Wednesday, May 31, 2017

Arizona basketball recruiting: Another top three class fuels excitement plus updates on 2018

For the fifth time in six years, U of A has a top three class

It doesn’t seem to matter when or how Sean Miller assembles his annual recruiting class.

One thing is for sure; it’s going to be nationally revered.

This year’s class, for the most part, was assembled early - a far cry from the 2016 class that for the longest time featured some gangly Finnish prospect who people knew next to nothing about. (Whatever happened to him?)

While the spring did have its excitement thanks to the monthly ‘Brian Bowen expects to commit by ____,’ Emmanuel Akot committing and then really committing, landing Chase Jeter, the one percent chance U of A might’ve scored Trevon Duval, and lastly, the ‘who will leave, who won’t leave’ NBA Draft script, the majority of the class was wrapped up by the time the turkey came out of the oven last Thanksgiving.

This just goes to show that no matter how Miller goes about his recruiting process, it works.

For the fifth time in six seasons, Miller has assembled a top three recruiting class (always behind Kentucky and Duke) but this one has a different feel to it - at least it does as I write this on the last day of May.

Now twenty years removed from its last National Championship and 16 seasons from its last Final Four, Tucson is restless.

The staff, seen in Sean Miller’s ditching of Twitter, is likely restless or simply annoyed. *

*Or maybe he just really hates Twitter, but something - err some people - irked him the wrong way.

Everyone desperately wants a Final Four berth with a national championship ‘cherry’ on top.

While last season’s class was disrupted by Terrance Ferguson’s decision to head Down Under, this class, if it fully materializes as expected, will have a weight on its shoulders that may have never been felt before; at least in this millennium.

No team in the nation has had the recruiting success Coach Miller and Arizona has had in the last decade without the hardware to show it.

This team, with four returning starters, an uber-talented big man, and athletic wings that fill the rest of the holes, Miller has the pieces that point directly towards San Antonio.

Now, this is hardly the first or last article that will harp on the talent that Arizona Basketball currently possesses. But with the entire national 2017 class set in stone - minus Bowen who, for all I know, will never, ever commit (though doubtful), U of A is cemented in the third spot once again. (If Bowen somehow picks Texas, then please take this article out back and burn it because they will likely jump the Cats.)

Sean Miller did his part off the court, the time now comes for the work to happen on it that will determine if this team will go down in Arizona lore or be another team that leaves something to be desired.


With 2017 in the rear view, let’s turn our focus towards the 2018 class that is back down to one occupant, Shareef O’Neal. Most of these updates are somewhat recent and if they aren’t, by chance, please save the pitchforks for later.

  • Gerald Liddell cut his list to seven, including Baylor, California, Texas, UCLA, Oregon, and SMU along with Arizona.
  • Taeshon Cherry also trimmed his schools, this time to eight. He’s riding with Oregon, SDSU, Texas A&M, USC, Florida State, Gonzaga, UCLA, and Arizona.
  • Jahvon Quinerly cut his list to seven. Along with the Wildcats, he has Villanova, UCLA, Seton Hall, Stanford, Kansas, and Virginia.
  • Immanuel Quickley cut his list and did not include the Cats. I’m not sure how hard the staff was going after him but it appears it wasn’t too hard as Arizona doesn’t usually get knocked off this early.
  • Devin Dotson is likely to include Arizona on a soon-to-be released list. He told ESPN that the Wildcats have made him a priority.
  • Simi Shittu, a friend of Emmanuel Akot, is hearing from U of A. Shittu says of Arizona, “Very nice school, My friend. Emmanuel Akot is going there, he reclassed. They’re in contact here and there. And the coach from Washington [Lorenzo Romar] is there now, he’s an assistant.”
  • I might have mentioned it but Naz Reid has U of A in his first top-10.
  • 2019 guard Josh Green isn’t in any rush on the recruitment side but does tell Scout.com, “Arizona is a great school with a great coaching staff. I have been down there before and Arizona has a great environment also. It’s just a great school overall.”
  • At the bottom of this article, Brandon Williams talks about his rehab. Says “everything is going fine” and goal is to be back on the court in July.
  • Jairus Hamilton says Arizona is coming hard at him along with UNC, Kansas, Duke, and Kentucky.
  • The first “session” (for a lack of a better word) of AAU ball ended and this link has some updates on Marvin Bagley, Bol Bol, and others.
  • Below is Shareef O’Neal and Bol Bol doing as they please.

You can follow Alec on Twitter: @UofAlec



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Arizona baseball: JJ Matijevic named a Golden Spikes Award semifinalist

The junior is one of 25 players on the list

After putting up an extraordinary draft year, Arizona Wildcats junior infielder JJ Matijevic has been named a semifinalist for the Golden Spikes Award, which is given to the best amateur baseball player in the country.

Matijevic is one of 25 players to earn the distinction.

This year, the junior from Pittsburgh has put up a slash line of .389/.440/.650 while leading the country in doubles, taking two bases 29 times (2nd most in school history). He is also the only Arizona player to reach double digits in home runs, slugging ten pitches out of the park in 2017.

You will be able to vote for Matijevic to win the award at GoldenSpikesAward.com

This past Sunday may have been Matijevic’s final game at Hi Corbett Field, and he took a little time afterwards to take it all in.

“Sunday was tough for me,” he explained on Tuesday. “Just those seniors, I’ve been with ‘em for three years and it got to me a little bit. This place is special to me and the most important thing to me is the players and coaches.”

“It kinda hit me a little bit,” Matijevic added on if it potentially being his last game in Tucson sunk in. “It possibly couldn’t be because we could still possibly play here for Super Regionals, and I know that and I know there’s a lot more baseball to be played.”

The key to Matijevic’s success this year has been trying to not do too much.

“When I’m going good is when I’m just being myself and not try to do too much,” he explained. “When I’m missing balls and swinging at bad pitches is when I just get out of my comfort zone and try to do too much and just swinging hard.”

Terry Francona remains the only Arizona player to have ever won the Golden Spikes Award, winning it in 1980.


Here’s the full list of players that have been named a semifinalist:

  • Jake Adams, Jr., IF, Iowa
  • J.B. Bukauskas, Jr., RHP, North Carolina
  • Jake Burger, Jr., IF, Missouri State
  • Griffin Canning, Jr., RHP, UCLA
  • Morgan Cooper, Jr., RHP, Texas
  • Greg Deichmann, Jr., OF, LSU
  • Drew Ellis, Jr., IF, Louisville
  • Alex Faedo, Jr., RHP, Florida
  • Stuart Fairchild, Jr., OF, Wake Forest
  • Steven Gingery, So., LHP, Texas Tech
  • Nate Harris, Sr., RHP, Louisiana Tech
  • Adam Haseley, Jr., LHP/OF, Virginia
  • Luke Heimlich, Jr., LHP, Oregon State
  • Keston Hiura, Jr., IF/OF, UC Irvine
  • Gunner Leger, Jr., LHP, Louisiana Lafayette
  • Nick Madrigal, So., IF, Oregon State
  • J.J. Matijevic, Jr., IF, Arizona
  • Brendan McKay, Jr., LHP/IF, Louisville
  • Nate Pearson, So., RHP, College of Central Florida
  • David Peterson, Jr., LHP, Oregon
  • Brent Rooker, Jr., OF, Mississippi State
  • JP Sears, Jr., LHP, The Citadel
  • Brian Shaffer, Jr., RHP, Maryland
  • Pavin Smith, Jr., IF/OF, Virginia
  • Evan White, Jr., IF, Kentucky


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Arizona football: Kick times for first three home games of 2017 announced

Are you ready for some late night football?

When the Arizona Wildcats open their 2017 home schedule, they’ll be on three different networks.

Of course, there is the rule that Arizona can’t host games during the day early in the season, so we already knew these games would be late. But now we know just how late.

The 2017 season opener against NAU on September 2nd will kickoff at 8 PM MST, and will be broadcast on Pac-12 Networks, which will be the fourth game of the day shown by the conference’s channel.

For week number two, the Houston Cougars and new head coach Major Applewhite make the trek to Tucson. That game will be played at 7:30 PM MST on September 9th, and will be shown on some ESPN network that will be announced the week before the game.

After a trip to El Paso for a Friday night game against the UTEP Miners on ESPN at 7:15 PM, the Wildcats return home for another Friday night game against the Utah Utes to open Pac-12 play. Arizona and Utah square off on September 22nd at 7:30 PM MST and it will be shown on FS1.

The rest of Arizona’s start times and TV designations will be announced throughout the season.

