CLEMSON BASEBALL

Clemson Baseball Preview vs Virginia


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Clemson vs. Virginia

Clemson (19-13, 9-3 ACC), who is tied for third place in the ACC standings

(according to winning percentage), will play host to Virginia (24-11, 5-8 ACC)

this weekend in a three-game series at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. Game times are

7:15 PM (Friday), 4:00 PM (Saturday), and 1:00 PM (Sunday). All three games will

be broadcast live on the radio by Clemson Tiger Sports Network and can be heard

live via the internet at ClemsonTigers.com. Live stats will also be available on

Clemson's website for all three games.


The Series

Clemson and Virginia have met 128 times on the diamond, with the Tigers holding

a 98-30 lead in the series dating back to the 1955 season. Last year at

Virginia, the Cavaliers swept the three-game series by a combined score of 12-5.

It was the first time Virginia won at least two games of a three-game,

regular-season series since 1972. Two years ago at Clemson, the Tigers won two

of three games.

The Tigers hold a 49-7 lead over the Cavaliers all-time in games played at

Clemson and a 37-5 lead in games played at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. Clemson also

holds a 88-26 advantage in games played in the ACC regular season. Tiger Head

Coach Jack Leggett is 27-10 against Virginia as Clemson's head coach, including

a 13-2 record at Doug Kingsmore Stadium.


The Starting Pitchers

Virginia will start junior righthander Matt Avery (4-2, 3.80 ERA) in game one

Friday. The McLean, VA native has made eight starts for a total of 45.0 innings

pitched. He has yielded 40 hits and 18 walks while striking out 41.

Clemson will counter with junior righty Kris Harvey (4-1, 3.94 ERA) in game one.

The Catawba, NC native has made eight starts for a total of 45.2 innings

pitched. He has allowed 45 hits and 15 walks while striking out 42.

The Cavaliers will send out junior lefthander Mike Ballard (5-3, 3.92 ERA) in

game two Saturday. The Virginia Beach, VA native has made nine starts for a

total of 57.1 innings pitched, meaning he is averaging over 6.1 innings pitched

per start. He has allowed 56 hits and only nine walks with 32 strikeouts.

The Tigers will counter with junior righthander Josh Cribb (2-4, 3.83 ERA) in

game two. The Lake View, SC native has made eight starts and one relief

appearance for a total fo 47.0 innings pitched. He has yielded 62 hits and 11

walks while striking out 45, good for a 4.1 strikeout-to-walk ratio.

In game three Sunday, Virginia will start fifth-year senior and righthander Jeff

Kamrath (5-3, 2.40 ERA). The Houston, TX native who missed all of last season

with an arm injury, is in the top 10 in the ACC in ERA. In 56.1 innings pitched

over eight starts and one relief appearance, he has allowed 37 hits and 18 walks

while striking out 44. His .192 opponents' batting average is also among the ACC

leaders.

Clemson will send out junior lefty Robert Rohrbaugh (4-1, 4.17 ERA) in game

three. The Littlestown, PA native has made seven starts and two relief

appearances for a total of 41.0 innings pitched. He has yielded 45 hits and 19

walks while striking out 33. He is also 4-0 with a 3.12 ERA in four ACC starts.


The Cavaliers

Virginia, led by second-year Head Coach Brian O'Connor, enters the weekend

series with a 24-11 overall record and 5-8 ACC mark. This past weekend, N.C.

State won two of three games in Charlottesville over the Cavaliers, who are in

eighth place in the ACC standings. The Cavaliers, who are 20-3 at home and 4-8

on the road, have already played three games this week. They defeated Norfolk

State 13-1 on Tuesday, and beat Maryland-Eastern Shore twice (15-1, 6-0) in two

seven-inning games on Wednesday.

Virginia is hitting .295 as a team, and is led by All-America candidate and

infielder Ryan Zimmerman. The Virginia Beach, VA native is hitting .431 with 14

doubles, three triples, five homers, and 44 RBIs. He has walked 17 times and

struck out just six times. He also sports a .494 on-base percentage, 12 steals

in 13 attempts, 20 multi-hit games, and a solid .955 fielding percentage.

Freshman first-baseman Sean Doolittle leads the team with seven homers as well.

The Cavaliers use speed and defense to their advantage. The team has stolen 48

bases and has been hit by a pitch 51 times. They are also among the ACC leaders

in fielding percentage at .974, as they have committed only 35 errors in 35

games. Catcher Scott Headd has allowed only 13 stolen bases in 31 attempts, but

he did not make the trip to Clemson due to a finger injury he sustained on

Wednesday.

