Supers in Raleigh – Previewing The Rice Owls

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Fans of Wolfpack Baseball (47-14) became Owls fans this past weekend in droves.  One set of Owls eventually got sent home from Chapel Hill despite a pretty plucky performance there.

The other set of Owls however, came thru big time for the Wolfpack.

By topping the Oregon Ducks in game seven Monday evening in the Eugene Regional, the Rice Owls (44-18) kept the Pack’s travel budget under control this year.  And who needs national seeds anyway when you’ve got birds of prey on your side?  The Pack now gets to host the Super Regional round in Raleigh, just as they should have been all along.

In their own right, the Pack is coming off of a rather impressive performance in the Raleigh Regional.  The Pack was perfect in Raleigh, first dispatching Binghamton in the first game, then sitting William & Mary down two straight.  In three games the Pack yielded only 3 runs, including a shutout gem from Carlos Rodon when he faced the BillnMary on Saturday.

Now it’s the Owls turn to try their hand in Raleigh.

It’s a best of three series at The Doak this weekend between the Owls and the Woflpack, with the winner advancing to the College World Series in Omaha.  It’s the first time ever for Wolfpack Baseball hosting a Super Regional round in Raleigh.

Let’s hope it’s a memorable one.

Color_Rice_RRice Owls

44-18 (15-9 C-USA, t1st, RPI #26)
Bid: Automatic, C-USA Tournament Champions

OK yeah, we appreciate the Owls’ assist in the Eugene Regional, allowing the Pack to keep home field advantage for the Supers.  But that’s over.  The Owls now become the enemy and must be handled as such if the Pack hopes to reach Omaha next weekend.

So let’s see what make them tick….

At The Plate

Offensively, in many ways Rice is a very similar ballclub to the Wolfpack, statistically speaking.  Taking a look at their numbers vs those of the Pack bears this out and if anything, in some categories they have a clear edge, such as onbase% and strikeouts per game.

Rice bats .280 as a club (vs .281 for the Pack).  They’ve knocked 25 HRs on the season (Pack=29), have an onbase% of .371 (Pack=.364) and a slugging% of .371 (Pack=.391).  They strike out 5.40 times per game (Pack=6.38) while drawing 4.27 walks per game (Pack=4.03).

For the season however, the Owls have averaged scoring 5.24 runs per game while the Pack has averaged pushing 6.30 men across per contest.  So, what’s the x-factor here for the Pack that has allowed the Pack to average more than a full run more per game despite getting on base less often?

Small ball, baby.  We play it with abandon and it works for us (usually).  Moreover, we play to our strength of team speed and take advantage of it at every opportunity.

As an example of the difference there, consider that the Owls have stolen only 41 bases on 64 attempts for the season.  The Pack on the other hand has swiped 104 bags on 137 attempts.  That’s 250%+ more opportunity taken to try to move a man into position to score.  And when Trea Turner (and others) get themselves into scoring position, especially without having to give up an extra out to do so, it tends to disrupt the opposition’s battery, often leading to even more opportunity from unforced errors.

On the other hand, Rice has managed to gun down nearly half (32/65) of opposing baserunners attempting to steal on them.  So this shapes up as a key point by which this series might be decided.  I don’t expect the Pack to change gears at this point.  You dance with the one that brung ya, as they say.  Nor do I think Rice has faced our level of speed day in and day out in C-USA.

If they manage to keep us in check and off the bases completely, or if they manage to gun down a few steal attempts, it could be a huge turning point in the wrong direction no doubt.  But I like our chances nonetheless.

Plain and simple: For the Pack…Speed Kills.

Offense: Advantage Wolfpack

Rice Top Offensive Performers

Shane Hoelscher (#2, Jr, 3B) – leads the Owls in batting average (.331),  His other numbers are misleading from having missed time (23 games) due to injury and I don’t feel like crunching the numbers to prorate them.  He can hit, but rarely with power, that’s all ya need to know.

Michael Ratterree (#8, Sr RF) – his 9 HRs leads the team, as does his 48 runs scored.  Second in RBIs (41) and slg% (.442).  Carries an overall avg. of .270, draws a lot of BBs (43) but Ks a lot too (39).  Also lead with 12 stolen bases in 14 attempts.