For a team coming off of a 3-9 season, it’s kind of nice that the Wildcats aren’t being relegated to strictly Pac-12 Network in the early going. At least people that like to stay up and watch Arizona play football will have an easier time of doing it.



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Arizona basketball: Wildcats finalizing home-and-home series with Alabama, per report

Arizona will reportedly host Alabama in 2017-18 then travel to Tuscaloosa in 2018-19

The Arizona Wildcats are close to finalizing a home-and-home series with the Alabama Crimson Tide, reports Cecil Hurt of the Tuscaloosa News.

Hurt reports Arizona will host Alabama in the upcoming 2017-18 season and then Alabama will host Arizona in Tuscaloosa in the 2018-19 season.

The Wildcats have Dec. 9-10 open on their 2017-18 schedule, which is presumably when this series will begin.

Alabama, coached by former NBA player Avery Johnson, went 19-15 this past season, and returns nearly all of its key contributors plus adds the No. 6 recruiting class in the country, including five-star point guard Collin Sexton and four-star guard John Petty, who is the No. 30 player in the 2017 class.

Sporting News ranked Alabama 21st in its original “way-too-early” Preseason Top 25, so there’s a chance the Crimson Tide could be ranked arriving in Tucson. Arizona is Sporting News’ preseason No. 1.

Of course, this series also means former Arizona athletic director/current Alabama athletic director Greg Byrne may be returning to Tucson fairly soon.

Here’s the rest of Arizona’s non-conference schedule for the 2017-18 season:

Nov. 10 — vs. Northern Arizona

Nov. 12 — vs. UMBC

Nov. 22 — Battle for Atlantis

Nov. 23 — Battle for Atlantis

Nov. 24 — Battle for Atlantis

Nov. 29 — vs. Long Beach State

Dec. 2 — at UNLV

Dec. 5 — vs. Texas A&M (in Phoenix)

Dec. 9 or 10 — vs. Alabama

Dec. 16 — at New Mexico

Dec. 18 — vs. North Dakota State

Dec. 21 — vs. Connecticut


You can follow this author on Twitter at @RKelapire



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SB Nation’s Arizona blog needs a new site manager. Is that you?

Come help us continue to build the best free Wildcat site on the internet.

With Jason leaving the site soon, we’re looking for some new blood to manage the site, as well as come on board as contributors.

If you love Arizona Wildcat sports, writing, and the idea of running your own site, we'd love for you to be the new Arizona Desert Swarm manager. Here's what that person does:

  • Writes multiple articles about Arizona sports each week
  • Manages a staff of other writers, editing and scheduling their work
  • Runs (or delegates) the site’s Facebook, Twitter, and other evolving social platform accounts
  • Makes sure the site publishes enough to grow
  • Trains other writers in SB Nation best practices (headlines, formatting, etc)
  • Maintains a growing and vibrant community and ensures it is welcoming for everyone

This is a part-time contracted position and comes with a monthly stipend. Previous writing experience isn't required (but it does help), but a familiarity with social media tools, an understanding for what is news and how to find it, and a self-starter attitude are required.

If you’re interested in applying, you can do so here.

We look forward to hearing from you soon.



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Tuesday, May 30, 2017

NCAA Baseball Tournament: Arizona ready for intense atmosphere in Lubbock

The Wildcats already have some experience with the fans and ballpark they’ll be playing in this weekend

A lot of times, teams that are forced to travel for Regional play in the NCAA Baseball Tournament are going to a strange, hostile place.

For the Arizona Wildcats, only the second adjective is true.

Back on March 7th, Arizona took a trip to Lubbock to play the Texas Tech Red Raiders in a single midweek game before traveling back to Tucson after the Frisco Classic.

Texas Tech won that game 13-1, but it was more than the Red Raider offense that has left a lasting impression on the Wildcats.

“Their fans were pretty rowdy,” senior LHP JC Cloney remembered of that night. “There were some things said that probably should never be said, but it’s Lubbock and there’s not much to do there. Their fans I’m sure will be packed up, so it’ll be a lot of fun.”

“The crowd was a little unruly,” Cloney continued. “It’ll be fun to go there again now that the stakes are a lot higher so I think it’ll be a lot more fun than it was last time.”

“It was intense, I can tell you that,” freshman third baseman Nick Quintana recounted. “But I think for us as a team that’s the best thing that could happen. Go back in there with some revenge that we can get back.”

“They have a great crowd, fan atmosphere there,” Arizona head coach Jay Johnson added. “It’s very home field-ish, but when you’re in the NCAA Tournament and you’re going on the road, that’s going to be the case no matter where you go. We saw two of those last year at Louisiana and at Mississippi State.”

Texas Tech announced a crowd of 4,432 fans for that particular game, which happened to be the highest-ranked showdown in Rip Griffin Park history at the time.

“The atmosphere was awesome,” junior first baseman JJ Matijevic remembered. “It was cold that day but it’s not going to be cold this weekend. It was definitely an outstanding atmosphere. Their fans were definitely into it. But on the road, definitely (the biggest midweek crowd we’ve seen).”

“There was a pretty good amount of fans that they had there,” junior LHP Rio Gomez tacked on. “It was more crowded than I expected for a midweek, so they bring a good atmosphere and it’ll be exciting this weekend.”

Having that familiarity from both last year’s postseason and that single game in Lubbock this year, certainly the Wildcat players will feel a little more comfortable than if it was all totally new.

“We got our feet wet as you’d like to call it,” junior outfielder Jared Oliva said. “It’s going to be a real fun, competitive time.”

“I guess you get a better feel for the park,” said Gomez. “I think a lot of the experience that we can bring from this road crowd is last year’s Regional and last year’s Super Regional with the atmospheres we faced.”

“I think it’s invaluable,” Johnson added about last year’s travels helping this squad. “Successful experience can be a great teacher and can establish confidence, and I think in this particular case, we have a new team, but we have enough guys that played enough of a role in that that there’s a lot they can draw from, and I’m sure they will.”

“I remember in the first inning of the Regional last year, my heart was pounding,” Johnson admitted. “And in the College World Series it’s like that and it takes you a little bit to settle in. As players I’m sure they have some of that, but knowing we play every game with the greatest importance I think they’ll be prepared for it.”

“I think it’s going to help a lot,” Matijevic continued on about last year’s experiences. “That experience was special for me. I think we needed that for this year. We know what to expect now. We know we just have to be ourselves and not do too much and the game will take care of itself.”

So yes, Arizona may be walking into a hostile environment this weekend, but it’s nothing that they haven’t seen before. All of that could come around and pay off in a big way.



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A sort of farewell to AZ Desert Swarm

This isn’t goodbye forever, but it is so long for now

In February of 2013, I came to AZ Desert Swarm as a guy looking for a way to go to Arizona baseball and hockey games for free.

I leave four years and four months later having done so much more than that.

As fate would have it, I’m actually writing this post in the Hi Corbett press box during Arizona baseball’s Senior Day of what will most likely be the final game I cover at this historic stadium. It won’t be my last Arizona baseball game though, as I’m going to Lubbock this coming weekend.

When I started writing for this website, a lot of people had to take a chance on me. First off, Kevin Zimmerman had to trust me to be out there without really having any journalism background or even knowing me at all. I graduated from Arizona with a Bachelor’s in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.

At the start of my college career, I came down to Tucson from Flagstaff as an undeclared major, and even lived in the undecided dorm of Cochise my freshman year. There were several things that interested me -- sports writing being one of them — but my English 101 and 102 classes turned me off to the entire department.

Biology 181 and 182 is what made me decide on the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology route, and I’ve never regretted it, especially now that it’s coming back into my life with what I’m about to embark on by moving to Dallas and pursuing my true top passion by continuing to be an advocate for animal health and conservation.

When I graduated from U of A, I worked full time at Reid Park Zoo for a year as an apprentice zookeeper. But during that time, Paul Swaney of Stadium Journey reached out to me to write a review of McKale Center, which of course I could do since I’d probably been to just about a hundred games in that place over a five-year span. And it’s not like you completely ignore writing when you’re a science major...not even a little bit.

Joining Stadium Journey allowed me to do things on my days off at the zoo that I couldn’t have imagined. For some reason I think the turning point was actually going to El Paso to go to a UTEP basketball game, then going back just a few weeks later to cover that awful USC team that ended up losing to Georgia Tech in the Sun Bowl. Being that close to Lane Kiffin’s despair was something I’ll never erase from my memory.

Those trips were both in December 2012, and my time at the zoo ended in late January. So I needed something while I was interviewing at other places around the country, and that’s when I emailed Kevin.

At that point, this site wasn’t too big or well known, and the staff had kind of dwindled to where it was just the two of us. So after baseball I ventured into football thanks to the help of Blair Willis, and away things went.

