Casey at the Bat

Casey Gillaspie hit his league-leading seventh home run yesterday.

 
Casey Gillaspie was going to have a hard time matching his big brother’s success. That’s what happens your brother is a former Cape Cod Baseball League MVP.

But Gillaspie is doing his best.

The Falmouth slugger went 4-for-6 in a doubleheader yesterday and belted his league-leading seventh home run. Falmouth split the twin bill with Bourne, winning the first game 3-1 and dropping the second 4-3.

Gillaspie has now officially matched his brother in the home run category. Casey hit a league-best .345 with seven homers in his 2007 MVP campaign with Falmouth.

Casey got off to a bit of a slow start this summer. While teammate Rhys Hoskins was hot from the beginning, Kevin Cron was delivering huge games and Dylan Davis was bursting onto the scene with four home runs in his first four games, Gillaspie was a little more in the shadows. But he was clearly part of the sluggers crew, and he has steadily improved his all-around numbers in the last few weeks.

Gillaspie was hitting .235 on July 15. Since then, he’s had a hit in nine of 10 games and is batting .447 in that stretch with five extra-base hits. He leads the league in home runs by two and he ranks second in extra-base hits. His batting average is up to .292, his on-base percentage is .364 and his slugging percentage is .496.

Falmouth didn’t really need the help, but Gillaspie’s uptick makes them that much more dangerous. Davis had two RBI and Leon Byrd, Jr. (Rice) hit a home run in the game-one win yesterday. Trey Teakell (TCU) tossed seven strong innings on the mound.

In game two, Bourne got six strong innings from Austin Gomber (Florida Atlantic), who was making his final start. Tim Caputo (Rhode Island) and Mason Robbins (Southern Miss) drove in two runs each. That was enough to hold off Falmouth.

Gillaspie did his part with a double and a homer. If he stays hot, it’s going to get harder and harder to hold Falmouth off.

 

Hyannis 0, Brewster 0; Hyannis 5, Brewster 4

Hyannis and Brewster also staged a doubleheader and the Harbor Hawks came away from it with three points and a three-point lead in the West standings. Brewster got a dominant performance from Aaron Brown (Pepperdine) in game one. Brown went eight scoreless innings and struck out five. Rocky McCord (Auburn) and Jordan Foley (Central Michigan) matched him though, combining for eight strikeouts and five hits allowed in nine innings. The game ended in a 0-0 tie. In game two, the Harbor Hawks won a one-run game for the ninth time. Brian Anderson (Arkansas) brought in the go-ahead run in the sixth and Eric Eck (Wofford) notched his league-best ninth save to finish it off.

 

Cotuit 8, Y-D 3

Cotuit got two RBI each from newcomer Austin Byler (Nevada) and Team USA returnee Bradley Zimmer (San Francisco) on their way to a victory over the Red Sox. The Kettleers are three points back of Hyannis for first place in the West. Rhett Wiseman (Vanderbilt) added a double to take the league lead in extra-base hits. Wiseman is hitting .483 over his last nine games. On the mound, Ben Smith (Coastal Carolina) went four shutout innings with five strikeouts. John Hochstatter (Stanford) worked two scoreless innings for the win and Joel Seddon (South Carolina) got a save with three scoreless frames.

 

Wareham 11, Chatham 6

The Gatemen made the long trek to Chatham and came back with one of their best wins of the season. Ethan Gross (Memphis) went 3-for-4 with four RBI to lead the charge. Kyle Schwarber (Indiana), who went 4-for-4 in his first game back after Team USA, continued to mash, going 4-for-6 with a double in his second game. Brett Pirtle (Mississippi State) added a home run and Adam Toth (Baylor) knocked in two runs. Kurt McCune (LSU) picked up the win with five solid innings. He struck out five and allowed two runs. Jonathan Holder (Mississippi State) struck out three over the final 1.2 innings to finish it off. For Chatham, Jimmy Pickens (Michigan State) hit his fourth home run.

 

Harwich at Orleans, PPD

 

What to Watch

Chatham ace Lukas Schiraldi (Navarro College), who shut out Falmouth for six innings in his last start, draws the Commodores again as the Anglers hit the road. Kevin McKanna (Rice) is scheduled to start for Falmouth.
 

