.

It’s been exciting watching our reach grow, even if it’s not outwardly visible due to the lack of a commenter base. Hopefully that will change in the immediate future, and we will get more engagement from you the reader on the actual site rather than on our Facebook and Twitter. It would also be cool to see people writing FanPosts, where you can share your own thoughts about Arizona in a more longform kind of way.

Thank you to everyone who has ever read an article on AZ Desert Swarm, and a special thanks to those of you that made it all the way to the bottom of this. I realize it’s very self-centered, but I felt like I just needed to share with you how Arizona baseball got this ball rolling, and how we plan on being your one-stop-shop for everything Arizona Athletics.

You may see me dressed up wearing a Block A tie at football games this year. That’s because I’m joining the Pride of Arizona Drumline professional staff, and will be doing that as well as writing and talking about the football team. It’ll be just another thing on my plate this year, but with everything we’ve built, and the great staff of writers that we currently have, and you the readers, I’m not worried about it at all.

We will continue to bring you the best Arizona Wildcats coverage moving forward. You can count on that.



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Tucson Restaurant Tournament: (3) Bison Witches vs. (14) Athen's on 4th Avenue

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College World Series recap: Coastal Carolina wins first National Championship with 4-3 win over Arizona

The Wildcats come up just short of their fifth National Championship

For the first time in school history, the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers are your NCAA Baseball National Champions.

The Chants did it by taking down four-time champ Arizona by a score of 4-3 on Thursday afternoon.

This winner-take-all game was pushed back to Thursday after lightning in the area Wednesday night, which allowed Coastal to throw their ace pitcher Andrew Beckwith on almost normal rest.

Jay Johnson and the Wildcats countered with Bobby Dalbec, who went toe-to-toe with the Big South’s pitcher of the year in the first half of this game.

But the game came down to the sixth inning and a couple of errors.

With runners on first and second and no runs on the scoreboard, Dalbec got a strikeout for the second out of the inning, but the pitch was in the dirt, allowing the runners to move up into scoring position.

Zach Remillard came up, and bounced one up the middle to Cody Ramer.

Ramer misplayed it, allowing one run to score. But then he also threw the ball away when going to third, letting a second run score. Before those pair of errors, the senior second baseman had only committed nine all season.

Two more unearned runs scored in the inning thanks to a G.K. Young homer to right. Dalbec would give up another two-out hit before being replaced by Cameron Ming.

As Ming jogged in from the bullpen, Dalbec put his arm around Ramer, consoling the senior that led Arizona to this point.

Ming was able to end the damage, drawing a comebacker for the final out of the inning. But the damage was done.

Arizona responded with two unearned runs of their own.

A two-out error by Coastal first baseman Kevin Woodall Jr. that was very Bill Buckner-like extended the bottom half of the sixth, and put two runners on.

Alfonso Rivas walked, loading the bases for Jared Oliva. The outfielder already had six RBI in the CWS, and added two more with a single through the left side.

That also ended Beckwith’s day. Bobby Holmes would get Coastal out of the 6th without allowing anymore runs.

Arizona rallied in the ninth. A sac fly brought in a run, but after a double was fielded in the left field corner perfectly, Ramer was left at third.

Ryan Haug struck out on a full count with two runners on to end the game.

*****

Arizona had the first threat of the game, putting two runners on with just one out in the second. But a strikeout by Rivas and an Oliva flyout to right left those two guys on base.

The Wildcats appeared to score their first run of the game in the third. Ramer dropped a single in front of right fielder Connor Owings. Owings played it aggressively, and it cost him, as the ball bounced behind him to the wall, allowing Ramer to get to third.

That brought up Zach Gibbons, who bounced one back to Beckwith. Ramer came home, and so did Beckwith. The throw to catcher David Parrett was up the first base line, but Parrett caught it, and reached back to tag Ramer. The umpire called Ramer out at the plate, even though it appeared from the high angle that Ramer was safe.

The lower angle tells a slightly different story though.

It’s still amazing to think Arizona got to this point. This is a team with a first-year coaching staff, hadn’t been to a postseason since winning the 2012 National Championship, and was picked to finish ninth in the conference.

They wound up finishing third in the conference, but going 6-0 in elimination games before Thursday allowed them to be playing in the final game of the college baseball season. Don’t lose sight of that, and the direction this program is heading with one of the best coaching staffs in the country.



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College World Series: Arizona vs. Coastal Carolina Championship Game open thread, viewing info, streams and more

Come chat about the deciding game with us!

Welcome to the longest college baseball season ever.

The Arizona Wildcats and Coastal Carolina Chanticleers will (hopefully) play for a National Championship on Thursday afternoon in Omaha.

Come on down to the comments section to join our open thread!

Thursday’s game is scheduled to start at 10 AM PT on ESPNU. You can also stream the game on Watch ESPN or the ESPN App.

You can also stream the Arizona radio call on TuneIn radio here:

Or, here’s the national feed on Westwood One, which I actually really enjoyed for the first half of Saturday’s game

Be sure to join us below to chat about the game!



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Terrance Ferguson will not attend Arizona, pursue professional opportunities

The highly-ranked recruit is heading overseas and not Tucson

The highly-touted 2016 Arizona Wildcats recruiting class lost arguably its greatest asset this week when Terrance Ferguson informed Sean Miller that he will not attend college and pursue professional opportunities.

"Terrance Ferguson informed me earlier this week that he has decided to pursue professional opportunities instead of attending the University of Arizona this fall," Miller said in a statement. "I hope this next chapter of his basketball career goes well, and his goal of one day becoming an NBA player is realized."

Based on reports from a few weeks ago, it’s likely that Ferguson will head to Australia for a year before making his way to the NBA Draft, where he is a projected first round pick.