I took over control in the weeks leading up to the Fiesta Bowl, and watching that year first-hand was probably one of the most memorable three months I will ever experience. Being on the sidelines for the endings of the Cal and Washington games was amazing. Obviously that ASU game for the South ended up being the most intense Arizona Stadium atmosphere that I will argue has ever existed.

The 2014 football season is why I love doing this, even if those last two games didn’t exactly go according to plan.

I also feel like that was the turning point of the site. I knew when I became the manager of AZ Desert Swarm I had to find people to help me. Luckily for me, we formed what I now like to call our “Core Four” of me, Ryan Kelapire, Gabe Encinas, and David Potts. And luckily for me, the first two were in Tucson and would be able to help me do things in person, while David added the humor and perspective we needed from Phoenix and his seemingly weekly trips to Albuquerque.

We were able to parlay this newfound team and turn this site into what you all know it as today: the premier place to get Arizona sports news.

Obviously more people have come and gone (shoutout to Alec Sills-Trausch and Brandon Combs for being so invested in the basketball and football recruiting, respectively...I personally hate recruiting and wish you people would stop reading about it so much). Matt Sheeley became the ultimate Arizona basketball columnist that we needed for those long perspective pieces from the fan side. And I can’t wait for this Lute Olson tattoo that’s coming. Two decades worth of not being an elite basketball program is resulting in that bad boy.

So here we are, coming to the finish line of the 2016-17 sports/academic year. Baseball is in the postseason for the second time in a row, and only the second appearance in the time I’ve been coming to the old ballyard all the time as a “non-fan”. Of course I will never get to work a Tucson Regional or likely Super Regional, I was one year too late for that, but if another Omaha trip is in the cards...you can bet on me being there however long I need to be.

When the sun does set on the 2017 baseball season, it will also set on my time as managing editor of AZ Desert Swarm. It’s been a fun ride and I have so many people I’m grateful for and should be thanking for their guidance and helping hands that I haven’t already mentioned.

First and foremost, Matt Brown and Luke Zimmermann, the college league managers at SB Nation. The daily emails and constant feedback on how to make the site grow really opened my eyes to how the internet works, and how poorly everyone else in Tucson actually does it, which is sort of a big reason why we’ve been able to bring all the new eyes here.

Secondly, Daniel Berk and Michael Lev, who I’ve spent countless hours with at baseball and football games/practices over the years. You also have to put the legendary Scott Terrell in this group, and if you’re still looking for a great baseball follow after I move on, WildcatUniverse is where you should be.

Anthony Gimino, Steve Rivera, Matt Moreno, Damien Alameda, and David Kelly of various other Arizona/Tucson outlets have also been great sounding boards over the years and their knowledge of the history of Arizona or lesser known stories about the less-covered sports in the area have also meant more than I could have ever imagined.

Bruce Pascoe was always the friendliest and willing to converse no matter how much he had on his plate with Arizona basketball, especially with what’s been going on the last couple years. I will always respect him and what he does and can’t even imagine being in that position over the years. I gotta throw Kelly Presnell in here too, especially with how stupid I look next to him with my little point and shoot, AA battery-powered digital camera at baseball and softball.

Thank you to all the coaches, players, media relations people, and facility security I’ve dealt with over the years. I know I probably got annoying at times, but I was almost always treated with kindness and respect by everyone I came across at Arizona, and I’ve built some relationships I never thought I would have had four years ago. When Jay Johnson came to Arizona in 2015, there was no baseball beat writer at the Star at that time, so I was able to hit on something big there for those few months, and even sat next to him while he was scouting San Diego State at last year’s Tony Gwynn Classic and we just talked baseball sitting there at Tony Gwynn Stadium on a Saturday night in February while he wasn’t on the phone with tournament directors and recruits.

Of course I’ve already mentioned the mainstays on our staff, but Ryan Kelapire became an invaluable piece to the puzzle, and his decision to opt for writing here ended up being enormous for not only us, but people that wanted to read about Arizona basketball. If you’re one of those people out there that watches our Facebook Live videos (shoutout to Rudy Martinez), you’ll know that those would have been trash if it had just been me there, so luckily I had Ryan next to me at McKale this year and making our coverage better than you could find anywhere else. Also over the last two years, while I’ve been getting my veterinary technician license in addition to doing this and teaching drumline at the high school and college levels, he stepped up when I couldn’t.

He’s going to do some big things in this business, and I look forward to him joining Turner this summer. I just wish the last game we worked together wasn’t the most devastating loss in the history of Arizona softball.

Also I have to send an extra shoutout to Gabe. We had fun at football practices and games, and I also had someone to talk Pokemon with when I wasn’t with the U of A drumline staff. If you need someone to do your taxes next year, hire Gabe. He is not trash.

I’m also continuously impressed with Brandon Combs’ desire to write about football recruiting with the current state of this program. That’s some serious dedication right there. And his dedication to going to Red’s on Uni basically every night he was in Tucson last year was also a sight to behold. No Anchovies better.

Again, I couldn’t possibly thank everyone here that I probably should. But most importantly, it was you the reader that made all of this possible. Without you (especially the 99.9% of you that don’t leave anger-fueled comments), this is less worth it. It’s been fun running into people that know who I am and we just start talking about Arizona sports. It was especially odd in Las Vegas this year when people stopped me at 1 AM while walking down The Strip, but if that means we’re doing this right, then so be it. We already have about as many page views in the first five months of 2017 that we had in the entire year of 2015, so again, thank you for trusting us to give you the best and most-informed Arizona news out there.

As for what’s next here, that’s a little unclear. But someone will come in, and with my help, the transition will be nice and smooth and this site will remain a credible resource for Arizona fans out there. I truly believe that. That person needs to love Arizona basketball though if they want to be successful. Just fair warning.

Whether I’m still around in a lesser role this time next year, that remains to be seen. I look forward to potentially writing my perspective about watching football games with other Arizona fans in a Dallas sports bar this upcoming year. I look forward to making a trip to Waco and watching Anu Solomon play for Baylor.

There are a lot of things that I’ll miss about doing this every day, and some things I won’t miss at all, but it was all worth it.

So this isn’t goodbye forever, but it’s more of a see you later.

And just remember, you’re all premium users here.

Bear Down.



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Arizona football recruiting SitRep: Time for Wildcats to start focusing on summer recruiting and camps

Arizona ready to focus on recruits during the summer

It has been a slow week for the Arizona Wildcats on the recruiting trail. Now that the Spring Evaluation period is over, however, the Wildcats can start focusing on who they want to during the summer months.

Let’s dive into this week’s SitRep.


Dominique Hampton

The tall, rangy, in-state corner received his offer from the Wildcats when he was on an unofficial visit. Since his offer and visit, Hampton has been in constant communication with Rich Rodriguez and Marcel Yates.

As of now, no schools are standing out to Hampton as he goes through the process. He has high interest in the ‘Cats and likes the fact that he could be a Wildcat if he so chooses.

Full Interview


Recruiting Notes

  • Bryson Jackson (4-star receiver from St. Pius X High School in Houston, TX) released his Top 12 on Monday. The list includes Arizona, Alabama, Texas A&M, Nebraska, TCU, Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Oregon State, Miami, Minnesota, Cincinnati, and Ole Miss. It’ll be a tough haul for the ‘Cats but getting on the early list is a good sign.
  • Lance Robinson (3-star safety from De La Salle High School in Marrero, LA) released his Top 8 early in the week. The list consists of Arizona, Kansas State, Kansas, SMU, Tulane, Washington State, South Carolina, and Memphis. Robinson has stated many times over the week that his recruitment is still open. The Wildcats are doing a great job with Robinson so far and the next step will be to get him on campus.
  • This upcoming month could be a busy one for Arizona. Summer camps start and that means the staff will be traveling once again and bringing more recruits on campus. This is the time of year, historically, that Rich Rodriguez has loaded up on commitments. Even though this recruiting cycle has felt different than previous years, it would not be surprising to see a few new members for the 2018 class when all is said and done.

2018 Offers (4)

Wide Receiver

Tight End

Defensive Line

Safety

  • Armani Adams: Lakewood HS (St. Petersburg, FL)/5-foot-11/180 pounds/3-star



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Monday, May 29, 2017

Arizona baseball: Middle infield of seniors will help the Wildcats in postseason

This is a good place to have a lot of experience

When the stakes get high, the game can get fast.

Having experience in high pressure situations helps that, and for the Arizona Wildcats, they have experience in the right places heading into postseason play.