Michael Aquino (#15, Jr, DH/OF) – Owls top RBI man with 42, also tops with slg% of .502.  2nd on the team in avg. (.312), HRs (8) and doubles (13), 3rd in runs scored (44), .  Strikes out a lot (his 53 leads the team) and walks way less than he should (18).  But if he’s got a bat in his hands, he’s dangerous.

Christian Stringer (#5, Sr, 2B) – Leads the team in runs scored (47) and doubles (14).  Is 2nd on the team in onbase% (.417) and 3rd for avg (.304) and slg% (.409) and drawing walks (40).

In The Field

The Owls have a very good pitching staff, plain and simple.  They check in with a staff ERA of 2.81 (18th nationally) while the Pack checks in at 3.12 on the season (29th).  They have a .224 against avg, compared to .215 for the Pack.  Overall, they give up 3.56 runs per game, while the Pack surrenders an average of 3.85 per game.

Both teams ring up their share of strikeout victims.  The Pack is in elite national company here of course (8.8 per 9innings, #3), but Rice is no slouch at 7.6 per 9innings, good enough for 37th nationally.

The Owls are extremely good at keeping the ball in the ballpark having given up only 15 HRs on the year, while the Pack has yielded more than twice as many at 32.  Similar to the Pack, they’re 9th in the nation in hits allowed/9innings at 7.12 (Pack=7.08 for 6th), and 67th in the nation in BBs/9 at 3.14 (Pack=3.56 for 138th).

Not surprisingly therefore, both teams come in with very similar WHIP numbers as well.  Rice is 12th in the nation at 1.15, while the Pack checks in at 17th at 1.17.

So, based on cumulative season statistics alone….

Pitching: Advantage Owls (slight).

HOWEVER – and this is a BIG however (two actually)…

Caveat #1: We mentioned in the Raleigh Regional preview that if the Pack could cut down on the free passes that this staff could become truly elite.  Well, someone was listening apparently as Wolfpack pitchers would give up only two free passes during the regional, both in game one to Binghamton.  Keep that up please.

Caveat #2: Don’t read too much into the cumulative season ERA numbers for the Pack.  Alert readers will recall that the Pack’s staff ERA was at 3.49 just a couple of weeks ago.  That number is now down to 3.12.  That’s a tremendously large drop for this late in the season, so I went and crunched the numbers.

First, the Pack has given up only 8 runs in their six post-season games thus far for an avg of only 1.33 per game.  That’s ALL runs, not just earned.

But, when you get to their post-season ERA, they begin to look even scarier.  In the Pack’s six games since the regular season ended, they’re carrying an ERA of just 0.86.  That’s not just Carlos Rodon, mind you.  That’s the entire staff.  Rodon’s personal post-season ERA is just a shade under NADA in 19 innings of work.

Those numbers are amazing enough without background shading, but keep in mind the competition level there.  Aside from Binghamton, the other five games were all top 50 RPI teams, with UNC (#1 RPI) essentially figuring into the ERA twice with the 18 inning contest in Durham.  Clemson (#17 RPI) and Miami (#19 RPI) are also in that mix.

That’s getting it done, and then some.

So yeah, I’ll give the slight nod to Rice on pitching based on their cumulative season numbers.  But if we continue to toss it like we have been thus far in the post-season (and keep the walks and hit batsmen to a minimum), it won’t matter.

Rice Top Starters

Austin Kubitza (#21, JR, LHP) – 8-4, ERA 2.02, 102.1 IP, 0 HR, .188 against avg, 126 Ks, 48 BBs
Jordan Stephens (#27, Soph, RHP) – 8-4, ERA 2.48, 112.1 IP, 3 HRs, .213 against avg, 95 Ks, 29 BBs
John Simms (#13, Jr, RHP) – 8-4, ERA 2.61, 103.1 IP, 6 HRs, .223 against avg., 90 Ks, 34 BBs

And though I don’t usually bother trying to talk about individual bullpen performers of the opposition, this time I’m making an exception.  Remember the name Zech Lemond (#33, Soph, RHP).  Zech carries a 1.52 ERA on 71.0 IP.  He has 7 wins (7-1) out of the pen, has collected 14 saves and has a .198 against avg.

