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Showing posts with label Baseball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baseball. Show all posts

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Long-awaited big inning helps Auburn avoid weekend sweep against Arizona State

AUBURN, Ala. — Auburn was on the cusp of a big inning all weekend, but because of rotten luck, bad baserunning or poor situational hitting repeatedly failed to strike it big.

The No. 23 Tigers finally broke through in their last chance, scoring four runs in the eighth inning Sunday to rally for a 10-8 win against No. 7 Arizona State and avoid a three-game sweep at Plainsman Park.

“It seemed like every potential big inning we had they just shut us down and we didn’t get the breaks,” Auburn shortstop Casey McElroy said. “It really felt nice to finally have that one inning where we got a couple breaks and the balls fell in.”

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Auburn (11-5) got a monkey off its back in its biggest non-conference test of the season. The Tigers had lost five straight to the Sun Devils in the last two years, despite leading in every game.

“I think it was a real important team win,” Auburn coach John Pawlowski said. “It was just what the doctor ordered today.”

Arizona State (11-3) used a four-run seventh to take an 8-6 lead, chasing Auburn starter Derek Varnadore, who gave up six runs on five hits in six-plus innings.

But The Tigers rallied in the eighth. Jay Gonzalez and Justin Fradejas drew walks to put runners on first and second with two outs for McElroy, who helped kill a potential rally an inning earlier by getting caught in a rundown between third and home.

ASU lefty Mitchell Lambson (3-2) tried to get a fastball past him on the first pitch, but McElroy lined it into the left field corner, just inside the foul line. Gonzalez and Fradejas scored to tie the game at 8.

Dan Gamache batted next, lofting a high fly ball to left that the wind carried to the base of the wall. ASU left fielder Matt Newman jumped and appeared to catch it at the base of the fence, but he lost control of it as he fell to the ground.

McElroy came around to score as the umpires furiously signaled that the play was still alive.

“I thought he caught it,” said Gamache, who was 7-for-14 with 9 RBIs in the series. “I thought it got blown up a little bit and was an easy fly ball, but the wind took it and I got lucky.”

Wes Gilmer added an RBI single to make it 10-8 Auburn. It was the first time the Tigers scored more than two runs in an inning all weekend.

“The first two games we just kind of came up empty-handed, but we were right there until the end,” said McElroy, who was 3-for-5 with three RBIs. “And this game we knew it was going to be another dogfight and this one we just kept believing and coach kept using the word magic.”

Zach Blatt (1-1), who entered the day with an 8.31 ERA in three appearances, pitched two perfect innings to close out the game, a much-needed boost both personally and for a bullpen that struggled to hold leads all weekend.

Auburn returns to action Tuesday in a non-conference game against Alabama in the Capital City Classic at Riverwalk Stadium in Montgomery. First pitch is 8 p.m. ET.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Hard-hitting Arizona State tops Auburn 9-5

AUBURN, Ala. — The hits keep coming and coming for Arizona State, with no end in sight.

After a 16-hit effort in Friday’s opener, No. 7 Arizona State pounded out 17 hits Saturday in a 9-5 win against No. 23 Auburn at Plainsman Park.

Matt Newman hit two home runs and had four RBIs and Joey DeMichele was 5-for-5 with three doubles and four runs for the Sun Devils (11-2), who have won five straight against the Tigers (10-5) dating back to last year.

“It always seemed like we were pitching with somebody on base,” Auburn coach John Pawlowski said. “So it puts a lot of pressure on your team, puts pressure on the defense, and they’re a quality team and they’re going to find ways to score runs. And they did today.”

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Arizona State took command of a back-and-forth game in the late innings. Deven Marrero hit a sacrifice fly off reliever Andrew Morris (1-1) to break a 5-5 tie in the seventh. Newman followed with an RBI double to make it 7-5.

The Sun Devils tacked on two more in the ninth. Newman, who had one extra-base hit all year, hit his third of the day when he launched a Dillon Ortman offering into the right field bullpen. Xorge Carrillo added an RBI single to push the lead to four.

ASU’s six through nine hitters went 12-for-19 on the afternoon with two homers, six doubles and eight RBIs.

Auburn had a glut of wasted chances. After scoring four runs in the first three innings, it scored only one more time the rest of the game.

Zach Alvord ran through a stop sign at third in the second inning, getting thrown out by a considerable distance at the plate. An inning later, Cullen Wacker whiffed on a squeeze bunt, leaving Wes Gilmer hung out to dry between third and home.

The Tigers twice loaded the bases with one out or less but only managed to score one run in those two innings. They left nine runners on base overall.

“We’ve got to keep talking to them about approach and try to find a way offensively to try to get guys on base and manufacture some runs,” Pawlowski said.

With the conference opener looming next weekend, Pawlowski said he’ll have to re-evaluate the pitching rotation.

Starter Slade Smith lasted only 3 1/3 innings, allowing three runs on seven hits. The right-hander has gotten through the fifth inning only once in four starts this year and has an 8.00 ERA.

“We said that we’ve got to get our guys ready to go,” Pawlowski said. “We may have to make some adjustments.”

The teams conclude the series Sunday at 2 p.m. ET. Derek Varnadore (3-0, 1.17 ERA) takes the mound for Auburn against Arizona State’s Kramer Champlin (2-0, 2.50).

“Our mindset is it’s a one-game championship tomorrow,” Pawlowski said. “We’ve got to come ready to play. And to our program, to our kids in there, even though it’s non-conference, they are competitive and they want to win.”

Friday, March 11, 2011

Ninth-inning rally lifts No. 7 Arizona State to 8-7 win over No. 23 Auburn in weekend opener

AUBURN, Ala. — Just like last year, Auburn couldn't hold a lead against Arizona State.

The No. 7 Sun Devils rallied from three deficits Friday night for an 8-7 win against the No. 23 Tigers at Plainsman Park to start a three-game series.

Arizona State (10-2) scored twice in the ninth for the win, tying the game on an Xorge Carrillo single and going ahead on a single by Zack MacPhee that took a fortuitous bounce into right field.

"It's real disappointing," Auburn coach John Pawlowski said. "We knew they weren't going away. That's a solid ballclub over there and they play to a high level. We had our chances. It just didn't work out."

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Auburn (10-4) was swept by Arizona State in Tempe, Ariz., last season, despite leading in every game.

The Tigers looked like they would break that streak, taking a 7-6 lead in the eighth after an errant throw on Justin Fradejas' infield single allowed pinch runner Bobby Andrews to score.

But Arizona State (10-2) rallied. Reliever Ethan Wallen walked Austin Barnes to start the ninth. After a bunt moved him to second, Carrillo's RBI single up the middle scored him to tie the game at 7.

Andy Workman batted next and hit a sharp grounder up the middle that got past the pitcher's mound and struck umpire Jay Pierce on the foot. The ball ricocheted to second baseman Justin Hargett, who was ready to fire to first when Pierce ruled the play dead, putting runners and first and second.