On Sunday, seniors Louis Boyd and Kyle Lewis likely played their last games at Hi Corbett, but it certainly wasn’t their last in an Arizona uniform as the team now readies for the Lubbock Regional.

“I love those guys,” head coach Jay Johnson said of his senior middle infield after Sunday’s game. “There’s good players sitting on the bench, and those guys play because they do a lot of things to help us win, and they’re a big reason why we’ve had a lot of success here over the last couple of years.”

Those two were among the eight seniors honored in a ceremony about half an hour before the regular season finale against Cal.

“It was a pretty special day at the start,” said Lewis about Sunday’s festivities. “The atmosphere here is unlike anywhere in the country and it’s great playing in front of these fans.”

“It was nice,” Boyd added of the Senior Day ceremonies. “Really professional school and organization, but as skip says, we don’t want to make a huge deal about Senior Day right now because we’ve got lots of baseball to play. We wanted to make it a good deal then move on from it and focus on the game.”

Having a middle infield of two seniors is not something a lot of schools will showcase, but the fact that Arizona has it will play in their favor as the postseason gets rolling.

“I think that’s huge,” Boyd said about having two seniors there. “Coming down here there’s a lot of one-run games, and when there’s one-run games you need a lot of good defense and we had that last year so it’s kind of like the same blueprint. We know what we’ve gotta do and we have the guys in the right spots, so that’s huge.”

“It definitely makes a difference,” added Lewis. “Just the communication on the defense, things are moving a little smoother, and being able to make routine plays. That comes up big in postseason and moving forward and if we can make the routine plays and communicate with our outfielders and our infielders and get all the plays right, I think we’ll be in good shape. It’s definitely important with the experience for me and Boyd up the middle.”

Last season, Boyd played a lot at shortstop, but Lewis was more of a spot player at third base with Cody Ramer filling the role as the starting second baseman. But as the year’s gone on, Lewis has kind of settled into his spot at second base.

“Yeah a little bit,” he said if the game’s slowed down for him this year. “Last year I wasn’t really a starter at all, so it’s just a different role to be in. I was always a little anxious to get in the game and waiting there, but it’s definitely slowed down this year and I’m feeling really confident.”

With prolific offensive teams filling up the Lubbock Regional, there’s no doubt that Arizona will have to be on its game defensively if it wants to get out of the first weekend. And with two seniors up the middle, chances are that will happen for this team.



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Dallas Braden will shave his head on-air if Arizona wins Lubbock Regional

Let’s go

There will be a lot on the line when the Arizona Wildcats travel to Lubbock for Regional play this weekend.

A Super Regional bid is all well and good, but the real thing on the line is the possibility of Dallas Braden shaving his head during a Monday Night Baseball broadcast if Arizona wins the Regional.

Braden is a Texas Tech alum, and this is a bet with his ESPN co-worker Pedro Gomez, who happens to be the father of Arizona LHP Rio Gomez.

Yeah, this is the real reason people should want Arizona to get out of Lubbock.



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NCAA Baseball Tournament: First look at the Lubbock Regional

Some familiar foes for Arizona

When the Arizona Wildcats begin their quest for a second consecutive College World Series appearance on Friday, they will be faced with some familiar sights and faces.

Arizona is the 2-seed in the Lubbock Regional, a place where they lost 13-1 to No. 5 National Seed Texas Tech on March 7th. But the Wildcats’ first game is against Sam Houston State, a team that UA faced twice in the Regional round last year, winning those games 7-3 and 6-5.

This year, Sam Houston State went 40-20 overall, but finished 3rd in the Southland behind McNeese State and Southeastern Louisiana. SHSU made a run in the conference tournament this past weekend though, earning the conference’s auto-bid. SE LA is the 2-seed in the Baton Rouge Regional, while Arizona non-conference opponent McNeese State got left out.

SHSU returns seven of the starters from last year’s games against Arizona. They also add junior college transfer Blake Chisolm, who also played a year at Furman. Chisolm is the team’s leading hitter this season, putting up a .355 average in 166 ABs. The Bearkats have seven regular starters hitting above .300 this year, and they hit .307 as a team, which is 23rd nationally.

Both starting pitchers Arizona faced are also back this season. Heath Donica and Dakota Mills both have double digit starts, and Donica has posted an ERA of 1.69 in 101 innings. It’s very likely that a JC Cloney/Heath Donica showdown is coming on Friday night.


Texas Tech

The Red Raiders are the No. 5 overall seed, and already beat Arizona 13-1 earlier this year. Tech went 43-15 this year, went 16-8 in a deep Big 12, and they have a record of 16-11 against the RPI top 50.

Texas Tech hits .306 as a team and outscores its opponents by an average of three runs per game. If Arizona were to get the Red Raiders on Saturday, it would be a tough matchup for Cameron Ming.

Not only do they get a lot of hits, but they hit for power. The Red Raiders are 23rd nationally in slugging percentage, and average nearly a home run per game. They’re also fourth in the country in triples.


Delaware

The Blue Hens did most of their damage at home this year, posting a record of 21-4 at their own ballpark. However, they were just 13-17 away from comfort, and only 2-4 against the RPI top 100.

They are also a prolific offensive team, posting a .313 team batting average (14th in the country). Their slugging percentage is also absurd (.487 - 13th).

Three different Blue Hens have hit double digit home runs this year. Sophomore infielder Nick Patten leads the way with 14, while senior catcher Brian Mayer has 11 and senior outfielder Jordan Glover has 10.

Their pitching depth will be the concern for them as they try to stun the field. Only one guy (Jr. RHP Ron Marinaccio) has an ERA below 3.20, and the majority of their pitchers sit somewhere in the 4.30-6.20 range. Like most four-seeds, that will likely lead to their demise against some of the top teams in the country.


Texas Tech and Delaware will begin play in Lubbock at Noon PT on Friday. Arizona and SHSU will start at approximately 4 PM PT, or 55 minutes after the first game ends. Both games will be shown on WatchESPN and the ESPN app.



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NCAA Baseball Tournament bracket: Arizona Wildcats a 2-seed in Lubbock Regional with Texas Tech, Sam Houston State, and Delaware

And so it begins

After being left out of the Regional hosting picture, the Arizona Wildcats will hit the road to start the NCAA Tournament this weekend.

U of A will be forced to travel to Lubbock, Texas and face off against the Sam Houston State Bearkats on Friday at 4 PM PT on WatchESPN. Texas Tech and Delaware are the other two teams in Lubbock.

Arizona lost at Texas Tech earlier this year, and played Sam Houston State twice in last year’s Lafayette Regional.

The Lubbock Regional is paired with the Tallahassee Regional.

Arizona finished the 2017 regular season 16-14 in Pac-12 play, just like they did in 2016. That was good for fourth place in the conference behind Oregon State, Stanford, and UCLA. U of A fell from 15th to 23rd in the RPI after dropping two-of-three to Cal this past weekend.

OSU is the overall No. 1 seed, and the Corvallis Regional (Nebraska, Yale, Holy Cross) is paired with the Clemson Regional (Vanderbilt, St. John’s, UNC-Greensboro). Stanford is the overall No. 8 seed. The Cardinal will host Cal State Fullerton, BYU, and Sacramento State. Stanford is paired up with the Long Beach Regional.

UCLA is the 3-seed in the Long Beach Regional, getting matched up with Texas in the first game. The Bruins’ inclusion in the field kind of forced Arizona out of that Regional.

The Wildcats’ 37 wins overall were the third-most in the conference, and they finished the year ranked 3rd in non-conference RPI, posting a 21-5 record against those teams.

The NCAA Baseball Tournament will start on Friday for most teams. Stanford will start on Thursday because of BYU being included. All games will be found somewhere on the ESPN networks.



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Arizona softball: Danielle O’Toole, Wildcats shocked to fall short of Women’s College World Series

This wasn’t supposed to happen to a team that was “so special.”

Danielle O’Toole wasn’t ready to leave.

With tears rolling down her face, smudging her warrior-like eye black, the left-hander entered the circle at Hillenbrand Stadium one last time in an Arizona uniform.

With a smattering of fans chanting her name, she crouched down like a catcher and brushed her hand over the pitching rubber.

“I was just saying ‘bye’,” said O’Toole, who sat there idly for several minutes. “I could hear [the fans].”

But her mind was elsewhere. The ace’s career was over and the ending was unlike anything you’d read in a fairytale.

“I feel gypped,” said a heartbroken O’Toole.

Had it been up to her, her last time entering that circle would have been minutes earlier, with Arizona nursing a 5-3 lead against Baylor in the seventh inning of a winner-take-all Super Regional game.

