It’s easy to miss the boat on potential stars when they aren’t part of preseason outlooks and previews, but late additions to Cape League rosters often come to town with pretty good credentials.
In an effort to keep up, we begin the notebook with a quick look at some of the stand-outs who may not have been on the preseason radar:
Erich Weiss, Chatham – Texas stand-out had a down junior year, but was still selected in 13th round this year
Joe Goodman, Chatham – Undersized righty had an ERA under 1.00 for High Point
Cole Lankford, Brewster – Starred for Texas A&M this year, hitting .352 with three homers
Jake Stinnett, Brewster – Maryland pitcher was a 29th round pick of the Pirates this June
Ian Happ, Harwich – Cincy freshman hit .322 with six homers in debut
Ryan Lindemuth, Harwich – William & Mary junior hit .351 in the spring, was drafted by Pirates in 20th round this year
Ian Tompkins, Harwich – Western Kentucky reliever struck out 59 in just 35 innings this spring
Geoff DeGroot, Orleans – Hit .345, stole 25 bases for UMass Lowell
Jeremy Rhoades, Orleans – Saves six games with an ERA under two for Illinois State
Jeremy Null, Y-D – Had a tremendous year on the mound for Western Carolina, striking out 109 in 91 IP
Chad Carroll, Bourne – Terrific season at James Madison – .389, 3 HR, 55 RBI on way to All-CAA honors
Connor Castellano, Cotuit – TCU commit started his career at Vanderbilt before going the JUCO route
Steven Duggar, Cotuit – Hit .300 for Clemson as a freshman; ranked 15th best frosh in the country coming into the year
Alex Haines, Cotuit – Top prospect in the NECBL last year and a 33rd round pick this year
Trevor Seidenberger, Cotuit – Struck out 63 for TCU and was drafted in 12th round by Brewers
Conner Hale, Falmouth – JUCO star has committed to LSU for next year
Trey Teakell, Falmouth – TCU reliever had an ERA under 1.00
Jake Hernandez, Hyannis – Solid player for Orleans last summer has resurfaced in Hyannis and is off to a fast start
Fred Shepard, Wareham – Amherst standout was steady contributor for Wareham last year
Team USA has sort of unofficially gone back to its old trials format, where players headed to camp without roster spots. In recent years, the team was picked without any sort of trials. This year, it’s kind of a hybrid, with some players guaranteed to be on the roster and others fighting for spots. Quite a few players who have already been on the Cape this year are part of the second group, including Harwich’s C.J. Hinojosa and A.J. Reed, Falmouth’s Preston Morrison, Orleans’ Colin Welmon and Cotuit’s Bradley Zimmer.
Wareham’s lineup can use all the help it can get, and the Gatemen signed an old friend today who should help the cause in Louisville’s Cole Sturgeon. The sophomore hit .297 with five home runs in Wareham’s championship season last year. He also pitches and had a 1.97 ERA in seven games.
Three pitchers have made two starts without allowing an earned run – Harwich’s Aaron Bummer and Chandler Shepherd and Cotuit’s Alex Haines. Haines leads that group in strikeouts with 14 in nine innings. Interestingly, Bummer has only struck out five in 13 innings.
Orleans closer Matt Troupe hasn’t picked up a save since getting two early on, but he continues to strike a lot of people out. Troupe has 10 strikeouts in 4.2 innings pitched, good for a 19.3 K/9.
The Y-D pitching staff struggled mightily for three games before getting on track Monday. The Red Sox were hurting so much that they put returning all-star infielder Robert Pehl on the mound for an inning. He promptly struck out two in a perfect inning.
It would have been impressive enough for the Chatham Anglers to run their record to 6-0. No Cape League team has started that hot since the 2007 Y-D Red Sox, and they were Cape League royalty.
But to do it like the Anglers did – just go ahead and tip your hat at this point.
