College baseball column: Hitting the bases at UCI
Amara Aguilar
It’s definitely not going to be a walk in the ballpark for the
newly reinstated UC Irvine men’s baseball team this season.
Although the future looks bright and the young squad has mounds of
potential, it will be a year for the team to learn, mature and adjust.
Not that the Anteaters won’t be competitive. Although not one of UCI’s
players has Division I experience, the team is loaded with young talent.
“Our players are young and inexperienced and we’re only going to get
better,†UCI Coach John Savage said. “We have got to get in the fire and
experience it and with the type of people we are playing, we’ll be well
tested and I think by the time league starts we’ll be prepared.â€
UCI’s squad, which consists of only freshmen and juniors, has a tough
schedule that will test the Anteaters and help them gear up for Big West
Conference play. Among opponents they will face in preseason are UCLA,
BYU, Pepperdine, USC, Arizona, Michigan, California, UNLV and San Diego
State.
“By the time league hits against Pacific, we really want to know who
are the tough guys that can step up during crunch time,†Savage said. “I
think we’ll do that because our nonleague is so strong that by the time
league hits we’ll be in pretty good shape. At least we’ll know who can
hold their end of the deal up and who is ready and who is not.â€
Savage acknowledges the Anteaters’ schedule is difficult, but he looks
at it as a challenge and he is approaching the season with a realistic
attitude.
“We know there are going to be some bumps along the road,†he said,
“but that’s what any good program has to go through before getting good.â€
One of many things UCI players will have to adjust to this season is
the speed of Division I baseball.
“The speed is so much quicker at the Division I level,†Savage said.
“Guys are throwing the ball harder. There are better runners. There’s
more power. We are really trying to help our freshmen adjust to that game
speed and we have to be very positive with them.â€
Not only are the players on UCI’s baseball team young, the coaches are
too. Savage is 36, followed by assistant coaches Jason Gill (31) and Pat
Shine (30). Volunteer assistant coach Joe DeMarco is the youngest at 26.
Speaking of coaches, who is Savage’s inspiration as far as baseball
goes? It’s USC Coach Mike Gillespie.
“I learned so much from him in terms of everyday operations of running
a program, that I tried to follow his lead when it comes to a lot of
that,†Savage said.
As a pitching coach and recruiter under Gillespie at USC, Savage said
his most memorable moment was winning the national championship with the
Trojans in 1998.
Maybe he can add another championship with the Anteaters in the years
to come.
Pitcher Brett Smith was recently ranked the 20th best freshman
prospect in the country by Baseball America, but it will be junior Paul
French who will start in the Anteaters’ first game.
Most of the UCI baseball players are from California, with a few
exceptions. Freshman catcher Jeff Werhun is from Alberta. Being from
Canada, of course he played hockey in high school.
Junior outfielder Chet Womach is from Spokane, Wash. and freshman
pitcher Reid Matsushima is from Hawaii.
A few other players have experience in other sports besides baseball.
Junior outfielder Jon Horwitz played water polo in high school. Freshman
pitcher Glenn Swanson, junior pitcher Sean Tracey, freshman outfielder
Evan Harney and junior pitcher Keith Raulinaitis played football in their
prep days. Junior outfielder Chris Klemm lettered in basketball and
football in high school.
One UCI baseball player has already played in a World Series. Freshman
outfielder Erik Johnson competed in the 1996 Little League World Series.
A couple of UCI baseball players have family ties in Major League
Baseball. Junior pitcher Paul French has a brother in the San Diego
Padres organization. Freshman Brett Dalton is related to Mike Dalton,
formerly of the Pittsburgh Pirates and Detroit Tigers.
Anteater Ballpark will be ready for action just in time for Opening
Day Friday. The scoreboard was recently put up and a temporary press box
will be set up for UCI’s first contest against the University of San
Diego. The game starts at 7 p.m.
And finally, UCI baseball season tickets may be purchased by calling
(949) UCI-WINS. The Anteaters have 35 home games during the regular
season. Reserved season tickets are $100. An adult individual ticket is
$7. Seniors and those ages 18-and-under are $4. Children under 5 and the
first 600 UCI students with valid student identification are free.
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