The Wildcats needed just three more outs to reach the Women’s College World Series for the first time since 2010 and O’Toole wanted to be the one to lead them there.

“I was ready,” she said.

But the ball was taken out of her hand. Head coach Mike Candrea summoned Taylor McQuillin from the bullpen to toss the final inning.

“I didn’t think it was necessary,” O’Toole said. “I was ready.”

Instead, she could only watch from the dugout as her team’s fate was determined without her.

“We just felt like Tooly was struggling with the middle of their lineup,” Candrea said. “Taylor did a pretty decent job last night and (we) thought a different look might be good.”

It wasn’t.

The first two Bears reached base, then Shelby McGlaun lifted a towering drive over the batter’s eye in center field for a game-winning, three-run homer, crushing the Wildcats’ postseason dreams — dreams they seemed all but destined to reach.

Candrea said his 52-9 team had “all the pieces to the puzzle” and was positioned to make a deep postseason run, and it’s hard to disagree.

The Wildcats had a talented, lengthy lineup with one of the game’s most feared hitters in Katiyana Mauga, a dependable defense, an experienced senior class, and were able to play Super Regionals at home where they hadn’t lost consecutive games all season.

Most importantly, though, Arizona had an ace in O’Toole, who was the program’s first 30-game winner since 2010.

Yet, she wasn’t in the circle when it mattered most. That’s not how she imagined things unfolding when she transferred in from San Diego State (a move she’s said was the best decision of her life).

“I don’t want to take this jersey off. I’ve spent two years in it and I feel gypped,” she said. “And that’s not anyone’s fault.”

Candrea begged to differ. He took the blame.

“Our pitching changes surely didn’t work this weekend,” he said. “That’s all I can say.”

But no matter whose fault it is — and to be fair, O’Toole had struggled to retire the middle of Baylor’s lineup — the end result is Arizona missed the WCWS for the seventh year in a row.

Sure, the 2017 team’s list of accomplishments is rather long — Arizona won its first Pac-12 title since 2007, had its winningest season since 2006 and had the Pac-12 Pitcher, Coach, and Player of the Year for the first time in program history among other things — but the team’s ultimate goal was to get to Oklahoma City and it failed.

Again.

“I just feel proud to be a Wildcat and to have this jersey on and to play for Coach Candrea and this staff, and to play next to amazing girls. You can’t ask for anything else,” said Mauga, who finishes her career as the Pac-12’s leader in home runs and second all-time in the sport.

“But there’s nothing to say. We lost.”

It’s especially disheartening for Mauga, O’Toole and the other six members of Arizona’s senior class, whom Candrea credited for putting Arizona softball “back on the map” and changing the culture of the program, only to have their careers end in an all-too-familiar fashion.

Arizona lost Games 2 and 3 in a Super Regional in 2016, too.

“Originally when I got here I was expecting a little something different and it’s not anything bad on the previous teams, but this team was so special,” O’Toole said.

And still stunned how its season ended, O’Toole finally stands up and exits the circle at Hillenbrand Stadium for good.

She migrates to a spot outside the Lapan Family Center just beyond the left field wall and sits back down.

The crowd has cleared, the sun is setting, the Oklahoma City-bound Baylor team has departed for the airport, and 45 minutes have passed since the Wildcats’ season ended.

O’Toole’s teammates have changed into street clothes, but the teary-eyed left-hander is still donning her white, No. 3 jersey.

She refuses to take it off.

Because once she does, she knows it’s never going back on.

“I didn’t think [this] was going to be the last time,” she said.


You can follow Ryan Kelapire on Twitter at @RKelapire



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Sunday, May 28, 2017

NCAA Baseball Tournament projections: Arizona Wildcats destined to head East?

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NCAA Softball Tournament: Baylor Bears stun Arizona Wildcats to advance to Women’s College World Series

Wildcats lose a heartbreaker to fall short of the Women’s College World Series

Up by two runs in the seventh inning, the Arizona Wildcats looked destined to make their first Women’s College World Series appearance since 2010.

Instead, Shelby McGlaun lifted a three-run homer to center field off Taylor McQuillin to lift the Baylor Bears to a stunning 6-5 victory.

The Wildcats finish the season 52-9 and 30-4 at home, and miss the WCWS for the seventh year in a row.

Arizona put two runners on in the bottom of the seventh, but the rally fell short as senior pinch-hitter Nancy Bowling grounded out to second in her final at-bat at Hillenbrand Stadium.

McQuillin (16-4), who entered in the seventh, was tagged with the loss after Danielle O’Toole tossed six innings of three-run ball in her final start at Hillenbrand Stadium.

O’Toole was in line for the win after Reyna Carranco delivered a go-ahead single to put UA ahead 4-3 in the sixth and Mo Mercado drew a bases loaded walk to give Arizona an insurance run heading into the final frame, but it wasn’t enough for the Wildcats, who lost consecutive games at home for the first time all season.

Baylor appeared to take a 4-3 lead against O’Toole in the top of the sixth after three two-out singles, but Taylor Ellis missed third base before crossing home plate and the run was ruled off after a brief discussion by the umpires.

Arizona was trailing 3-1 heading into the fifth but postseason hero Jessie Harper lined a game-tying single after Mercado’s RBI single put Arizona within one.

Shelby Friudenberg knocked in three runs for the Bears, including an RBI double in the first inning to give Baylor and early 1-0 lead and a two-run homer in the third to put Baylor ahead 3-1.

The Wildcats intentionally walked her in her third at-bat.

Arizona slugger Katiyana Mauga was walked three times herself, but did get a chance to swing the bat in the sixth with the bases loaded when she flew out to center.

Mauga scored on a wild pitch in the bottom of the first to tie the game.

Baylor will face No. 10 Oklahoma next weekend in the Women’s College World Series in Oklahoma City.



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NCAA Baseball Tournament Regional sites announced

Tucson will not be hosting postseason baseball this year

Entering the final weekend of the regular season, the Arizona Wildcats had a decent shot at hosting Regional play.

But after results from conference tournaments and other games around the country combined with Saturday’s loss to Cal, Arizona will be on the road to start the postseason next weekend.

The NCAA announced the 16 Regional sites on Sunday evening, and Tucson was not among the locations that will have tournament games played at it next week.

Here’s a look at the full list of 16 sites:

  • Baton Rouge, La., Regional — LSU
  • Chapel Hill, N.C., Regional — North Carolina
  • Clemson, S.C., Regional — Clemson
  • Corvallis, Ore., Regional — Oregon State
  • Fayetteville, Ark., Regional — Arkansas
  • Fort Worth, Texas, Regional — TCU
  • Gainesville, Fla., Regional — Florida
  • Hattiesburg, Miss., Regional — Southern Mississippi
  • Houston Regional — Houston
  • Lexington, Ky., Regional — Kentucky
  • Long Beach, Calif., Regional — Long Beach State
  • Louisville, Ky., Regional — Louisville
  • Lubbock, Texas, Regional — Texas Tech
  • Stanford, Calif., Regional — Stanford
  • Tallahassee, Fla., Regional — Florida State
  • Winston-Salem, N.C., Regional — Wake Forest

Arizona is most likely to end up in either the Long Beach or Houston Regionals as a two-seed. The full postseason field will be announced on Monday at 9 AM PT.

Of course, traveling isn’t a huge issue for this team, as it had to go through the Lafayette Regional and Starkville Super Regional to reach the College World Series. They also ended up with an 11-11 away record overall in 2017.



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Arizona softball notebook: On Mauga’s intentional walks, Baylor’s success vs. O’Toole, and more

Don’t expect Baylor to pitch to Katiyana Mauga in Game 3

Opposing teams have been pitching around Arizona slugger Katiyana Mauga all season, but the Baylor Bears took it to another level on Saturday.

Baylor walked Mauga four times, three of which were intentional. The other walk was on five pitches. The pro-Arizona crowd was not happy.

“That stuff doesn’t even bother me,” said Baylor starter Kelsee Selman, who issued the free passes. “It more so just makes me laugh. If it was the other way around, they probably wouldn’t pitch to her either.”

Indeed. Entering Saturday, Mauga was hitting 6 for 11 with three homers and six RBIs in the postseason.

Also: she is also one of the best power hitters the sport as ever seen, as she is just three homers shy of tying the NCAA’s all-time home run record.

Walking Mauga is sensible, though it did come back to bite the Bears in one inning.

After Mandie Perez hit an RBI single to put Arizona up 3-2 in the sixth, an intentional walk to Mauga moved Perez up into scoring position, where she would be knocked in by Mo Mercado’s RBI single a batter later.