This is the same path that Emmanuel Mudiay took after attending the same "school" as Ferguson. Mudiay ended up being the 7th overall pick in the draft after playing a year in China.

It’s also not the first time that Arizona has dealt with a similar situation. Brandon Jennings was committed to the U of A, but then opted to play in Italy for a season before being the 10th overall pick by the Milwaukee Bucks.

I’m honestly surprised that this doesn’t happen more often. With the NBA forcing players to wait a season after graduating from high school before they can enter the draft, it seems like the better, more mature players would almost be better off going overseas to make money for a year rather than playing for free in college.



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Sonoran Hot Reads: 2017 Battle 4 Atlantis field revealed

We now know the entire field for the 2017 Battle 4 Atlantis

We knew over a year ago that the Arizona Wildcats were going to take part in the 2017 Battle 4 Atlantis, but now the rest of the field has been revealed.

Originally, Mississippi State was on the list, but it appears they’ve been replaced with Tennessee. Either way, this should give Arizona two legit non-conference neutral site games at worst in the span of three days. It also could be a pretty nice trip for some Arizona fans out there

"True Love Waits" by Radiohead is apparently the song that best defines Arizona this year?

Baseball

- Wednesday’s game was postponed until Thursday at 10 AM PT on ESPNU. You can read the reasoning behind the decision on omaha.com

- During the rain delay, Marlins Man was taking pictures with the team

- Maybe this year’s Championship Series feels like Fresno/Georgia in 2008, but Coastal is a program with a much longer period of success than Fresno was

- Texas hired Tulane head coach David Pierce, which ends the Jay Johnson to Austin speculation

Football

- Arizona is +30000 to win the College Football Playoff this year according to Odds Shark

- Gabe joined a podcast with our USC friends over at Conquest Chronicles to chat about Arizona. He also had a little roundup of some of the latest recruiting news

- The All-2000s Arizona team looks pretty good to me

Swimming

- Kevin Cordes broke the US Open record in the 200m breaststroke semifinals. He’ll go for the world record around 3:30 PM AZ time on Thursday

Tucson news

- I’m sure the people in the athletics department are voting early and often in the Trident vs. El Corral matchup in the Tucson Restaurant Tournament. There are a lot of upsets going down in the second half of the first round voting

- TUSD approved an increase in pay for teachers

- Some horrible human being shot a coyote on the east side, and there’s a reward out for any info on who did this



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Wednesday, June 29, 2016

College World Series: Arizona vs. Coastal Carolina Championship Game postponed until Thursday at 10 AM PT

We will wait yet another day for baseball’s national champion to be decided

The winner-take-all final game of the College World Series between the Arizona Wildcats and the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers has been postponed to Thursday thanks to lightning in the area, and the NCAA’s rule of not starting a game later than 11 PM local time.

The game will be played at 10 AM PT, and will be broadcast somewhere.

The fact that it took almost an hour for them to decide on a game time after deciding to postpone Wednesday's action is pretty ridiculous. The NCAA should have had a backup plan in place, and putting the game on during the middle of the day on a lesser network is such a waste.

Without a doubt this helps both pitching staffs, in particular Coastal Carolina. Andrew Beckwith, who has a 14-1 record, was not announced as the starting pitcher on Wednesday opposite Arizona’s Bobby Dalbec. Dalbec was slated to pitch on his 21st birthday on three days rest. He’ll at least get that fourth day of rest now. You would have to think CCU will now go with Beckwith, who threw over 130 pitches on Friday.

There is still a chance of rain in Omaha for Thursday. This is already the latest a college baseball season has ever gone, so thank you Mother Nature for allowing us to partake in the CWS later than we have ever been able to before.



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College World Series: Arizona vs. Coastal Carolina Game Three open thread, viewing info, streams and more

Come chat about the final college baseball game of the year with us!

A National Championship will be decided on Wednesday night.

After splitting the first two games, the Arizona Wildcats and Coastal Carolina Chanticleers battle in a winner-take-all Championship Game in Omaha. Come down to the comments section to discuss the game with us!

First pitch is scheduled for 5 PM PT, and the game will be broadcast on ESPN. You can also stream the game on Watch ESPN. Or, you can stream the Arizona radio broadcast through TuneIn right here:



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Tucson Restaurant Tournament: (6) El Corral vs. (11) Trident Grill

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Arizona football recruiting: Ranking updates, future commitments and powerhouse programs

Another recruiting roundup for a busy week ahead

The Arizona Wildcats have a busy week ahead of them on the recruiting trail, with two commitment dates that both favor Arizona. The class currently has 19 commitments thus far, solidified at 12th in the nation according to 247Sports’ composite ranking, which was just recently updated, bumping up quite a few prospects.

Ranking adjustments

Tony Fields received a pretty decent bump after all four recruiting services finally ranked him and he’s pretty close to the top 500. Kurtis Brown received one of the largest updates. He was once ranked 955th in the nation, but is now sitting at 750th overall.

Kylan Wilborn, Scott young, Drew Dixon, Edgar Burrola and Rhett Rodriguez also received some considerable bumps. Meanwhile, Bryce Gilbert dropped just a tad. Also, Elijah Watson is just about a one hundredth decimal point away from being ranked as a composite 3-star.

Still, keep in mind that early recruiting rankings, especially for 3-stars, are extremely rough. Compare these to a preseason college football poll.

Commitments elsewhere

We’ll first start with Elijah Blades. I was extremely confident that he was headed to Arizona. That was because I had received word that he had been a silent commit since he came away from his trip to Florida. Now he's a Gator.

