2012 Boston College Baseball Media Guide

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CITY OF CHAMPIONS BOSTON BRUINS SIX-TIME STANLEY CUP CHAMPIONS 2010-11 STANLEY CUP CHAMPIONS BOSTON CELTICS 17-TIME NBA CHAMPIONS 2008 NBA CHAMPIONS BOSTON RED SOX SEVEN-TIME WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS 2004 & 2007 WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS 2001, 2003 & 2004 SUPER BOWL CHAMPIONS


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE

2012 QUICK FACTS

Location.......................................... Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 Founded......................................................................... 1863 Enrollment................................................................... 14,640 President......................................Rev. William P. Leahy, S.J. Athletic Director............................................. Gene DeFilippo Nickname..................................................................... Eagles Colors......................................................... Maroon and Gold Home Field............................................................................. ............Eddie Pellagrini Diamond at Commander Shea Field Conference................................... Atlantic Coast Conference

BASEBALL

MEDIA RELATIONS

HISTORY

Table of Contents/Credits 1 Honoring Sonny Nictakis 2-3 This Is Boston College Baseball 4-5 Boston College vs. Red Sox 6 Boston College in the Beanpot 7 2011 Outlook 8-9 Roster 10

All-Americans and Awards 32-33 Alumni in the Majors 34 Eagles in the Pros 35-37 Season-by-Season Records 38 Boston College in the NCAA Tournament 39 Eagle Greats 40-42

RECORDS

COACHES Head Coach Mike Gambino Assistant Coach Scott Friedholm Assistant Coach Steve Englert Assistant Coach Greg Sullivan Support Staff

BC Record Book 11 12 12 12 13

PLAYERS Players 14-29

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Associate AD/Media Relations.......................Chris Cameron Assistant AD/Media Relations..................Stephanie Tunnera Assistant AD/Media Relations.............................. Dick Kelley Assistant Director/Media Relations..........................Tim Clark Assistant Director/Media Relations........................Matt Lynch Assistant Director/Media Relations....................Zanna Ollove Media Relations Assistant..................................Josh Lentine Media Relations Assistant............................. Ashley Robbins Media Relations Fax ..................................... (617) 552-4903 Mailing Address.......................................... 321 Conte Forum ....................................................... Chestnut Hill, MA 02467 Website.................................................... www.bceagles.com

BASEBALL CONTACT

BOSTON COLLEGE ACC Baseball Athletics Director Gene DeFilippo City of Boston The University

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Baseball SID......................................................Zanna Ollove Office Phone.................................................. (617) 552-2004 Press Box...................................................... (617) 552-0530 Email............................................................... ollove@bc.edu The 2012 Boston College baseball media guide is a production of the Boston College Media Relations Office and the Boston College Athletic Association, Chestnut Hill, Mass. 02467. All rights reserved. Edited by Matt Lynch and the Media Relations Office.

REVIEW

Designed by Pack Network

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Photographs by John Quackenbos (Athletic Department Photographer), Jet Commercial Photo, Garry Gilbert (BC Office of Publications), Lee Pellegrini (BC Office of Publications), Jim Abts, Boston Chamber of Commerce, Thomasville Hi Toms, Winchester Royals.

2012 BASEBALL media guide

BC

2011 Results 2011 Statistics

HISTORY RECORDS

OUTLOOK

REVIEW

Head Coach................... Mike Gambino (Boston College ‘00) Record at BC..................................... 17-33 (second season) Career Record................................... 17-33 (second season) Assistant Coaches.................................................................. ................ Scott Friedholm (second season, Providence ‘98) ...................Steve Englert (11th season, Boston College ’87) ......Greg Sullivan (second season, Eastern Conn. State ‘06) 2011 Overall Record......................................................17-33 2011 ACC Record (Finish)..................... 7-22 (fifth in Atlantic) Letterwinners Returning-Lost..........................................18-9 Position Players Returning-Lost......................................13-7 Pitchers Returning-Lost.....................................................8-6 Newcomers......................................................................... 10 Athletic Trainer..................................................... Aaron Clark

OUTLOOK COACHES PLAYERS

table of contents

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BOSTON

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

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COLLEGE

sonny Nictakis

COLLEGE Boston College head baseball coach Mike Gambino continues a tradition he started last year at The Heights by selecting a current player to wear No. 8 in honor of former player Peter “Sonny” Nictakis. Each season, a player who has battled adversity and represents the best qualities of BC Baseball will wear Sonny’s old number. Gambino announced that senior captain Kyle Prohovich will don No. 8 for the 2012 season. He made the announcement at Baseball Night, held at Fenway Park’s State Street Pavillion. Sonny was a two-time captain for the Eagles in 1998-99 and lost his courageous battle with Hodgkin’s disease in the summer of 2000. Until last season, his No. 8 had not been worn since 1999. In 2011, Gambino tabbed senior outfielder Mike Sudol to be the first to wear the number. “Bringing Sonny’s No. 8 back is something that is very important to me and one of the first things I wanted to do as head coach,” Gambino said at last year’s Baseball Night. “Wearing his number will be the biggest honor a player can receive in our program. It will be given to one player each year - the one that best shows the qualities that made Sonny such a great teammate, great leader and great friend. “When we think about what we want in this program and the type of kids we want to represent BC baseball, Sonny was the embodiment of all those qualities: hard worker, great teammate, leader, unselfish, committed to being great at everything he did,” Gamnbino added. “He handled adversity, never complained and held himself and everyone around him to an incredibly high standard. Sonny didn’t care whether or not anyone liked him. He had true confidence in himself because of the morals and values instilled in him by his family and he had the integrity to always do the right thing. And that’s part of why everyone loved him.” Sonny’s two-year captaincy proved what a leader he was. He earned the 1998 Jeff Keith Athletic Leadership Award and the 1996-97 baseball team leadership award. Sonny also served as the president of the Student Athlete Advisory Committee. He graduated from BC in 1999 with a double major in English and theology. After graduation, he took a job with the Boston Red Sox. In the summer of 2000, Sonny lost his courageous seven-and-a-half year battle with Hodgkin’s disease.

1999 captains Sonny Nictakis (right) and Jeff Waldron (left)

2012 BASEBALL media guide


His spirit lives on in the BC baseball community with the Sonny Nictakis Fall World Series that is played every year. Prohovich has become the Eagles’ go-to guy out of the bullpen. He appeared in 24 games last season with a 3.46 ERA. He was third on the team in appearances and strikeouts (34) and recorded three wins. He also allowed 15 earned runs on 34 hits in 39.0 innings of work. Some of his 2011 highlights included allowing only two hits in a career-high 4.0 innings against Virginia to record the extra-innings win and striking out five in 3.2 innings and allowing two hits at Duke to earn the win. He allowed only four runs in 12 appearances from March 6 to April 10, a total of 15.1 innings. Prohovich made eight starts as the designed hitter, recording a .195 batting clip in 41 at bats with one home run and three RBIs. His two-run homer, the first of his career, came against SIU Edwardsville in March.

“It’s a great honor to wear Sonny’s number,” Prohovich said. “Last year, Mike Sudol had the honor of wearing it and I want to live up to the standard he set. Personally, this means a lot to me and I want to wear it well. Hopefully, this season I can really do No. 8 justice.”

2012 BASEBALL media guide

BC

SONNY NICTAKIS HONOREES 2012 – Kyle Prohovich 2011 – Mike Sudol

HISTORY RECORDS

“Kyle is a kid who has battled through some injuries during his career that, for some players, could have affected the way they work and go about their business on a daily basis,” Gambino said. “For two years I’ve watched how hard he works and how driven he is to be great at everything he does. He is a fierce competitor who takes his preparation very seriously, but always has time to help bring a teammate along with him. He reminds me of Sonny at times the way he genuinely wants his teammates to succeed. He has turned into a great leader who has earned the utmost respect, not just from his teammates, but from the coaching staff as well. There is no doubt in my mind that Kyle will be tremendously successful at whatever he decides to set his mind to after he leaves Boston College. We are lucky to have him in our program.”

REVIEW

As a junior, the Weston, Mass., native appeared in nine games out of the bullpen. He also received a medical redshirt in 2009 and made two relief appearances his first year in the Maroon and Gold.

OUTLOOK COACHES PLAYERS

sonny Nictakis

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BOSTON COLLEGE

THIS is bc BASEBALL

COLLEGE ACADEMIC SUCCESS Once again in 2012, US News & World Report ranked Boston College among the Top 40 Universities in America. BC is one of six Atlantic Coast Conference institutions ranked in the top 40, joining Duke, Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Virginia and Wake Forest.

BEANPOT Boston College, Northeastern, and Harvard took part in the first Beanpot in 1990 and the tradition has continued since with UMass joining in 1998. The Eagles own a 29-12-1 record in the annual tournament which is the best among the four participants. BC has won 10 Beanpot titles with its latest coming in 2011.

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

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Eddie Pellagrini Diamond at Shea Field Nestled on a corner of the Boston College campus with a sweeping view of the Boston skyline, the Eddie Pellagrini Diamond at Shea Field is the home of the baseball team. Shea Field is named after Commander John Shea U.S.N., who played football at Boston College from 1916-17. Shea passed away on September 15, 1942 when the naval carrier “Wasp” was torpedoed during the Guadal Canal campaign. The diamond was formally dedicated in a ceremony preceding the Boston College-Connecticut game on May 3, 1997. Pellagrini was Boston College’s baseball coach for 31 years, during which time he accumulated 359 victories and coached three Boston College World Series teams. Shea Field is the new home of the Peter “Sonny” Nictakis Fall World Series, held for the first time in the fall of 2001. Nictakis, who played baseball at Boston College from 1995-99, passed away in the summer of 2000 after a seven-and-a-half year battle with Hodgkin’s disease. The intra-squad “Maroon and Gold” scrimmage wraps up fall practice. In the spring, with the Chestnut Hill Reservoir bordering the field along St. Thomas More Drive, the Eagles play their home games at Shea Field. With the students coming out to catch a doubleheader or split an afternoon between baseball and softball games, BC enjoys a strong fan base. Local residents often fill the stands and line the garage ramp to catch the baseball team take the field against some of the nation’s best competition. This year fans will have the opportunity to see 23 home games at Shea Field, including threegame sets against perennial national powerhouses Georgia Tech (March 23-25) and Florida State (April 13-15).

2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE

RED SOX Boston College is one of the few programs in the country to play a Major League Baseball squad. Every season since 1993, the Eagles and Red Sox have met on the diamond at Boston’s spring training facility in Fort Myers, Fla. This year, the two teams will square off on March 3.

POSTSEASON PLAY

REVIEW

Boston College stormed onto the national scene in 2009 and advanced to its first ever ACC Championship and its first NCAA Tournament since 1967. The Eagles went 2-1 in the ACC Championship to ensure their berth into the NCAA Tournament where they were selected as the No. 3 seed in the Austin Regional. BC went 1-2 in the regional with a stunning ninth inning comeback against secondseeded Texas State. It also battled No. 1 overall seed Texas in the longest game in NCAA history. It took 25 innings and over seven hours, but the Longhorns won, 3-2. The Eagles advanced to the ACC Championship again in 2010 but fell short of its second-straight bid to the NCAA Tournament.

OUTLOOK COACHES PLAYERS

THIS is bc BASEBALL

HISTORY RECORDS

Eddie Pellagrini

2012 BASEBALL media guide

BC

Eddie Pellagrini (second from left) coached Boston College for 30 seasons from 1957-88. He grew up in nearby Roxbury and played 11 seasons in the majors, spending time with the Red Sox, St. Louis Browns, Cincinnati Reds, and Pittsburgh Pirates. He led BC to three appearances in the College World Series.