“The game is not played with one person, so I felt like they were giving us a free base,” head coach Mike Candrea said of Baylor’s approach to Mauga. “Is it frustrating? Yeah. Did I understand what they were doing? Yeah. It’s a matter of the rest of our kids picking up the slack.”

That instance aside, the Wildcats were limited to four runs with Mauga’s bat glued to her shoulder, and Baylor scored four runs in the sixth to complete a comeback victory and force a winner-take-all game on Sunday.

Don’t expect the Bears to pitch to Mauga in that game, either.

“It’ll happen again tomorrow,” Candrea said on Saturday. “She probably won’t see another pitch, but we’ll be ready.”


Baylor not O’Fooled

When Danielle O’Toole relieved Taylor McQuillin in the sixth inning, a simple, yet valuable, message was passed along in Baylor’s dugout.

“They were all saying changeup,” said Sydney Christiansen, who ended up ripping a game-tying double down the left field line.

O’Toole is known for her devastating off-speed pitch but the Bears, having faced her three times this season, weren’t phased by it.

They scored three runs on four hits off the left-hander in 23 of an inning to complete the 6-4 comeback victory.

“The girls are doing an outstanding job of fighting up there with the off-speed,” said Baylor head coach Glenn Moore. “When you change speeds as well as she does, you’ve gotta be in a different timing. You can’t just go up there and swing away. She makes you look bad even when you are at the right timing. It’s almost like she’s saying ‘hey, I’m throwing a changeup’ and you’re still missing it many times. She’s that good.”

It happened to Christensen, who swung out of her shoes on a changeup before lacing a similar pitch for a double.

“It’s awfully tough sometimes when you see a kid look really bad an off-speed (pitch) to not throw it again,” Candrea said.

Prior to Saturday’s relief appearance, O’Toole had allowed just two runs against the Bears in 14 innings. The senior tossed a five-hit shutout against Baylor on Feb. 11, then threw seven innings of two-run ball on Friday night.

Maybe Baylor is catching on?

“I think we’ll learn from it and move forward, but we’re going to do what we do,” Candrea said. “It’s kind of hard at this stage of the game to change what you do, but yes I’m sure we’ll make some subtle changes and if that’s what’s happening obviously we’ll pick up on that and make an adjustment.”


Déjà vu?

A year ago, the Wildcats were in a nearly identical scenario as they will be in on Sunday. Arizona won Game 1 of the Auburn Super Regional, but lost Game 2, forcing a winner-take-all Game 3.

Auburn won that game and Arizona fell short of a Women’s College World Series appearance.

But the good news for Arizona this time around is it’s playing at home. The Wildcats enter Sunday’s game with a 30-3 home record and they did not lose a home series all season.

That includes three-game series against top-25 teams like Oregon, ASU, and Washington, which is why Arizona feels comfortable heading into the Super Regional finale against Baylor.

“I think our Pac-12 schedule helps that,” Candrea said. “We play three-game series for a reason. It’s kind of how I approach it right now. We have to win a three-game series.”

Game 3 is set to begin at 4 p.m. on Sunday at Hillenbrand Stadium. It will be broadcast on ESPNU.

The winner will advance to the Women’s College World Series and will face No. 10 Oklahoma in Oklahoma City next weekend.

Should Arizona win, it would be its first WCWS appearance since 2010 but its 23rd in program history.

“You have to remember back in the day there were just eight Regionals,” Candrea said. “There were only 32 teams. You win your regional, you’re in the College World Series. Then they expanded the field to 64 which brought in the Super Regional format and obviously that does make it more challenging, but everyone in the country has to do that to get there. It’s no different for us than it is for anyone else.

“But yeah, there’s a hell of a lot of parity in the country. We know that. Like I told the kids, nothing is going to come easy. You’ve gotta earn you way and so [Sunday] we need to get up, have a good breakfast, and come in here and get ourselves ready to go out and battle and compete.”


You can follow Ryan Kelapire on Twitter at @RKelapire



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NCAA Baseball Selection Show and Regional Site announcement info

A couple of different shows to watch

As has been done in recent years, the regional sites for the NCAA Baseball Tournament will be announced the night before the entire field is announced.

On Sunday night, we’ll know if the Arizona Wildcats will have to travel that first weekend for Regional play. Here’s the info on the Regional Site announcement show:

WHEN: Sunday, 5:30 PM PT

WHERE: Facebook

Then on Monday, the entire field of 64 will be announced:

WHEN: Monday, 9 AM PT

WHERE: ESPNU. Also stream it on WatchESPN and the ESPN app

Regional play begins across the country on Friday, and is a double-elimination format with four teams traveling to each site. There are 16 sites, and then the winners of those Regionals will meet in Super Regional play the following weekend, which is a best-of-three series.

The College World Series is scheduled to start on Saturday, June 17th, with the championship series beginning on Monday, June 26th.



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Saturday, May 27, 2017

Cal vs. Arizona baseball recap: Wildcats’ Regional hosting chances take hit on Saturday

Tough day of results for a potential Tucson Regional

Essentially needing a win to make the best case possible for hosting a Regional next weekend, the Arizona Wildcats scuffled against the California Golden Bears, losing this game 9-6.

The starting pitchers for both teams had rough nights. Cameron Ming allowed five runs in the first inning, while Arizona chased Cal starter Matt Ladrech after he recorded just one out.

Cal turned to Joey Matulovich, and he was able to hold Arizona off just enough.

Matulovich tossed 4 13 innings on the night, but did give up three runs, allowing Arizona to tie the game in the fourth.

However, Arizona’s bullpen did its bullpen-y thing, letting the Bears score single runs in the sixth and seventh plus a two-spot in the eighth to take this contest with what felt like relative ease.

Cal provided two very entertaining moments in this game. Left fielder Jonah Davis got stuck in the fence after trying to chase down a foul ball, resulting in the entire Golden Bear dugout running out to help free him from the grips of the chain link.

And then while leading 6-5 in the 7th, a swinging bunt thing led to a two-run advantage for Cal.

But you should also watch this Louis Boyd play, because it’s absurd.


Results from around the country on Saturday that could have an impact on Arizona’s hosting chances

The loss to Cal was certainly not the only bad part of the day for Arizona and its bid to host a regional.

Good results:

  • Oklahoma State beating West Virginia 4-3 in 10 innings

Bad results:

  • Texas beating TCU in one of two games to advance to the Big 12 Final
  • Florida State beat Duke 5-1
  • Houston beat UConn 13-3
  • Southern Miss beat Charlotte twice
  • Arkansas beat Florida 16-0
  • UCLA beat Oregon 10-1
  • Long Beach State beat Cal State Fullerton 1-0

That should pretty much end any thought of Tucson seeing postseason baseball next weekend. It’s likely Arizona will travel to either Long Beach or Austin for Regional play. The 16 Regional sites will be announced at 5:30 PM PT on Sunday.


Arizona and Cal wrap up their three-game series on Sunday afternoon. First pitch is scheduled for 1:30 PM PT. Cody Deason is scheduled to toe the rubber for Arizona, while the Bears had not announced a starting pitcher for their season finale. It will also be Senior Day at Hi Corbett.



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NCAA Softball Tournament results: Baylor Bears beat Arizona Wildcats to force Game 3 in Tucson Super Regional

The Wildcats couldn’t hold onto a late lead

The Arizona Wildcats will have to wait another day to clinch a spot in the Women’s College World Series.

Behind a four-run sixth inning, the Baylor Bears came from behind to beat the Wildcats 6-4 on Saturday night to force Game 3 in the Tucson Super Regional.

“I’m really proud of this team for fighting back the way they did, backs against the wall, seasons almost over,” Baylor head coach Glenn Moore said. “And they came out and fought against a very good team and a lot of kids contributed in this lineup.”

Arizona, the designated road team, led 4-2 in the sixth, but a pitching change backfired.

After a one-out double by Shelby Friudenberg, Danielle O’Toole relieved Taylor McQuillin and quickly surrendered the lead.

An infield single by Shelby McGlaun put runners on the corners, then Jessie Scroggins hit a slow chopper to shortstop, which Mo Mercado had no play on, to cut UA’s lead to 4-3.

Sydney Christensen then roped an 0-2 changeup down the left field line to tie the game and Taylor Ellis followed it up with a looping two-run double into left center to make it 6-4.

“I thought it was our advantage to have brought her (O’Toole) in when they chose to,” Moore said. “Because… I thought out of all our lineup, Shelby [McGlaun] saw her the best yesterday and was on her the best.”

O’Toole (30-5) threw a complete game in Arizona’s win on Friday, but allowed three runs on four hits in 23 of an inning on Saturday.

McQuillin tossed 5 13 innings, allowing three runs (two earned) on six hits while striking out three and walking one.