Pawlowski argued the call saying the play should have been live, although the umpires were backed up by the rulebook, which says a fair ball that hits an umpire before it passes an infielder other than the pitcher is dead and runners advance one base.

"Sometimes those things happen," Pawlowski said. "It's unfortunate the ball hitting the umpire. That's part of baseball."

After an ASU runner was thrown out at the plate trying to score on a grounder to short, MacPhee hit a grounder into hole between first and second that took a bad hop over Hargett's head and into right field, allowing Workman to score with the winning run.

Wallen (0-1) took the loss, giving up two runs in 2 2/3 innings of relief. Auburn starter Cory Luckie struck out eight, one shy of a career-high, giving up three runs on nine hits in 4 2/3

Arizona State reliever Mitchell Lambson (3-1) earned the win after giving up one run in 2 1/3 innings.

Dan Gamache went 3-for-4 for the Tigers, driving in Auburn's first four runs with a double and triple. Kevin Patterson added a two-run homer in the sixth, his second of the year.

Johnny Ruettiger
was 2-for-5 for ASU with three RBIs and Barnes was 3-for-4.

The Tigers and Sun Devils play again today at 4 p.m. ET. Auburn will start Slade Smith (1-0, 7.98 ERA) against Kyle Ottoson (2-0, 3.46).

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Commentary: Despite disappointing season, Barbee offers Auburn basketball hope

My colleague, Seth Emerson, had game story duties today at the SEC tournament. You can read his account here. I wrote a column on the conclusion of Auburn's season instead. Here it is:

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ATLANTA — There was no comeback, no second-half magic, no late-game rally for the Auburn Tigers on Thursday.

Tony Barbee's first season on the Plains came to a predictable conclusion in a 69-51 SEC tournament loss to Georgia, a much bigger, much better team from top to bottom.

But he didn't dwell on it.

"Can't look back," Barbee said, echoing a season-long sentiment. "We've got to look ahead."

Looking back at the wreckage won't help. The Tigers (11-20) finished with their fewest wins since the 1993-94 season, placing fifth in the SEC West, the fifth time in the last seven years they've been one of the bottom two teams in the division.

But here's where things differ from the Jeff Lebo era. There's hope.

It's a word rarely spoken in Auburn basketball circles. Lebo's teams never made the NCAA tournament, coming close only once while treading water until the life raft of a new arena could push the program to the next level.

Barbee's different. In 20 years as a player or coach, he's missed the postseason only twice. He's been schooled by a noted winner, John Calipari. And in his only previous head coaching gig, he took UTEP from 10th to first place in the Conference USA in four short years.

Why would that pattern change now?

Sure, the numbers are bad this season — historically bad, in fact, if you're talking RPI — but look at what Barbee inherited. The team had no seniors. Its best player missed the season with a knee injury. Its top two recruits failed to qualify academically. Going 0-for-the-SEC was in play.

Still, the Tigers never folded. They scrapped their way to four SEC wins (I'm guessing the over paid off on that one), had a competitive surge late in the season during which no deficit was too large and gave their fan base reason to believe better days are ahead.

"They stayed together as teammates and didn't point, didn't blame," Barbee said. "They knew they had a lot of growing to do because of the inexperience. And I talked about the growing pains from Day 1. And you see how we progressed as a team and got gradually better over the course of the season. And that's what we want to try to do every year."

It won't be an instant fix. Auburn needs size and scoring. The Tigers got mauled on the boards Thursday, allowing 18 offensive rebounds. Their signature offensive play this season was the seven-minute scoring drought.

There's also the matter of making the scholarship numbers work, which will probably require some maneuvering Auburn fans like to think only takes place under Nick Saban's watch.

But it's not as though SEC reclamation projects take a long time. Mark Fox took Georgia from 5-11 in the SEC to the cusp of the NCAA tournament in Year 2. Anthony Grant had a similar turnaround at Alabama, turning a 5-11 SEC team into Western Division champs.

Why can't Auburn, which plays in one of the weakest divisions in Division I basketball and will add injured guard Frankie Sullivan, transfers Varez Ward and Noel Johnson and at least three freshman signees to its current group, make a similar jump?

Barbee refuses to sugarcoat the process — "He doesn’t shoot you no crap," forward Kenny Gabriel said. "He doesn’t tell you what you want to hear." — nor will he slow down to let the stragglers play catchup. Losing isn't in his DNA.

"They've got to commit to improving," Barbee said. "If not, they will get left behind."

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Auburn-Memphis baseball game canceled

Auburn's baseball game tonight against Memphis was canceled because of weather. The teams will not make the game up.

Fans holding tickets to Wednesday’s game can exchange them for any other non-conference game, subject to availability.

The No. 23 Tigers (10-3) begin a three-game series against No. 7 Arizona State on Friday at 7 p.m. ET at Plainsman Park.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Auburn pitcher/utility player Justin Bryant to undergo arm surgery, will miss rest of season

Auburn pitcher/utility player Justin Bryant will have surgery on his throwing arm and miss the remainder of the season, the school announced Friday.

Bryant, a senior from Remlap, Ala., started three games in left field and one as a designated hitter this season, batting .182 in 11 at bats with two RBIs. He hit .323 in 99 at bats last year, with 5 home runs and 32 RBIs.

The right-handed reliever pitched in one game this year, striking out two in a four-out save.

Dr. James Andrews will perform the surgery on Bryant during the next week.

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CVCC transfer Derek Varnadore stakes claim to starting job with 'weird' delivery

Derek Varnadore won't pitch until Sunday for the Tigers in the C of C Classic at College of Charleston this weekend. But I wrote about the right-hander's fast start for today's newspaper. Here's how it starts:
AUBURN, Ala. -- Auburn pitcher Derek Varnadore’s delivery is, in a word, unusual, although his coaches have a hard time describing it.

Tigers coach John Pawlowski said the right-hander throws it a little bit across his body, making it deceptive for hitters to pick it up. Adam Thomas, his coach at Chattahoochee Valley Community College for two years, said it looks like he throws it out of his arm pit.

“It’s kind of -- I don’t want to say herky jerky -- but it’s weird,” Thomas said.

Varnadore, who earned SEC Pitcher of the Week honors after striking out 13 in a shutout of Radford last Sunday, isn’t going to overthink it.

“If it’s working,” he said, “I’m not going to change it.”
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Auburn (6-3) plays New York Tech today at 1 p.m. ET, College of Charleston on Saturday at 1 p.m. and Western Kentucky on Sunday at 11 a.m.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Varnadore named SEC Pitcher of the Week

Auburn's Derek Varnadore was named SEC Pitcher of the Week after a 13-strikeout, two-hit shutout of Radford on Sunday.

The right-hander, who transferred from Chattahoochee Valley Community College, allowed only four baserunners against Radford, none of which advanced past second. His 13 strikeouts were the most by a Tigers pitcher since Chris Bootcheck struck out 15 against West Virginia in 1999.

Varnadore is 2-0 in two starts this year, allowing five hits, three walks and no runs. He's struck out 17 in 16 innings.