The Owls have other capable arms in the pen as well, but Zech Lemond (tell me that’s not a name they’d love in Chapel Hill) is a cut above and the Owls rely on him a LOT.  It would be very surprising if Wolfpack batters didn’t have to face him this weekend at some crucial point.

Defensively, the Owls are pretty solid with a fldpct of .974 (37th), though 3rd baseman Hoelscher can sometimes be rather suspect in bunches.  The Pack still struggles a bit on the bottom side of average at .968 (107th)

Rice University Vitals

Founded: 1912
Located: Houston, Texas
Total Enrollment: 6000+
Athletics Mascot: Sammy the Owl
Colors: Blue and Gray
Famous Alumni: Former Sec. of State James Baker, Former Atty. General Alberto Gonzales, former major leaguer Lance Berkman (yeah, I know he’s with the Rangers now…wanna take bets on whether he makes it to the break without another trip to the DL?  Hang ’em up Lance, your body will thank you later), and Candace Bushnell, infamous author of “Sex and the City”.  I told you heathens last time to read a book.  Feel free to skip that one.
Kinda Weird Tradtion: The Baker 13…what’s the point of streaking if you’re gonna cover up the best parts with shaving cream?

Links:

Rice Owls Baseball Home (RiceOwls.com)

C-USA Baseball Home (ConferenceUSA.com)

Pack Hosts Raleigh Super Regional (GoPack.com)

2013 NCAA Baseball Tournament Interactive Bracket (NCAA.com)

Raleigh Super Regional Info (GoPack.com)

Previewing the CWS super regionals (ESPN.com)

Games Schedule – TV

  • Friday June 7th, 4pm – ESPN2
  • Saturday June 8th, 4pm – ESPN2
  • Sunday June 9th, 4pm – ESPNU (if necessary)

I wanted to give a shout out the Wolfpack Nation.  The support for the baseball team has been tremendous in general here just lately.

Specifically, I also wanted to tell the patrons of our blog specifically how much I’ve enjoyed their increased interest and participation in our baseball threads.  I really do appreciate the chatter.

I was actually shocked (pleasantly) by how many folks came around for the evening sessions Monday to keep up with the Ducks/Owls (and to a lesser extent, those effing guys and the other Owls).

Also, there had been a request for a little analysis of the teams remaining and how they might stack up heading towards Omaha.  I decided to hold off on that for now for two reasons.

First, mojo.  Don’t want to get cocky and start looking too far ahead.

And Second, I’ll be doing research on at least 8 teams in all likelihood should we make Omaha, though admittedly the depth of that research is yet to be determined as that always depends on what kind of week I’m having.  Plus, this week I wanted to give the Owls their due and concentrate on them.  Not to mention that I didn’t want to talk about 16 teams, 8 of which won’t be standing after Monday.

But…to give a bit of a taste…the CWS is comprised of two separate four team double elim brackets.  The winners of those two brackets then face off for a best of three to determine a national champion.  Also, rest and pitching isn’t usually QUITE as big of an issue as each bracket alternates days of play.

The brackets will go a little something like this for the initial matchups:

Bracket A
#1 vs #8 – N.Carolina/S.Carolina winner vs. NC State/Rice winner
#4 vs #5 – LSU/Oklahoma winner vs CS Fullerton/UCLA winner

Bracket B
#2 vs #7 – Vandy/Louisville winner vs FSU/Indiana winner
#3 vs #6 – Oregon State/K State winner vs UVa/Miss. St. winner

Of those teams, all were #1 seeds in their regional aside from Rice and Oklahoma, and all of the national seeds except Oregon made it thru.  So, regardless of which of those teams end up advancing from Supers and filling those seeded slots it’s going to be a very good CWS.

Better if the Pack gets that first round shot at the Heels, however.

Incidentally, if all of the favorites win this weekend, the ACC will have four of the eight teams in Omaha.  That might be fun.

Go Pack!!  Beat the Owls then PACK for Omaha!!!

About Wufpacker

A 2nd generation alumnus and raised since birth to be irrationally dedicated to all things NC State. Class of '88 and '92.

Baseball

69 Responses to Supers in Raleigh – Previewing The Rice Owls

  1. PackerInRussia 06/05/2013 at 2:19 AM #

    No time like the postseason to be pitching at your best. Go Pack! Defeat the Angry Birds!