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BOSTON COLLEGE

bc and the boston red sox

COLLEGE

One of the most exciting things about playing for Boston College is the opportunity to play the seven-time World Champion Boston Red Sox at their spring training facility in Fort Myers, Florida. The two teams will meet for the 22nd time on March 3, 2012. The teams have met for the past 19 years and also played in 1916 and 1933. The Eagles had their best chances to win in 1999 and 2002, when they lost by just one run. Last year, the Eagles lost 6-0. Boston College vs. Boston Red Sox (21 Meetings) Year...................... Winner.......................... Score 1916..................... Red Sox............................. 9-1 1933..................... Red Sox............................. 7-2 1993..................... Red Sox............................. 2-0 1994..................... Red Sox........................... 12-1 1995..................... Red Sox........................... 19-0 1996..................... Red Sox........................... 22-0 1997..................... Red Sox............................. 4-3 1998..................... Red Sox........................... 10-1 1999..................... Red Sox............................. 4-3 2000..................... Red Sox............................. 8-3 2001..................... Red Sox........................... 11-5 2002..................... Red Sox............................. 2-1 2003..................... Red Sox............................. 9-6 2004..................... Red Sox............................. 9-3 2005..................... Red Sox........................... 11-5 2006..................... Red Sox........................... 10-0 2007..................... Red Sox............................. 9-1 2008..................... Red Sox........................... 24-0 2009..................... Red Sox............................. 7-1 2010..................... Red Sox............................. 6-1 2011..................... Red Sox............................. 6-0

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

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2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE

Beanpot All-Time Records vs. Opponents All-Time Beanpot Record 29-12-1

vs. Northeastern Beanpot Record 11-5 Year Score Date BC Pitcher of Record 1990 W, 4-1 April 18 Brian Decelles 1992* W, 3-1 April 22 Chris Higgins * 1993 W, 8-7 April 21 Matt Essick 1995 L, 7-3 April 20 Craig Katz 1996 L, 9-5 April 18 Craig Katz 1998 W, 9-8 April 23 Erik Olson 1999 W, 9-7 April 27 Steve Langone 2001 W, 12-1 May 1 Erik Olson 2002 L, 7-3 April 23 James Dawson 2003 W, 13-7 April 23 Dave Preziosi 2004* W, 6-2 April 21 Mike Wlodarczyk * 2005 L, 7-2 April 20 Terry Doyle 2007 L, 2-0 April 25 Ted Ratliff 2008 W, 13-6 April 9 Pat Dean 2010 W, 9-3 April 21 Kevin Moran 2011 W, 6-1 April 20 Nate Bayuk Doug MacNeil * John Fitzgerald Curt Romboli Chris Taylor * Curt Romboli Craig Katz Mark Sullivan * Jake Marsello Kevin Boggan Ted Ratliff Ted Ratliff Mike Dennhardt Kevin Moran Andrew Lawrence Andy Sullivan Erik Olson Jaime Quiros Mark Sullivan James Dawson Nick Asselin Ted Ratliff Kevin Moran Pat Dean

vs. Boston University Beanpot Record 1-1 1991 W, 5-1 May 1 1994 L, 9-4 April 26

Chris Higgins Steve Dunlea

*Beanpot Champions

Beanpot Championships 1990 2001 2010

BC Beanpot MVPs

1990 Doug MacNeil 1993 Chris Taylor 2001 Mark Sullivan, Brian Durkin 2004 Mike Wlodarczyk, Jared McGuire

2012 BASEBALL media guide

1992 Chris Higgins 1999 Steve Langone 2003 Ryan Leahy 2006 Peter Frates

BC

1992 1993 1999 2003 2004 2006 2011

HISTORY RECORDS

vs. Massachusetts Beanpot Record 5-4 1998 L, 7-2 April 21 1999* W, 4-2 April 29 2000 L, 4-1 April 24 2001* W, 10-5 May 2 2002 W, 7-5 April 16 2005 W, 8-6 April 21 2006 W, 11-3 April 18 2008 L, 4-3 April 15 2009 L, 5-2 April 7

REVIEW

vs. Harvard Beanpot Record 12-2-1 1990* W, 6-3 April 18 1991 L, 12-9 May 2 1992 W, 5-4 April 21 1993* W, 14-5 April 29 1994 T, 7-7 April 27 1995 W, 12-3 April 18 1997 L, 9-2 April 22 2000 W, 8-5 April 25 2003* W, 8-6 April 24 2004 W, 11-6 April 20 2006* W, 10-2 April 25 2007 W, 5-2 April 19 2009 W, 9-5 April 13 2010 W, 10-9 April 14 2011 W, 8-0 April 26

OUTLOOK COACHES PLAYERS

BEANPOT

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BOSTON

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COLLEGE

outlook COLLEGE

Head Coach Mike Gambino and the Boston College baseball team understand the challenges of playing in arguably the best conference in the country, but that does not diminish what their goal is each and every season. “Our goal is to get to the postseason,” Gambino said. “From the fall and into the spring, we preach that we need to be a team that is playing its best heading down the stretch. That is something that we talk about and focus on all of the time; getting to the postseason and making a run to Omaha once we get there.” The Eagles will have to do that without some of their key components from last season. Veteran leader Garret Smith, who played a multitude of roles for BC, graduated and was drafted. Brad Zapenas, a three-year starter at shortstop, left early after being drafted by the Chicago Cubs. John Leonard was the Eagles’ most reliable starting pitcher. Mike Dennhardt, despite being lost last year to Tommy John surgery, would have been a weekend starter but he also took his chance to go pro. Matt Hamlet was a four-year starter at second base. “Losing Smith is tough with the versatility and leadership he gave us,” Gambino said. “Leonard was so consistent and you always knew what you were going to get out of him. Zapenas leaving early after being drafted was a huge loss for us at shortstop.”

Every team in the country has to fill those holes every year and BC is no different. With a combination of proven players and an injection of new talent, the Eagles will look to make a bid to get back to postseason play.

Gambino brought in local product Andrew Chin, who would have been an immediate impact on the weekends, but he will sit out the year to recover from Tommy John. Chin, who hails from Newton, was drafted by Toronto in the fifth round.

Kyle Prohovich STARTING PITCHERS The starting pitching might be the place where Boston College has the most question marks. The only definite to be a weekend ACC starter is sophomore Eric Stevens, who appeared in a team-leading 27 games last year as a freshman. He went 2-1 with a 4.38 ERA in 49.1 innings of work, which also was the most on the squad. “Stevens is a legitimate ACC pitcher with a dominant fastball; not with velocity but with life,” Gambino said. “Those other spots are up in the air.” The Eagles’ most reliable returning hurler is senior Kyle Prohovich, but Gambino would like to use him out of the bullpen. Senior Nate Bayuk has been both a starter and a lefty specialist out of the bullpen and is in the mix for a starting role.

Junior Hunter Gordon and sophomore Matt Alvarez are a couple of more options for the weekend. Gordon has primarily come out of the bullpen, as he made 26 appearances last year with a 4.09 ERA. Alvarez threw 23 times with three starts.

Eric Stevens

“Alvarez has impressive stuff and could play a huge role,” Gambino said. “I could see him closing or being our Sunday starter. Bayuk is coming off a little elbow trouble but has looked good. Brazis is a wild card for us and could really change everything.” Junior Taylor Lasko is a proven arm who has started games in the past, but he underwent Tommy John surgery late in 2010 and is still on the road to recovery.

Senior Andrew Lawrence was forced into action last year and started 12 games, appearing in 20. He usually pitched just one inning per start as Gambino used a bullpen by committee in two of the three weekend games. He has valuable experience pitching in the ACC as he ended the season 2-3 with 4.26 ERA.

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

RELIEF PITCHERS BC returns its best reliever in Prohovich, but as stated above, Gambino would only use him in the pen in an ideal situation. He made 24 appearances last season and went 3-1 with a 3.46 ERA in 39.0 innings of work. He struck out 34 batters and walked 16. “We trust Prohovich so much out of the bullpen and we love having him in there,” Gambino said. “He is the guy I want to go to. But if you can’t get to him, you can’t get to him. He might have to be a swing guy.” With Stevens being the only solidified starter, BC could use a variety of pitchers out of the bullpen. Bayuk has been the go-to guy to retire a lefthander if the situation arose and Gordon has come out of the pen his entire career. Brazis served as the closer in 2010 and racked up nine saves. The Eagles return junior Jay Jeannotte, who will be a factor in the back end of games after coming off shoulder surgery. Sophomore Steve Green made 13 appearances last year as a freshman and will see more time if his consistency improves. Freshmen John Gorman, Eric Stone and Tyler Hinchliffe will get their time on the mound this year, as will Michael West and Nick Poore.

If senior Matt Brazis can get back to the form he had in 2010 when he was a go-to guy of the bullpen, he could play a huge role for the Eagles.

2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

CATCHERS

COLLEGE

Payne has also spent some time at third base and will see action over there. Newcomers Gorman and Ferrick are a couple of more options for Gambino at the hot corner.

The Eagles have two viable options to go behind the plate and they are junior Matt Paré and sophomore Nate LaPointe. Paré was one of two starters at catcher last year before a knee injury sidelined him for the rest of the year. He made 27 starts. LaPointe appeared in 20 games with 12 starts and batted .282.

OUTFIELD The outfield is where the Eagles return the most experience and will serve as a strength for the 2012 Eagle team.

“We have a really good battle between Paré and LaPointe,” Gambino said. “It will be back and forth with those guys early because both have some experience behind the plate. LaPointe’s raw power and hard work has turned him into a good option. Paré is going to hit and everyone knows that. He is also a solid defensive player.” Freshman Geoffrey Murphy is the third option for Gambino behind the plate, but could make a bigger impact out of the bullpen in his first season with the Eagles.

FIRST BASE

Prohovich has spent time at first base in the past and Gambino can also use Gorman, Hinchliffe and freshman Travis Ferrick at the position.

SECOND BASE Freshman Blake Butera looks to be the starter at second base to replace Hamlet, who was a fouryear starter at the position. Butera is the brother of Barry, who played for BC from 2007-09 before leaving to go pro. He led BC to its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 42 years in 2009. “Blake is a solid baseball player,” Gambino said. “He has really good hands and an arm for shortstop. He is a natural shortstop who has made the adjustment and gotten much better on his turns.”

Gambino knows what he has at shortstop and he is excited for the type of year that senior Anthony Melchionda could have. Melchionda has started at third base the last two seasons but is making the move to his left to become the anchor of the defense. Last season, he batted .304 with 17 doubles, three triples and 34 RBIs. “I think Melchionda is our best player across the board,” Gambino said. “He has way more range than you would think and he is just a really good baseball player. Anything you would want your shortstop to get to, he gets to. He is so consistent over there and so accurate with his throws.” As a career .319 hitter in the brutal ACC and with 110 starts under his belt, Gambino knows Melchionda can use his experience to have a massive final season.

Junior Matt McGovern was held out of the lineup early last season with an injury but emerged as one of the best bats on the team. He led BC with a .371 average and three triples. He is the likely option at right field, but he and Bourdon could switch spots at different times. “Those are three really good left-handed hitters,” Gambino said. “Lawrence is coming into his own offensively and is going to hit for some power this year. He should give us some protection around Melchionda.” Senior Marc Perdios is a solid option when a right-handed batter is needed in the lineup, especially if Lawrence is on the mound. He started 38 games in 2011 and batted .267. Moir is another experienced outfielder that would have no problem stepping in. Junior Koury Hajjar and sophomore Jimmy Dowdell could be in the mix as well.

“I think he is going to be a sleeper for ACC Player of the Year,” Gambino said. “That’s how good he is going to be.”

THIRD BASE Hennessy is the likely pick to start at third base this season. He earned some time in the infield a year ago with 13 appearances and five starts. “Hennessy has worked so hard and is right in the mix at third and second,” Gambino said. “He has gotten a lot better defensively and the bat is coming along. He is settling in at third as he gains more experience over there.”

BC

Sophomore John Hennesy is another option to play at second, but he seems to be the frontrunner to start at third. Ferrick will fight for time at all of the infield spots while freshman Nick Colucci recovers from Tommy John surgery.

SHORTSTOP

HISTORY RECORDS

Junior Rob Moir is also a player who could see a lot of time at first base. He played in 21 games in 2011 with three starts and is undoubtedly one of the leaders on this year’s team.

Anthony Melchionda

Sophomore Tom Bourdon returns as the starting center fielder after being a key component for the Eagles last year. He batted .289 and led the team with six steals.

REVIEW

The field position that is most up in the air entering the season is at first. Senior Spenser Payne might see the most time at the position after appearing in 31 games last year with eight starts. He batted .242 in 33 at-bats.

Lawrence will serve as the starting left fielder if he isn’t taking the mound to begin the game. He is one of the most seasoned veterans on the team with 96 starts. He is a career .291 hitter with 11 homers and 58 RBIs.

OUTLOOK COACHES PLAYERS

outlook

Matt McGovern

2012 BASEBALL media guide

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BOSTON

No. Name

COLLEGE

ROSTER COLLEGE Cl.

Pos.

Ht. Wt.

B/T

Hometown/High School

2

Nick Colucci

Fr.

INF

6-2 180

R/R

Portland, Maine/Deering

3

Blake Butera

Fr.

INF

5-9 175

R/R

Madisonville, La./Mandeville

4

Travis Ferrick

Fr.

INF

6-0 175

R/R

Stafford, Va./Colonial Forge

7

Tom Bourdon

So.

OF

5-11 181

L/R

Simsbury, Conn./Northwest Catholic

8

Kyle Prohovich

Sr.

RHP/1B

6-4 238

R/R

Weston, Mass./Roxbury Latin

9

Marc Perdios

Sr.

OF

6-0 185

R/R

Milton, Mass./Catholic Memorial

So.

INF

5-11 178

L/R

Andover, Mass./Andover

11 Anthony Melchionda Sr.

INF

6-0 195

R/R

Braintree, Mass./Thayer Academy

12 Jimmy Dowdell

So.