Chatham went on the road Tuesday to take on the Hyannis Harbor Hawks, the league’s only other unbeaten team, and dispatched them with ease, winning 10-0. It’s the most lopsided victory of the season for any team in the league. Chatham smacked 15 hits, and Andrew McGee (Monmouth) delivered his second straight dominant start.
Chatham now leads the league in average, on-base percentage, slugging, runs, hits, doubles, total bases and walks. On the pitching side, they lead the league in ERA.
Add all that up, and this is what you get.
On Tuesday, they immediately went to work, scoring four runs in the first four innings. They blew it open with one in the eighth and four more in the ninth.
The first five hitters in the Chatham lineup all had two hits, while No. 8 hitter Kenny Koplove (Duke) went 4-for-5 with three runs scored and an RBI. The two-hit parade was manned by Mitchell Gonsolus (Gonzaga), Connor Joe (San Diego) and Jimmy Pickens (Michigan State), who also had two RBI each. Brandon Sedell (Nova Southeastern) and Erich Weiss (Texas) had two hits as well.
As good as the offense was, it was largely unnecessary. McGee, the reigning NEC Pitcher of the Year, made his second start of the summer and was just as good as he was the first time. He struck out three and allowed just two hits in six shutout innings. On the year, he has struck out 12 and hasn’t allowed a run.
The bullpen also did its part. Stephen Marino (Williams) worked out of a mini-jam in the seventh and Mitch Merten (UC Irvine) struck out three over the final two innings.
Chatham will try to stretch the streak to seven tonight when it visits Bourne. The Anglers are slated to face Ohio State standout Jaron Long, who’s just arrive back in town for a second summer with the Braves. It’ll be a challenge, but at this point, I wouldn’t bet against the Anglers.
Coutit 8, Y-D 3
The Kettleers also stayed hot, improving to 5-1 with a lopsided win over the Red Sox (2-4). Cotuit scored seven runs in the seventh inning to bust open what had been a one-run game. Bradley Zimmer (San Francisco), Mike Ford (Princeton) and Yale Rosen (Washington State) drove in two runs each to lead the Cotuit offense. Connor Castellano (Sante Fe CC) went 1-for-2 and remained the league’s leading hitter at .462. Kevin Bradley (Clemson) added two hits. On the mound, Jared Walsh (Georgia) turned in his second impressive start of the summer, allowing three hits in six shutout innings. For Y-D, Erick Fedde (UNLV), the best starter on opening night, struck out five and gave up one earned run in six innings before the Kettleers got to the Red Sox bullpen. Fedde leads the league in strikeouts with 13. Robert Pehl (Washington) had two hits for the third straight game for Y-D.
Falmouth 5, Wareham 3
After three straight losses, Falmouth got back into the win column with a victory over the Gatemen (1-4). Every player in the Commodore lineup had at least one hit, part of a 13-hit attack. Rhys Hoskins (Sacramento State) extended his season-long hitting streak to six games, the longest in the league, with a 1-for-4 night. Sam Gillikin (Auburn) had three hits and three RBI, while Conner Hale (State College of Florida) and Casey Gillaspie (Wichita State) had two hits apiece. Preston Morrison (TCU) got the win with 5.1 innings in relief of TCU teammate Brandon Finnegan. Nic Manuppelli (Youngstown State) picked up the save.
Orleans 8, Brewster 2
Orleans cruised past Brewster, becoming the only East team other than Chatham to own a winning record and keeping Brewster as the only winless team in the league. Colin Welmon (Loyola Marymount) tossed five shutout innings and the offense delivered 10 hits. Will Fulmer (Montevallo) and Riley Moore (Arizona) knocked in two runs each, while Collin Slaybaugh (Washington State) and Chris Marconcini (Duke) had two hits apiece.
Bourne 7, Harwich 1
After its first win on Monday, Bourne made it two in a row with a win over the Mariners (2-3). The Braves scored three runs in the sixth and three more in the ninth to take control. Tim Caputo (Rhode Island) had three hits and two RBI, while Vinny Siena (UConn) had three hits and drove in one. Eric Fisher (Arkansas Baptist) and Bobby Boyd (West Virginia) had two hits each. Kyle Kubat (Nebraska) scattered six hits in 5.1 scoreless innings. Jack English (Florida Gulf Coast) struck out the side in the ninth.