MVP Return

Kyle Schwarber went 4-for-4 with a game-tying home run in his return to the Cape.

 
Kyle Schwarber’s return to the Cape Cod Baseball League happened on the same field where he left it.

Little else in the setting was the same.

On August 17, 2012, Schwarber led the Wareham Gatemen to the league championship on a sunny afternoon at Red Wilson Field in Yarmouth, with fans tucked into every nook and cranny. On July 25, 2013, Schwarber helped a struggling Wareham team salvage a tie with Y-D on a cool, dreary evening.

The fact that he was here for both is one of the coolest stories of the 2013 Cape Cod Baseball League season.

Schwarber earned Playoff MVP honors last summer when he hit two home runs in Wareham’s championship-clinching victory. His emergence as a star continued on the same trajectory in the spring, when he hit .366 with 18 home runs and led Indiana to the College World Series. He was ticketed for a return to Wareham, but Team USA came calling and Schwarber ran with the opportunity.

But along the way, he told Wareham officials he wanted to come back when Team USA’s season ended. It was easy to envision him returning and pushing the Gatemen over the top, leading them to more playoff glory.

That probably isn’t going to happen. Wareham has had a tough season and needs a miracle just to grab the fourth spot in the playoffs.

And still, Schwarber came.

This is a guy who has been playing baseball non-stop since Indiana’s season began on February 15. The grind took him across the country, then to Omaha then to Japan with Team USA.

Coming back to Cape Cod for a few meaningless games, when scouts already have a good feel for who he is? Nobody would have blamed him if he headed home instead.

But still, Schwarber came.

Last night, karma smiled on that move. Schwarber went 4-for-4 in his 2013 debut and his two-run homer in the ninth inning tied the game at 2-2. Wareham and Y-D went on to finish in a tie. Andro Cutura (Southeastern Louisiana) delivered a strong performance on the mound for the Gatemen.

Schwarber’s move is reminiscent of something another Wareham great once did. Matt Murton, who went on to a Major League career, broke his finger at Team USA tryouts in 2002. The temptation would have been to take the rest of the summer off. Instead, Murton returned to Wareham – where he’d played the summer before – let the finger heal and was in the lineup as the Gatemen won their second consecutive league championship.

Schwarber likely won’t cap his return with the same kind of hardware, but the sentiment is the same. Both had great experiences in Wareham and both felt a measure of loyalty that isn’t always a priority in summer baseball.

Schwarber is now 6-for-9 with three home runs in his last two Cape League games. The gap between those games – when they happened and what they meant – is huge, but Schwarber was doing his thing all the same.

 

Brewster 2, Falmouth 0

The Whitecaps have hit another rough patch but last night was a pretty serious bright spot. Jake Stinnett (Maryland) struck out eight in seven shutout innings as Brewster topped Falmouth 2-0. Stinnett took a no-hitter into the sixth before a base hit by Cameron O’Brien (Northeast Texas CC). It was the only hit he allowed. Justin Kamplain (Alabama) and Brad Schreiber (Purdue) finished the shutout with an inning each. Nick Lynch (UC Davis) delivered all the offense Brewster needed with two RBI, while Boo Vazquez (Pittsburgh) had two hits and scored both runs. Vazquez has a six-game hitting streak. The win was made all the more impressive by the fact that Brewster’s bus broke down before the game and the team arrived just 30 minutes before game time.

 

Orleans 7, Cotuit 3

The Firebirds won their fifth straight, riding a dominant performance by Jared Miller (Vanderbilt) to a victory over the Kettleers. Miller started the summer in the bullpen but went seven shutout innings in his second start last week. This time, he went six scoreless and struck out 10 while allowing just two hits. Shawn O’Neill (La Salle) picked up the save. Austin Davidson (Pepperdine) had two hits and two RBI, while Jordan Luplow (Fresno State) also drove in two. Will Fulmer (Montevallo) and Chris Marconcini (Duke) added two hits each. Orleans is now 18-18, just a point back of Harwich for second place in the West. For Cotuit, Bradley Zimmer (San Francisco) made his return from Team USA and went 1-for-4.