OF

5-10 191

R/R

Palm Harbor, Fla./Clearwater Central Catholic

14 Andrew Lawrence

Sr.

OF/LHP

6-1 188

L/L

Richmond, Va./St. Christopher’s School

15 Nate LaPointe

So.

C

6-3 230

R/R

Brimfield, Mass./St. John’s

16 Rob Moir

Jr.

OF/1B

6-0 201

L/R

Seymour, Conn./Seymour

18 Matt McGovern

Jr.

OF

5-10 169

L/L

Mamaroneck, N.Y./Mamaroneck

19 Nate Bayuk

Sr.

LHP

5-11 185

L/L

Foxboro, Mass./Xaverian Brothers

20 Matt Brazis

Sr.

RHP

6-2 198

R/R

21 Eric Stone

Fr.

RHP

5-10 165

R/R

Milford, Conn./West Haven

22 Eric Stevens

So.

RHP

6-5 208

R/R

Pompton Lakes, N.J./Don Bosco

23 Michael West

Fr.

RHP

6-0 220

L/R

Spring, Texas/Klein

24 Matt Paré

Jr.

C

6-0 202

L/R

Portland, Maine/Pompano Beach

25 Koury Hajjar

Jr.

OF

5-9 179

L/R

Hanover, Mass./Boston College High

26 Hunter Gordon

Jr.

RHP

6-0 213

R/R

28 Andrew Chin

Fr.

LHP

6-1 180

L/L

Newton, Mass./Buckingham, Browne & Nichols

29 Nick Poore

Fr.

LHP

5-11 176

L/L

Littleton, N.H./Salem

30 Matt Alvarez

So.

RHP

6-1 184

R/R

Cranbury, N.J./Princeton

31 Geoffrey Murphy

Fr.

C/P

6-1 179

R/R

Peachtree City, Ga./McIntosh

33 Spenser Payne

Sr.

INF/OF

6-0 207

R/R

Kirkland, Wash./Eastside Catholic

34 John Gorman

Fr.

RHP/INF

6-1 220

R/R

Norwood, Mass./Catholic Memorial

35 Taylor Lasko

Jr.

RHP

6-0 169

R/R

Stratford, Conn./Bunnell

36 Jay Jeannotte

Jr.

RHP

6-1 192

R/R

Narragansett, R.I./Narragansett

40 Steve Green

So.

LHP

5-10 161

L/L

Brewster, N.Y./John Jay

44 Tyler Hinchliffe

Fr.

LHP/1B/OF 5-10 185

L/L

Voorhees, N.J./Highland Regional

10 John Hennessy

Tampa, Fla./Tampa Jesuit

Swampscott, Mass./Swampscott

COACHES 5 Mike Gambino 43 Scott Friedholm 42 Steve Englert

Head Coach Assistant Coach Assistant Coach

41 Greg Sullivan

Assistant Coach

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

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2012 BASEBALL media guide

BREAKDOWN State Connecticut...........................................................4 Florida...................................................................2 Georgia.................................................................1 Louisiana...............................................................1 Maine....................................................................2 Massachusetts....................................................10 New Hampshire....................................................1 New Jersey...........................................................3 New York...............................................................2 Rhode Island.........................................................1 Texas.....................................................................1 Virginia..................................................................2 Washington...........................................................1 Class Seniors..................................................................7 Juniors...................................................................7 Sophomores..........................................................7 Freshmen............................................................10


OUTLOOK

head coach MIKE GAMBINO

COACHES PLAYERS

• SECOND Season at BC • BOSTON COLLEGE '00

Mike Gambino, a 2000 graduate of Boston College, was named head baseball coach on July 19, 2010. Gambino is in charge of rebuilding a program that made an emphatic postseason statement in 2009, earning its first ACC Championship berth and first appearance in the NCAA Tournament since 1967. The Eagles went 17-33 in his first season at the helm last year, but he saw four players get selected in the MLB First-Year Player Draft. Gambino, who was an assistant coach for the Eagles from 2003-05, came from Virginia Tech where he spent four seasons as an assistant coach under former BC head coach, Pete Hughes. He served as the Hokies’ recruiting coordinator and also worked with the hitters and infielders. Virginia Tech’s batting average improved 40 points (from .279 to .319) under his direction since the 2006 season.

REVIEW

With Gambino’s help, the 2010 Hokies made their first appearance in the NCAA Tournament since 2000 and finished the season ranked No. 20 in the country. Prior to working in Blacksburg, Gambino spent a year as a regional scout for the Detroit Tigers.

He was a first-team All-Big East, All-New England and All-Northeast region honoree following his senior campaign. He also earned second-team All-New England and Big East Academic Team accolades during his playing career. Following his career with BC, the Garrison, N.Y., native played two seasons in the Boston Red Sox minor league system. He spent the 2000 season with the Augusta Green Jackets before splitting the 2001 season between Augusta and the Lowell Spinners. In 2002, the Red Sox hired Gambino as a special assistant to the Major League staff before heading back to Lowell for a coaching role with the Spinners just prior to the June draft. Following his stint in Lowell, the Red Sox sent Gambino to the Major League Baseball Scout Development Program. In January 2003, Gambino returned to BC as an assistant coach under Hughes. Gambino received his bachelor’s degree from the Heights in English and theology.

THE GAMBINO FILE

2012 BASEBALL media guide

BC

2010-present............................................................Boston College head coach 2007-10..................................................................Virginia Tech assistant coach 2006........................................................................Detroit Tigers regional scout 2003-05..............................................................Boston College assistant coach 2000-02....................................Played in Boston Red Sox minor league system 1996-2000................................................................... Played at Boston College

HISTORY RECORDS

Gambino, who played for the Eagles from 1997-2000, started 166 games in the middle infield. He held a career batting average of .313 with 22 doubles, eight homers, 87 RBI and 117 runs. In his final season in 2000, he belted 78 hits and scored 52 times, which ranks tied for fifth and eighth, respectively, in a single season. His 78 hits that year were the most in a single season at the time.

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BOSTON COLLEGE

assistant coaches

COLLEGE Scott Friedholm

• Assistant Coach • Second Season at BC

Steve Englert

• Assistant Coach • 11TH Season at BC

Scott Friedholm, who spent five seasons as the recruiting coordinator and pitching coach at Navy, is in his second season as an assistant coach for the Boston College baseball team.

Steve Englert is in his 11th season as an assistant coach at Boston College. Englert’s primary responsibilities are working with the catchers and as a hitting coach.

Friedholm, who also serves as the recruiting coordinator and pitching coach for the Eagles, helped the Midshipmen reach new heights on the diamond. He guided the pitching staff to the highest five-year win (149), strikeout (1,757) and save (59) totals among any other five-year stretch in program history.

Englert mentored Tony Sanchez who emerged as the top collegiate catcher in the country in 2009 and was a finalist for the Johnny Bench Award. Sanchez was selected fourth overall by the Pittsburgh Pirates, making him the highest draft pick ever from Boston College.

Friedholm developed the first two pitchers to ever be drafted out of Navy while also mentoring 12 all-conference selections, three freshman All-Americans and one AllAmerican. The Midshipmen won 30 games in four of the five years he was at Navy. The program had done that just three times in the previous 110 seasons.

Englert has seen 33 Eagles selected in the Major League draft since he took a position at Boston College in 2002.

Prior to arriving in Annapolis, Friedholm spent four seasons in the same capacity at Maine, producing a pair of MLB draft picks and guiding the Black Bears to two NCAA Tournament appearances. Friedholm also served as the pitching coach for two seasons at Bryant, where the Bulldogs set school records in both overall and Northeast-10 Conference wins in consecutive years. Friedholm played four seasons at Providence from 1995-98. As a freshman, he was part of the Friars squad that won 44 games and a program-record 16 Big East games that earned them a spot in the NCAA Tournament. Friedholm earned All-Big East and all-region honors in 1996 and then as a senior he hit .395 with 13 homers and a school-record 66 RBI, earning All-America honors. Friedholm signed a free agent contract with the Tampa Bay organization in June of 1998. He played for the St. Petersburg Devil Rays of the Class A Florida State League. In 1999, he attended the Rays’ spring training camp. Friedholm graduated from Providence in 1998 with a degree in history.

GREG SULLIVAN

• Assistant Coach • Second Season at BC

In addition to coaching the Eagles, Englert has also coached the Harwich Mariners in the Cape League for the past 14 seasons. In the summer of 2008, Englert led the Mariners to its first Cape League title since 1987 and then followed that up with another championship in 2011. Englert first served as an assistant with Harwich from 1998-2002 before being promoted to his current position as field manager in 2003. Under his tenure as head coach, the Mariners have averaged 19 players drafted per year including six first round picks in the last four seasons. Englert has tutored 36 All-Americans and over 200 players currently play professionally, including 22 major leaguers. Englert came to the Heights after spending one season at Holy Cross, where he coached the catchers and outfielders and was also the hitting instructor. He helped tutor the Crusaders to the Patriot League Tournament in 2001. Prior to his stint at Holy Cross, he spent one season at Virginia Commonwealth University, where he coached the catchers and also worked as the hitting instructor. While at VCU, he helped lead the team to the Colonial Conference Tournament championship game. Englert’s first collegiate coaching job came in 1998 as an assistant at the University of Richmond. In his only year there, the Spiders broke the school singleseason record for home runs, won the Colonial Conference, earned a bid to the NCAA tournament and finished the season ranked No. 25 in the country. A 1987 Boston College graduate, Steve resides in Chestnut Hill, Mass., with his wife, Lisa, and their daughter, Samantha.

Greg Sullivan, who spent four seasons as the head coach at Newbury College, is in his second season as an assistant coach for the Boston College baseball team. Sullivan came from Wofford College where was named an assistant coach in June of 2010. Sullivan was named Newbury College’s first head coach in January 2007 and began laying the groundwork for the development of the program. In 2008, he was named the national Coach of the Year by the Association of Division Three Independents. The Nighthawks earned the New England Collegiate Conference Sportsmanship Award in each of the last two seasons. Sullivan graduated from Eastern Connecticut State in 2006 with a degree in communications. He was a four-year starter for Bill Holowaty and led the Warriors to three Division III national tournament appearances, finishing second in 2004.

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

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2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE Russell DeRosa • Director, Strength & Conditioning, Olympic Sports

Aaron Clark

• Assistant Athletics Trainer Aaron Clark is in his sixth year as a member of the Boston College sports medicine staff. He works primarily with the baseball and men’s soccer programs. Clark came to BC after spending one year (2005-06) as the athletic trainer at nearby Shrewsbury (Mass.) High School.

DeRosa joined the BC staff after seven years (1996-2002) at Yale University, the last five as Associate Director of Sports Conditioning. In that position, he oversaw the strength & conditioning for 32 intercollegiate sports programs.

Prior to his work at Shrewbury, Clark spent four years at Merrimack College (North Andover, Mass.) where he earned his undergraduate degree in sports medicine in the spring of 2005. There, he worked primarily with the men’s hockey, men’s basketball, baseball and women’s lacrosse programs.

In addition to his Yale experiences, DeRosa has also worked with the New HavenConnecticut entry to the American Hockey League (1998-99) and with Boston University (1995-96) as an academic intern. DeRosa received his bachelor’s degree in health and fitness from Springfield College in 1995. He earned a master’s degree in exercise science with an emphasis on exercise physiology from Southern Connecticut State University in 2001.

Clark was a four-year football letterman at tight end at Merrimack. He served as team captain during his senior campaign. A 2001 graduate of Greenfield High School, Clark grew up in Greenfield, Mass. He now resides in Somerville.

He is a member of the National Strength & Conditioning Association.

REVIEW

Russell and his wife Alex, have a 6-year-old son, Andrew. They reside in West Peabody.

COACHES PLAYERS

Russell DeRosa is in his 10th season as a strength and conditioning coach at Boston College. After serving five seasons as the Assistant Strength & Conditioning Coach, he was promoted to Director of Strength & Conditioning for Olympic Sports in 2007.

OUTLOOK

SUPPORT STAFF

HISTORY RECORDS BC

2012 BASEBALL media guide

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BOSTON

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

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PLAYERS PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

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COLLEGE

players COLLEGE 19 - NATE BAYUK

• Senior, LHP, 5-11, 185, L/L • Foxborough, Mass./Xaverian Brothers AS A JUNIOR (2011) Fourth on the team with 23 appearances to go with four starts … went 4-4 with a 5.82 ERA in 60.1 innings, the second most on the team … allowed 41 runs – 39 earned – on 75 hits while striking out 35 and walking 24 … worked 2.2 innings and struck out three against Le Moyne (5/14) … struck out a pair in 2.0 innings against Harvard (4/26) in a combined shutout for the Beanpot Championship … combined to throw 2.1 innings against Northeastern (4/20) and at Georgia Tech (4/22), allowing one hit … earned the win against the Huskies … picked up the win after allowing just one hit in 7.0 innings of relief against Virginia Tech (3/26) … faced one batter over the minimum and used 78 pitches … started vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5) and tossed 7.0 shutout innings for the win, allowing five hits … also won in his first start against Indiana (2/19), allowing one run in 5.0 innings while striking out four.