“Taylor did a good job tonight. I thought she gave us a solid performance,” Arizona head coach Mike Candrea said. “There were a couple loud hits that inning and I felt it was time to make a change and show them some off-speed pitches and it came back to bite us.

“I’ll take the blame for it.”

Having seen O’Toole two other times this season, Baylor players said they were expecting plenty of changeups and they were right on them when they got them.

Well, actually it took a pitch or two.

“I actually knew that she was going to throw me a changeup first pitch and I still whiffed really, really bad,” Christensen said, referring to the at-bat she hit a game-tying double. Then “threw me a changeup (on 0-2) and I hit it pretty solid.”

Kelsee Selman (24-8) picked up the win for the Bears, allowing four runs (three earned) on eight hits in seven innings.

Tied 2-2 in the top of the sixth, UA left fielder Mandie Perez blooped a single to center off Selman, scoring Reyna Carranco to put the Wildcats ahead 3-2.

Then, after the Bears walked Katiyana Mauga for the fourth time, Mercado chopped a single over the third baseman’s head to score Perez and extend UA’s lead to 4-2.

Three of Mauga’s four walks were intentional. The other was on five pitches.

“The game is not played with one person, so I felt like they were giving us a free base,” Candrea said. “Is it frustrating? Yeah. Did I understand what they were doing? Yeah. It’s a matter of the rest of our kids picking up the slack.”

Jessie Harper, a night after hitting a walk-off single, did just that.

With the Wildcats trailing 2-0 in the fourth, she lined a 1-2 pitch off the right field wall to bring home two runs and tie the game.

Harper appeared to get hit by a pitch from Selman earlier in the at-bat, but it was ruled a foul ball.

“She did a wonderful job. That’s Harp,” Candrea said of the UA first baseman. “She’s a battler and a fighter as this whole team is.”

Harper’s game-tying single came shortly after Scroggins put the Bears ahead.

The Baylor center fielder laced a single up the middle to score Riley Browder and Maddison Kettler to put the Bears on top 2-0 in the fourth.

Kettler was able to score from second after UA center fielder Eva Watson bobbled the ball, capping off a shaky defensive inning for the Wildcats.

Earlier in the frame, Kettler singled to right to move Browder to third, and Mercado tried to pick off Kettler at first, but her throw skipped past Harper.

Kettler was able to advance to second, putting her in position to score on Scroggins’ single.

“The game got a little quick on us today for some reason,” Candrea said. “Sometimes that happens and usually when that happens that’s when miscues happen. But there were some plays that could’ve been made, should’ve been made but weren’t made.”

Arizona was outhit by Baylor 10-8 and hit just 3 for 19 with runners on while leaving 10 batters on base. The Wildcats stranded two runners in both the second and third innings.

Tamara Statman singled to lead off the seventh, but the Wildcats’ rally fell short as Selman retired three in a row to end the game.

“It was obviously a tough night for us, but we’ve got another one tomorrow,” Candrea said.

The rubber match is set for Sunday at 4 p.m. with a trip to the WCWS on the line. It will be broadcast on ESPNU.


You can follow Ryan Kelapire on Twitter at @RKelapire



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Arizona softball notebook: On Mauga’s clutch hitting, O’Toole staying cool, and more

Read up on Arizona softball before it takes on Baylor in Game 2 of Super Regionals

Katiyana Mauga wasn’t in the best mood when the Arizona Wildcats finished batting practice before Friday’s game against the Baylor Bears.

“She thought she had a crappy practice,” head coach Mike Candrea said.

It certainly didn’t carry over to the game.

Mauga went 3 for 3 with a homer and a double as Arizona won Game 1 of the Super Regional, 3-2.

“That goes to tell you what batting practice really means,” Candrea joked. “It’s just a warmup.”

Mauga doubled and scored the game’s first run in the first inning, then later hit a solo homer to right to put Arizona up 2-0.

But the at-bat that may get overlooked was Mauga’s nine-pitch walk in the seventh inning.

With the count at 2-2 in a 2-2 ballgame, the third baseman fouled off three straight pitches before a wild pitch from Gia Rodoni skipped to the backstop, allowing Mandie Perez, who led of the inning with a single, to advance to second.

With a base open, Baylor decided to intentionally walk Mauga, and the next two batters singled to lift the Wildcats to victory.

“I think Kati was a big factor tonight. I don’t think they wanted any part of her,” Candrea said. “She was seeing the ball, swinging at good pitches, really just calm.”

Teams often pitch around Mauga, who said she’s learned to be patient in those situations.

“Especially being a senior and pitchers seeing me a lot, I think just being patient and relaxing and not being too anxious up there definitely helped me,” she said. “If I’m swinging out of my shoes, that’s not something I would want or the team would want."

Mauga’s clutch at-bat didn’t surprise Candrea. Aside from her power, the other thing he noticed while recruiting her is she always had a knack for making a timely play.

“I’ve always said that the one thing that impressed me with Kati is her being so clutch,” he said. “It seemed like every game I watched her, she was driving in the winning run. She, as a young kid, really embraces those moments. It’s nice to see that she’s still doing that.”

Mauga is hitting 6 for 11 with three homers and six RBIs in the postseason.

Her solo homer against Baylor was the 92nd of her career, putting her just three shy of tying the NCAA’s all-time record, which is held by former Oklahoma Sooner Lauren Chamberlain.


O’Toole stays O’Cool

Arizona led 2-0 heading into the sixth, but Danielle O’Toole promptly surrendered a triple to Kyla Walker and a two-run homer to Ari Hawkins, which erased the Wildcats’ lead.

But it didn’t rattle O’Toole who retired the next six batters she faced, putting the Wildcats in position to win the game in the bottom of the seventh.

“I’ve never seen her where her emotions were controlling her,” Candrea said. “She always seems to be in control and even after she gave up the two runs, she came in and got with the team and went out and did her job.

“The thing at this time of year in postseason, you’ve gotta be able to do that. Crap can happen sometimes."

O’Toole, who became Arizona’s first 30-game winner since Kenzie Fowler, also made what Candrea deemed to be a “web gem.”

In the fourth inning, O’Toole snagged a chopper to her left and scurried over to first for the out. First baseman Jessie Harper had broken toward second and was late getting over to the bag.

“Not many pitchers are going to do that,” Candrea said. “That’s why she’s on the (Pac-12) All-Defensive Team. Most pitchers will stop and say ‘Jess, where are you?’ She just motored over there.”


Harpy birthday

Jessie Harper was retired in the bottom of the fifth, extending her slump to 0 for 13. But as she jogged back to the dugout, Candrea rewarded her with a high five.

The freshman had lined out to center, showing that her timing was on point and she was able to square up the pitch — two things she was unable to do in previous at-bats.

“Sometimes you have to celebrate the small victories in this game, especially as a hitter,” Candrea said.

And you always have to celebrate the big victories.

Harper snapped out of her slump in her very next at-bat, drilling a walk-off single to lift the Wildcats to a 3-2 victory on her 19th birthday.

It was a line drive into center field. Of course.

“It felt good to see her come through on her birthday,” Candrea said.


Selman not herself

Baylor ace Kelsee Selman pitched just 2 13 innings on Friday, her shortest start since Feb. 22 against McNeese State.

She was pulled after allowing two runs on four hits, including a solo homer to Mauga in the third inning.

“She threw a pitch that she wanted back and many people have with Mauga,” head coach Glenn Moore said.

Moore said Selman was a “little rusty.” The senior right-hander only pitched once in Regionals and was supposed to throw in an intersquad game this week in practice, but it got rained out.

No matter, Selman (23-8, 1.57 ERA) will get a chance to redeem herself on Saturday as Moore said she will start in the circle for the second straight game.

“We’re playing one game at a time,” Moore said. “That’s our philosophy anyway. We’ve been playing three-games series all year and we continued to fight in all of those series. ... These are warriors I have right here.”

First pitch between No. 2 Arizona (52-7) and No. 15 Baylor (46-13) is set for 6 p.m. and it will be broadcast on ESPN.

The Wildcats, one win away from reaching the Women’s College World Series, are likely to start left-hander Taylor McQuillin (16-3, 1.72), who has tossed nine scoreless innings in the postseason.


You can follow Ryan Kelapire on Twitter at @RKelapire



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Friday, May 26, 2017

Cal vs. Arizona baseball recap: Wildcats down Golden Bears 10-3 in series opener

A lot of Cal mistakes led to a big Arizona win

Some really shoddy defense by Cal in the sixth and seventh innings at Hi Corbett on Friday night allowed the Arizona Wildcats to take the first game of a three-game set by a score of 10-3.

