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Danbury Westerners
Jesse Lepore (Miami) |
The Westerners, a year removed from a league-worst 13-29 record, have eight players competing in the postseason. Three come from Binghamton, the America East champion for the third time in the past four seasons. The top-seeded Bearcats were lifted in the conference tournament by the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player Jason Agresti, who has a .291/.380/.503 slash line and went 3-for-4 in the championship game after hitting a clutch walkoff grand slam. Danbury also pulled in a trio of players from Bryant, the NEC champions for the third time in four years. Southpaw Justin Snyder led the Bulldogs with 25 appearances out of the bullpen, striking out 53 in 45 1/3 innings pitched. Ross Weiner has also been an important piece for Bryant, making 15 appearances and posting a 2.39 ERA over 26 1/3 innings of work. Randy Polonia made 24 appearances out of the bullpen for the AAC champions UCONN and had overpowering stuff. Polonia piled up 38 strikeouts over 28 innings while limiting opponents to a .233 batting average against. Finally, one of the top players coming for Danbury is Miami mid-week starter Jesse Lepore, who produced a sparkling 9-0 record with a 2.17 ERA over 12 starts. Lepore has thrown at least six innings in seven of his starts this season. The Hurricanes won the ACC and will host a regional.
Brandt Stallings (Georgia Tech) |
Prospects: Carmen Giampetruzzi (Boston College), Brandt Stallings (Georgia Tech), Derek Casey (Virginia), Tommy Doyle (Virginia), Daniel Lynch (Virginia), Bennett Sousa (Virginia)
The Virginia-Keene pipeline is alive and well, as the Swamp Bats reeled in four members from the defending champions. Daniel Lynch made his first appearance since April on Friday during the ACC tournament, retiring all four batters he faced, as he was sidelined with a back injury and untimely food poisoning. Tommy Doyle, who threw a scoreless inning in last years College World Series, made 20 appearances this year, finishing third on the team with 58 1/3 innings. Promising rising sophomore Derek Casey didn't pitch as he recovered from Tommy John surgery, while Bennett Sousa struggled with control out of the bullpen. Sousa struck out 23 in 25 innings, but also walked 19 and had opposing hitters bat .297 against him. Carmen Giampetruzzi only threw four innings this spring, as his Boston College squad made the tournament for the first time since 2009. Brandt Stallings has been a pivotal piece of Georgia Tech's outfield, appearing in 43 games. Over 143 at bats, Stallings posted a slash line of .308/.366/.569 with seven home runs and 33 RBIs.
Mystic Schooners
Prospects: Timothy Cate (Connecticut), Doug Domnarski (Connecticut), Joseph Rivera (Connecticut), Zac Susi (Connecticut), Chase Lunceford (Louisiana Tech), Ryan Connolly (Nebraska), Tyler Buffett (Oklahoma St), Carson Teel (Oklahoma St), Colin Simpson (Oklahoma St), J.R. Davis (Oklahoma St), Martin Figueroa (Rhode Island)
Tim Cate (UCONN) |
New Bedford Bay Sox
Prospect: P.J. Poulin (Connecticut, yet to register an at-bat this season)
Newport Gulls
Prospects: Denny Brady (East Carolina), Dwanya Williams-Sutton (East Carolina), Adam Wolf (Louisville), Devin Mann (Louisville), Remey Reed (Oklahoma St), Matthew McGarry (Vanderbilt), Connor Kaiser (Vanderbilt), Stephen Scott (Vanderbilt), Ben Breazeale (Wake Forest), Nate Mondou (Wake Forest)
Connor Kaiser (Vanderbilt) |
North Adams SteepleCats
Prospects: Daniel Holst (Southeast Missouri St U), Edward Haus (St. Marys Col)
Daniel Holst hit .322/.474/.507 for the Redhawks in the regular season, slugging 11 doubles and seven home runs. Holst also swiped 22 bases (out of 26 attempts), drew 53 walks to 48 strikeouts, and scored 59 runs. Edward Haus, the MVP of the Hamptons League last summer, hit .268 in 53 games for the Gaels. Haus legged out 13 doubles and drove in 26 runs.