AS A SOPHOMORE (2010) Made seven appearances out of the bullpen in a season shortened by injury … finished with a 3.86 ERA in 4.2 innings of work … allowed two runs on three hits with both of those runs scoring in one appearance … threw a perfect inning against Holy Cross (3/25) with a strikeout … allowed a hit and two walks in his only two ACC appearances at Virginia (3/20) and Miami (3/14) … worked a scoreless inning against Missouri (2/28) … retired the only batter he faced at Auburn (2/26) and at Tulane (2/19).

AS A REDSHIRT FRESHMAN (2009) Became a key part of the bullpen as a left-handed specialist … led the team with 32 appearances … finished the season with a 3.14 ERA … worked 14.1 innings and allowed five runs on 15 hits … struck out 13 batters and walked nine … only allowed two extra base hits, both doubles … inherited 48 runners on the season and only allowed 14 to score … pitched 0.1 inning in all three games at the Austin Regional and allowed one base runner on a walk … came on in relief in a bases loaded jam with BC up 3-0 against Dartmouth (4/29) and struck out the Big Green’s two best hitters to pick up the save … appeared in all three games against Virginia, pitching 1.2 innings and allowing one hit … did not allow a run in his first 15 appearances of the season, a total of 6.2 innings.

AS A FRESHMAN (2008) Appeared in one game vs. Lehigh (3/2).

BEFORE BC Earned All-Catholic Conference honors three times as a sophomore, junior and senior … also captured Daily News Transcript All-Scholastic honors three times … was a two-time Boston Herald All-Scholastic selection … earned the team’s Most Valuable Player award twice – as a junior and senior … served as team captain as a senior … was a three-year letterwinner for head coach Gerry Lambert … posted a 15-6 career pitching record … earned Under Armour Preseason All-America honors prior to his senior season … selected to Perfect Game’s Northeast Top Prospect Games.

PERSONAL Enrolled as a communications major in the College of Arts and Sciences… Nate is the oldest of Stew and Elizabeth Bayuk’s three children … born Sept. 18, 1988. Year ERA 2008 0.00 2009 3.14 2010 3.86 2011 5.82 Totals 5.18

W-L G-GS 0-0 2-0 0-0 32-0 0-0 7-0 4-4 23-4 4-4 64-4

CAREER STATISTICS

Innings: Strikeouts:

2012 BASEBALL media guide

SV 0 1 0 0 1

IP 0.2 14.1 4.2 60.1 80.0

H 0 15 3 75 93

CAREER HIGHS

R 0 5 2 41 48

ER 0 5 2 39 46

BB 0 9 3 24 36

SO 1 13 2 35 51

7.0 (2x) last vs. Virginia Tech (3/26/11) 4 (3x) last at Wake Forest (5/6/11)


OUTLOOK

players 20 - MATT BRAZIS

• Senior , RHP, 6-2, 198, R/R • Tampa, Fla./Tampa Jesuit

COACHES

AS A JUNIOR (2011) Made 20 appearances out of the bullpen … went 0-4 with a 5.79 ERA in 23.1 innings of work … gave up 19 runs – 15 earned – on 26 hits while striking out 14 … threw a scoreless inning in the season finale against NC State (5/21) and also had one at Wake Forest (5/8) … worked a season-high 2.1 innings against Virginia (5/1) without giving up a run and allowing one hit … pitched a pair of innings against Harvard (4/26) in the Beanpot Championship in a combined shutout … threw a perfect inning at Georgia Tech (4/22) … pitched 2.0 perfect frames at Maryland (3/18) and another one at Florida State (3/11) … earned his only save of the season at Bethune-Cookman (3/4). As the closer, led the Eagles in appearances out of the bullpen with 29 … finished the season with a 1-0 record, nine saves and a 4.73 ERA … tossed 32.1 innings, allowing 19 runs – 17 earned – on 32 hits … he struck out 30 and walked 14 … was dominant in 13 ACC contests with a 1-0 record, five saves and a 1.62 ERA … did not allow a run in five appearances from May 16-26, a total of 6.0 innings … threw a perfect ninth with two strikeouts against Georgia Tech (5/22) for the save to clinch a spot in the ACC Championship … struck out three of the four batters he retired against Dartmouth (5/16) for his eighth save of the year … earned the save against Florida State (5/7) by retiring the side in order … struck out the last batter of the game for his sixth save against Quinnipiac (4/27) … picked up his lone win of the year at NC State (4/24) when he a threw a career-high 2.2 innings, allowing one run on two hits … threw one pitch and forced a game-ending double play for the save vs. Wake Forest (4/17) … started the season by not allowing a run in 10 of his first 11 appearances … struck out a batter for the save in a perfect ninth inning at Northeastern (3/31) … also got a save against Duke (3/27) … notched his second save of the year at Miami (3/12) … his first save of the season came at Florida Atlantic (3/5).

AS A FRESHMAN (2009) Led all freshman with 23 appearances out of the bullpen … had a 5.60 ERA and a 1-0 record … worked 17.2 innings and allowed 16 runs – 11 earned – on 20 hits … fanned 21 batters and walked seven … pitched 0.2 innings in the longest game in NCAA history against Texas (5/30) in the Austin Regional, allowing two hits with a strikeout … allowed just one hit in three appearances, a total of 3.0 innings, against North Carolina (5/14), Le Moyne (5/9) and Miami (5/2) … picked up first collegiate win against the Tar Heels after striking out the only batter he faced … worked an inning of scoreless ball against Rhode Island (4/8) and a perfect 1.2 innings at UConn (4/1) … did not allow a run in six-straight appearances and only gave up two hits from 3/3 to 3/22 … did not issue a walk in his first nine appearances.

BEFORE BC All-Hillsborough Country selection as a junior and senior and an honorable mention all-state honoree … three-year letter winner with a career record of 10-4 … won Tampa Jesuit’s Top Pitcher and Rene Martinez Unsung Hero awards … played in the Tampa Bay Rays All-Star Classic and the Florida Diamond Club Pro Showcase … a Perfect Game and Prospect Wire top 100 player in Florida … struck out 77 batters in 45 innings of work as a junior and had an ERA of 1.63 … as a senior, had 71 Ks in 43 innings and posted a 2.03 ERA … named to the All-Star team as a senior … led Tampa Jesuit to a district championship and was the runnerup in the region as a junior … played for head coach Richie Warren … played for the Orlando Scorpions (2008), East Coast Grays (2007), and Team Hitmaster (2006) during the summer … member of the National Honor Society.

PERSONAL

CAREER STATISTICS

W-L SV G-GS 1-0 0 23-0 1-0 9 29-0 0-4 1 20-0 2-4 10 72-0

Innings: Strikeouts:

2012 BASEBALL media guide

IP 17.2 32.1 23.1 73.1

H 20 32 26 78

CAREER HIGHS

R 16 19 19 54

ER 11 17 15 43

BB 7 14 18 39

SO 21 30 14 65

2.2 at NC State (4/24/10) 3 (5x) last vs. Dartmouth (5/16/10)

BC

Enrolled as a history major in the College of Arts and Sciences … Matt is the younger of Lori and Bill Brazis’ two children … born on September 6, 1989.

Year ERA 2009 5.60 2010 4.73 2011 5.79 Totals 5.28

PLAYERS REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

15 AS A SOPHOMORE (2010)

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BOSTON COLLEGE

players COLLEGE 14 - ANDREW LAWRENCE

• Senior , OF/LHP, 6-1, 188, L/L • Richmond, Va./St. Christopher’s School AS A JUNIOR (2010) Started 28 games in the outfield and 12 on the mound, appearing in 43 total games … HITTING: led the Eagles with five homers and was second with a .465 slugging percentage, 24 RBIs and 22 runs … fourth on the team in batting (.271) and on-base percentage (.329) … only player on the team with multiple home runs … had nine multi-hit games with six coming in his last 14 contests … went 3-for-4 with a double against Le Moyne (5/15) … hit a two-run homer at Wake Forest (5/8) … had two hits and a double in consecutive games at the Demon Deacons (5/7, 5/6) … tripled in consecutive games against Virginia (5/1, 4/30) … went 2-for-4 with two RBIs against Harvard (4/26) in the Beanpot Championship … was 3-for-4 with a solo homer and two RBIs at Georgia Tech (4/24) … drove in a pair of runs against Northeastern (4/20) in the Beanpot … went 4-for-5 with a double, three-run homer and four RBIs at Dartmouth (4/12) … hit a two-run double against Bryant (4/6) … belted a two-run homer at Holy Cross (3/23) … had two hits at Florida State (3/12) and hit a solo home run in the series opener (3/11) … went 2-for-4 with two runs, a double and a RBI vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5) … PITCHING: had the second most starts on the team with 12 and appeared in 20 on the mound … went 2-3 with a 4.26 ERA which ranked fourth on the team … allowed 15 runs – 12 earned – on 23 hits in 25.1 innings of work.

AS A SOPHOMORE (2010)

Appeared in 41 games with 23 starts in left field … batted .287 with six doubles, three homers, 13 RBI and 14 runs … slugged at a .483 clip and had an on-base percentage of .388 … hit a walk-off two-run home run in the 12th inning against Miami (5/27) in the ACC Championship … went 2-for-3 with a double and two runs against St. John’s (5/18) … drove in a run in consecutive games versus UConn (5/16) and Dartmouth (5/18) … doubled and scored a run at Virginia Tech (4/30) … hit a solo home run in his only plate appearance against Quinnipiac (4/27) … hit an RBI triple against Northeastern (4/21) in the Beanpot Championship … went 3-for-5 and drove in three runs against Wake Forest (4/16) … knocked an RBI double against Maryland (4/10) … went 2-for-3 with a double, homer and two RBI against Bryant (4/7) … had a 3-for-3 day at Bryant (3/17) with a double, RBI, run and a steal.

AS A REDSHIRT FRESHMAN (2009) Appeared in 51 games in the outfield and started 33 … batted .317 with 14 doubles, three homers and 19 RBI … slugged at a .508 clip … third in the ACC in sac bunts with 11 behind Matt Hamlet and Brad Zapenas … had a hit in all five postseason games he started … went 2-for-4 against Army (5/31) and Texas State (5/29) in the Austin Regional … knocked a double and scored twice against the Bobcats … had an RBI double and scored a run vs. Miami (5/22) in the ACC Championship … hit a double in consecutive games against North Carolina (5/14-15) … went 1-for-2 with a double, sac fly, two RBI and a run against Miami (5/2) … went 12-for-21 (.571) in a five-game stretch from 4/21 to 4/29 … had two singles and a run against Dartmouth (4/29) and Quinnipiac (4/28) while driving in three runs vs. the Bobcats … hit a pair of doubles at Duke (4/25) … had a career game against Bryant (4/21), going 4-for-5 with two home runs, six RBI and three runs.

AS A FRESHMAN (2008)

CAREER PITCHING STATISTICS

Year ERA W-L G-GS IP H 2011 4.26 2-3 20-12 25.1 23 Totals 4.26 2-3 20-12 25.1 23 Innings: Strikeouts:

16

R 15 15

ER 12 12

BB 13 13

SO 16 16

CAREER PITCHING HIGHS

3.0 (2x) last vs. Harvard (4/26/11) 3 vs. Le Moyne (5/14/11)

Redshirted the season.

CAREER HITTING STATISTICS

BEFORE BC Four-year outfielder and pitcher at St. Christopher’s School … played for head coach Tony Szymendera … totaled eight home runs and 76 RBIs during high school career … earned AllState, All-Prep League and All-Metro first-team honors as a senior … earned All-Prep League first-team honors and All-State second-team honors as a junior … team captain in 2007 … winner of Baseball Award in 2007.

PERSONAL Enrolled as an English major in the College of Arts and Sciences … Andrew is the middle of Rick and Deb Lawrence’s three children … born May 22, 1989.