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    Sunday, February 20, 2011

    New bats are expected to set new standard in college baseball

    I won't be out at Plainsman Park for the final game of opening weekend for Auburn against UAB. But I did write this lengthy Sunday article for our paper about the new bat standard for the NCAA this year and how it might radically alter the game. Here's how it starts:
    AUBURN, Ala. -- The high, deep fly ball looked good off the bat of Casey McElroy, soaring toward left-center field as the Auburn crowd stood in anticipation of the season’s first home run.

    Not with college baseball’s less-lively bats. Instead, the ball caromed high off the wall, leaving the Tigers third baseman with a double.

    “I think it would have been out (last year),” McElroy said. “I don’t know how far. I knew right when I hit it I had to run.”

    Expect more of that this season after the NCAA, concerned by skyrocketing offensive numbers and the injury risk from exceedingly high speeds of batted balls, made its biggest changes to bat standards in more than a decade.

    The new bats, which lack the distinctive “ping” associated with the college game, conform to standards similar to the wood bats used in professional baseball, with a smaller sweet spot, less of the “trampoline effect” common in old composite bats and, as a result, decreased speeds.

    Coaches and players anticipate a radical change to the game, with fewer slugfests that pass the four-hour mark, an across-the-board drop in home runs and scoring and, as baseball purists love to hear, an added emphasis on pitching and defense.

    “I think it’s probably closer to what baseball should be,” Georgia coach David Perno said.
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    Friday, February 18, 2011

    Auburn beats Arkansas State 12-5 in opener

    AUBURN, Ala. — Auburn's new-look lineup didn't flash the power it did last year, but it still showed it is still capable of scoring some runs.

    The No. 23 Tigers didn't hit a home run but scored four times in the third and seventh innings of a 12-5 win against Arkansas State on Friday in front of a crowd of 4,096, a school record for a season-opener.

    "We have to create runs," Auburn head coach John Pawlowski said. "I think that's what our team identity is going to be. And we've got some big, strong guys in the lineup, but we've got to find ways to create some offense."

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    Auburn (1-0), which slugged its way to within one game of the Super Regional last year, setting the school record in home runs thanks to MLB draft picks Hunter Morris, Brian Fletcher and Trent Mummey, didn't hit the ball out of the park once Friday.

    Instead it showed a versatile offensive game, walking, bunting and stealing its way to 12 runs on 13 hits.

    "I think we did some good things with the short game," Pawlowski said. "We put a little pressure on them and slashed a little bit."

    Auburn scored in a variety ways. In the third, it was patience. Arkansas State starter Andy Ferguson (0-1) issued four walks and hit a batter. Freshman Zach Alvord made it 4-0 with a two-run single, the only hit of the inning.

    Arkansas State (0-1) pulled withing 6-5 in the seventh, but Auburn pulled away with another four-run inning.

    With two runners on in the seventh, Justin Bryant put down a bunt that third baseman Claude Johnson threw into right field, allowing two runs to score.

    "That's what we worked on all fall," said third baseman Casey McElroy, who went 3-for-4. "We knew with the new (less lively) bats we weren't going to be able to hit the home runs like we did last year. So we worked on small ball and moving runners."

    Justin Hargett and Justin Fradejas followed with back-to-back RBI doubles that pushed the lead to 10-5.

    Starter Slade Smith (1-0) pitched 5 2/3 innings for the win, allowing four runs on six hits. He faced one over the minimum through three innings, allowing one baserunner on an error.

    Creede Simpson was 3-for-3 with four runs scored and a stolen base.

    Auburn hosts No. 14 Virginia today at Plainsman Park at 2 p.m. ET. Left-hander Cory Luckie will start for the Tigers.

    Tuesday, February 15, 2011

    Coaches pick Auburn baseball third in SEC West

    The SEC released the coaches' picks for the 2011 baseball season, and Auburn was picked to finish third in the West.

    The Tigers, who won the SEC West last year, were picked behind LSU and Arkansas.

    Auburn opens the season on Friday at 7 p.m. ET when it plays host to Arkansas State at Plainsman Park.

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    Here's the full coaches' picks (Team, Points, 2010 record/Finish):

    Eastern Division
    1. Florida, 66, 22-8/1st
    2. Vanderbilt, 55, 16-12/3rd
    3. S. Carolina, 48, 21-9/2nd
    4. Kentucky, 33, 13-17/4th
    5. Georgia, 26, 5-23/6th
    6. Tennessee, 17, 12-18/5th
    Western Division
    1. LSU, 63, 14-16/5th
    2. Arkansas, 49, 18-12/2nd
    3. Auburn, 46, 20-10/1st
    4. Ole Miss, 40, 16-14/3rd
    5. Alabama, 33, 15-15/4th
    6. Miss. State, 17, 6-24/6th

    Wednesday, February 9, 2011

    Auburn baseball announces signing class

    The Auburn baseball team added 14 players who will join the team in the fall before the 2012 season.

    The class includes 11 high school players and three junior college transfers. They come from four different states.

    Auburn begins its 2011 season Feb. 18 at home against Arkansas State at 7 p.m. ET.

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    Here's the full list. Read the full bios here:

    Name, Ht, Wt, Pos, Yr, B/T, Previous School, Hometown
    • Cameron Blinka, 6-0, 200, RHP, JR, R/R, Alvin CC, Rosenburg, TX
    • Grant Bush, 6-4, 190, LHP, FR, L/L, Grissom HS, Huntsville, AL
    • Justin Camp, 6-2, 220, RHP, FR, R/R, Austin HS, Decatur, AL
    • Trey Cochran-Gill, 5-10, 175, RHP/OF, FR, R/R, Tallassee HS, Tallassee, AL
    • Garrett Cooper, 6-6, 210, 1B/RHP, JR, R/R, El Camino CC, Manhattan Beach, CA
    • J.D. Crowe Jr., 6-0, 195, C, FR, L/R, Oak Mountain HS, Birmingham, AL
    • Colton Davis, 6-3, 185, OF, FR, R/R, Lake Wales HS, Lake Wales, FL
    • Clay Holmes, 6-4, 225, RHP, FR, R/R, Slocomb HS, Slocomb, AL
    • Daniel Koger, 6-6, 170, LHP, FR, L/L, Huntsville HS, Owens Cross Roads, AL
    • Rocky McCord, 6-2, 175, RHP, FR, R/R, Spanish Fort HS, Mobile, AL
    • Craig Shirley, 6-4, 225, IF/RHP, FR, R/R, Northview HS, Dothan, AL
    • Jarred Smith, 5-10, 180, IF/RHP, FR, L/R, Lake Wales HS, Lake Wales, FL
    • Ryan Tella, 6-0, 175, OF/LHP, SO, L/L, Ohlone College, Fremont, CA
    • Chase Williamson, 6-2, 190, RHP/IF, FR, R/R, UMS-Wright HS, Saraland, AL

    Thursday, February 3, 2011

    Baseball season just around the corner for Tigers

    The baseball season is right around the corner. Auburn, which was the preseason pick to repeat as SEC West champions, has already begun practice, with its season opener Feb. 18 at home against Arkansas State at 7 p.m. ET.