    By the way, College Baseball got a little corner of ESPN’s home page that contained this article which has a brief preview of each super regional matchup for those who are interested: http://tinyurl.com/llrmcl4

  2. Wufpacker 06/05/2013 at 2:31 AM #

    Thanks for that PIR…I will add it to main body of the entry as well.

  3. redcanine 06/05/2013 at 7:33 AM #

    Whatever happened to Wise potato chips?

  4. Tuffy2 06/05/2013 at 7:49 AM #

    I am sure this is stupid to even bring up but is there anybody out there that cannot attend the games who have purchased their tickets? I could not think of spending my 58th birthday Saturday any where else.

    On another note, I wish ESPN would promote college baseball more. They do show the games on ESPN3 during the season and one would think it would also prepare MLB fans to get a glimpse of future stars.

  5. Tuffy2 06/05/2013 at 8:04 AM #

    Whatever happened to Wise potato chips?

    Good question redcanine. Frito-Lay might have something to do with it as Wise just could not compete against that giant.
    In the summer of 2005 Wise forged direct ties to the New York Mets through a multi-tiered, three-year sponsorship deal that made Wise the Official Potato Chip of the Mets[. Wise products are sold exclusively at Shea Stadium.

  6. Texpack 06/05/2013 at 8:25 AM #

    Rice is an outstanding university and people in Houston all pull for Rice. If the Owls make it past The Pack, they will be the team I’ll be pulling for in Omaha.

    Having said that, I’ll also say that I actually remember listening to State’s only CWS appearance ever. It was out on the back porch using the old box radio my Daddy had with tubes that had to warm up. That my friends is way too long ago. This is our time to return to Omaha and break the streak. I thoroughly enjoyed watching on Sunday. I even cut loose a “Woo Baby” that would have made Ric Flair proud when FAU hit the grand slam. I am very much looking forward to the weekend. Go Pack!

  7. TheCOWDOG 06/05/2013 at 8:30 AM #

    I’ve always dug the Textura font of the Rice cap insignia.

    Way clean.

  8. Pack Leader 06/05/2013 at 8:52 AM #

    Whatever happened to Wise potato chips?

    You mean a Wise oil chips? God those things were so greasy…

  9. Pack Leader 06/05/2013 at 9:10 AM #

    Sounds like Avent will throw RodoCop out there in Game 1…

    “We’ve tried to keep routine that’s big for us… we’re probably going to go with Carlos on Friday, but we haven’t made that decision. It’s probably going to be Carlos Rodon on Friday.”

    “You’d like to get that first one, and just one more, here we go, but it can be done either way. You can lose the first one and win the next two or vice versa, and if your guy is ready to go, why not?”

  10. CaptainCraptacular 06/05/2013 at 10:00 AM #

    good stuff wufpacker. Very much look forward to the previews/game updates/recaps.

  11. Whiteshoes67 06/05/2013 at 10:05 AM #

    Got to give Rodon the ball in game 1. I suspect Avent knows he made a mistake last year in the super. With that said, the Friday forecast here is calling for heavy thunderstorms, possibility of more than an inch in rain.

  12. Tuffy2 06/05/2013 at 10:24 AM #

    He better be looking at the weather for Friday because that is the day and night that we are suppose to have the most rain in the area. Hate for Rodon to have to sit out a few hours after starting the game and not be able to be on after the rain delay. Worst yet, not able to return.

    If they cancel the game would that extend the series to Monday or they play a double on Saturday? I would hope that it would be finished up on Monday.

    A very interesting note that the espn3 announcers stated during the Rice vs Oregon game that Rice was very glad to be playing where it would be cool when they found out they were gong to oregon. I thought to myself that if they play here they will get a taste of that North Carolina humidity. I thought that statement was weird because playing in Texas is not exactly cool weather country.

  13. Whiteshoes67 06/05/2013 at 10:37 AM #

    Compared to Houston in June, Rice will enjoy NC weather. Boys are going to have to play some mistake free baseball. Mental and physical errors against Graham’s teams will get you into big trouble. Team that makes the fewest mistakes this weekend wins.

  14. Whiteshoes67 06/05/2013 at 10:39 AM #

    I think this is an appropriate place to thank Cowdog and the rest of the 1968 Wolfpack baseball team that last represented us in Omaha. For all you News and Observers readers out there, a little birdie told me they’re planning to run a piece and put up some old team photos from the 1968 season on the website by this weekend. I was looking for a team schedule for that season, anybody got one?