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2009 .317 51-33 120 22 38 19 14 0 3 8 2 2010 .287 41-23 87 14 25 13 6 1 3 10 1 2011 .271 43-40 144 22 39 24 9 2 5 8 2 Totals .291 135-96 351 58 102 56 29 3 11 26 5 Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

CAREER HITTING HIGHS

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

2012 BASEBALL media guide

4 (2x) last at Dartmouth (4/12/11) 3 (2x) last vs. Bryant (4/21/09) 6 vs. Bryant (4/21/09) 6 games (4/19/09-4/29/09)


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE OUTLOOK

players

COLLEGE

11 - Anthony Melchionda

• Senior, INF, 6-0, 195, R/R • Braintree, Mass./Thayer Academy

COACHES

AS A JUNIOR (2011)

AS A SOPHOMORE (2010) Stepped into a starting role and started all 58 games, mostly at third base … led the team in batting (.358) and hits (78) … hit total is the fifth-most in a single season at BC … was also third on the team in on-base percentage (.404), RBI (41) and home runs (7) … fourth in slugging (.518), doubles (12) and total bases (113) … had 24 multi-hit games and nine games with three hits … had a pair of 11-game hit streaks during the season … had six three-hit games in the last 11 contests of the year … went 3-for-4 with a pair of doubles and runs against Virginia (5/26) in the ACC Championship … also went 3-for-4 in a pair of games against Georgia Tech … had a double and a run in the second game of the series against the Yellow Jackets (5/21) and doubled, homered and drove in three runs in the opener (5/20) … hit a two-run double against Dartmouth (5/16) … went 3-for-4 with a double and two runs versus UConn (5/10) … had a huge series against Florida State, going 8-for-11 with two doubles, a homer, five RBI and five runs … had a 3-for-3 day with a double, RBI and a run in the finale against the Seminoles (5/9) and went 3-for-4 with a two-run homer in the first game that day … went 2-for-4 with a double, two RBI and two runs in the series opener (5/7) … went 2-for-4 with a homer and two RBI at NC State (4/25) … had three hits the previous day against the Wolfpack (4/24) … blasted a three-run homer against Northeastern (4/21) in the Beanpot Championship.

AS A FRESHMAN (2009) Appeared in 21 games and earned three starts, two at second and one at shortstop … went 2-for-4 with a double, RBI and a run against North Carolina (5/15) … doubled and drove in two runs vs. Le Moyne (5/10) … had an RBI single and stole a base against Miami (5/3) … had a pinch-hit two-RBI single against Virginia (4/18).

BEFORE BC

PERSONAL Enrolled as a communications major in the College of Arts & Sciences … Anthony is the middle of Laurie and Bob Melchionda’s three children … born on February 17, 1990.

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2009 .162 21-3 37 4 6 7 2 0 0 0 1 2010 .358 58-58 218 39 78 41 12 1 7 14 4 2011 .304 49-49 181 21 55 34 17 3 1 24 3 Totals .319 128-110 436 64 139 82 31 4 8 38 8 Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

4 (2x) last at Dartmouth (4/12/11) 3 vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5/11) 4 (4x) last at Dartmouth (4/12/11) 11 games (2x, last 3/27/10-4/13/10)

BC

Earned Independent School League (ISL) MVP honors as a senior shortsthop at Thayer Academy … gained 2008 Boston Globe All-Scholastic honors … was a two-time Patriot-Ledger All-Scholastic selection … hit .500 with five home runs and 16 RBIs as a senior; scored 22 runs … captured All-ISL honors as a junior after hitting .450 with eight home runs … played for head coach Matt McGuirk … split time during summer 2008 between Braintree Legion and Braintree White Sox (Cranberry League) … played for East Cobb Cubs 17U (Marietta, Ga.) during summer 2007 … also starred on Thayer’s football team; gained All-New England and All-ISL honors as senior quarterback.

PLAYERS REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

Started 49 of the 50 games with nearly all of them coming at third base … led the team with 55 hits, 17 doubles, three triples, 81 total bases and 34 RBIs … second on the team with a .304 batting average, a .385 on-base percentage and 24 walks … recorded 15 multi-hit games … had a hit in four of the last five games of the season … hit a walk-off double in the 11th inning against top-ranked Virginia (4/30) … went 2-for-4 with a RBI double at St. John’s (4/25) … had a pair of hits and stole a base at Georgia Tech (4/24) … recorded two hits in consecutive games at Georgia Tech (4/22) and against Northeastern (4/20) in the Beanpot … had a RBI double and walked three times against Clemson (4/15) … went 4-for-5 with a double, two runs and four RBIs at Dartmouth (4/12) … was 3-for-6 with two doubles and two RBIs at Duke (4/10) … had two hits, a double and a RBI in the second game of the series against the Blue Devils (4/9) … went 3-for-5 with two runs and a RBI against Bryant (4/6) … was 2-for-3 with a double and three RBIs vs. Miami (4/3) … doubled and tripled at Rhode Island (3/30) … went 3-for-4 with a two-run homer and three RBIs against Virginia Tech (3/25) … had a 3-for-5 performance with a double at Maryland (3/18) … doubled and drove in two runs at BethuneCookman (3/8) … had two hits against Michigan State (3/6) … went 4-for-5 with two triples, a double, three runs and four RBIs against SIU Edwardsville (3/5) … drove in three runs and walked three times at Bethune-Cookman (3/4) … had a pair of hits and a RBI at Florida (2/27) … drove in two runs against Indiana (2/19).

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BOSTON COLLEGE

players COLLEGE 33 - Spenser Payne

• Senior , INF/OF, 6-0, 207, R/R • Kirkland, Wash./Eastside Catholic AS A JUNIOR (2011) Appeared in 31 games with eight starts at first base … batted .242 with a double, a homer and five RBIs … drove in two runs against Harvard (4/26) in the Beanpot championship … hit a solo homer, the first of his career, at St. John’s (4/25) to give BC a 4-3 lead in the top of the 10th … had a pinch-hit single against Clemson (4/15) … singled in games against Miami (4/3) and at Northeastern (3/29) … singled and scored a run at Bethune-Cookman (3/8) … went 2-for-3 with a double and two RBIs vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5).

AS A SOPHOMORE (2010) Appeared in eight games with a start in left field … forced a walk against Georgia Tech (5/20) … doubled and scored against St. John’s (5/12) … got his start against Holy Cross (3/25).

AS A FRESHMAN (2009) Appeared in five games and started BC’s opening game at the ACC Championship vs. Florida State (5/20) … pinch hit against North Carolina (5/15), walked and scored a run.

BEFORE BC Three-time All-Metro League player for Eastside Catholic … named to the all-state team as a senior … served as team captain as a junior and senior … played second and third base … batted .430 with 10 home runs and 29 RBI as a senior … hit .526 with six homers as a junior … played for head coach Curt Towey … was also an all-league player in football.

PERSONAL Enrolled as a human development major in the Lynch School of Education … honor roll student all four years at Eastside Catholic … Spenser is the son of Shan Cunningham and Stanley Payne … has an older sister … born on September 18, 1989.

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2009 .000 5-1 6 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2010 .100 8-1 10 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 2011 .242 31-8 33 3 8 5 1 0 1 7 1 Totals .184 44-10 49 5 9 5 2 0 1 9 1 Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

18

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

2 vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5/11) 1 (5x) last at St. John’s (4/25/11) 2 (2x) last vs. Harvard (4/26/11) 2 games (2x, last 4/25/11-4/26/11)


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE OUTLOOK

players

COLLEGE

9 - MARC PERDIOS

• Senior, OF, 6-0, 185, R/R • Milton, Mass./Catholic Memorial

COACHES

AS A JUNIOR (2011)

AS A SOPHOMORE (2010) Appeared in 14 games with six starts in left field … walked and scored a run against St. John’s (5/18) … doubled and walked against Duke (3/27) … hit a solo home run at FIU (3/10) and against Missouri (2/28).

AS A SOPHOMORE (2009) Redshirted the season with an injury.

AS A FRESHMAN (2008) Started 38 games and appeared in 45 of them … had six multi-hit games … went 1-for-2 with an RBI and a walk vs. Wake Forest (5/15) … had a double, two walks, and a run scored vs. UConn (5/13) … went 2-for-3 with a walk vs. Northeastern (5/11) … went 2-for-4 with a double, a run, and a stolen base vs. Maryland (5/2) … knocked two runs home with a single vs. Florida State (4/11) … registered two hits in consecutive games against Georgia Tech (3/29) and Holy Cross (3/26) … had a double, two RBI, and two runs against the Crusaders … went 2-for-5 with a double, two runs, and an RBI at Miami (3/7) … went 3-for-6 in BC debut at Georgia Southern (2/23) with a homer, a double, three RBI, and two runs scored.

BEFORE BC Three-year starting centerfielder at Catholic Memorial … played for head coach Hal Carey … was a three-time All-Catholic Conference selection … was a two-time Boston Herald AllScholastic honoree … hit .433 as a senior and ranked in top five in every team offensive category in the Catholic Conference … served as captain his junior and senior seasons … honor roll student … member of National Honor Society.

PERSONAL Enrolled as a communications major in the College of Arts and Sciences … Marc is the older of Dave and Sarale Perdios’ two sons … born Feb. 23, 1988.

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2008 .223 45-38 139 25 31 17 10 0 2 17 5 2010 .158 14-6 19 3 3 2 1 0 2 5 0 2011 .267 41-38 135 20 36 11 10 2 0 18 3 Totals .239 100-82 293 48 70 30 21 2 4 40 8

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

3 (3x) last vs. Le Moyne (5/14/11) 3 (2x) last at Duke (4/8/11) 3 at Georgia Southern (2/23/08) 5 games (2/27/11-3/9/11)

BC

Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

PLAYERS REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

Appeared in 41 games with 38 starts … batted .267 with 10 doubles, two triples and 11 RBIs … recorded 11 multi-hit games … finished the season 7-for-11 in his last three starts … went 2-for-4 with a double and two RBIs against NC State (5/19) … doubled, tripled and scored a run against Le Moyne (5/15) … went 3-for-4 with a triple and a run scored in the first game against the Dolphins (5/14) … doubled and scored a run at Wake Forest (5/7) … drove in a run and scored against Harvard (4/26) in the Beanpot championship … went 2-for-3 with a double and two runs against Northeastern (4/20) in the Beanpot … doubled and drove in a run against Clemson (4/16) … had two hits and a RBI at Duke (4/10) … went 3-for-5 with two doubles and three runs scored in the series opener at the Blue Devils (4/8) … knocked a pair of singles against Miami (4/3) … went 1-for-3 with two RBIs vs. Virginia Tech (3/26) … had two hits and a double the previous game against the Hokies (3/25) … went 2-for-4 with a RBI at Florida State (3/12) … was 2-for-3 with a run and a RBI at Bethune-Cookman (3/8) … singled twice and scored a run at Florida (2/27).

19


BOSTON

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

20

COLLEGE

players COLLEGE 8 - KYLE PROHOVICH

• Senior ,1B/RHP, 6-4, 238, R/R • Weston, Mass./Roxbury Latin AS A JUNIOR (2011) Appeared in 19 games with nine starts … eight starts came as the designated hitter, one as a pitcher … became the go-to guy out of the bullpen, appearing in 24 games … PITCHING: second on the team with a 3.46 ERA and three wins … third in appearances and strikeouts (34) … allowed 15 earned runs on 34 hits in 39.0 innings of work … walked 16 batters … threw 1.2 shutout innings and fanned three in the season finale against NC State (5/21) … struck out two more members of the Wolfpack (5/2) in a perfect inning the day before … worked 3.0 shutout innings and allowed just one hit against Le Moyne (5/15) … allowed two hits through a career-high 4.0 innings against Virginia (4/30) to pick up the win in extra innings … allowed four runs in 12 appearances from March 6-April 10, a total of 15.1 innings … struck out five in 3.2 frames and only allowed two hits at Duke (4/10) to earn the win … got first win of the season after tossing 1.1 shutout innings against Bryant (4/6) … struck out the only two batters he faced at Rhode Island (3/30) … started and threw 2.0 perfect innings at Northeastern (3/29) … pitched 1.1 scoreless innings at Florida State (3/11) and vs. Tennessee Tech (2/20) … HITTING: batted .195 in 41 at-bats with a homer and three RBIs … recorded a pinch-hit single against Harvard (4/26) in the Beanpot championship … singled and scored a run against Clemson (4/16) … singled and scored twice against Bryant (4/6) … hit a pinch-hit RBI single vs. Miami (4/3) … hit a two-run homer, the first of his career, and scored twice against SIU Edwardsville (3/5) … singled and scored a run against Indiana (2/19).

AS A SOPHOMORE (2010) Appeared in nine games out of the bullpen … went 0-1 with a 12.00 ERA … worked 9.0 innings and allowed 12 runs on 13 hits while walking and striking out nine … worked 0.2 innings and surrendered a walk against Maryland (4/10) … tossed 1.1 innings versus Bryant (4/7) and allowed a hit while striking out a pair … allowed a walk in an inning of relief at Clemson (4/2) … struck out a pair in an inning at Virginia (3/19).

AS A REDSHIRT FRESHMAN (2009) Received a medical redshirt … had two at-bats in his only appearance of the season vs. Bethune-Cookman (2/27).

