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Kennesaw State 8, Georgia 6

I drew some measure of encouragement from the Diamond Dogs' road win over Kennesaw State on Tuesday night. That extra confidence was not entirely decimated by the Red and Black's home loss to the Owls on Wednesday afternoon, but the setback certainly didn't help matters.

Alex McRee was on the mound in the top of the first frame and the Georgia starter not only surrendered a bunt single to leadoff hitter Jacob Robbins, he compounded the poor start with an error that allowed the Kennesaw State second baseman to advance to third. This made it easy for Ric Bishop to register an R.B.I. groundout to give the visitors a 1-0 lead.

Fortunately, the home team took it right back (and then some) in the bottom of the inning. Ryan Peisel began the Classic City Canines' turn at the plate by drawing a walk and taking second on a wild pitch. Michael Demperio walked, as well, and, after Gordon Beckham popped up, Rich Poythress's single to center field scored Peisel. Although Matt Olson hit into a fielder's choice, Demperio moved over to third and scored on the throw. Joey Lewis flied out to end the inning with Georgia holding a 2-1 advantage.

A two-out base hit by Andrew Martin in the top of the ensuing stanza marked the only at-bat of the second canto to generate anything other than an out for either squad, but the Owls went right back on the offensive in the visitors' half of the third inning. Following a Bucky Smith flyout to begin the proceedings, Robbins put down his second successful bunt attempt of the game and promptly thereafter stole second. When an error allowed Bishop to reach base and advance to second himself, Robbins scored an unearned run to tie the contest.

Unearned . . . you know, like Elvis's black belt.

This marked the end of McRee's stay on the hill, as the Georgia starter was pulled after facing just a dozen batters, striking out two but surrendering a trio of hits. Although he ultimately was to be charged with three runs, none of them were earned, although one of them was his fault. Ryan Woolley assumed the hurling responsibilities and proceeded directly to plunk Jay Morrow.

Jace Whitmer plated Bishop with a base hit to left field and, after Drew Fowlkes reached on the error that loaded the bases, Martin hit into the fielder's choice that ended the Owls' turn at the plate with K.S.U. holding a 3-2 edge. Beckham was hit by a pitch and swiped second in the bottom of the frame, but none of his teammates succeeded either in reaching base or in advancing him nearer to home.

A base hit by Smith in the fourth canto went for naught when the K.S.U. shortstop was caught stealing to record the third out of the inning but Olson's leadoff single in the home half of the stanza carried consequences, as the Georgia right fielder took second on a wild pitch and came around to score on a Bryce Massanari single to center field before Lyle Allen lined into the inning-ending double play that left the score snarled at 3-3.

Stephen Ochs took over the pitching duties at the outset of the fifth frame and immediately conceded a base hit to Martin Baker. Morrow followed up a Bishop flyout with a single of his own to move the Kennesaw State center fielder over to third. Fortunately, Whitmer hit into the double play that kept Baker from breaking the deadlock. The Diamond Dogs, though, did nothing to capitalize upon this opportunity in the bottom of the stanza, as neither a Matt Cerione single nor a Demperio walk generated a run.

Evidently, Georgia's offensive philosophy against Kennesaw State was "walks, not runs."

The Classic City Canines' comedy of errors continued in the top of the sixth inning, although the visitors did much to help their own cause, commencing with a leadoff walk by Fowlkes. Martin sacrificed the Kennesaw State designated hitter over to second and, after Tyler Stubblefield was plunked, Smith hit into the fielder's choice that sent Fowlkes to third. A Robbins walk and a run-scoring passed ball signaled the end of Ochs's evening.

On came Stephen Brock, at the start of whose watch Robbins stole second and Baker registered a base hit. The Owl center fielder advanced as far as third on an error while claiming credit for having batted in a pair of runs, then another error allowed Bishop to reach first and Baker to plate another unearned score. Mercifully, the K.S.U. left fielder was caught stealing to end a two-error, one-hit, four-run inning.