Next is Maurice Bell. With the class filling up so fast, he essentially lost his spot. Arizona is looking to add some size at wide receiver right now, hence the Warren Jackson commitment. I had Bell going to Michigan after his visit, but they didn’t even make his top three either, so Colorado it was for Bell.

Upcoming Arizona commitments

The first is Rhedi Short, who has his decision date set for July 3rd. I was really thinking that he was going to Oregon, but many Duck insiders have told me they were kind of laying off.

I was then able to speak with him on the phone and he didn’t give me much, although he did say that Arizona, Oregon and Penn State were his top three. He has now released a top five which also includes Arizona State and California. I don’t feel 100% confident that he will come to Arizona, but that’s where my Crystal Ball pick is for now. He did mention that he talks to Greg Johnson quite a bit and he’s a guy who is likely to close the deal for Arizona.

Cody Shear is the next commitment watch with a July 5th decision date. He has Arizona, Oregon State and Washington State as his top three. I get a good a feeling about Arizona, as he’s kept me in the loop throughout his entire recruitment.

He likes Washington State because of the air raid offense. Arizona is in the mix due to his strong connection to Coach Jim Michalczik and the blue collar toughness of the line. Meanwhile, Oregon State is close to home and a program he believes in.

Warren Jackson commitment

If you were keeping up, you knew that Jackson was one to commit soon. Now with 19 commitments it makes the class pretty tight on scholarship numbers, particularly at wide receiver after now landing five pass catchers.

With only so many spots open, Arizona is likely to save those spots for the big names: Joseph Lewis, KJ Hamler or Bruce Judson. Despite upcoming unofficial visits, I’d be shocked if Arizona took Darrian McNeal or Bryan Thompson, or if they ended up having Arizona as their first option to begin with.

Future of the class

So to elaborate a little more, these are the remaining targets that Arizona would likely be going all in for to round out the class:

  • Receivers Joseph Lewis, KJ Hamler and Bruce Judson.
  • Corners Jaylon Johnson and Jaylon Redd.
  • Defensive linemen Odua Isibor and Jalen Harris.
  • Offensive linemen Tucker Robertson and Cody Shear.
  • And then of course any newcomers throughout the season.

I’m very interested to see how Isaac Slade-Matautia stands with all of this and how heavily the staff is pursuing him right now. Remember that trio of Florida boys: Nick Smith, Robert Porcher and Bruce Judson? I think Smith is UNC bound and Porcher is off to Nebraska, so that leaves two defensive pieces out of the equation now.

Chris Brooks update

With so many commitments and Brooks’ later timeline to commit, I figured that he missed his spot. But he has announced that he will be deciding by the end of July and tells me that Arizona is still his leader.

He also says that Oregon and USC are in the mix, but feels like the Ducks are going to offer him before his commitment date, trumping all schools.

This will be interesting to watch. The staff is still talking to him twice a week which is a good amount.

Reader Questions

From my understanding, Watson’s high school is a bottom feeder in the highest division of Georgia high school football. So he’s going up against some of the best competition in the South with some not-so-great talent around him. With that being said, it’s probably pretty hard to rank him, so it’s up to the scouting reports now.

This is a really good question. By no means is this class filled with All-Pac-12 candidates, but there is a lot of quality depth and versatility that Arizona is landing.

There’s also a big difference in the schools that they’re recruiting out of. They have commitments from Bishop Gorman, IMG Academy, Mater Dei and Long Beach Poly, arguably four of the top 20 programs in the nation. Bishop Gorman is currently preseason ranked 3rd in the nation, IMG Academy 4th and Mater Dei 6th, so that should tell you a bit about the impact those guys have on their team.

To actually answer the question, I think these guys coming in are going to be a lot better. Before, Arizona was landing some lower-tier 3-star guys, now the Wildcats are starting to land some solid 3-star guys, and by the end of the recruiting cycle, a lot of them will be closer to the top 500.



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Sonoran Hot Reads: ASU head coach Tracy Smith has jury duty during Arizona’s CWS run

At least the Wildcats are still playing baseball

While Tuesday’s result may not have been what Arizona Wildcats fans wanted, at least the Cats are still playing baseball. Compare this to what ASU’s head coach was doing on Tuesday. Tracy Smith spent his day fulfilling his civic duties by doing some jury duty in Maricopa County. Give me a loss in the College World Series over jury duty every single time

- Arizona is 6-0 in elimination games, but Coastal is 5-0, so something’s gotta give on Wednesday

- It had been 30 years since two pitchers recorded ten strikeouts in a single CWS game until Kevin Ginkel and Mike Morrison did it on Tuesday

- Here’s a pretty in-depth look at how Jay Johnson is in this position in his first year at Arizona

- And yet another article about Arizona’s seniors

Football

- How would you feel about a Cactus Bowl of Arizona vs. Baylor?

- Gabe talked to Odua Isibor about how Arizona stacks up in his recruitment

- The Wildcats seem to have the 7th-best defensive trio in the Pac-12. I never heard of anyone having defensive triplets before, but alright

- Nick Wilson is the biggest X-factor this year

Basketball

- Ryan Anderson will get his initial chance at the NBA with the Orlando Magic, while Gabe York gets his start with the Charlotte Hornets

Tucson news

- It’s a battle between Bobo’s and Rosa’s in the Tucson Restaurant Tournament

- There was a homicide around Fort Lowell and Country Club

- Deadly car crashes are on the rise around Arizona this year

- A woman was bitten by a rattlesnake in Marana



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Tuesday, June 28, 2016

College World Series recap: Coastal Carolina forces third game with 5-4 win over Arizona in Championship Finals

There will be a decisive Game Three on Wednesday

The end of the college baseball season will have to wait another day.