AS A FRESHMAN (2008) Made two relief appearances and pitched 3.0 innings … made collegiate debut at Florida Atlantic (3/4) and pitched 2.0 innings, allowing an unearned run and no hits with two strikeouts.

BEFORE BC Three-year starter at Roxbury Latin High School … played first base, outfield and pitcher … played for head coach John Lieb … batted .439 as a senior; hit three home runs … tallied a 6-0 pitching record … two-time All-Independent School League selection … played summer ball with the East Cobb Braves … AAU All-League selection … selected as the Best Athlete at Roxbury Latin in 2007.

PERSONAL Enrolled as a history major in the College of Arts and Sciences … Kyle is the older of Donald and Sheryl Prohovich’s two children … born Sept. 23, 1988.

CAREER PITCHING STATISTICS

Year ERA W-L G-GS 2008 3.00 0-0 2-0 2010 12.00 0-1 9-0 2011 3.46 3-1 24-1 Totals 4.94 3-2 35-1 Innings: Strikeouts:

IP 3.0 9.0 39.0 51.0

H 2 13 34 49

R 2 12 15 29

CAREER PITCHING HIGHS

ER 1 12 15 28

BB SO 2 3 9 9 16 34 27 46

4.0 against Virginia (4/30/11) 5 at Duke (4/10/11)

CAREER HITTING STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2008 .000 1-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2009 .000 1-0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2010 .000 4-0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2011 .195 19-9 41 6 8 3 0 0 1 4 0 Totals .170 25-9 47 6 8 3 0 0 1 5 0 Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

CAREER HITTING HIGHS

2012 BASEBALL media guide

1 (8x) last vs. Harvard (4/26/11) 2 (2x) last vs. Bryant (4/6/11) 2 vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5/11) 2 games (3x, last 4/25/11-4/26/11)


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE

25 - KOURY HAJJAR

26 - Hunter Gordon

• Junior , OF, 5-9, 179, L/R

• Junior , RHP, 6-0, 213, R/R

• Hanover, Mass./Boston College High

• Swampscott, Mass. /Swampscott

Appeared in three games … recorded his first collegiate hit at UCF (3/9).

BEFORE BC Played first base and outfield at BC High and was a career .330 hitter … played on the Eagles 2008 and 2009 state championship teams … 2008 Bay State Games gold medal winner … starred for the Hanover American Legion team that won the state title, batting .414 with a .827 on-base percentage.

PERSONAL

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2011 .333 3-0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

CAREER HIGHS

Hits:

1 at UCF (3/9/11)

36 - Jay Jeannotte

• Sophomore, RHP, 6-1, 192, R/R

BEFORE BC

• Narragansett, R.I./Narragansett

Named to ESPN RISE Magazine All-Area Greater Boston team … played in the Massachusetts vs. Connecticut All-Star Game as a senior … a Northeastern Conference all-star who led the Big Blue in wins and strikeouts as a senior … also led all area hitters in home runs with 10 … went 5-3 as a junior and finished with a 1.20 ERA.

AS A SOPHOMORE (2011) Missed the entire season due to a shoulder injury.

AS A FRESHMAN (2010) Made 10 appearances out of the bullpen before an injury shortened his season … had a 6.10 ERA in 10.1 innings of work … allowed seven runs on 10 hits, walked six and struck out three … threw 1.1 innings of no-hit ball against UMass (4/13) and then did the same in an inning vs. Bryant (4/7) … retired the only two batters he faced against Duke (3/27) … walked two but did not give up a hit in an inning at UConn (3/16).

PERSONAL Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … Hunter is the younger of Paula and Robert Gordon’s two children … born March 22, 1991.

BEFORE BC Selected the Most Valuable Player in Division I-South and was all-state as a senior … finished the season with a .458 batting average … scored 34 runs and stole 29 bases without getting thrown out … registered 61 strikeouts in 38 innings on the mound … also an all-state basketball player and was named Gatorade Player of the Year … member of the National Honor Society and the Foreign Language Honor Society.

PERSONAL CAREER STATISTICS

Innings: Strikeouts:

CAREER HIGHS

R ER BB SO 32 28 21 13 18 15 11 23 50 43 32 36

3.0 (2x) last vs. NC State (5/20/11) 3 (2x) last vs. Le Moyne (5/14/11)

CAREER STATISTICS

Year ERA W-L APP-GS IP H R ER BB SO 2010 6.10 0-0 10-0 10.1 10 7 7 6 3 Innings: Strikeouts:

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

BC

Year ERA W-L G-GS IP H 2010 7.71 1-3 24-1 32.2 38 2011 4.09 1-4 26-0 33.0 30 Totals 5.89 2-7 50-1 65.2 68

Enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences … Jay is the son of Mary and John Jeannotte … born November 9, 1990.

PLAYERS REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … continues the long Hajjar legacy at Boston College … Koury is the older of Joanne and Jamie Hajjar’s two children … born February 22, 1991.

AS A FRESHMAN (2010) Had the third-most appearances on the team with 24 … went 1-3 with a 7.71 ERA in 32.2 innings … gave up 32 runs – 28 earned – on 38 hits … walked 21batters and struck out 13 … the only pitcher on the roster to not allow a home run during the course of the season … threw a perfect inning with a strikeout against St. John’s (5/18) … worked 2.0 no-hit innings against Harvard (5/5) to earn his first collegiate win … tossed a perfect inning of relief in the Beanpot Championship versus Northeastern (4/21) … struck out the only batter he faced against Wake Forest (4/16) to earn the save … worked 1.2 innings and only allowed a hit and a walk against Bryant (4/7) … threw 2.1 innings and allowed one run on four hits in a 5-4 win at Northeastern (3/31) … retired all four Holy Cross (3/25) batters he faced … threw perfect innings at Bryant (3/17) and UConn (3/16) … worked 2.2 innings of relief at Miami (3/13) and did not allow a hit … tossed 2.0 innings and gave up two hits at Tulane (2/20) in his first collegiate appearance.

COACHES

AS A SOPHOMORE (2011)

AS A SOPHOMORE (2011) Second on the team with 26 appearances and third with a 4.09 ERA … went 1-4 and allowed 18 runs – 15 earned – on 30 hits in 33.0 innings … struck out 23 while walking just 11 … allowed two base runners in 5.0 innings in his last two outings … pitched 3.0 scoreless against NC State (5/20) and a perfect 2.0 innings with three strikeouts vs. Le Moyne (5/14) … threw a perfect inning against Virginia (4/29) and Harvard (4/26) in the Beanpot Championship in a combined shutout … worked 2.1 shutout innings at Duke (4/10) and struck out two … allowed an unearned run in nine outings from March 8-April 6 … threw 12.0 innings in that span and allowed seven hits, while opponents’ batting average was .156 in that span … worked 2.0 perfect innings against Virginia Tech (3/25) and Maryland (3/18) during that time frame .. got his win against the Terrapins.

OUTLOOK

players

2.0 at Tulane (2/21/10) 1 (3x) last vs. Massachusetts (4/13/10)

21


BOSTON

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

players COLLEGE

BC

18 - MATT McGOVERN

35 - Taylor Lasko

• Junior , OF, 5-10, 169, L/L

• Junior, RHP, 6-0, 169, R/R

• Mamaroneck, N.Y./Mamaroneck

• Stratford, Conn./Bunnell

AS A SOPHOMORE (2011)

AS A JUNIOR (2011) Missed the entire season after undergoing Tommy John surgery in August 2010.

AS A SOPHOMORE (2010) Appeared in 21 games with eight starts, emerging as an important reliever on the weekend … went 4-2 with a 5.14 ERA in 63.0 innings … allowed 37 runs – 36 earned – on 69 hits while striking out 37 and walking 24 … got the win against Georgia Tech (5/22) to clinch a spot in the ACC Championship, starting and throwing 5.1 innings, allowing three runs on five hits … also earned a win against Dartmouth (5/16), giving up four runs on six hits in 6.0 innings … he struck out four and did not issue a walk against the Big Green … threw 2.0 perfect innings of relief at Virginia Tech (5/1) … tossed 4.1 innings from the bullpen at NC State (4/23), getting the win after allowing a run on five hits and fanning four with no walks … picked up his only save of the year when he threw 3.0 innings of relief versus Wake Forest (4/18), giving up two hits and a run … got his first win of the year at Bryant (3/17), throwing 6.0 innings and allowing one run on five hits … did not give up a run in four of his first five appearances … tossed scoreless innings at Miami (3/14) and FIU (3/9) … worked 2.2 scoreless frames vs. Florida Atlantic (2/2&) and also threw 0.2 innings at Tulane (2/21).

AS A FRESHMAN (2009) Appeared in nine games with five starts … went 0-2 with an 8.31 ERA … started and tossed 4.0 innings at Bryant (3/18), allowing two runs – one earned – on three hits … also started at Florida Gulf Coast (3/4), allowing five runs – two earned – and six hits in 4.0 innings of work.

BEFORE BC Was a three-time Class LL All-State selection as a pitcher at Bunnell High School … gained All-Southwestern Conference honors in each of his four seasons … was a three-time All-Area choice … had a 10-1 mark with a 1.02 earned-run average in 2008; fanned 120 batters, while issuing just seven walks … finished with a 7-2 record and a 1.10 earned-run average in 2007; recorded 105 strikeouts and nine walks … played for head coach Scott Szturma … also starred on the Bulldogs basketball team.

PERSONAL Enrolled as a communications major in the College of Arts & Sciences … Taylor and his younger brother Justin are the sons of Lynne and Eugene Lasko … born on May 3, 1990.

Played sparingly in February and March due to an ankle injury, but went on to start 30 games and appeared in 34 … led BC with a .371 average, three triples, a .476 slugging percentage and a .412 on-base percentage … only Eagle over .400 in both slugging and on-base percentage … second on the squad with 21 runs and five stolen bases … led the team with a .395 average in ACC play … had 14 multi-hit games and five games with at least three hits … batted over .400 until May 15 … went on a tear at the pate from April 6-22, going on a 10-game hit streak in which he hit .532 (25-for-57) with two doubles, two triples, eight RBIs and 10 runs … slugged at a .660 clip and was on base 55 percent of the time during that span … in a span of three games from April 9-12, he was 12-for-14, and was the only player in the conference to have four hits in three-consecutive games … singled and scored twice against NC State (5/19) … went 2-for-4 with a run and a RBI at Wake Forest (5/8) … was 3-for-4 with a double and a pair of runs against Virginia (4/30) … had two hits, a triple and three RBIs at Georgia Tech (4/24) … went 3-for-4 with a double in the opener at the Yellow Jackets (4/22) … had a pair of two-hit games in the series against Clemson (4/15-16) … went 4-for-4 with a triple and three runs scored at Dartmouth (4/12) … was 4-for-5 with a RBI and two runs in the series finale at Duke (4/10) … in second game of the series, went 4-for-5 with a career-high four RBIs and a triple … had two hits in the opener at the Blue Devils (4/8) and against Bryant (4/6) … also drove in a pair against the Bulldogs … hit his first career homer and drove in two runs vs. Miami (4/3) … went 2-for-3 and scored twice against Tennessee Tech (2/20).

AS A FRESHMAN (2010) Appeared in 28 games and started four in left field … came on to pinch hit against Georgia Tech (5/20) and delivered a sacrifice fly … singled in a run against St. John’s (5/18) … stole a base and scored a run as a pinch runner against Maryland (4/10) … drove in a run at Bryant (3/17) … singled and stole a base as a pinch hitter at Miami (3/12) … singled and scored a run at Tulane (2/21) and doubled in his first career at-bat against the Green Wave (2/20).

BEFORE BC Member of the 2009 Louisville Slugger High School All-American team … two-time all-state selection in New York … three-time all-section selection and an all-league player for four seasons … led Mamaroneck to state titles as a junior and senior … batted .514, scored 49 runs, stole 29 bases and did not allow a run as a senior … named The Journal News Westchester/Putnam athlete of the season … holds New York state records for hits (149) and runs scored (169) by a large-school player.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences … Matt is the middle of Delia and Bob McGovern’s three children … born February 12, 1991.