What to Watch
Chatham sends Aaron Garza (Houston) to the hill in the aforementioned match-up with Bourne, which is set for 6 p.m. at Doran Park. In Orleans, Cotuit will try to keep its streak going against Firebirds starter Kyle Twomey (USC), an unsigned third round pick from last year’s draft.
Predicting college baseball success based on Cape Cod Baseball League success is generally not a worthwhile enterprise. I once did a Top 25 based on Cape results and picked USC No. 1. I don’t think the Trojans even sniffed the real Top 25 that spring.
But what you can do is pinpoint up-and-coming teams. Not the North Carolinas and Vanderbilts of the world, but the Stony Brooks. Anyone who watched the 2011 Cape Cod Baseball League season knew Stony Brook had to have a good year in 2012. The Seawolves then made a Cinderella run to Omaha.
Last year, Right Field Fog commenter Orville from Orleans suggested Indiana as a breakout candidate for 2013.
The man knows what he’s talking about.
The Hoosiers are in the College World Series and haven’t yet lost an NCAA Tournament game. They shut out Louisville in their CWS opener on Saturday night.
While the Hoosiers aren’t quite as Cape League heavy as that Stony Brook team from a year ago, some of their stars are Cape League bred. Kyle Schwarber was the CCBL playoff MVP and is now one of the top hitters in the country. Sam Travis starred for Y-D.
And Joey DeNato, a true Cape League veteran, was the star of Saturday’s win.
DeNato pitched for Y-D in 2011 and 2012, and was one of those steady performers that Cape League teams need. He started five games in 2011 and came out of the bullpen for seven more. He pitched exclusively out of the bullpen last summer. He didn’t make any top prospects lists and wasn’t drafted this year. But I’m sure if you ask Y-D manager Scott Pickler, he loved having DeNato on his staff. DeNato owns a career Cape League ERA of 2.28.
Saturday was his day in the sun. The lefty struck out eight in a complete-game, four-hit shutout of a Louisville team that had beaten Vandy superstars Kevin Ziomek and Tyler Beede a week earlier.
The Hoosiers are now 1-0 in their first-ever trip to Omaha, something a lot of people on the national stage didn’t see coming.
Some of us did.
The University of San Diego had a banner day when slugger Kris Bryant was selected with the second overall pick in the Major League Baseball Draft. His teammates are doing what they can on the Cape. Y-D’s Andrew Daniel ranks sixth in the league in hitting at this early stage, and fellow Torero Connor Joe of Chatham is right behind him in seventh at .417. Both of them own three-game hitting streaks.
Chatham’s Mitchell Gonsolus (Gonzaga) has been on base more than anybody so far this season, with three hits and five walks in 10 plate appearances, good for an .800 OBP. Summer success should be no surprise – Gonsulus was the MVP of the West Coast Collegiate League last summer
Sometimes, late additions come to the Cape with some of the best credentials in the league. Chatham’s Erich Weiss and Cotuit’s Alex Haines fit the bill. Weiss starred as a sophomore for Texas in 2012, hitting .350 with five homers. Heading into his junior season, he was labeled as a potential early-round pick but he didn’t repeat as much of his success and fell down draft boards. He was still selected in the 11th round by the Pirates this year but is in Chatham, where he has two hits in two games. Haines, who plays at D-II Seton Hill, was the top prospect in the NECBL last summer but didn’t get drafted until the 33rd round this year.
Harwich’s Ian Happ was not on the team’s original roster, but he looks like a great pickup. The Cincinnati freshman hit .322 this spring with six homers, 13 doubles and a .451 OBP. He also stole 25 bases, and is slotting into the leadoff spot in Harwich’s order. The Mariners have some more talent to come, but Happ may not be moving from that spot.