Seriously????? Do you watch college baseball at all. Oregon State won back to back championships with nothing but pitching and defense. They had minimal power and scored runs by bunting and stealing. This year they are hitting .275 as a team with 22 team bombs, but they have an incredible team fielding percentage of .976(unreal) and an era of 3.69.
Fresno State won a world series with their bullpen and timely hitting. Guys like mendonca and susdorf and hit a few bombs, but they were a station to station team. Teams like CS-Fullerton, UC-Irvine, Cal Poly, Long Beach St, etc all play great defense, pitch lights out and move runners.
watch the damn games
check out the stats for UT this year, a team that will most likely make it to the cws. not very many homeruns in that lineup but yet they are ranked in the top 5 i think
You bring up very good points.
Texas is the #1 national seed this year. Their team batting average of .289 is nine points higher than the Cajuns this season. Their slugging percentage and on-base percentage are comparable to the 09 UL team. They have only 31 home runs all season (we hit 50). Their runs per game average is pretty close to what we scored. They've had nearly 80 sacrifice bunts....more than 30 more than we did (and some think WE play small ball). They've stolen about the same number of bases as the Cajuns.
But their team ERA is 2.8. That's unreal in college baseball today. They field .980...also unheard of.
And all they are is the #1 seed going into the NCAA Regionals.
If you start with 2002 (and Fresno was somewhat of an aberration last year, although their bullpen was nails in the CWS), the teams that have won the CWS have done it with pitching, defense and timely hitting.
#1 overall national seed actually with 31 HRs and a .289 team BA
For comparison, LSU is #3 with 89 HRs and bats .313
Cajuns had 51 HRs and batted .278
EDIT: Jay just beat me to it. Power hitting can get you to the top, but small ball and great pitching and fielding can do it as well.
I saw nothing wrong with the Cajun batting "philosophy" this season. Our guys simply failed to fight hard at the plate, at very peculiar times and we errored our way out of contests. To say we watched too many pitches to raise pitch counts and that we played nothing but small ball is totally false. We swung at many a first pitch, we swung for the fences with guys in scoring position, and the bats let us down.
Griffen needs some batting instruction on how to connect with that big swing. It is a shame that Goulas wasn't healthy from the git-go. I think that would have made a world of mental difference to the entire team. I thought we had plenty of players with pop in their bats... and still do. They just didn't get tough at the plate... half the season it seemed like guys were just taking batting practice and content to go back to the dugout.
The only philosophical issue I questioned was the constant lineup changes. I know it was tactical for a lot of reasons I can't see from the outside. But, it seemed like it may have lifted the player leadership requirement out of the rotation. I'm probably way off, but something about the line-up changes always left me wondering who out of our upperclassmen were mentally in charge of the team.
If things improve from a mental standpoint (toughness at the plate and defensively) these same guys are a regional team next year.
Oregon State did not have a lot of pop in their lineup. Both of those Beaver national championship teams were built off of excellent pitching and defense. It is pitching and defense that has been the path to the title for the vast majority of teams since the de-tuning of the aluminum bat.
Brian
Yup. They play the best defense in the country and have the deepest pitching staff (notice I did not say best front-line starters ... although they are still very good here ... especially Ruffin).
This is the way Texas has always done it under Garrido. Texas is always near the top in number of sacrifice bunts and in some years is far and away the leader. They won two national championships this decade on pitching and defense (and small ball) and challenged for several more.
Brian
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