    The Tigers are ranked No. 23 in both the preseason NCBWA Division I poll and ESPN/USA Today coaches' poll.

    Head coach John Pawlowski, first baseman Kevin Patterson and pitcher Cory Luckie stopped by before Thursday's basketball game to talk to the media. Here's a little bit of what they had to say:
    • "Obviously know it's time for college baseball when the temperature starts to crash," Pawlowski joked.
    • Auburn, which led the country in home runs last year, won't be as reliant on the long ball this year, especially after losing Hunter Morris, Brian Fletcher and Trent Mummey to the pros. Pawlowski said they'll be more of a hit-and-run team and do plenty of bunting. "Our offensive game is going to have to evolve and develop as season goes on," Pawlowski said.
    • Pawlowski said the Tigers will have 17 new players, although most of the lineup will be of guys who got a good number of at bats last season.
    • Pawlowski gave a tentative lineup: RT Creede Simpson, CF Justin Fradejas, LF is "wide open" with Justin Bryant/Brooks Beisner the frontrunners, 3B Dan Gamache, SS Casey McElroy/Zach Alvord, 2B Justin Hargett, 1B Patterson/Patrick Savage, C Tony Caldwell, DH will be a "revolving door."
    • Starting rotation is shaping up as Luckie, Slade Smith, then a number of guys for the third spot, including freshman Andrew Morris, long reliever Bradley Hendrix and junior college transfer Will Irvin.
    • Of the freshmen, Pawlowski said some arms will be key in the bullpen, including Ethan Wallen, Dillon Ortman and Morris. Alvord, an infielder from Alpharetta, Ga., who was one of the Tigers' top recruits, could also be a factor somewhere.
    • There are new regulations on the metal bats college players can use this year. It'll probably cut down on some of the home runs that have pervaded the college game. Naturally, Patterson and Luckie had different opinions about it. "From the pitching side of it, we love it," Luckie said. "You can really pitch inside with it. You can really attack hitters now. You can really pitch how pitching's meant to be. Guys won't hit a bloop home run."
    • Patterson can hit the ball a long way, regardless. "I don't think it's going to matter to KP much," Luckie said.
    • The Tigers surprised a lot of folks by winning the West last season. Pawlowski doesn't want to make it a one-year thing. "We want to go back-to-back to the SEC Tournament," he said.

    Wednesday, September 8, 2010

    Following regional run, Auburn extends baseball coach John Pawlowski's contract through 2015

    Baseball coach John Pawlowski cashed in on Auburn's regional run last year, agreeing to a two-year contract extension that will run through 2015.

    Pawlowski will have a guaranteed salary of $315,000, up from $300,000, according to the Opelika-Auburn News.

    "Our staff will continue to work and build a program that we all can be proud of both on and off the field and in the classroom,” Pawlowski said. “Winning the West and having the opportunity to not only participate in but to host a NCAA Regional last year will certainly help us as we prepare for the 2011 season and beyond.”

    In his second season, Pawlowski guided the Tigers to a 43-21 record and their first SEC West division title in 15 years. Auburn's 20-10 SEC record was its best in school history. In two years, Pawlowski has gone 74-46.

    “We’re very appreciative of what John and his staff have done with the baseball program since their arrival at Auburn,” Auburn athletics director Jay Jacobs said. “Winning the SEC West and hosting an NCAA Regional certainly made this past season a memorable one, and we look forward to them continuing to build off the success they have achieved.”

    Auburn had 11 players selected in the MLB Draft last season, a school record.

    Monday, August 2, 2010

    Fletcher signs contract with Royals

    Outfielder Brian Fletcher signed a contract with the Kansas City Royals, two weeks before the deadline, ending his Auburn career.

    Fletcher, an 18th round pick the Royals, weighed his options after going lower in the draft than he thought he would.

    The 21-year-old batted .357 with 22 home runs and 75 RBIs for Auburn this year, earning All-SEC honors.

    He and catcher Ryan Jenkins both have signed with the Royals. Fletcher expects to be assigned to Low-A Burlington, where Jenkins has been playing.

    Auburn had 11 players drafted in June. Of the nine that had eligibility remaining, six signed pro contracts. DH Kevin Patterson, RHP Bradley Hendrix and OF Justin Fradejas opted to return for their senior season.

    Tuesday, July 20, 2010

    Baseball: Fradejas, Hendrix, Patterson will return for senior season

    Auburn announced Tuesday that outfielder Justin Fradejas, reliever Bradley Hendrix and designated hitter Kevin Patterson will return for their senior season.

    The three players were all selected during last month's Major League Baseball amateur draft.

    "We are ecstatic that Justin, Bradley and Kevin are returning to Auburn for their senior seasons. They will continue their outstanding Auburn careers and provide our 2011 team with toughness and leadership,” Auburn coach John Pawlowski said. “There is no substitute for having experienced winners on your team and these three players were a big reason that Auburn won the SEC West in 2010. Our fans should look forward to watching them play again in Plainsman Park next season.”

    Patterson, a 23rd round pick by the Rays, hit .315 with 16 home runs and 33 RBIs last year.

    Hendrix, a 30th round pick by the Reds, was 4-2 in 58 appearances with a 5.35 ERA.

    Fradejas, a 35th round pick by the Rockies, hit .358 with 52 runs and a team-high 14 stolen bases last year.

    Outfielder Brian Fletcher, a 17th-round pick by the Royals, is still weighing his options. He has until Aug. 16 to sign.

    Auburn had a school record 11 players taken in this year's draft. Of the nine eligible to return, five have signed, including OF Trent Mummey (Orioles), 1B Hunter Morris (Brewers), LHP Cole Nelson (Tigers), LHP Grant Dayton (Marlins) and RHP Stephen Kohlscheen (Mariners).

    Sunday, July 18, 2010

    An extended Q&A with Auburn athletics director Jay Jacobs

    I sat down with Auburn athletics director Jay Jacobs for an interview this week, armed with reader-submitted questions. The abridged version ran in today's newspaper. But fear not, the full transcript is right here on the blog, with proper attribution for questions in parentheses.

    I apologize if I didn't get to everybody's question. I only had a limited amount of time for the interview. But I'd like to thank everybody that wrote in.

    And don't forget to follow the blog on Twitter.
    Q: You took a lot of criticism for the Gene Chizik hire. Do you feel any vindication a year and a half later with the forward momentum the program has made? (Chris K., RC, Mark Daily)
    A: "No. I wasn't in search of vindication. Like I told that football team that Thursday night after Tommy (Tuberville) quit was that I was going to hire the best coach for them. And having played here and coached here, I knew the quality and the caliber of the man that we needed to coach this football team, so I'm very pleased with what went on last year. We overachieved, winning eight ballgames and getting a chance to play in the Outback Bowl, which was really exciting, as we all know, with three overtimes. But Gene and his staff are building this program back up, but we're still a couple signing classes away from getting the quality of athletes that we need to have to get back to Atlanta. And that's what the goal is is to get back to the SEC championship game. But specifically to answer your question, no. I don't feel any vindication. I wasn't after vindication. I was after what I thought was best for this team and for Auburn. And we still have a ways to go, but what Gene has done is exactly what we talked about in his interview. He had a plan. He stuck to his plan and we're just building this thing back a brick at a time."