No Diamond Dog reached base in the bottom of the sixth stanza and no player for either team reached base in the seventh canto. The visitors built on their lead in the top of the eighth frame, in which a one-out base hit by Stubblefield chased Brock from the game, putting Nick Montgomery in a position to surrender a run-scoring double to Smith. The latest Georgia reliever retired the next two batters to keep the score 8-3 in Kennesaw State's favor.

Peisel led off the bottom of the eighth inning with a base hit to right field. Demperio singled to center field and, after Beckham flied out, Poythress tacked on the base hit that brought Peisel home. An additional single by Olson scored Demperio and forced a K.S.U. pitching change. The resulting wild pitch plated Poythress before Lewis and Massanari both popped up to bring down the curtain on a three-run, four-hit frame that brought the home team within two runs of their guests.

Missed it by that much.

Each of the first two Owls to bat in the top of the ninth canto grounded out, but Whitmer's subsequent single to left field earned Montgomery the hook. Dean Weaver then became the sixth Georgia pitcher of the night but the first neither to plunk nor to permit a hit to the first batter he faced; instead, the Bulldog closer struck out Fowlkes.

It appeared as though the Red and Black were determined to overcome their own miscues when Allen began the bottom of the final frame with a base hit. However, there followed a Cerione strikeout, a Peisel pop-up, and a Demperio flyout to give the visitors the victory in a game the Diamond Dogs did not deserve to win.

The first three batters in the Georgia order between them went two for ten and batted in no runs. Although the Classic City Canines were outperformed only by two runs (8-6) and by two hits (11-9), the Owls committed no errors, as opposed to the Bulldogs' five. Ryan Peisel, who was charged with his sixth and seventh errors of the season on Wednesday, notched a higher number in the "E" column (2) than he did in the "H" column (1).

Granted, Kennesaw State is better than you think, but the Red and Black appeared to lack focus in what could have been a series-sweeping midweek victory. They will need to hit, pitch, and field better as a team if they hope to emerge victorious from Starkville following this weekend's three-game S.E.C. set with Mississippi State.

Go 'Dawgs!

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A short time ago...
I spoke of the unintended consequences of the BCS which affect the entire landscape of the intercollegiate platform.  You wanted more input and examples of how these unintended consequences play out.  I received this article as an email from one of my closest friends, who is a national cross checker with a professional baseball team.

Here is the article:

Paltry Sums

Baseball scholarships are a drop in the bucket
March 25, 2008

The New York Times doesn't frequently delve into college baseball coverage, and anyway, they've been busy lately what with reporting the extramarital affairs of John McCain (alleged), Elliot Spitzer (confirmed!) and David Paterson (yikes).

However, when they did recently, the news was fascinating. A Times story on the amount of money parents spend on chasing down college scholarships found that the average scholarship for sports other than football and basketball amounts to $8,707. The study, based on data from the 2003-2004 academic year, also found that men's rifle was the lowest overall average scholarship sport, at $3,608.

Of more interest here at BA, baseball checked in at second-lowest among men's sports, at a paltry $5,806.

Conveniently, the Southeastern Conference held a conference call with coaches the day after the story was published. Instead of shooting fish in a barrel and asking Ron Polk what he thought about the NCAA, we talked to several other coaches about the results of the study, and the answers of course were predictable.

Yet they still merit attention, thanks to the NCAA's ruling last year to require Division I baseball programs to give student-athletes who receive athletic scholarship aid a minimum 25 percent share of a scholarship.

Big Brother Approach

 With baseball still limited to a maximum of 11.7 scholarships--and with the American Baseball Coaches Association reporting that less than half of D-I programs are fully funded--the change will significantly alter the college baseball landscape.

"When I played at VMI, I always figured those rifle guys were getting more than me," Auburn coach Tom Slater deadpanned. "I can tell you seriously that at Auburn right now, 17 of our 31 players receive scholarships less than the 25 percent threshold.

"There have been a lot of players who have come in for less than 25 percent and really helped our program . . . I'm not happy that we no longer will have that option."