Ocean State Waves
Brian Rapp (BC) |
Reliever Brian Rapp got the win in Boston College's ACC championship game win over Georgia Tech, punching their ticket to the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2009. Rapp piled up 39 strikeouts over 26.1 innings of work, holding opposing hitters to a .235 average. Teammate Gian Martellini hit .233 with 14 RBIs over 26 games, while John Witkowski had 16 strikeouts in 14 innings of relief. Bryant freshman outfielder Nick Angelini has excelled, hitting .356 over 51 games, earning the NEC Rookie of the Year honor. Angelini played in the Futures Collegiate Baseball League last summer with Nashua, and the experience gained paid off. He has an almost-.500 on-base percentage along with nine stolen bases. Daniel Keating hit almost .300 for the C-USA champions Southern Miss, homering five times and stealing seven bases. Three more players come from Stetson, headlined by reliever Ben Onyshko, who's fanned 42 over 38 innings of work. Onyshko has split time between the bullpen and rotation for the Hatters, who are a .500 team that went on a run through the Atlantic Sun tournament. Dom Grillo, a reliable reliever, and Chris Hess, a talented hitter, both will come from the Atlantic 10 champions Rhode Island.
Plymouth Pilgrims
Prospects: Thomas Lane (Boston College), Blake Workman (Cal State Fullerton), CJ Dandeneau (Connecticut), Cole Gordon (Mississippi St)
Freshman Thomas Lane immediately had a place with the Eagles, making 11 appearances with seven starts- but he had a 6.83 ERA and gave up quite a few hits. C.J. Dandeneau, a redshirt freshman for the Huskies, made 20 appearances out of the bullpen. He posted a 21:5 K/BB ratio over 21 innings. Dandeneau was an All-Star last summer in the Futures Collegiate Baseball League with the Brockton Rox.
Sanford Mainers
Prospects: CJ Krowiak (Binghamton), Brendan Skidkmore (Binghamton), Joseph Orlando (Binghamton), Brandon Bingel (Bryant), Ryan O'Connor (Fairfield), Ben Wessel (Rhode Island), Jordan Powell (Rhode Island), Michael Landestoy (TCU), Dalton Brown (TCU), Tristan Chari (Vanderbilt)
Jordan Powell (Rhode Island) |
Upper Valley Nighthawks
Prospects: Grayson Byrd (Clemson), Walker Grisanti (Vanderbilt), Brian Mims (UNCW), Zack Canada (UNCW)
Walker Grisanti (Vanderbilt) |
Valley Blue Sox
Prospects: Trent Astle (Xavier), Greg Jacknewitz (Xavier)- pair of relievers for the Musketeers
Vermont Mountaineers
Prospects: Jeremy McCuin (Arizona St), Christian Isbell (Arizona St), Fitzpatrick Stadler (Arizona St), Trevor Holmes (Connecticut), Troy Scocca (Fairfield), Daniel Little (Louisville), Sam Bordner (Louisville), Zeke Pinkham (Louisville)
The Mountaineers have several players coming from Arizona State, headed up by reliever Christian Isbell. The Sun Devil right-hander posted a 2.84 ERA over 15 appearances, striking out 10 over 19 innings. Teammate Jeremy McCuin struggled this spring, hitting just .161 over 26 games. Fairfield, making their first appearance in the tournament, is led by Troy Scocca, who hit .277/.373/.435 with five home runs, 34 RBIs, and five stolen bases. Louisville righthander Sam Bordner has been reliable in the bullpen, striking out 21 in 20 2/3 innings of work and even picking up a save.
Winnipesaukee Muskrats
Prospects: Anthony Maselli (Boston Col), Paul Campbell (Clemson)
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It's pretty cool to see all of these players on top teams will be coming to New England this summer, and if you took the time to read through all of the teams above, you'll know what to watch over the ensuing weeks. Some players might be quick outs, but other's will be with their teams through Omaha.
An interesting study worth pursuing is how teams form connections with college programs, at least over the last few years. There's definitely players from Vanderbilt who routinely end up with the Gulls, and Keene has had a Virginia connection as I briefly talked about earlier. Overall, the teams sending players here are some of the best in the league.
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