    Q: Many readers were curious about scheduling philosophy. It seems like every year Auburn schedules one BCS opponent in its non-conference schedule and three lower-tier opponents. Why doesn't Auburn schedule more quality non-conference opponents? (Anonymous, JaSteveFC, Abraham Belt, kinchler)
    A: "When LSU won the national championship with two losses in the Southeastern Conference, that was a great example of how strong our league is. And to play eight SEC games and then four others, the whole key is getting to Atlanta and winning the SEC championship and get a chance to play for the national championship. And this league has done that better than any other, particularly over the last 20 years. But our philosophy is that we'll play those eight SEC games and then when we went to the 12th game, we, unlike some of our other institutions in the Southeastern Conference, we didn't have that ninth game that was a traditional non-conference BCS opponent. Georgia-Georgia Tech. South Carolina-Clemson. Florida-Florida State. We didn't have that. So when you go to 12 games like that, for the players, playing four teams that you don't necessarily hear a lot about or maybe get real excited about, it's hard to do. And it's also hard for our fans.
    "So when that 12th game came about, we decided what we had to do is play that BCS opponent that those other institutions have. So each year we're going to play a West Virginia or a Clemson or whoever it may be, because it's exciting for our players and it's exciting for our fans. And at the same time, you know that the whole goal is to get to Atlanta to win an SEC championship to play for a national championship. So that's what the philosophy is. Really and truly, if you can play all eight SEC games and win the Southeastern Conference championship game in Atlanta, win those nine games, at the end of the day, nobody ever looks back upon who those non-conference games were, because you're playing for the national championship. And so if you go back and look at the SEC schools that have won the national championship and review who their non-conference opponents were, which we've done, it resembles a lot of what we're doing schedule-wise."

    Q: Is there a fear of repeating 2004, though, where Auburn's schedule was perceived to be weaker than the USC's and Oklahoma's and the Tigers were left out of the national title game? (Forrest Foti)
    A: "That's what the perception is, but when other institutions have won the national championship, they played similar opponents. What the challenge was in 2004 was that USC and Oklahoma started out the preseason 1-2 and I believe we started out 17th. And we worked our way up and USC and Oklahoma never lost. So for us to jump them would have been something odd to have happen anyway if one of them didn't stumble. And they didn't. And if the inverse were true, if we were 1 or 2, let's just say that USC was No. 1 and we were No. 2 and Oklahoma started out No. 17, and we were all undefeated, we don't feel like it would be fair for Oklahoma to jump us to No. 2 to play for the national championship. There's some debate about those preseason polls. But the strength of schedule hasn't kept us out of the national championship. It was the fact that three teams that year went undefeated and we started out so low compared to the other two.
    "Really not about how low were in the preseason, really about No. 1 and No. 2 started out the season and they never lost. But you always do think about that, though. You think about what you can do differently. Then, you look at some schools over the last couple years that have played two I-AA opponents and end up maybe in a better bowl game than some that didn't play two I-AA teams. It's happened not only in our league but other places as well. So if you're good, you're good. And if you start out high enough and beat the teams in your conference, you've got a chance to play for your conference championship, then the national championship, particularly in this league."

    Q: Last year Auburn nearly agreed to play a season opener in Atlanta as a neutral site game against UCLA. Is that still something you are pursuing? (Jack in Atlanta, Ryan Miller)
    A: "We're always looking at that. No. 1 thing is when Coach Jordan said college football games were meant to be played on campus, we believe that. However, I guess it was five years ago that us and Clemson were the first teams to talk to the people in Atlanta about playing the game, which is what ended up giving us this home-and-home that we're having this year and next year with Clemson. And we couldn't get it to work out for us, because we both needed a home game in the same year. However, in a year where from a budgeting standpoint we can have an away game and now because of the establishment of that game, the finances can be to the point where it's a better deal than going on an away trip, going to play on somebody else's place, So to answer your question, yeah, that's something we continue to look at, as far as when and who we can play in Atlanta.
    "I think it would be a good opportunity for our fans in Atlanta. First and foremost, I think it would be a good opportunity for our football players because it's an opportunity to play in that dome prior to the SEC championship game. Because having played in the Sugar Bowl when I was a player, it's a completely different atmosphere playing 10 or 11 ballgames outdoors and then walking into a dome in December or January. It's different. But it's different for both teams. But having a chance to go in there and play, I think would be great for our football players playing in a pro stadium. And for our fans in Atlanta, I think we've got about 17,000 Auburn alumni in the Atlanta area, I think it would be good for everybody. But the one thing is that football generates 77 percent of our income and in order to be able to complete at the level we want to for all 21 of our sports, we can't concede a lot of dollars to move a game out of your own campus."

    Q: If you were to play a game at a neutral site instead of a home game, how much of a difference in revenue would that be? (Marmot)
    A: "Well, it would depend on what the neutral site would pay. But a home game for us is anywhere from $2.2 million to $4 million, depending on the opponent and the price of the ticket. For a home game against a non-BCS team, it's probably about $2-2.5 million deal for us. For a BCS team like a West Virginia or a Clemson, it could be anywhere from $3.5-4 million, depending on the price of the ticket. And that ties directly in with completely selling the game out."

    Q: Do the payouts of these kickoff classics approach that?
    A: 'They appear, because we haven't been involved in one, I don't know, but in our discussions in future scheduling, it appears that you could be fine financially to go play one, particularly in a year where you could have an away game."

    Q: Auburn seems to play a lot of out-of-state, non-BCS opponents in the non-conference (UT-Chattanooga, Louisiana-Monroe, Arkansas State this year). Is there any push to play in-state opponents for those games? (Ryan Miller)
    A: "There's no push to play do so or no push not to. It's just all about scheduling who's available, who's willing to come here. There's no push one way or another."

    Q: Are there any plans to build a long-term series with another school, similar to what Arkansas and Texas A&M have done, agreeing to play each other for at least the next 10 years in Dallas? Would that be appealing? (Paul Reeder)
    A: "It would be. If we could find an opponent that we thought was a natural. What you're talking about doing is creating that rivalry game for the 12th game, and if we had an opponent and our philosophies matched up in that and it would be exciting for both our fan bases, then we certainly would do that."

    Q: What about scheduling games out of the Southeast? It seems fans would like to travel to some new locales to follow the Tigers. (Forrest Foti, kinchler)
    A: "Well, we've been to Syracuse. We went to West Virginia a few years ago. We went to USC. We've been to Texas. So all those are the kind of games that we like to play. We play those BCS games. Those are great campuses to go to, those are great schools to play. And we talked to all of them about future scheduling."