 

Harwich 10, Hyannis 0

Dillon Peters (Texas) turned in his second straight dominant start and the Mariners pulled away late for an easy victory. Peters struck out six in five scoreless innings after seven shutout innings in his last start. Logan Jernigan (NC State) struck out four in three innings of relief and Jake Drossner (Maryland) finished the job. Derek Fisher (Virginia) had two RBI to lead the attack, while Ben Moore (Alabama) and Tanner English (South Carolina) had two hits each.

 

Chatham 7, Bourne 3

The Anglers delivered a steady offensive performance and held off Bourne for their 24th victory of the season. Jimmy Pickens (Michigan State) had two hits, including a home run, to power the offense. Landon Lassiter (North Carolina) added two hits and two RBI, Michael Russell (North Carolina) had two hits, Blake Butera (Boston College) drove in two runs and recent arrival Brett Bell (Texas Tech) added two hits. Andrew McGee (Monmouth) gave up three runs in four innings. Dominic Moreno (Texas Tech) got the win with three scoreless innings of relief and David Speer (Columbia) shut down his former team over the final two innings for the save. Bourne got four hits from Mark Laird (LSU) but was again kept from clinching a playoff spot.

 

What to Watch

Orleans and Cotuit will meet for a second straight night, this time at Lowell Park. It should be a good pitching match-up with Bobby Poyner (Florida) starting for Orleans and Ben Smith (Coastal Carolina) going for Cotuit. Smith was one of the league’s top strikeout pitchers before he missed his last turn in the rotation.

Hoosier Hysteria

Joey DeNato delivers a pitch for Y-D in last year's Cape League championship series.
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.
  • Regional Watching

    The Cape League season is less than two weeks away but if you need to whet your appetite, you’re in luck. The NCAA tournament begins today with 32 regional games.

    Some Cape notes down below, but first, courtesy of SEBaseball.com, here’s a Friday schedule, sorted by time and with TV info included. Most games are available online at ESPN3.com. Four will be televised on ESPNU: Troy vs. Alabama at 12 p.m., Wichita State vs. Kansas State at 3 p.m., East Tennessee State vs. Vanderbilt at 5 p.m., and Columbia vs. Cal State Fullerton at 11 p.m.

    Friday:
    Noon ET Troy vs Alabama (Tallahassee) ESPNU

    1 ET Coastal Carolina vs Oklahoma (Blacksburg) ESPN3
    1 ET Towson vs Florida Atlantic (Chapel Hill) ESPN3
    1 ET Liberty vs Clemson (Columbia) ESPN3
    1 ET Florida vs Austin Peay (Bloomington) ESPN3
    1 ET Army vs Virginia (Charlottesville) ESPN3

    2 ET William & Mary vs Ole Miss (Raleigh) ESPN3
    2 ET Georgia Tech vs. Illinois (Nashville) ESPN3
    2 ET Oklahoma State vs. Miami (Louisville) ESPN3

    3 ET Wichita State vs Kansas State (Manhattan) ESPNU
    3 ET UC Santa Barbara vs Texas A&M (Corvallis) ESPN3
    3 ET Mercer vs South Alabama (Starkville) ESPN3
    3 ET Jackson State vs LSU (Baton Rouge) ESPN3

    5 ET San Francisco vs Rice (Eugene) ESPN3
    5 ET Savannah State vs Florida State (Tallahassee) ESPN3
    5 ET San Diego vs Cal Poly (Los Angeles) ESPN3

    5:30 ET Connecticut vs Virginia Tech (Blacksburg) ESPN3

    6 ET Canisius vs North Carolina (Chapel Hill) ESPN3
    6 ET Bowling Green vs Louisville (Louisville) ESPN3
    6 ET Elon vs UNC Wilmington (Charlottesville) ESPN3