No college coach is happy about the 25 percent rule, which actually might be the one change that is most disappointing across the college coaching spectrum. College baseball is going through convulsing changes presently, from a possible new stadium in Omaha to a compacted schedule, new transfer rule and the 25 percent rule.

The full slate of changes is plenty to swallow, but most of the changes have advocates and critics. The 25 percent rule seems to only have critics.

"It shows that we don't have the support and respect (of the NCAA)," South Carolina coach Ray Tanner said. "I understand the APR (academic progress rate) and graduation rates. I don't understand why we don't get any respect from the NCAA. I'm appalled and disappointed by it. It's been a blow. It's not going to really affect coaches, though; it's the players that it really hurts . . .

"If this were basketball and Coach K (Duke's Mike Kryzyzewski) spoke up about it, they'd listen. We haven't had that in our sport."

This is a role that only Polk has tried to fill, but even Polk admitted last June, during the College World Series, that he was not the best choice to try to earn the NCAA's respect. He set that case back in the fall with a 19-page letter trying to convince administrators, college coaches and NCAA officials of baseball's plight. Polk has criticized the NCAA so much in his career--and NCAA president Myles Brand in particular--that no one in the organization seems to take him seriously. And no other coach has shown the guts to take Polk's place as a national advocate.

 Private Dancers

At least all but one of the 12 SEC schools are public and somewhat affordable, and other SEC schools such as Georgia and Louisiana State can stretch recruiting dollars thanks to state lottery-sponsored scholarships.

Where does that leave private schools such as Duke and Richmond, who played each other the day after the Times' story was released? Blue Devils coach Sean McNally is only in his third season and hasn't made quite the same reputation as Coach K yet. (In fact, the most impressive building close to Duke's Jack Coombs Stadium isn't the ballpark but rather the looming, brand-new practice facility for Coach K's basketball program down the right-field line.)

McNally said a full ride to Duke costs more than $47,000. If he gives a player 25 percent under the new rules, the player will still have to pay about $36,000. In other words, middle-class student-athletes need not apply to expensive, private schools such as Duke, Stanford, Tulane or Vanderbilt.

"From a socioeconomic standpoint, the middle is getting squeezed," McNally said. "We can go after players who qualify for financial aid, or we can go after the high scholarship guy, the full-ride guy where we invest a lot, or we can recruit players from affluent families."

The NCAA sets the rules, and every college coach will have to adjust to them. It just so happens that right now, after eight years of growth and prosperity that followed the NCAA's expansion of the postseason to 64 teams and toning down the performance of metal bats, lots of rules are changing at the same time, leaving coaches uneasy.

"I think the game is the best it's ever been," Tennessee coach Todd Raleigh said. "It seemed like things were rolling along pretty good. I see all these changes and I think there could be a lot of unintended consequences."

"A Regular Season Bracketed Playoff - Truly Making Every Game A Playoff in College Football While Upholding The Tradition of the Bowls!"

by bcsbusters on Mar 27, 2008 2:44 AM EDT reply actions  

Very interesting
When Ron Polk was Georgia's baseball coach, he spoke at a Bulldog Club meeting I attended. He made many of these same criticisms at that time, including pointing out that, even though he had coached such future major leaguers as Will Clark and Rafael Palmeiro, he had never been able to offer a full scholarship to any player.

The last line from Todd Raleigh is particularly telling: "I see all these changes and I think there could be a lot of unintended consequences." Short of Lord Falkland's dictum that, when it is not necessary to change, it is necessary not to change, I don't know that I have ever read a more succinct summation of the wisdom of cautious conservatism: all change carries consequences which are unknown and unknowable, so any change should be made only after careful deliberation.

College baseball, which is an afterthought for most people (even most sports fans), gets slighted and bears the brunt of change because it barely receives cursory consideration, much less careful deliberation.

Thank you for sharing that item, BCSBusters.

by T Kyle King on Mar 27, 2008 7:55 AM EDT reply actions  

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