    Q: Has anything been decided about the opening game in the new arena? (Tar Heel Tiger)
    A: "It has not. Bernard Hill and coach (Tony) Barbee are continuing to work on that. We've got a few teams we are talking to, but no, there's nothing decided yet."

    Q: Do you expect that soon?
    A: "Yeah. That'll be in the next couple weeks. It's so different than football, I guess because there are 323 teams that play basketball. So those are quite fluid sometimes."

    Q: What are you plans to increase attendance at football games this year? (JaSteveFC)
    A: "What we're doing is through our e-mail and different marketing promotions, the thing we found in our surveys from last year is the gameday experience here, which is one of our five goals, is second to none. People love coming to campus. And with the economic times the way they are, there are still some tickets available. Hopefully most of those people we've written letters to, most of those people have replied that when the economy changes, they'll come back to buying their tickets. But it's a great opportunity for people who have never had an opportunity to buy season tickets here at Auburn, you can do it now and get involved with that and get involved in our priority system and join Tigers Unlimited. But our marketing staff is doing things all the time promote ticket sales and all we need to do and feel very good about ... just like last year started off a little slow to begin with, by the time we started playing, we had sold everything that we had."

    Q: An article on Rivals.com said Auburn has the highest average football ticket prices in the SEC. What's the reasoning behind most of the most expensive tickets in the country despite not selling out events? (Alex L., Ryan Miller Skip Hansberger)
    A: "Well, what we've tried to do each year, particularly with Clemson coming here this year and the four SEC games, last year, years that we travel to that BCS opponent, your ticket price doesn't increase, generally. But having that BCS opponent here, that dictates what our total season package is. Seven games vs. eight games. So you have that additional ticket and that increases the price. And other people, we've looked at what other people do as well. Some of them, they make all their tickets exactly the same price every game. We still feel like as best we possibly can and to still win at a level that we as Auburn people will win at, we still believe that some of those games that have a lower price ticket so that the people that normally can't come to every ballgame can have a chance to come to and afford a couple of ballgames, whether it's homecoming, opening game, whatever it may be. So we tier our prices to make different price points on a per game basis, so the person that maybe can't afford four season books can at least come and buy tickets to a couple of the games."

    Q: Is there a fear that in this economic climate right now that you're out-pricing certain fans?
    A: "I think you always have to be cognizant of that is that you could. Right now we haven't seen that. We're not losing very many customers. Some people aren't buying very many tickets as they have in the past, but in our surveys and our letters to them, it's all just because of the economics. It's because they don't have extra cash to spend. And instead of buying eight tickets, they have six this year, and their family members are going to take turns as to who comes to what games. And hopefully most of the e-mails and letters that I get back are in a couple years when the economy changes, they'll be back to pick up their tickets."

    Q: How much longer is the Under Armour contract and what kind of benefits have you seen from being one of the first to strike up a partnership with that company in its infancy? (Ryan Miller)
    A: "I think Maryland was the first and then we were the first one here in the Southeastern Conference, and then one of the first outside of probably Maryland to do it all-inclusive. It's been fabulous. It's been great for us. And it's been great for Under Armour. And we'll renegotiate that contract with them and hopefully extend that sooner than later. But it's been a great opportunity for us to get the best, quality products for our student-athletes. When we were going through the requests for proposals and these different companies were coming in and presenting to us, some of our athletes would stop me outside and say, 'Mr. Jacobs, we have to go with Under Armour. That's the new deal.' That was, what, four years ago? What Kevin Plank, the CEO of Under Armour, and they have done in thinking and coming and sitting down with our coaches and getting everything exactly right has just been great. We have a great relationship, a great partnership, one we plan to in the near future announce extending that even further."

    Q: The general tone from a lot of readers' e-mails is that Jordan-Hare Stadium has fallen down the rankings in terms of aesthetics and modernness. Are there any plans to expand or renovate the stadium in the near future? (kinchler, Joel K. Davis, Anonymous, Joe, Rick Sheehan)
    A: "Well, a couple of things. One, when you talk about renovations, five years ago we did a major renovation in the concourse. We increased the number of restrooms and points of sales. As far as the main concourse, I don't know if anybody has a nicer concourse, and I've been to all of them, than we do for the fans. So the renovation part of it, keeping it updated, the first school to have the HD video board, the restrooms, the concession stands, all those things, with the exception of a food court, we're not behind anybody in that. But when you're talking about adding seats vs. a renovation, a renovation to me means updating, if you're talking about stadium expansion, that's a completely different thing. The only thing we've done in the last seven years is we added a few thousand seats on the east upper deck and added a dozen more suites.
    "But what we did in October was we hired a master design architect and we've been to probably six or eight different stadiums over the last eight months looking at what other people have done in their stadiums. What we're going to do is we're going to come up with a master plan for how we want our stadium to look in so many years. And the reason we did that is when our pro forma dictates that it's time to add additional seats-- let's just say for example premium seats in the upper deck, in one particular end zone -- we don't want to have gone in and expanded the recruiting lounge in the south end zone and now, two years later have to go in and add an upper deck and destroy what we've done underneath. So what we're doing is we're putting together a master plan of everything that we would want in a stadium, including capacity, in the next number of years. Whatever the years may be. And so we'll have some different components so when the pro forma dictates, when we're selling out our season tickets for a couple years in a row and the TUF priority for a couple years in a row, then it's time to expand it. We were there a couple years ago. We had actually started the wheels in motion as far as doing an expansion, and then 2008, when we only won five ballgames and the economy hit, we put that on hold. So we haven't moved forward with that, because the time and the money don't dictate doing so. And the demand doesn't dictate doing so at this time.
    "However, we brought in these master design folks to look at what everybody does, so when we get ready to do whatever it may be, whether it's a stadium expansion of the upper deck or premium seats or scholarship seats in the end zone or suites in the end zone or enlarging our recruiting area, whatever it may be we'll take that part of the master plan and we'll do it and it won't impact any of the other parts and we don't paint ourselves in a corner. What we've learned to do is be proactive, not reactive, and try to have a good plan for everything. So when it comes to stadium expansion, the fans dictate that with demand. And the football team certainly has to win. All that dictates how soon we can possibly expand the stadium."

    Q: Are there plans to expand student seating? (Joe, Skip Hansberger, Alex L.)
    A: "That will be part of our master plan, because as enrollment continues to increase, right now we have the highest percentage, based on enrollment, of student tickets of anybody in the SEC, so our students are our future season ticket holders and they're the lifeblood of what we do on gameday Saturday. You just look out there at that West Virginia game and the student stayed, and then you look at the end of our last game of the season where our students are still there, chanting, 'It's great to be an Auburn Tiger.' That's why in the basketball arena, we built a separate entrance for our students to come to basketball and have their own sections and concession stands and all that. So as we move forward with the stadium master plan, part of what we do for our students will be part of that. So when you ask me if there is anything for student expansion, only when we do something with the entire stadium, because the way our ticket priority works, if you continue to pay your priority, you don't lose your seats. And so right now there's really nowhere to expand the students to."