“I thought we hit the ball hard early in the game and didn’t get rewarded, and sometimes baseball rewards you just not when you think they should,” head coach Jay Johnson said after the game. “We snuck a few there and they didn’t make plays and we were able to take advantage of it.”

This is the first time Arizona has won seven consecutive conference games since 2007.

The Cats were trailing 3-2 heading into the bottom of the sixth, but Cesar Salazar started the inning by reaching first on an error by the second baseman.

It was the only error charged to the Bears, but it was certainly not the only defensive miscue.

A Kyle Lewis single off the second baseman tied the game at three. Then Louis Boyd was able to reach first when the Cal pitcher missed the bag while covering on a grounder to the first baseman.

Arizona proceeded to take the lead on a passed ball and extended that lead thanks to a wild pitch and an Alfonso Rivas single to the shortstop.

More of the same happened in the seventh. Jared Oliva started the inning with a sharp double, but a walk, hit batter, and a couple seeing-eye singles pushed the Wildcat lead to five runs.

Rivas then grounded out to first, but with the force off, Cal Stevenson got into a rundown between first and second, allowing a second run to score on the play, making it a 10-3 ballgame.


JC Cloney gave up ten hits in 5 23 innings of work, which was his second straight appearance that he didn’t put up particularly great numbers, but he says he felt great.

“Today was probably the best I’ve felt all year,” said Cloney. “That’s why it was kind of disheartening to get taken out but it is what it is. I felt like I had good command of just about everything. I missed a couple spots up but I felt like I was making good pitches and they were getting barrels on good pitches.”

A lot of those hits came against Arizona’s defensive shifts, which kind of inflated Cal’s hit total.

This could have also been Cloney’s final start at Hi Corbett depending on how the postseason situation plays out.

“Not at all,” he responded when asked if that was on his mind. “Obviously we hope to host next week, but it’s in their hands, not ours.”

Michael Flynn took over with two down in the sixth and cruised his way to the end. He allowed just one hit and hit another batter in his 3 13 inning appearance.


Notable results from around the country

As Arizona continues its quest to host a Regional next weekend, here are some scores from the rest of the nation over the past couple of days that will have an impact:

Good results:

  • Cal State Fullerton def. Long Beach State 6-3 Thursday
  • Oklahoma 0-2 at Big 12 Tourney
  • Baylor 0-2 at Big 12 Tourney
  • Virginia 1-1 at ACC Tourney
  • Arkansas losing to Mississippi State on Thursday at SEC Tourney
  • The entirety of the results in the AAC Tourney except Houston winning its first two games including one against UConn and UCF getting a win over USF
  • Southern Miss losing a game at Conference USA Tourney
  • Missouri State losing a game to Illinois State at Missouri Valley Tourney
  • Mississippi State losing twice on Friday to Florida and Arkansas

Bad results

  • Virginia getting a win against Clemson at the ACC Tourney
  • Florida State 2-0 in ACC Tourney w/ a win over likely National Seed Louisville
  • Texas 2-0 at Big 12 Tourney
  • West Virginia getting wins vs. Baylor and Texas Tech in the Big 12 Tourney
  • UCLA beating Oregon on Thursday (3rd place in the Pac-12 would look better than fourth place)
  • Arkansas beat Mississippi State on Friday
  • Long Beach beat Fullerton 2-1 in ten innings on Friday

After Arizona’s game on Friday, they were 17th in the RPI, one behind Long Beach State and one in front of Texas, who has gone on a run in the Big 12 Tournament.

“I look at the RPI,” Cloney said. “I think we’re at 16-ish, so if we can take care of business tomorrow I feel like we’re going to be in a great position to be in that under-16 slot I guess you could say, but we gotta win tomorrow and let the committee decide on Sunday.”

Arizona wants to host, but it’s not the end-all, be-all.

“For us, we’re in the top 64,” Cloney added. “We don’t care if we go on the road or host, we just want to play in the postseason because once you get in anything can really happen. You saw what we did last year. For us, we would rather host just because we’re home and we know the ballpark, but I think if you were to ask anybody, we just want to be playing next Friday night.”


Game two of the three-game series will be played at 7 PM PT on Saturday night. Cameron Ming is scheduled to pitch for Arizona. He’ll square off with LHP Matt Ladrech.



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Photos and videos: Arizona beats Baylor 3-2 in Game One of Tucson Super Regional

A dramatic start to the second weekend of postseason play

The Arizona Wildcats are now just one win away from their first Women’s College World Series appearance since 2010.

Arizona beat Baylor on a Jessie Harper walk-off single in the bottom of the 7th on Friday to seal a 3-2 victory in Game One of the Tucson Super Regional.

Read all about from Ryan Kelapire, and enjoy the pictures above and postgame press conference videos below.



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NCAA Softball Tournament results: Arizona Wildcats beat Baylor Bears 3-2 in Game 1 of Super Regionals

Jessie Harper hit a walk-off single to propel the Wildcats to victory

Jessie Harper’s first career postseason hit couldn’t have come at a better time.

Marred in an 0 for 13 slump, the freshman lined a walk-off single into center field, propelling the Arizona Wildcats to a 3-2 win over the Baylor Bears in Game 1 of Super Regionals on Friday night at Hillenbrand Stadium.

The victory puts Arizona one win away from reaching the Women’s College World Series for the first time since 2010.

“I was just trying to get the ball in the air as far as it could go,” said Harper, who stepped to the plate with the bases loaded and nobody out.

Arizona held a 2-0 lead heading into the sixth, but Baylor second baseman Ari Hawkins lifted a two-run homer to left off Danielle O’Toole to tie the game, stunning the pro-Arizona crowd.

However, O’Toole (30-4) rebounded from there, retiring the next six batters she faced to complete the shutout. The senior left-hander allowed six hits and struck out four, while inducing 12 groundouts.

Seniors Mo Mercado and Katiyana Mauga each had three hits for Arizona.

Mercado doubled in Mauga in the first inning to give Arizona an early 1-0 lead, then Mauga hit a solo homer to right in the third to make it 2-0.

In the seventh, Mercado singled and Mauga walked to set up Harper’s walk-off.

The Wildcats outhit the Bears 12-6, but were just 4 for 15 with runners in scoring position.

Arizona stranded at least one runner in scoring position in the first, second, fourth, fifth and sixth innings.

The Wildcats left the bases loaded in the fourth.

After a 14-pitch walk to Dejah Mulipola and a pair of singles by Reyna Carranco and Ashleigh Hughes, Gia Rodoni struck out Hillary Edior, who pinch hit for Eva Watson, and Mandie Perez to escape the jam.

Rodoni (17-3) was tagged with the loss, but tossed 3.2 scoreless innings heading into the seventh.

She relieved starter Kelsee Selman who surrendered two runs on five hits and was removed after Mauga’s solo homer.

Game 2 of the series is set for Saturday at 6 p.m., and it will be broadcast on ESPN. Taylor McQuillin (16-3, 1.72 ERA) will likely start for the Wildcats. Selman will start once again for the Bears.

*story will be updated with quotes

Notes

  • Bears left fielder Kyla Walker’s first-inning infield single was her 82nd hit in 2017, setting a new Baylor single-season record. She later tripled and scored on Hawkins’ homer.
  • Mauga’s third-inning homer was the 92nd of her career, putting her three shy of tying the NCAA’s all-time record (held by former Oklahoma Sooner Lauren Chamberlain)

You can follow Ryan Kelapire on Twitter at @RKelapire



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NCAA Softball Tournament: How to watch the Arizona Wildcats host the Baylor Bears in Super Regionals

A trip to the Women’s College World Series is on the line

The Arizona Wildcats are two wins away from reaching the Women’s College World Series for the first time since 2010, but the Baylor Bears are standing in their way.

The Wildcats (51-7) host the Bears (46-12) for a best-of-three Super Regional this weekend starting on Friday night at Hillenbrand Stadium.

Arizona is the No. 2 overall seed; Baylor is No. 15.

Here’s viewing info, the schedule, plus a few other things to prep you for gameday.

Schedule

Game 1 — Friday, May 26 | 6 p.m. PT | ESPN2

Game 2 — Saturday, May 27 | 6 p.m. PT | ESPN

Game 3 (if necessary) — Sunday, May 28 | 4 p.m. PT | ESPNU

All games will be streamed on WatchESPN.

Coverage

Interviews

Mike Candrea at practice on Tuesday

Danielle O’Toole at practice on Tuesday

Candrea, O’Toole, and Jessie Harper preview the Super Regional

Baylor head coach Glenn Moore and players preview the Super Regional



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