On Tuesday night, the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers took down the Arizona Wildcats by a score of 5-4, setting up a winner-take-all Game Three on Wednesday night. It is the first time ever that all the if necessary games will be played at a CWS.

With a National Championship on the line, the Wildcats turned to flamethrower Kevin Ginkel to take the ball.

He didn’t disappoint, going seven innings, scattering just five hits and did not walk a Chanticleer.

Coastal Carolina started Mike Morrison, who had been their closer all year. He ended up throwing a career-high 6 2/3 innings on Tuesday.

He also notched a career-high ten strikeouts.

In fact, he and Ginkel both struck out ten batters, which is far from common.

The two pitchers battled to a 2-2 draw through the first seven innings of this game.

After Ginkel was taken out, Cameron Ming, who had thrown ten innings of one-run baseball in Omaha, came in and was struggling from the get-go. He gave up a leadoff single to Anthony Marks, and then Marks moved to second on a sacrifice bunt.

That brought up three-hole hitter Connor Owings, who blooped one into short left to give Coastal the late 3-2 lead.

Zach Remillard followed that with a double, which chased Ming and brought Alfonso Rivas into a 3-2 game with two runners in scoring position.

Rivas immediately gave up a two-run single to G.K. Young, allowing Coastal to take a 5-2 lead. Another single would bring Cody Deason to the mound.

In the bottom of the eighth, Arizona loaded the bases with no outs.

They would get two runs on a groundout followed by this error:

That made it a 5-4 game. Cody Ramer flew out to left to end the threat.

A scoreless top of the ninth set up Arizona’s heart of the lineup for the bottom of the ninth. But they were retired in order by CCU reliever Bobby Holmes to end the game.

*****

In typical Arizona fashion, Ramer and Zach Gibbons led the game off with singles.

Then the Jay Johnson criticism started coming in fast and furious. With three-hole hitter JJ Matijevic up, who is not a typical three-hole hitter for what it’s worth, was asked to bunt, even with two strikes. Matijevic pushed that final bunt attempt foul, resulting in a strikeout for the first out of the frame.

Ryan Aguilar drew a walk to load the bases for Bobby Dalbec.

All year in spots like that, Arizona has attempted to score two runs on a squeeze play. It happened again, but Dalbec got a pitch low and away that he could not get down.

This ended up in Ramer being picked off at third, and Gibbons was almost picked off at second.

But he wasn’t, and Dalbec’s at bat continued. He eventually roped one at the third baseman, scoring Gibbons from second and giving Arizona the 1-0 advantage.

The Chanticleers would respond with their first runs of the Final in the top of the third. Billy Cooke picked up the first CCU hit of the game with a single to left center.

Cooke would advance to second when Ginkel slipped on the rubber, letting a pitch go ten feet behind the batter. Cooke then moved to third on a sac bunt.

This brought nine-hole hitter David Parrett to the dish. After showing squeeze play, Arizona’s infield was playing him in. He then skied a Ginkel pitch into extremely shallow left field on a 2-2 count.

The ball hung in the air for what seemed like hours, and it eventually fell to the ground as Louis Boyd failed to get a glove on it.

Parrett made it to second on the play, and Cooke remained at third with Anthony Marks strolling to the plate.

Marks wasted no time, squaring up a 2-0 pitch through the middle, bringing home the two runs and giving CCU a 2-1 lead.

Arizona had a chance to retake the lead in the bottom of the fourth. They were able to get two runners into scoring position with just one out. But consecutive strikeouts by Justin Behnke and Boyd ended the threat, allowing the Chanticleers to cling to the one-run lead.

They would at least erase the deficit in the fifth. Once again, Ramer and Gibbons started the inning by getting on the corners without an out. Matijevic struck out on a nasty curveball, but Aguilar grounded a fielder’s choice up the middle to score Ramer and tie the game at the time.

*****

On Wednesday night, CCU is expected to start their ace pitcher Andrew Beckwith. I would expect Arizona to counter with Bobby Dalbec. That game is scheduled for 5 PM PT on ESPN.



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College World Series: Arizona vs. Coastal Carolina Game Two open thread, viewing info, stream, and more

Come chat about the Wildcats as they look to win a National Championship

The Arizona Wildcats are now in a position where they will need to win one game over the next two days to win the 2016 National Championship.

Come on down to the comments section to chat about Game Two of the College World Series final, as Arizona looks to take down the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers.

Tuesday’s game is scheduled to start at 5 PM PT, and will be shown on ESPN. You can stream it on Watch ESPN, or you can stream the Arizona radio call on TuneIn right here:

You can also find a ton of links from after Monday’s game in this morning’s Sonoran Hot Reads.



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Former Arizona forward Ryan Anderson agrees to Summer League deal with Orlando Magic

Not the first Ryan Anderson or Wildcat to play for the Magic

After going undrafted, Ryan Anderson, who spent his senior year with the Arizona Wildcats, will have a chance to make the Orlando Magic roster this summer.

Anderson, a transfer from Boston College, led the Wildcats in scoring (15.3 ppg) and rebounds (10.1 rpg) in the 2015-16 season. He was also able to shoot 74.5% from the free throw line.

In his year away from the court due to the transfer rule and injury, Anderson rehabbed his shoulder in a way that allowed him to become the strongest player in program history (literally broke the bench press record). The moment he returned to the floor for his senior year, you could tell that he was going to be Arizona’s most important player throughout the year.

Even though he averaged a double-double, his defense was the weakness in his game, particularly against power forwards that could play above the three point line. His inability to cover a guy one-on-one in certain situations forced Sean Miller to use a zone defense for the first time in his Arizona tenure.