    Q: Any plans on putting a second HD replay board on the north end of the stadium? (Alex L., Skip Hansberger)
    A: "That'll be part of our master plan too. Whatever we can do to make the gameday experience more enjoyable for our fans. And certainly the more visual you can have, the better off you are. The one thing we don't want to do is put a new HD scoreboard somewhere and in two years come back and tear it out because we've got to put premium seating in that area of the stadium. So we continue to look at ways to increase the gameday experience, but it's all based on winning and attendance and revenue."

    Q: What about improving the aesthetics of the outside of the stadium, perhaps bricking over the steel beams that you can see to match other academic and athletic buildings on campus? (kinchler, Rich Coe)
    A: "That's all part of the master plan as well. Everybody sees the same thing we do. And one thing the university has done is on the east side of the stadium, they're changing that road on the north end down there, where there's that area down there underneath, they put a road down there, and it's all getting dressed up. We have to continue to update our facilities and do all these things that people are asking about. It's just all about time and money."

    Q: Is there almost an arms race with other SEC teams to keep up or stay ahead in terms of facilities?
    A: "It is. There's a proverb that says, 'Your heart is where your treasure is.' And it is, to use that term, it is an arms race. We have to continue to be out front when it comes to facilities. That's why we've seen over the last five or six years, all the different things that we've done -- the golf facility, the tennis facility, the academic center, the soccer/track facility, the track facility, the gymnastics facility, the softball complex, the new multi-purpose indoor facility -- that's why we've got something going every year."

    Q: Are there plans to add any additional programs like men's soccer or wrestling, or do Title IX restrictions make that impossible? (Jerry Romine, Brian Faletto)
    A: "It is a Title IX issue. So we can't get out of proportionality. We're in great shape right now with our numbers of scholarships and women's participants compared to men and the overall enrollment of the university. But no, there's no plans to add wrestling. Nobody in the Southeastern Conference I know is considering it. And there are no plans for men's soccer, even though there are some teams in the ACC that have men's soccer. I don't know of anybody in the SEC that does. Our No. 1 goal is to win SEC championships, so we want to compete at the highest level in the SEC in the sports that our sister institutions have. And one of our goals is winning. It's the No. 1 goal in our strategic goals is to be in the top 10 percent of the Director's Cup, which means you that you get into NCAA play. For the sixth year in a row, we've achieved that goal of being in the top 10 percent."

    Q: Any plans to extend baseball coach John Pawlowski's contract after the kind of season Auburn had? (Michael Wells)
    A: "We've extended John's contract and are certainly proud of what they were able to accomplish this year. But we're still building. I believe we had a record number of guys drafted, so we'll be back to rebuilding next year, but John and his staff have done a great job. It was certainly exciting this past year, being able to host the NCAA regional, which we hadn't done in seven years. So we're looking for bigger and better things. Everybody's just going to have to realize that we lost a lot of key players and we'll be back into a rebuilding mode this year."

    Q: At the regional there was overflow attendance at Plainsman Park, on the hill beyond center field and in the parking deck near the stadium. Does that make you want to expand Plainsman Park to be able to host such events in the future? (Bill McKnight)
    A: "It does. Fortunately, the capacity didn't keep us from hosting. And we had great crowds. It was just a great baseball feeling. Our baseball park, like basketball, it's not the biggest but it's the best. And as Auburn people, we all appreciate that. We appreciate class facilities and fun facilities. It gives our student-athletes the best opportunity to compete on the field and on the court. But part of our master plan is to do the same thing in baseball that are in football, which we've already started. We've got a master plan for our baseball facility. So how do we want it to look? As we look at these schools in our league that have added suites and additional seats, it goes back to being proactive and it is an arms race. If demand is proven that you can add those additional seats or suites or additional seating areas, and be able to make your pro forma work, you have to do that. You have to treat it as a business model, and that's how we do it. But yeah, it certainly makes it exciting and you see everybody lined up and you don't have enough tickets for baseball in an NCAA regional. It's an exciting time. It's just that we have to realize that we're losing a bunch of players and this next year will be challenging to say the least. We'll look for great things and they'll all play hard. It's just that we lost a lot of players."

    Q: Why doesn't Auburn retire Tracy Rocker's jersey? The program has retired the jerseys of Bo, Pat Sullivan and Terry Beasley, but not Rocker -- one of the most dominant defensive players in college football history. Now that he's back at Auburn, isn't it time? (Anonymous)
    A: "Well, we've also got two other players who have had similar awards to what Tracy's had. And we look at that over time to determine what numbers we should retire. We have a committee of people that look at that, not only in football, but in all of our sports. And certainly, what Tracy did here as a player is remarkable and certainly appreciated, but retiring of jerseys, whether it's Tracy's or anybody else, that's something we look at annually as to what we should be doing and what we should prepare to do."

    Q: Who makes those decisions?
    A: "It comes from a small group of people inside the athletics program and some people who are athletic department employees."

    Q: SEC expansion didn't happen, but what were your opinions of that when it appeared things might shift in the direction of adding two teams? (Christa L. Miller)
    A: "Well, No. 1 is we have the best commissioner in Mike Slive than anybody in the nation. And so when it comes to being able to evaluate and assess situations and know when the paradigm is shifting, he has his finger on the pulse of college athletics, and particularly in this case, the BCS and football that I trust his judgment in that wholeheartedly. As those things were being kicked around, we just knew that being the best league in the nation ... over the last five years, of the four major sports, football, both basketballs and baseball, the Southeastern Conference has won 10 of those 20 over the last five years. Including South Carolina's win in the College World Series, I believe we're 10-1 in national championship games. So we're the strongest league in the nation, so when it comes to expansion, we'll certainly be right in the middle of that and in all likelihood be the most attractive league to join if that were to happen. But I think that the way it all worked out worked out great. I think we still have the best league in the nation. Certainly our championship game in football and everything else we compete in during this past year, the championship games. So I think that there was a lot of conversation going on. Mike Slive was in the middle of all the conversations and did a great job communicating with all the ADs about what was going on. We feel very confident in where we are, and if things change, we'll be in a great spot as a league."

    Q: Reports said Texas A&M and Oklahoma would have been the two most likely teams to join the SEC if expansion occurred. What are your personal opinions about expanding that far West? Does that change the brand of the SEC at all? Are you more of a traditionalist in that sense?
    A: "I think that if the landscape begins to change the Southeastern Conference will be a frontrunner in that, just like we've always been, like with the SEC championship game. As far as speculating who would have been in here, what that would have done to the league, until we get to the point where this is who we're going to add, then I haven't spent a lot of time thinking about what it would have looked like, what it wouldn't have looked like, whether the tradition changes or anything like that. It's just that when it comes to change, the Southeastern Conference isn't going to sit on the sidelines. They're going to be in the game. At this point we're going to do what is best for this league."