    7 ET Valparaiso vs Indiana (Bloomington) ESPN3
    7 ET Binghamton vs NC State (Raleigh) ESPN3
    7 ET East Tennessee State vs Vanderbilt (Nashville) ESPNU
    7 ET Saint Louis vs South Carolina (Columbia) ESPN3
    7 ET New Mexico vs Arizona State (Fullerton) ESPN3

    8 ET UTSA vs Oregon State (Corvallis) ESPN3
    8 ET Central Arkansas vs Mississippi State (Starkville) ESPN3
    8 ET Bryant vs Arkansas (Manhattan) ESPN3
    8 ET Sam Houston State vs Louisiana(Baton Rouge) ESPN3

    9 ET South Dakota State vs Oregon (Eugene) ESPN3
    9 ET San Diego State vs UCLA (Los Angeles) ESPN3

    11 ET Columbia vs Cal State Fullerton (Fullerton) ESPNU

     

    CAPE LEAGUE FLAVORED REGIONAL NOTES

  • Cape League mainstay North Carolina is your No. 1 national seed. The Heels have seven players on Cape League rosters, led by freshmen Skye Bolt (Harwich) and Landon Lassiter (Chatham). Bolt has also been invited to Team USA. Also in the Chapel Hill Regional is Florida Atlantic, who’s led by future Bourne Brave Austin Gomber, the ace of the Owls’ staff.
  • Wareham fans will have their pick of Gatemen champions to root for this weekend. Tyler Horan leads Virginia Tech as it hosts a regional, Daniel Palka and Mott Hyde take Georgia Tech to the Nashville regional and Kyle Schwarber will be leading Indiana as it hosts a regional for the first time.
  • If East Tennessee State can pull off a monumental upset of Vanderbilt, Clint Freeman will probably be at the center of it. The future Bourne Brave hit .336 with 10 homers this year.
  • Casey Gillaspie, future Falmouth Commodore and brother of former Commodore Conor Gillaspie, will be in action on ESPNU at 3 as Wichita State takes on Kansas State. Gillaspie had a big sophomore season.
  • Former Chatham Angler Kris Bryant has had an incredible season for San Diego and is likely to be drafted in the top three picks next week. He and the Toreros take on Cal Poly at 5 p.m. in the L.A. regional.
  • San Francisco is making just its third regional appearance. The Dons have led offensively by future Cotuit Kettleer Bradley Zimmer, who’s brother Kyle is a former Kettleer and a first-round draft pick.
  • Bryant University, in its first year of D-I postseason eligibility, is in Kansas and will take on Arkansas. Craig Schlitter (Falmouth ’12) has had a big hand in the team’s success this year.
  • Alex Bregman has been invited to Team USA, so he may not make it to Harwich this summer. But the LSU freshman is worth watching anyway. He and the Tigers play Jackson State at 3 p.m.
  • Louisville is sending a huge contingent to the Cape this summer and has quite a few former Cape Leaguers as well. The Cards are hosting a regional and they take on Bowling Green at 6 p.m.
  • Gatemen Still Scorching

    Momentum isn’t supposed to last very long in baseball. It’s as good as the next day’s starting pitcher, they say.

    For several members of the 2012 Wareham Gatemen, momentum seems to have held strong for a good six months.

    Kyle Schwarber, Daniel Palka, Mott Hyde and Tyler Horan were four of the biggest reasons why the Gatemen put together their magical run to the 2012 Cape Cod Baseball League Championship. They combined for six playoff home runs and delivered big hit after big hit in leading Wareham past Y-D in the championship series.

    Six months later, that quartet continues to rake on fields far and wide.

    Schwarber, a sophomore at Indiana, is batting .378 with two homers, three doubles and nine RBI. Horan, a junior at Virginia Tech, is hitting at a .365 clip with two homers, three doubles and 14 RBI. Hyde, a Georgia Tech junior, is a little off the pace at .267 but he’s got five extra-base hits and eight RBI.

    And few in the country have been better than Palka. The Georgia Tech junior is mashing the ball to the tune of a .489 average, three home runs, five doubles and 20 RBI. He’s slugging .800.

    At some point, they might cool off, but the way last summer went, I wouldn’t count on it. The boys of Wareham’s summer are still shining in the spring.