His Boston College career was fairly consistent as well, as he always averaged double-digit scoring and just under eight rebounds per game in each season. He also impressed at this year’s Portsmouth Invitational, leading those players in rebounding and was third in scoring.

Anderson could certainly impress with his play and make his way to an NBA roster. As long as he can defend away from the basket, there’s no reason to think he can’t at least get some run in the league.



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Tucson Restaurant Tournament: (4) Bobo's vs. (13) Rosa's Mexican Food

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Arizona football recruiting: 3-star defensive end Odua Isibor eyeing in-state Wildcats

Arizona has been hitting up the local talent in this recruiting cycle

The talent pool of Arizona high school recruits this year is massive compared to years past. The Arizona Wildcats have already secured three in-state commitments, and there will likely be more to come, despite a rapidly-filling 2017 class.

The need for defensive linemen is clear, and it seems as if the staff could be working their way down the list to help bolster that area.

To address those issues, Arizona is going in on Odua Isibor, 3-star defensive end out of Saint Mary’s (Phoenix, AZ). He checks in at 6-foot-6, 210lbs, and is ranked 37th in the nation at his position.

I got a chance to talk to Isibor about his recruitment process with the Wildcats.

"We've been talking since last season," he said of his communication. "Me and Abel Navarette, our middle linebacker, drove out with our head coach at the time and saw a game. Since then I've been to practices, junior days, barbecues...everything like that."

Constant communication is a huge key to success for the staff and it often tells you how hard they’re trying to sell their pitch.

"Yeah, Coach Vince Amey, and Coach Chris Singletary are just two off the top, but I talk to a large number of the staff very frequently," Isibor explained.

Isibor holds some pretty heavy offers, but Arizona remains in the thick of things as one of the schools recruiting him the hardest.

"Well, Arizona is recruiting me pretty hard too but, I'd say Yale and ASU have been recruiting hard. I also talk to Oregon, A&M, Stanford and Dartmouth a lot," he said when asked about which schools are giving him the most attention. "Arizona is definitely among the top schools I'm interested in. They have one of the top medical programs."

It became clear that with Dartmouth, Stanford and Yale in the mix, to go along with his interest in medical programs, academics was going to be a big role in his decision.

"Really just academics and the opportunities that will be made available to me for my future," Isibor said about his decision factors. "And the type of player the school plans to use me as or turn me into."

Proximity to home might also play a small role, but he won’t let it completely influence him.

"I love AZ but I'm going to have to balance it."

As for how Arizona plans to use him?

"I'll be a pass rusher. A guy coming hard off the edge," he explained, which is a fit that he feels uses his skill set best. "They know exactly what they want and the exact players that they are looking for and Coach Amey is looking for pass rushers on that line"

Isibor has no unofficial visits planned yet, but he has been a frequent visitor to Arizona State.

"Did a little academic orientation visit today at ASU, and went to a camp at Stanford last week where I talked to some Yale and Dartmouth coaches as well."

As for official visits: "I was thinking at least Yale, A&M, and Oregon because they are much farther than Arizona, ASU and USC."

He has no set official date as to when he wants to decide, but wants to wait until he has taken all of his official visits, which would make it sometime at the beginning or middle of the season.

He’s a dual-sport athlete at Saint Mary’s also playing basketball. On the field he racked up 88 tackles and nine sacks in nine games. He was named third team All-State and first team All-Section.

His junior year highlights are below.



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Arizona basketball: Gabe York agrees to Summer League deal with Charlotte Hornets

York will get a chance to impress MJ

After going undrafted, Arizona Wildcats four-year guard Gabe York has agreed to join the Charlotte Hornets franchise on a Summer League deal.

For the first time in his career, York averaged double-figures in his senior season with the Wildcats, and he went well beyond that. He ended up second on the team in scoring with 15 points per game, trailing only Ryan Anderson in the scoring category.

York was by far Arizona's best three-point shooter in his final two seasons as a Wildcat. He shot 40% from beyond the arc in his junior year, then upped it to 42.1% in his senior campaign. He finished that off with a remarkable Senior Day in McKale Center, draining a program-record nine threes in his final home game.

That moment was extra sweet because York seemed like a candidate to transfer after a freshman season where he barely saw the floor. But he stuck with Sean Miller and company, deciding to grow in that system instead of leave and seek more minutes right away elsewhere.

Aside from playing predominately shooting guard, York also ran some point when called upon to do so, and there's reason to think he could do it for an NBA team if that's what he needed to do to make a roster. He said just that after a workout with the Sacramento Kings earlier this summer.

It'll be interesting to see if a guy like York will be able to shoot his way onto a team this summer.



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Sonoran Hot Reads: JC Cloney throws first shutout in CWS Final since 1993

A historic night for the Arizona lefty

For the first time since 1993, and the first time ever since the College World Series championship round went to a best-of-three format, a pitcher threw a shutout, and that pitcher was Arizona’s JC Cloney. In typical Cloney fashion after the game, he showed essentially no emotion despite the position he pitched the Wildcats into on Monday. One more year of this guy? Yes please

- Why did Cloney come to Arizona? Because Jay Johnson turned down Mrs. Cloney’s cookies

- He was also helped by Cesar Salazar and the freshman’s ability to turn balls into strikes by being "a suction cup" behind the dish

- The Chanticleers’ head coach said flatly that he will not throw their ace on Tuesday

- Coastal Carolina has a monkey in their dugout. No matter what happens, both of these teams are fun

- Pedro Gomez has been quite emotional watching his son Rio reach this point

- ASU fans have hated that this run has happened, except for Arizona governor Doug Ducey

- Oklahoma State head coach Josh Holliday is not going to be Texas’ next head coach, which is another step towards Jay Johnson being a realistic candidate there