The pitching staff has a 2.78 ERA and .223 opponents' batting average. Their ERA

entering this week's action was ninth-best in the nation. Among their 24

victories this year are a school-record nine shutouts. They have threw just 12

wild pitches and walked 92 batters against 234 strikeouts in 310.2 innings

pitched, meaning they have an excellent 2.7 walks per nine innings pitched mark.

Lefty closer Casey Lambert has eight saves and a 1.54 ERA in 14 relief

appearances.


The Tigers

Clemson enters the weekend series against Virginia with a 19-13 overall record

and 9-3 ACC mark, and have won four games in a row. Last weekend, Clemson swept

Duke in a three-game series at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. On Tuesday, the game at

Western Carolina was halted with the Tigers ahead 4-2 in the bottom of the fifth

inning. The game is scheduled to be completed on Tuesday at 5:00 PM. The Tigers

also defeated #4 South Carolina 12-2 on Wednesday. The Tigers, whose last seven

losses have been by a combined 10 runs, are 12-4 at home in 2005.

Clemson is on a four-game winning streak. In those four games, the Tigers have

outscored the opposition 48-17. The team is also hitting .364, and has totaled

12 doubles and nine homers in the last four games.

The Tigers have upped their season batting average to .299 thanks to the hot

bats. However, if you just take into account Clemson's nine regular starters

(see page one of the notes), those nine players have combined to hit .319 this

season. The team's hottest hitter is freshman centerfielder Brad Chalk, who is

21-for-39 (.538) in his last 13 games. He has raised his season average to a

team-best .388 and has a .462 on-base percentage. The other two Tiger freshmen

"up the middle" are also doing well at the plate, as Taylor Harbin (2B) is

hitting .374 and Stan Widmann (SS) is hitting .298.

The pitching staff has a 3.42 ERA and .256 opponents' batting average. The staff

also has a 8.3 strikeouts per nine innings pitched mark, the best figure since

the 1996 staff (9.69) that had the likes of Kris Benson, Billy Koch, and Ken

Vining. Clemson has yielded an ACC-low 10 long balls in 2005 as well.

Three Tigers are from the state of Virginia, including third-baseman Herman

Demmink (Midlothian), righthander Stephen Faris (Richmond), and righthander Jeff

Hahn (Winchester).


Sacrifices Leading to Runs

Clemson already has more sacrifice bunt this season (26) than it did all of last

year (25). And recently, those sacrifice bunts have led directly to runs.

Through the first 22 games, a Tiger sacrificed a runner to second base 14 times.

But those runners only scored five times. But in the last 10 games, all 11

Tigers who have been moved to second on a sacrifice bunt have ended up scoring.

Also, all eight times this season that a runner has been sacrificed to third

base, he has ended up scoring.


Faris Wheeling & Dealing Complete Games

Stephen Faris pitched back-to-back complete games in his last two starts,

becoming the first Tiger to do that since 2000 (Ryan Mottl). Clemson had just

one complete game each of the last three seasons. And he did that against two

teams that played in the 2004 College World Series. Against Georgia on April 6,

he allowed five hits, one earned run, and three walks while striking out eight.

Then a week later on April 13, he shut down #4 South Carolina, who was coming

off a three-game sweep at #6 Louisiana State, in another complete-game

five-hitter. This time the Tigers were victorious, as Faris allowed two runs and

one walk while striking out seven. He became the first Tiger to pitch a complete

game against the Gamecocks since 1997 (Matt White). His performance was a big

reason the Tigers snapped the Gamecocks' nine-game winning streak.


Tigers Topple #4 South Carolina 12-2 Wednesday

Clemson hit four homers and broke #4 South Carolina's nine-game winning streak

with a 12-2 win on April 13 at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. Travis Storrer, Kris

Harvey, Tyler Colvin, and Taylor Harbin each hit long balls. Stephen Faris

pitched his second-straight complete game, becoming the first Tiger to do that

since 2000 (Ryan Mottl). It was also the first complete game by a Tiger pitcher

against the Gamecocks since 1997 (Matt White). Faris allowed just two runs, five

hits, and one walk while striking out seven. Every Tiger starter had at least

one hit and scored at least one run. Brad Chalk had a game-high three hits in

four at-bats, while Harbin added five RBIs.

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