CAREER STATISTICS

CAREER STATISTICS

22

COLLEGE

Year ERA W-L APP-GS IP H 2009 8.31 0-2 9-5 17.1 27 2010 5.14 4-2 21-8 63.0 69 Totals 5.84 4-4 30-13 80.1 96 Innings: Strikeouts:

CAREER HIGHS

R ER BB SO 21 16 10 14 37 36 24 37 58 52 34 51 6.2 vs. Maryland (4/10/10) 5 at Florida Gulf Coast (3/4/09)

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2010 .152 28-4 33 4 5 3 1 0 0 1 2 2011 .371 34-30 124 21 46 18 4 3 1 8 5 Totals .325 62-34 157 25 51 21 5 3 1 9 7 Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

4 (3x) last at Dartmouth (4/12/11) 3 at Dartmouth (4/12/11) 4 at Duke (4/9/11) 10 games (4/6/11/4/22/11)


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE 16 - Rob Moir

24 - MATT PARÉ

• Junior, OF/1B, 6-0, 201, L/R

• Junior , C, 6-0, 202, L/R

• Seymour, Conn./Seymour

• Portland, Maine/Pompano Beach (Fla.) AS A SOPHOMORE (2011) Started 27 games and appeared in 28 before a knee injury sidelined him for the remainder of the year … batted .207 with two doubles and 11 RBIs … third on the team with 21 walks and a .395 on-base percentage … singled and drove in a run against Bryant (4/6) and in two games against Virginia Tech (3/25, 3/27) … went 2-for-3 with two RBIs and a run scored at Bethune-Cookman (3/8) … drove in a pair of runs vs. Michigan State (3/6) … scored twice against SIU Edwardsville (3/5) … doubled, drove in a run and scored three times at Bethune-Cookman (3/4) … had a pair of base hits at Florida (2/27) … drove in two runs vs. Tennessee Tech (2/20) … went 2-for-4 with a double and a RBI against Indiana (2/19).

AS A REDSHIRT FRESHMAN (2010)

AS A FRESHMAN (2009) Redshirted the season.

BEFORE BC Earned 2008 Male Athlete of the Year honors from the Connecticut Post and 2007-08 Athlete of the Year honors from the New Haven Register; starred on Seymour’s football, track and baseball teams … was a consensus All-State selection as a senior first baseman/pitcher … also gained All-Area accolades … selected as the Naugatuck Valley League’s Most Outstanding Senior … hit .405 with seven home runs and 30 RBIs in 2008; had a 10-0 mark and a 1.17 earned-run average … hit .395 with six home runs and 38 RBIs as a junior; was 6-1 on the mound in 2007 … played for head coach Bob Kelo … also captured All-State honors in football and indoor track … member of the National Honor Society.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … Robert is the youngest of Janice and Floyd Moir’s four children … born on April 1, 1990.

AS A FRESHMAN (2010) Earned the New England Top Prospect Award in the Cape Cod Baseball League … started all 58 games, mostly as the designated hitter … batted over .300 until May 2 and finished at .259 … led the team in on-base percentage (.422), walks (35) and hit batsman (19), was third in homers (7) and fifth in slugging (.434) … had eight doubles, two triples, 34 RBI and 38 runs … had 13 multi-hit games … went 2-for-5 with a go-ahead solo home run in the seventh inning against Miami (5/27) in the ACC Championship … doubled and scored a run against Georgia Tech (5/20) … went 2-for-2 with a pair of walks, an RBI and a run against Quinnipiac (4/27) … hit an RBI triple and scored a run at NC State (4/25) … doubled, walked three times and scored twice in the second game against the Wolfpack (4/24) … went 2-for-2 with a triple, two RBI and two sacrifices against Wake Forest (4/18) … smashed a solo home run against Maryland (4/11) … drove in three runs against Bryant (4/7) … hit a solo homer at Clemson (4/4) … belted a two-run shot the day before against the Tigers (4/3) … went 2-for-3 with a homer and two RBI against Duke (3/27) … hit a three-run, bases-clearing double in the top of the ninth at Virginia (3/20) to pull BC within a run … went 2-for-3 with two walks and a pair of runs at Bryant (3/17) … knocked two doubles and drove in all three runs in a 3-0 win at Miami (3/12) … hit a two-run double in the seventh at FIU (3/10) to tie the game … went 3-for-4 with a run at Florida Atlantic (3/7) … hit a three-run homer against the Owls (3/5) in the opening game of the series … had two hits in three of the first four games of the season … doubled and scored twice at Tulane (2/21) … went 2-for-4 with a homer, three RBI and two runs in the second game against the Green Wave (2/20).

BEFORE BC Drafted by the Houston Astros in the 26th round of the 2009 MLB First-Year Player Draft … batted .446 with nine homers and 30 RBI as a senior … played in the Florida all-star game … earned all-state honors when he played at Deering (Maine) as a junior and led the Rams to the Class A state championship.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences … Matt is the middle of Kim and Frank Watson’s three children … born November 17, 1990.

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2010 .235 21-6 34 2 8 2 2 0 0 3 0 2011 .115 21-3 26 2 3 3 0 0 1 1 1 Totals .183 42-9 60 4 11 5 2 0 1 4 1

CAREER HIGHS

2 vs. Massachusetts (4/13/10) 1 (4x) last at Wake Forest (5/7/11) 3 at Wake Forest (5/7/11) 2 games (2x, last 4/10/10-4/13/10)

Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

3 at Florida Atlantic (3/7/10) 3 at Bethune-Cookman (3/4/11) 3 (5x) last vs. Bryant (4/7/10) 4 games (3x, last 4/3/10-4/10/10)

BC

Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2010 .259 58-58 189 38 49 34 8 2 7 35 5 2011 .207 28-27 87 10 18 11 2 0 0 21 0 Totals .243 86-85 276 48 67 45 10 2 7 56 5

PLAYERS REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

Appeared in 21 games and started six (four in left field, two as DH) … batted .235 with two doubles, two RBI and two runs … hit a pinch hit RBI single against Georgia Tech (5/20) … went 2-for-4 with a double and a run against UMass (4/13) … recorded his first-career RBI in dramatic fashion, coming on to pinch hit in the bottom of the 10th against Maryland (4/10) and delivering a walk-off single to sweep a doubleheader … had a hit in consecutive appearances against Duke (3/27) and at Virginia (3/21).

COACHES

AS A SOPHOMORE (2011) Appeared in 21 games with three starts … had three hits on the year, including a pinch-hit threerun home run at Wake Forest (5/7) … went 1-for-2 and stole a base in the season finale against NC State (5/21) … had a pinch-hit single and scored a run at Florida (2/27).

OUTLOOK

players

23


BOSTON COLLEGE

players COLLEGE 30 - MATT ALVAREZ

7 - TOM BOURDON

• Sophomore, RHP, 6-1, 184, R/R

• Sophomore, OF, 5-11, 181, L/R

• Cranbury, N.J./Princeton

• Simsbury, Conn./Northwest Catholic

AS A REDSHIRT FRESHMAN (2011)

AS A FRESHMAN (2011)

Fourth on the team with 23 appearances while making three starts … finished with a 5.88 ERA in 33.2 innings of work … allowed 26 runs – 22 earned – while striking out 34 … struck out a pair in a perfect inning of work against NC State (5/21) … established career highs with seven strikeouts in 4.0 innings at St. John’s (4/25) … did not allow an earned run in 1.2 innings against Northeastern (4/20) and at Georgia Tech (4/22) … tossed 2.0 innings and allowed one hit versus Clemson (4/15) … threw a combined 3.0 shutout innings at Northeastern (3/29) and at Rhode Island (3/30) … also worked scoreless innings at Maryland (3/18), vs. SIU Edwardsville and vs. Indiana (2/19).

Started 46 games as the everyday starter in center field, appeared in 49 … third on the team with a .289 batting average while leading the squad with six steals … had seven doubles, a homer, 17 RBIs and 20 runs scored … had 11 multi-hit games … reached base 52 percent of the time when he led off an inning and was second on the team with a .298 batting average in ACC play … went 2-for-3 against NC State (5/20) … had two hits, doubled and scored a run at Wake Forest (5/8) while also having a pair of hits and a RBI the game before against the Deacons … went 2-for-3 and stole a base against Harvard (4/26) in the Beanpot Championship … doubled and scored at Georgia Tech (4/24) … drove in a season-high four runs at Duke (4/8) … drove in two runs and scored three times against Bryant (4/6) … was 2-for-2 with a RBI and two runs against Miami (4/3) … recorded a hit and a RBI in four-straight games from March 13-20 … went 2-for-3 with a RBI against Michigan State (3/6) … had four hits, an inside-the-park homer, two RBIs and four runs scored at Bethune-Cookman (3/4) … had a hit in each of the games at Florida … went 2-for-3 with a double, RBI, run and stolen base vs. Indiana (2/19).

AS A FRESHMAN (2010) Redshirted the season.

BEFORE BC Served as team captain as a senior … named to The Trentonian All-Colonial Valley Conference honorable mention team … recorded 67 strikeouts in 39 innings as a senior … played on the Super 17 and Diamond Jacks during the summer.

PERSONAL Enrolled as a psychology major in the College of Arts and Sciences … Matt is one of Betsy and Mike Alvarez’s two children … born January 11, 1991.

BEFORE BC Drafted in the 38th round by the Boston Red Sox … first player in school history to be named to the All-Central Conn. Conference team all four years … two-time all-state selection … only Connecticut player named to the American Baseball Coaches Association All-Region 1 team … started every game in high school … batted .465 with six homers, 26 RBI and 13 steals as a senior to help the Indians win their first state title … also had six saves and a 1.50 ERA on the mound … set school records for hits in a season (37) and hits (114) and games (91) in a career … also played football and basketball.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences … Tom is one of Mary and Peter Bourdon’s five children … comes from a baseball family as older brother, Tim, won a Division III World Series with Trinity … older brother, Pete, played baseball at Middlebury … other older brother, Mike, plays at the University of Tampa and was also drafted by the Boston Red Sox … born August 16, 1991.

CAREER STATISTICS

Year ERA W-L G-GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2011 5.88 0-2 23-3 0 33.2 38 26 22 26 34 Totals 5.88 0-2 23-3 0 33.2 38 26 22 26 34 Innings: Strikeouts:

CAREER HIGHS

4.0 at St. John’s (4/25/11) 7 at St. John’s (4/25/11)

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2011 .289 49-46 152 20 44 17 7 0 1 6 6 Totals .289 49-46 152 20 44 17 7 0 1 6 6 Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

24

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

4 at Bethune-Cookman (3/4/11) 4 at Bethune-Cookman (3/4/11) 4 at Duke (4/8/11) 6 games (4/3/11-4/12/11)


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE

10 - JOHN HENNESSY

12 - JIMMY DOWDELL

• Sophomore, INF, 5-11, 178, L/R

• Sophomore, OF, 5-10, 191, R/R

• Andover, Mass./Andover

• Palm Harbor, Fla./Clearwater Central Catholic

AS A FRESHMAN (2010)

Appeared in 13 games with five starts … had two singles in 21 at-bats … started at third base in two of the last three games … had his first career hit and scored first run against Virginia (4/30) and had a hit the next day against the Cavaliers (5/1).

BEFORE BC

Redshirted the season.

BEFORE BC

PERSONAL

PERSONAL Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … John is the youngest of Karen and Richard Hennessy’s three sons … born March 24, 1992.

Enrolled as a management major in the Carroll School of Management … James is the older of Teresa and James Dowdell’s two children … born March 24, 1991.

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2011 .125 6-1 8 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 Hits: RBI:

CAREER HIGHS

1 vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5/11) 1 vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5/11)

40 - STEVE GREEN

• Sophomore, LHP, 5-10, 161, L/L • Brewster, N.Y./John Jay AS A FRESHMAN (2011) Appeared in 13 games with one start … had a 10.32 ERA in 11.1 innings of work … allowed 15 runs – 13 earned – on 18 hits while striking out seven … finished the season by not allowing a hit in his last three outings, working an inning against NC State (5/20) and Georgia Tech (4/23) while tossing 2.0 innings against Virginia (4/29) … threw shutout innings at Northeastern (3/29), against Virginia Tech (3/25) and at Florida (2/25).

BEFORE BC Served as team captain as a senior … two-time all-section member … played four years of varsity at John Jay, playing outfield and pitching … held a 14-3 career record on the mound and batted .520 his senior season … also played basketball.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences … Steve is younger of Micki and Gary Green’s two children … born February 2, 1992.

CAREER STATISTICS

Innings: Strikeouts:

CAREER HIGHS

2.0 vs. Virginia (4/29/11) 2 vs. Virginia Tech (3/27/11)

Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

1 (2x) last vs. Virginia (5/1/11) 1 vs. Virginia (4/30/11) N/A t2 games (4/30/11-5/1/11)

BC

Year ERA W-L G-GS IP H R ER BB SO 2011 10.32 0-1 13-1 11.1 18 15 13 11 7

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2011 .095 13-5 21 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 Totals .095 13-5 21 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0

PLAYERS REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

Four year starting outfielder for the CCC Marauders … played for coach Tod Vaughan … earned all-county second team honors as a sophomore … first team all-state, All-Suncoast and all-county as a junior … won the Florida State Championship in 2008, going 3-for-4 with a triple in the championship game … led Pinellas County in homers (9) and hit .470 in 2008 … member of the Math Honor Society, Spanish Honor Society and Academic Team.

Four year starter at Andover and served as captain as a junior and senior … three-time AllMerrimack Valley Conference selection and a Boston Herald All-Scholastic team member … named an Eastern Massachusetts all-star … recorded 94 career hits and had a pair of seasons batting over .400.