Other sports

- Baseball players are not the only Wildcats doing good things in Omaha this week. Kevin Cordes qualified for his first Olympics, taking first in the 100m breaststroke

Football

- Arizona made Rhedi Short’s top five, and the Wildcats are expected to land him on July 3rd

- He may be joining three-star WR Warren Jackson, who pledged his commitment to the Wildcats shortly after the baseball game

- Gabe talked to Jaylon Redd, who is seriously considering Arizona as his school of choice

- The offensive triplet combo of Anu Solomon, Nick Wilson and Nate Phillips checks in at No. 7 in the Pac-12 according to ESPN

Tucson News

- Get your votes in for the Caruso’s vs. El Molinito matchup in the Tucson Restaurant Tournament

- This is a disturbing story of a child testing positive for cocaine in Oro Valley

- Winterhaven got hit hard by the monsoons



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Monday, June 27, 2016

College World Series news: Coastal Carolina will not throw Andrew Beckwith on Tuesday

It doesn’t appear either top pitcher will see the mound in the second game of the CWS Final

As the Arizona Wildcats look to wrap up a National Championship, and the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers try to keep their season alive, it seems like we will not see the aces of either pitching staff.

Arizona’s Nathan Bannister is still dealing with forearm tightness, and Coastal’s Andrew Beckwith, who threw 137 pitches on Friday against TCU, will not be coming back on three days’ rest.

"Absolutely not," Chanticleer head coach Gary Gilmore said flatly when asked if Beckwith would pitch his ace on Tuesday. "No shot."

Gilmore also seemed frustrated that Arizona did not announce its pitcher until the last possible moment on Monday.

"They kinda didn’t tell us today ‘til game time, so they’ll get the same thing from me tomorrow," he explained when saying who he would get the ball for CCU on Tuesday.

We’ll all apparently find out together who the starting pitchers are minutes before Tuesday’s scheduled first pitch of 5 PM PT.



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Arizona football recruiting: 3-star wide receiver Warren Jackson commits to Wildcats

Yet another deadly weapon on offense for Arizona

Yep. The Arizona Wildcats have landed yet another commitment for the 2017 class. This now gives the class 19 commitments, ten in the month of June. The newest commit is Warren Jackson, 3-star wide receiver out of Bishop Alemany (Mission Hills, CA).

Jackson is an extremely nice piece for the offense, checking in at 6-foot-5, 185 pounds. This is a commitment that I was expecting to happen for Arizona, and had this in my Crystal Ball prediction. When I spoke to him about his recruitment, I got a good feeling about this one, especially once he said he was in love with the campus. It was also evident that with all of these commitments, guys were going to need to commit soon to save their spot, which is exactly what Jackson did, as he told me that he had been in discussion with his family about committing soon.

This now gives the Wildcats five pass catchers for the 2017 class and there might be room for one more, with the focus solely on Joseph Lewis and possibly Bryan Thompson or KJ Hamler. But between Drew Dixon, Bryce Gilbert, and now Jackson, Arizona is going to have some great height on offense now. When you consider the fact that Samajie Grant, Trey Griffey and Nate Phillips will all be leaving after 2016, some of these recruits might be able to see the field as freshmen.

During his varsity career, Jackson has amassed 71 receptions for 1,140 yards and 11 touchdowns.

His junior year highlights are below.



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College World Series recap: Arizona beats Coastal Carolina 3-0 in first game of Championship Final

The Wildcats are one win away from their fifth National Championship

The Arizona Wildcats are now one win away from a National Championship.

JC Cloney led them to a CWS Final-opening win with a four-hit shutout of the Coastal Carolina Chanticleers, giving Arizona a 3-0 win.

Ten of the last 13 teams to win the first game of the best-of-three series have gone on to take the whole thing.

"Hall of Fame performance," Arizona head coach Jay Johnson said after the game. "I don't know how many good swings they got on him tonight. He has a special level of competitiveness that's been on display here for 16 innings and it's been a special performance."

Cloney has not allowed a run in 16 innings pitched in Omaha, having a seven inning performance against UC-Santa Barbara on Wednesday.

The Wildcats jumped out to an early lead on Zach Hopeck, who had been used sparingly by CCU over the last month or so. Cody Ramer led the game off with a double down the left field line. He would move up to third on a Zach Gibbons groundout, and then come home thanks to an RBI single up the middle off the bat of Ryan Aguilar.

They would only get the one run out of it though as Jared Oliva and Alfonso Rivas both struck out with two runners on.

Hopeck would continue striking out batters, matching his career high of five whiffs in the first three innings.

That third inning was a bit of a Houdini act by him though.

The Wildcats would put two runners in scoring position before recording an out thanks to a Ramer single and Gibbons double to start the third. But Hopeck escaped with a short fly out, strikeout and groundout forced to get out of the situation unscathed.

In the fourth, Ramer continued his ridiculous game with this defensive play.

That led right into him drawing a leadoff walk in the fifth. A couple of fielder’s choices and a foul out made that irrelevant though.

Hopeck lasted into the seventh, pitching 6 1/3 innings, more than CCU could have asked for.

He was replaced by Cole Schaefer, who inherited Cesar Salazar at second. A wild pitch moved the Arizona catcher to third base, and Ramer walked, putting runners on the corners with one out for Gibbons.

Gibbons hit a fly ball to center, which both runners tagged up on. The throw came into second, and the shortstop cut it off, costing CCU as the throw would have had gunned down Ramer if it had made it to the bag and the second baseman. It also would have gotten the Chants out of the inning without allowing a run because Salazar had not yet reached the plate.

