
Scots Open MWC Tournament
Release Date: May 10, 2000
The Monmouth College Fighting
Scots (19-13) are heading to Grinnell College Friday to play in the Midwest Conference
Baseball Championships, but another name for the event could easily be the "NCAA
Sub-Regional Tournament."
For the first time ever, the MWC
champion will be an automatic NCAA Tournament qualifier. That would have come in handy
over the past 20 years, as Monmouth last appeared in baseball’s "Big Dance" in 1983 but
won seven times MWC titles in the meantime.
The Scots’ first assignment at the
four-team, double-elimination playoffs will be North Division champion St. Norbert
(22-9). The Scots will face the Green Knights at 11 a.m. at the Grinnell High School
field while the South Division champion Grinnell Pioneers (18-11) meet two-time
defending champion Ripon (15-16) at the same time at the college field.
The winners of the 11 a.m. games will
meet at 2 p.m. at the college field, while the losers battle to stave off elimination at
the high school at 2 p.m. Games continue Saturday for three of the teams, with the
championship slated for 1 p.m. at the college field.
"As in any tourney, it’s anybody’s
tourney," said coach Roger Sander, who noted that prohibitive NCAA favorites Cincinnati
and Duke failed to win basketball titles the last two seasons. "It’s a matter of which
team gets hot at the right time."
In terms of head-to-head play,
Grinnell took three out of four games with Monmouth, winning two one-run decisions,
while Ripon took three out of four against St. Norbert, including a 24-5 pounding last
weekend. In the game St. Norbert did take from the Red Hawks, it had to rally from an
early 8-0 deficit.
The first game for all four schools
is obviously very important, but as Carroll’s softball team learned over the weekend,
it’s not absolutely essential to win it. The Pioneers actually dropped their opener to
Monmouth but came all the way back through the loser’s bracket to claim the title.
Sander feels his team has the pitching depth to pull off a similar feat if necessary.
"I definitely feel we have the depth,
but sometimes it’s more a matter of overcoming mental and physical fatigue than having
superior talent," said Sander of fighting back through the loser’s bracket in long
nine-inning contests. "Winning three games in one day is not easy, but we hope we don’t
have to face that scenario."
The Green Knights, who won the MWC
tourney in 1996 and 1997, are led at the plate by designated hitter Nicky Cordy (.436)
and left fielder Dave Reichwald (.418). The pair also leads St. Norbert on the basepaths
with 10 and 13 steals, respectively. The power comes from farther on down their list of
top hitters, as catcher Bryan Lemmans (.347) has four homers and center fielder Josh
Krowiorz (.298) has five. Other Knights who have helped the team compile a staggering
.355 average are shortstop Mike Frelich (.393), Matt Frank (.358) and right fielder Mike
Kessler (.353).
On the mound, Evan Celing has a 5-1
mark with a 3.50 ERA. Joe Borchardt (4-1, 5.67) and Zach Sand (3-2, 7.79) lead the team
in starts.
"They’re a really good-hitting
ballclub," said Sander. "They don’t give up, either. If they don’t come back and win
that game when they were down 8-0, then Ripon is the champion. I think we’re very
similar teams, but I think you might give the edge in pitching to us."
While St. Norbert’s powerful offense
is producing nearly nine runs per game, its pitching has been suspect. The staff’s ERA
of 6.23 is over a run and a half more than Monmouth’s 4.72.
Ryan Johnson is the Scots’ ace
with a 5-3 record and 2.55 ERA. The team’s lone southpaw has fanned 51 in 53 innings and
he’ll get the nod vs. St. Norbert. From there, a conventional approach would have
Sander’s other two planned starters, Beau Hellman (4-1, 3.23) and Joe Larkins
(4-2, 4.34), also start a game. But Sander believes in putting the best arm on the
mound, which is why current assistant coach Brent Dugan threw 23 innings in 24 hours in
the 1994 championships.
"Hopefully, it’ll be Johnson, Hellman
and Larkins for three complete-game wins, and that’ll be it," said Sander, who also has
Toby Lannholm (3-0, 3.27) and Jake Bilyeu (1-5, 7.42) available in the
pen.
Offensively, the Scots have had great
success in the top five slots of the lineup with an all-Galesburg contingent of
shortstop Casey Boydstun (.386, school records of 49 hits and 21 steals), second
baseman Shawn Hickey (.343), center fielder Steve Glasgow (.402, 24 RBI),
designated hitter Joe Larkins (.323, 7 HR, 27 RBI) and catcher Taylor Thiel
(.300). The sixth and seventh men aren’t shabby, either, as first baseman Kevin
Clarey is riding a 10-game hitting streak and is batting .402 to go with six homers
and 25 RBI. He recently became the third Fighting Scot to earn the MWC’s South Division
Player of the Week honor. Left fielder Jim Starcevich, who bats seventh, has
flourished in his new starting role, hitting .409. Starcevich doesn’t have enough
at-bats for season-long statistical qualifications, but he did qualify in the MWC and
wound up third with a .464 average. Glasgow led the way at .488.
A possible foe down the road would be
Grinnell, which possesses good pitching in the
form of last season’s South Division
Player of the Year, Jake Chavez. The fireballing righthander topped Monmouth twice this
season, including a 1-0 masterpiece over Johnson for the Scots’ only defeat at Glasgow
Field.
"What’s Grinnell going to do (with
him)?" asked Sander. "I have no idea. But IC knocked him around pretty good and he’s had
two losses, so somebody’s hitting him."
Chavez was a perfect 4-0 in MWC play
with a league-best 1.57 ERA. His win total was equaled by Ripon double-threat Nick
Johnson, who also clubbed an MWC-high nine homers. Other league leaders present at the
tourney will be Boydstun (10 steals) and Ripon’s Dan Pacer (28 RBI) and Chris Morgan (42
strikeouts, two saves).
Should Monmouth have the answer for
Chavez, the Knights and anyone else that stands in its way, Sander said the team would
learn of its NCAA fate Sunday night or Monday morning.
"As of right now, St. Olaf’s the
third-ranked team in the country, so my guess is we’d go to Minnesota if we won, or
maybe to one of the state schools in Wisconsin," said Sander. The Scots last NCAA foes
in 1983 were Ohio Northern and Luther in a regional that Monmouth hosted after going
21-2 in the regular season. |