    Tuesday, June 22, 2010

    Former Auburn, Columbus High pitcher Ty Kelley learning the ropes after signing with Angels

    It's been a whirlwind week for former Auburn reliever Ty Kelley. The one-time Columbus High standout went from starting his summer league stint in Amsterdam, N.Y., to signing with the Anaheim Angels in the matter of days.

    Now he's in Tempe, Ariz., ready to embark on a professional career with the Angels' Rookie league affiliate.

    "It's awesome," Kelley said Tuesday. " It's going to be a great experience getting here and trying to meet everybody and figure everything out."

    Auburn fans might not be familiar with Kelley's name. After making 11 appearances and starting three non-conference games in 2009, the 6-foot-4, right-hander pitched only four times last season, posting a 9.64 ERA in 4 2/3 innings. He would have been a fifth-year senior next season.

    He joined the New York Collegiate League as a way to get some innings this summer and perhaps catch the eye of major league scouts. The Angels, who showed interest in him out of high school, signed him after he threw four scoreless innings in Amsterdam.

    "It just kind of did catch me (by surprise)," Kelley said. "I kind of was hoping for something toward the end of the summer, but not that soon. And they called and then it just kind of caught me off guard and I kind of thought about it and weighed everything. I talked to a lot of different people. Everybody kind of felt like, they told me it was a great opportunity not to let it pass by."

    Here's what else Kelley had to say:
    (What are you feelings about signing with a major league organization?)
    "It just kind of hit me yesterday when I was in the locker room and putting on the Angels jersey, it's just being a part of a great tradition with a lot of people who have been through there and people who have played for the Angels, it's awesome to be able to do that."

    (How hard was it not being able to get many opportunities to pitch this year for Auburn)
    "You know, it was tough. After a year, last year I threw quite a bit. And this year it was real tough. Especially as much success as our team had. It was awesome. When you're winning, you're happy. But it was tough just not being able to throw as much as I'd like to and not getting as many opportunities as I wanted. But I guess you can't really complain about that."

    (After an inactive season, is your arm in shape?)
    "I was kind of worried about that. I threw those four innings within a few days and it felt great. And then the next day it was ready, and it wasn't sore or anything. I think it's pretty good. It's not ready to be a starter and go five-plus, but it's good enough to just work my way to that point. Plus, I just got here and they're going to work with me in bullpens. I'll be conditioning and they'll get my arm strength back up. So I'll be ready to throw when they need me."

    (What kind of role do you think you'll have?)
    "Right away it'll probably be coming out of the bullpen, probably a short relief and then going into long relief. Maybe starter down the road."

    (What are you first impressions of how the Angels operate?)
    "It's kind of funny. I was thinking, we have a lot of rules, a lot of things you can do and can't do, it's a lot like playing for (Columbus) coach (Bobby) Howard. He gets you real prepared for the next level. A lot of the things we do here are a lot like that. Real instructional. It's not really a big, big difference, it's just a lot more work, because it's a job now, so it's a lot more work. You're at the field for eight hours a day, in the heat practicing and trying to learn new things. It's going to be a big step. The big thing now is the time difference, just trying to get used to everything for me. Everything else, it's something I've always done. So it's not new to me."

    Monday, June 21, 2010

    While we were gone ...

    It was a refreshing week of vacation, but the blog is back for the next week and a half. Until, of course, another quick getaway, this time to Minnesota to see the folks. (Such is the life of a sportswriter, needing to cram all allotted vacation hours into amonthlong span).

    ANYWAY, some things happened on the beat while I was gone. Let's rattle through them quickly with some belated thoughts.
    1. It will cost $16 million and be privately funded. I don't think Auburn will have any trouble getting donors to chip in.
    2. It'll be 92,000 feet. Sounds big. More importantly, it puts the Tigers on par with all the other SEC schools that have indoor facilities. It's always nice for a program to be on an equal footing with stuff like that, especially when it comes to impressing recruits.
    3. Auburn is sparing no expense with this new coaching staff in refreshing everything about the program. The athletic complex underwent renovations last year. The practice facility will be next. Makes you wonder when the next face lift for Jordan-Hare will take place?
    • The football team got a commitment from Mobile, Ala., defensive end JaBrian Niles last week, shortly after attending Auburn's Senior Camp. Niles is a 6-foot-2, 270-pound three-star recruit, according to Rivals. He had offers from Alabama, Florida, Florida State, Ole Miss and Texas Tech. He's the Tigers' eighth commitment for 2011 and their second defensive lineman, joining Bear, Del., defensive tackle Angelo Blackson.
    • As expected, Auburn's baseball stars are starting to sign major league contracts. First baseman Hunter Morris got a $217,800 bonus from the Brewers. Center fielder Trent Mummey got $252,000 from the Orioles. Catcher Ryan Jenkins (Royals) and closer Austin Hubbard (Rays) -- both seniors -- also signed.
    • That leaves quite a few unsigned players for Auburn. The most interesting to watch will be pitchers Cole Nelson (10th round, Tigers) and Grant Dayton (11th round, Marlins), Brian Fletcher (18th round, Royals) and Kevin Patterson (23rd round, Rays). Nelson and Dayton were both taken high enough that you'd figure they would sign, just to minimize the risk of dropping in the draft next year (and, as seniors, losing any signing leverage they might have). Fletcher and Patterson, both juniors, are in the same boat, although both went lower in this year's draft than expected. Would that be enough for them to come back to Auburn for their senior year? I wouldn't bet on it. But if the money's not right, it could be a possibility. Non-senior college players have until Aug. 16 to sign.
    • I also have to point out a well done story on safety Zac Etheridge by fellow beat writer Andrew Gribble of the Opelika-Auburn News. Etheridge hasn't put on pads since the scary hit that nearly paralyzed him last fall, but he's worked on getting his strength back in the weight room. Key date: July 20. That's when he'll find out if he's cleared medically to play his final season at Auburn.
    • And to close things out, here's an artist's rendering of what the inside of the indoor practice facility will look like:

    Saturday, June 12, 2010

    Auburn baseball hopes this year was just the start

    I wrapped up the baseball season in an article for today's newspaper. Here's how it starts:
    AUBURN, Ala. — Auburn’s baseball season had hardly been over for 15 minutes when head coach John Pawlowski started his post-game press conference by thanking his players.

    “They worked so hard this year to come this far,” Pawlowski said, saving answers for the team’s season-ending NCAA regional loss to Clemson for later. “I look at the beginning of the season and where we were. I’m just really proud of this team.”

    The Tigers’ postseason run might have ended sooner than they would have liked, but it doesn’t change the giant step forward the program made in Pawlowski’s second year.

    Thanks to a strong class of juniors recruited by his predecessor, Tom Slater, Pawlowski led Auburn to 43 wins, the seventh most in school history. The Tigers ended a series of droughts, earning an NCAA berth for the first time since 2005, qualifying for the SEC tournament for the first time since 2003 and winning the SEC West for the first time since 1995.

    “It means a lot to have the fans believe in Auburn baseball again,” shortstop Casey McElroy said.