But alas, Ramer was safe and Salazar scored to make it 2-0. Aguilar came right up and ripped the first pitch he saw to left field to drive in another, giving Arizona the 3-0 advantage.

Coastal was unable to hit the ball hard until the 7th. Then they hit a few fly balls to the warning track, but that’s not how you score in Omaha, and all of them were caught.

The Chants had one last rally in them in the 9th. They put two runners on with no out, but a double play mitigated that trouble, and a Cloney strikeout looking ended the game.

The two teams will play again on Tuesday night for Game Two of the best-of-three series. First pitch is scheduled for 5 PM PT on ESPN.



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College World Series final: Arizona vs. Coastal Carolina Game One open thread, previews, viewing info, stream and more

It’s time to chat about the first game of the Championship Series

We’ve reached the end of the line for college sports in the 2015-16 year, and the Arizona Wildcats are one of just two teams remaining.

Come on down to the comments section to discuss Game One of the College World Series final with us!

The game will be airing on ESPN, with first pitch scheduled for 4 PM PT. You can also stream it on Watch ESPN. Or you can stream the radio call on TuneIn Radio:

Preview links:



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Tucson Restaurant Tournament: (5) Caruso's vs. (12) El Molinito

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Arizona football recruiting: Keep an eye on 4-star corner Jaylon Redd

After missing out on Elijah Blades for now, Arizona is in a great position for another 4-star corner

The Arizona Wildcats missed out on a big time prospect in 4-star corner Elijah Blades. While I don’t think that he’s completely done with his recruitment process, despite his commitment to his dream school Florida, Arizona still needs to start looking for other options at corner.

They have Malik Hausman and Greg Johnson on board, but could really use some help at the position. Maybe they saw Blades’ Florida commitment coming, because the offer to Jaylon Redd came just before the decision.

I got a chance to talk to Redd about his recruiting process.

"All my communcation has been through Coach Donte’ (Williams)," he said about his relationship with the staff. "(The offer) felt great because of my relationship with Coach Donte’. I know he knows everything to make me a better player and man. He’s a straight up guy and I like that."

Redd is one of the fastest corners in the nation, checking in at 5-foot-9, 180 pounds out of Rancho Cucamonga High, the same school as Thomas Graham. Redd is ranked 24th in the nation among all corners, 202nd regardless of position. He holds some pretty hefty offers including Michigan, Oklahoma, Oregon and UCLA, but that doesn’t stop Redd from having Arizona high on his list.

U of A checks all the boxes off when it comes to Redd’s future school wish list.

"A school that is going to make me a better football player, make me a better man and just like a family environment."

"Yessir," Redd told me when asked if Arizona was on his list considering his criteria. He is going to be releasing a top eight soon and he believes that Arizona is within his top three.

He’ll be heading to Arizona State for a visit on July 22nd and wishes to get to Tucson sometime this summer. He has not made any other visit plans as of yet for before fall rolls around.

This is certainly a recruitment to watch out for especially since it seems like the Wildcats' staff would like to add another corner back. I think Arizona lands Rhedi Short on July 3rd, and with a 4-star talent like Redd having so much interest, it would be hard to think that he would be turned down, even with the class filling up so fast.

His junior year highlights are below



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Sonoran Hot Reads: Comparing the 2012 and 2016 Arizona CWS teams

The last two Arizona CWS teams are so different

It’s bound to happen. Sports writers and fans are always comparing one player to another, one team to another, or one era to another. So of course, we have a comparison of the 2012 and 2016 Arizona baseball teams. What it tells us is there isn’t a lot of comparison, something we already find out when trying to compare the freshman catchers on those teams. This offense is worse, but the pitching is better, and the 2016 team has reached this point in a completely different fashion. There’s not a lot of similarities other than how far they’ve gone in the season

- Speaking of comparing, D1Baseball did so for a couple of categories, but refused to take a stand on the pitching and intangibles. Both of these teams certainly took the long road though

- Arizona almost was facing TCU this week because of some great rally antics in the Horned Frog dugout

- Here are some numbers that you should know about the CWS and the final series

- Some people are going to call Coastal a "cinderella" story, but those people have no idea what they’re talking about

- You’ve probably been wondering what a Chanticleer actually is. Never fear, we have your answer

- Will Cameron Ming be available to pitch Monday? Probably not, but he has been thriving in this new closer role that he’s taken on in the postseason

- It’s not an accident that this team readily shows its personality in the dugout

- We’ve had the best Arizona baseball coverage all season long, so if you’re feeling the need to get caught up on what this team has gone through and the personalities behind it, make your way through our baseball hub. You won’t find more about this team anywhere else

Basketball

- We’re still waiting on where Gabe York and Ryan Anderson will sign, but one New York writer thinks that the Knicks should make York a priority

- Allonzo Trier is the best NBA prospect on this year’s team

Football

- Three-star OL Cody Shear has Arizona in his final three, along with Washington State and Oregon State

Other sports

Tucson news

- Go vote in the Sushi Garden vs. Mariscos Chihuahua battle in the Tucson Restaurant Tournament

- It rained, so naturally people lost power. And of course Tucson Blvd. flooded because that’s just kind of what it does during the summer

- There was a fire that started burning near Redington Pass



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Sunday, June 26, 2016

College World Series: Arizona’s attitude stems from 2007 UC-Irvine team

The Wildcats are throwing it back to another West Coast team from 2007 with their attitude

If there’s one thing that the general public has been exposed to in the past couple weeks, it’s the fact that the Arizona Wildcats dugout is basically a party.

Another thing that’s happened is the discovery of just how smart and important to this team assistant coach Sergio Brown has been.

Here’s where these two things collide: 2007 UC-Irvine.