    Here are a few articles: http://www.gopack.com/sports/m-basebl/spec-rel/020907aaa.html
    http://www.gopack.com/sports/m-basebl/spec-rel/020913aaa.html
    http://www.theacc.com/sports/m-basebl/spec-rel/043008aaa.html

    Also a link to an online exhibition about the history of Wolfpack baseball: http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/exhibits/baseball/highlights.html

  15. 13OT 06/05/2013 at 10:46 AM #

    I’m glad we’re the home team; this should help us a little. Rice can light up the scoreboard, and this is a battle-tested program. The odds should be about even.

    Like somebody already said, hopefully Coach learned that he cannot hold out his ace to start the series like he did last year in Tally.

    My biggest concern is that in addition to the Owls having a solid pitching staff, we’ve not been scoring a lot of runs of late. Other than the last game against W&M, we need more offense, especially at this stage of the season.

  16. Gowolves 06/05/2013 at 10:52 AM #

    Expected 1 to 2 inches of rain on Friday. I doubt they will get the game in. I hope I am wrong. Part of tropical system coming from the gulf.

  17. Whiteshoes67 06/05/2013 at 10:52 AM #

    We’ve got to get production out of the middle of the lineup. My take, Senay is swinging it well and that’s a plus for us. 3 hole feasts on mediocre pitching. Need that slot to be more productive. I thought Avent tinkered with the lineup last Saturday, but guess I’d just had too many beers.

  18. CaptainCraptacular 06/05/2013 at 11:23 AM #

    13OT. nit: Game last year was in Gainesville. We played UF in the supers.

  19. packalum44 06/05/2013 at 11:29 AM #

    I just hope we can put a few runs on the board. Our batting average is awful, ranked 105 in the country. Never was it more evident than the UNC game we blew in Durham. I will never get over that game.

    I knew Rodon was good, but I wonder if the more casual baseball fan like myself realize he might be the best pitcher in his class (and maybe irregardless of class). You HAVE to win every game he pitches, or you waste the best pitcher NC State will likely ever have.

    “All draft/college baseball fans know the name Carlos Rodon, the prohibitive favorite to go first overall in next year’s draft. He’s not quite as obvious a future number one pick as Stephen Strasburg or Bryce Harper once were, but I think Vegas would put him as a 50/50 shot against the entirety of the 2014 field.”

    http://baseballdraftreport.com/2013/03/06/very-early-look-2014-mlb-draft-names-to-know/

    Also notes Trea Turner might be a top 10 selection.

    “There’s not much to love as of now when it comes to shortstop depth, but, damn, any class with three potential top ten talents (Gatewood, Gordon, Turner) who look like good shots to stick at the position is alright with me.”

  20. blpack 06/05/2013 at 12:05 PM #

    This is going to be a great weekend, weather permitting. State is on the edge of really doing something great. We just have to go do it.
    Thanks for the preview of the Owls.

  21. tjfoose1 06/05/2013 at 12:42 PM #

    “Compared to Houston in June, Rice will enjoy NC weather. ”

    Yep. I once spent a summer in Houston. Three straight weeks of daily 100+ temperatures and humidity that had you soaked in minutes.

    Worse than those August football camp 2-a-days “down east”.

  22. redisgood 06/05/2013 at 1:18 PM #

    Just to add some obsure tidbits, the major league prospect guide lists Carlos Rodon and Trea Turner as the #1 and #4 prospects respectively. Zach Lemond looked to be somewhere in the 125 – 150 range.

  23. TheCOWDOG 06/05/2013 at 1:39 PM #

    By the end of June 2014, Trea Turner will be roaming someone’s centerfield garden.

  24. Wufpacker 06/05/2013 at 1:57 PM #

    Give Lemond time. And I didn’t typo his name, it really is Zech. How that boy didn’t fall onto Mike Fox’s radar with that name, I have no clue.

    Skye and Zech. Sounds like a couple of homo-erotic Greek Gods.

  25. 44rules 06/05/2013 at 3:02 PM #

    Ask Google and ye shall receive:
    http://www.wisesnacks.com/header/store-locator.aspx

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