That 2007 Anteaters team was the first time Brown had been to Omaha as an assistant coach (he won the 1995 National Championship with Cal State Fullerton as a player). Irvine eliminated No. 5 National Seed ASU that year before losing to eventual champion Oregon State.

But just like 2016 Arizona, it was a loose bunch.

They’ve earned the right to have our dugout be the place they wanna be worse than any place in the world-Jay Johnson

"When you talk about what the word team epitomizes, that group of guys were spectacular in how they grew and how they developed," Brown said of that Anteaters squad. "And more than anything, I think that team taught me to let your players have fun and let them be who they are."

That philosophy was apparent from the first day this new coaching staff set foot in Hi Corbett, and manifested itself in the first weekend against Rice with a renewed presence from the dugout.

"Your players teach you how to be a good coach, and what they respond to," Brown explained. "From that, and what I learned early in the year is what we were doing was creating an atmosphere in the dugout that allowed them to stay engaged in the game and engaged with their teammates."

"A nine inning game when you’re a kid that’s not playing at all, it’s tough to get through," he continued. "So you want to let them have a little bit of their own personality and own identity as a team to get them to bring something to the table."

As the regular season progressed, the Arizona dugout was not in people’s faces as much as it was at the beginning of the year. Looking back now to when I first saw this team in San Diego at the Tony Gwynn Classic, and the way they were in the final home series against Abilene Christian, it was night and day how loud the dugout actually was.

Even with it possibly being a little more subdued, Arizona has also gotten on the nerves of people a bit in this CWS, similar to the Anteaters.

"People didn’t like that team," Brown said through a smile about 2007 UCI. "They maybe pushed the envelope a little more than maybe we should have, but they were having so much darn fun and they were doing everything right. It was kind of ‘Hey, this is your team. We’re going to stand out of your way as long as you’re playing hard and doing everything right on and off the field’."

"Now, we have some guys that are pretty extroverted, and some that are pretty introverted, but the one thing these guys are doing is having fun and being good teammates, and that’s the biggest thing."

"I’m at a loss for words with our guys sometimes and some of the stuff they do," Jay Johnson added on Sunday. "I just respect how much they do to prepare and the professionalism they play with, so my feeling is they’ve earned the right to have our dugout be the place they wanna be worse than any place in the world."



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Arizona baseball: Cameron Ming thrives in closer role for Wildcats

Changing roles at the most important time of the year can not be easy, but Ming has done it.

Before the season, Cameron Ming was in the mix to be the Arizona Wildcats’ Friday night starter.

He got the Saturday nod that first weekend at Rice, and once again the following week against Nebraska at the Tony Gwynn Classic.

In his third start of the year, Ming only lasted 1 1/3 innings against Northwestern State, allowing three earned runs in that outing, raising his season ERA at the time to 6.75.

From there, Ming spent the next three weeks making relief appearances of an inning or less as his ERA hovered around 7. He finally got the starting nod again vs. UCLA on March 26th, throwing five innings of two-run baseball.

After that, he earned four more starts in conference play, bouncing back and forth between being a weekend guy and being a middle reliever depending on the matchup that particular weekend, and if Jay Johnson felt the need to start a second lefty against the opponent.

But never before had Ming been used as a closer for this team.

Until when it mattered most.

In the postseason.

He picked up his first career save against Louisiana-Lafayette, tossing 3 1/3 innings of shutout baseball just a day after recording two outs against Sam Houston State. That first save also sent Arizona into the Super Regional round.

Then in that Starkville Super Regional, Ming got his second save while getting the final out of the Dalbec/Power Outage game. And then in Game Two, he pitched the final two innings, eventually getting credit for the win.

"It’s interesting," he said of taking on the new role before the team left for Omaha. "I’ve kind of been tossed around a lot of roles throughout the year. I like every role. I don’t really care. I’m not picky. I trust Coach (Dave) Lawn. He knows how to use me so I just have to embrace it and give it everything I have."

Now in Omaha, Ming pitched in each of Arizona’s first four College World Series games, and was the final Wildcat pitcher in all of those games.

In the first three outings, it was a more traditional closer role, throwing five total innings against Miami, Oklahoma State and UC-Santa Barbara. He only gave up two hits and zero runs in those three games.

"I think my personality suits closing," he said after the UCSB game. "When I get in to pitch, I’m a pretty intense dude. I don’t like starting that much, even though I’m ready to do whatever it takes for this pitching staff to roll, but I like coming out of the ‘pen more for sure, and I’m kind of on a roll right now."

"I love the adrenaline," Ming continued. "I do empty out the tank a lot more out of the 'pen, but my arm feels great. I have an arm that allows me to bounce back when I only throw one or two innings every game with a day off in between, so I can bounce back pretty easily, so it works."

Then the Friday OSU game happened. With Nathan Bannister forced to exit with forearm tightness, and Kevin Ginkel struggling with command, Arizona turned to Ming in the fifth inning. And once again, he was able to finish the game.

"It’s a special effort," Jay Johnson said after that particular game by Ming.

"When (Bannister) came out of the game, I wanted to give him and our team the best," Ming added. "You kind of have to not think about it as much as it sucks that Banni came out early. You kind of have to set that aside and keep working as a pitching staff."

Now with Bannister likely shelved for the Championship Series, Ming may have to take on the starting role he doesn’t like as much on Tuesday. It seems like Arizona would go with JC Cloney on Monday, who threw seven innings and 95 pitches against UCSB on Wednesday. Then Ming, with his 111 pitches total since Wednesday, might get the ball Tuesday.

Either way, I think Ming has been this team’s MVP in Omaha, and if they are to win a fifth National Championship, he will be a big reason why that happens.



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