COACHES

AS A FRESHMAN (2011)

AS A REDSHIRT FRESHMAN (2011) Appeared in six games with one start before a hand injury cut his season short … hit an RBI single against SIU Edwardsville (3/5) and earned first collegiate start at UCF (3/9).

OUTLOOK

players

25


BOSTON

15 - NATE LaPOINTE

22 - ERIC STEVENS

• Sophomore, C, 6-3, 230, R/R

• Sophomore, RHP, 6-5, 208, R/R

• Brimfield, Mass./St. John’s

• Pompton Lakes, N.J./Don Bosco

AS A FRESHMAN (2010)

AS A FRESHMAN (2011)

Appeared in 20 games with 12 starts behind the plate … batted .282 with a double, homer and eight RBIs … went 2-for-3 with a double and three RBIs against Le Moyne (5/15) … hit a threerun homer against Virginia (4/30) in BC’s only win of the series … had a pair of hits at Georgia Tech (4/23) … went 2-for-4 with two RBIs against Northeastern (4/20) in the Beanpot.

Led the team with 27 appearances and had six starts … led all freshmen with a 4.38 ERA, a 2-1 record and 49.1 innings pitched … allowed 26 runs – 24 earned – on 46 hits … struck out 36 and walked 23 … threw 1.1 no-hit innings against NC State (5/21) in the season finale … started and got the win against Le Moyne (5/15) after throwing 3.0 shutout innings, allowing one hit … struck out four and did not allow a hit in 3.0 innings of work at Wake Forest (5/8) … started the game at the Demon Deacons (5/6) and threw 2.0 shutout frames … tossed a scoreless inning at Georgia Tech (4/22) … worked 1.2 innings and allowed one hit against Clemson (4/16) and Virginia Tech (3/25) … threw a scoreless inning at Holy Cross (3/23) … worked 1.1 perfect frames at Maryland (3/19) … started at Bethune-Cookman (3/8) and threw 4.0 shutout innings, allowing one hit and fanning seven to get the win … struck out two in an inning of work vs. SIU Edwardsville (3/5) … started at Florida (2/25) and allowed two runs on seven hits in 5.0 innings, not getting a decision … worked 2.0 frames and allowed a hit against Indiana (2/19).

BEFORE BC Hometeam Magazine Baseball Player of the Year as a senior … hit 10 home runs and led the Central Mass. Conference with a .484 batting average … led St. John’s to a pair of Central Mass. Division I championship games … member of the National Honor Society.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … Nate is the son of Margot and David LaPointe … father pitched in the Los Angeles Dodgers organization in 1978 and 1979 … born January 12, 1992.

BEFORE BC Played two years of varsity at Don Bosco Prep … second team all-league honors as a junior and first team all-league as a senior … also named to the all-county first team … named to the New Jersey Baseball Coaches Association Senior All-Star Team … had a 6-1 record as a junior with a 1.98 ERA and went 11-4 with a 1.23 ERA in two seasons.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … Eric is the younger of Patricia and Glen Stevens’ two sons … born December 12, 1991.

RECORDS HISTORY BC 26

COLLEGE

players COLLEGE

REVIEW

PLAYERS PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

CAREER STATISTICS

Year Avg. GP-GS AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2011 .282 20-12 39 5 11 8 1 0 1 3 1 Totals .282 20-12 39 5 11 8 1 0 1 3 1 Hits: Runs: RBI: Hitting Streak:

CAREER HIGHS

2 (3x) last vs. Le Moyne (5/15/11) 1 (5x) last vs. Le Moyne (5/15/11) 3 (2x) last vs. Le Moyne (5/15/11) 2 games (3x, last 5/15/11-5/19/11)

CAREER STATISTICS

Year ERA W-L G-GS IP H 2011 4.38 2-1 27-6 49.1 46 Totals 4.38 2-1 27-6 49.1 46 Innings: Strikeouts:

2012 BASEBALL media guide

CAREER HIGHS

R 26 26

ER BB 24 23 24 23

SO 36 36

5.0 at Florida (2/25/11) 7 at Bethune-Cookman (3/8/11)


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE 3 - blake butera

• Freshman, INF, 5-9, 175, R/R • Madisonville, La./Mandeville

28 - andrew chin

• Freshman, LHP, 6-1, 180, L/L • Newton, Mass./Buckingham, Browne & Nichols Drafted in the fifth round by the Toronto Blue Jays … three-time first team All-ISL player from 2008-10 … led the Knights to the Independent School League title as a sophomore and junior … BB&N went a perfect 20-0 in 2010 … was 7-0 with a 0.69 ERA as a junior … pitched five innings as a senior before an injury sidelined him.

PERSONAL

Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … Andrew is the youngest of Carol and Vern Chin’s three children … born September 22, 1992.

2 - nick colucci

• Freshman, INF, 6-2, 180, R/R • Portland, Maine/Deering

4 - travis ferrick

• Freshman, INF, 6-0, 175, R/R • Stafford, Va./Colonial Forge BEFORE BC

BEFORE BC Led the Rams to a pair of state championships as a junior and senior … twice named to the Maine Baseball Coaches’ Association underclassmen all-star games … also voted to the senior all-star game … earned all-conference honors in baseball and basketball.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the College of Arts & Sciences … Nick is the younger of Janet and Steve Colucci’s two children … born August 22, 1992.

34 - john gorman

• Freshman, RHP/INF, 6-1, 220, R/R • Norwood, Mass./Catholic Memorial

First-team all-district and a Free Lance-Star first team selection as a senior … also earned allregion honors … second-team all-district and Free Lance-Star as a junior … led the Eagles to the district championship as a freshman and senior … team won the northwest regional championship as a freshman … also played football where he was an all-district selection as a safety.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the College of Arts & Sciences … Travis is the youngest of Brigitte and John Ferrick’s three sons … born April 29, 1992.

44 - tyler hinchliffe

• Freshman, LHP, 5-10, 185, L/L • Voorhees, N.J../Highland BEFORE BC

BEFORE BC Drafted in the 50th round by the Boston Red Sox … four-year starter and two-year captain for the Knights … Massachusetts Gatorade Player of the Year as a senior … Catholic Conference MVP as a junior and senior … went 6-2 with a 0.24 ERA and 80 strikeouts in his senior season while batting .354 at the plate … three-time Boston Herald all-scholastic pick and twice named to the Boston Globe team … also a two-time captain of the football team … member of the National Honor Society.

PERSONAL Enrolled in the Lynch School of Education … Tyler is the younger of Lorraine and Michael Hinchliffe’s two sons … born October 17, 1992.

Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … John is the oldest of Maria and Jack Gorman’s three children … born February 19, 1992.

2012 BASEBALL media guide

BC

PERSONAL

All-Group 3 first team selection and played in the Carpenter Cup Classic … played for Tri-State Arsenal and led them to a national championship … named to the Rawlings/Perfect Game Preseason Northeast Region All-High School Senior second team.

PLAYERS REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

Enrolled in the College of Arts & Sciences … Blake is one of Rhonda and Barry Butera’s four children … brother, Barry, played baseball at Boston College from 2007-09 and was drafted in the 21st round by Houston … father played baseball at Tulane and went on to play three seasons for the Pawtucket Red Sox (AAA Boston affiliate) … born August 7, 1992.

PERSONAL

COACHES

BEFORE BC

BEFORE BC Four-year letterman for the Skippers … twice served as team captain … named all-state and first team all-metro and district as a senior after hitting .435 with eight home runs and 48 RBIs … invited to play in the Louisiana All-Star game … earned first team all-district honors as a junior after batting .390 with four homers and 35 RBIs … named to the all-district second team as a sophomore.

OUTLOOK

players

27


BOSTON COLLEGE

players COLLEGE 31 - geoffrey murphy

• Freshman, C/RHP, 6-1, 179, R/R • Peachtree City, Ga./McIntosh

29 - nick poore

• Freshman, LHP, 5-11, 176, L/L • Littleton, N.H./Salem

BEFORE BC Four-year starter for the Chiefs … hit .360 with two home runs and 15 RBIs in 17 games in an injury-shortened senior season … batted .370 with two homers and 31 RBIs as a junior … named a Rawlings/Perfect Game Preseason Southeast Region honorable mention member … played for the 17U East Cobb Astros that advanced to the national championship game.

BEFORE BC Played two seasons at Salem before missing his senior season with an injury … first team allstate as a junior and second team all-state as a sophomore … went 3-3 with a 2.33 ERA, 26 strikeouts and 12 walks in 51 innings of work as a sophomore … member of the National Honor Society.

PERSONAL

PERSONAL

Enrolled in the College of Arts & Sciences … Geoffrey is the older of Lorna and Geoff Murphy’s two sons … born October 29, 1992.

Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … Nick is the older of Donna and Les Poore’s two sons … born November 1, 1992.

21 - eric stone

23 - mike west

• Freshman, RHP, 5-10, 165, R/R

• Freshman, RHP, 6-0, 220, L/R

• Milford, Conn., Conn./West Haven

• Spring, Texas/Klein

BEFORE BC

BEFORE BC

Served as team captain as a senior … named to the CHSCA all-state team and the New Haven Register all-state second team … an all-league and all-conference selection … went 4-3 with a 1.30 ERA as a senior and batted .370 with a school-record 14 doubles … named to the Perfect Game all-northeast second team … member of the National Honor Society.

Led the Bearkats to the state title game as a senior … voted the team’s most valuable pitcher and was a second team All-13-5A selection … was also the starting quarterback for Klein, leading the Bearkats to the Texas 5A semifinals.

PERSONAL

Enrolled in the Carroll School of Management … Mike is one of Christine and Scott West’s five children … born September 27, 1991.

Enrolled in the College of Arts & Sciences … Eric is the older of Gina and Brian Stone’s two sons … father starred at the University of New Haven and was drafted in the fifth round in 1986; he reached the AAA level with the St. Louis Cardinals … born March 23, 1993.

PERSONAL

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

28

2012 BASEBALL media guide


OUTLOOK

2011 RESULTS Record: 17-33, Home: 5-12 Away: 6-21 Neutral: 6-0 Conference: 7-22 Pitcher of record Attend Brazid (0-1) 1373 Bayuk (1-0) 232 Leonard (1-0) 212 Dennhardt (0-1) 2533 Prohovich (0-1) 4222 Oxley 5824 Leonard (1-1) 4213 Dennhardt (1-1) 255 Bayuk (2-0) 112 Leonard (2-1) 171 Stevens (1-0) 133 Green (0-1) 1021 Dennhardt (1-2) 4328 Bayuk (2-1) 5010 Brazis (0-2) 4377 Gordon (1-0) 388 Bayuk (2-2) 418 Leonard (3-1) 347 Brazis (0-3) 165 Lawrence (1-0) 117 Bayuk (3-2) 221 Leonard (3-2) 212 Smith (0-1) 68 Lawrence (1-1) 237 Bayuk (3-3) 632 Leonard (3-3) 421 Prohovich (1-1) 257 Brazis (0-4) 422 Leonard (4-3) 366 Prohovich (2-1) 533 Gordon (1-1) 369 Bayuk (3-4) 477 Leonard (4-4) - Alvarez (0-1) 1342 Bayuk (4-4) 122 Gordon (1-2) 1469 Leonard (4-5) 2131 Stevens (1-1) 1216 Smith (0-2) 302 Lawrence (2-1) 421 Lawrence (2-2) 1287 Prohovich (3-1) 1132 Laufer (0-1) 1090 Gordon (1-3) 473 Leonard (4-6) 681 Gordon (1-4) 489 Alvarez (0-2) 344 Stevens (2-1) 319 Lawrence (2-3) 211 Leonard (4-7) 341 Laufer (0-2) 1102

Time 3:17 2:44 3:01 2:01 3:06 1:40 2:25 3:45 2:23 2:14 2:49 2:20 2:45 3:33 2:37 3:30 2:46 2:36 3:00 2:18 2:07 2:37 3:03 2:27 3:45 1:37 3:00 3:06 2:41 3:19 2:53 2:54 2:52 2:43 2:09 2:44 2:09 2:55 2:33 2:33 2:48 3:10 2:44 2:40 2:55 3:08 2:06 2:07 2:56 2:34 2:36

* ACC game # Exhibition at City of Palms Park (Fort Myers, Fla.) % 2011 Beanpot

Brad Zapenas

BC

ACC 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 - 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-2 0-3 1-3 1-4 2-4 2-4 3-4 4-4 4-5 4-5 4-5 4-6 4-7 4-7 4-8 5-8 6-8 6-8 6-9 6-10 6-11 6-11 6-12 6-13 6-14 6-14 6-14 6-15 7-15 7-16 7-17 7-18 7-19 7-19 7-19 7-20 7-21 7-22

Garret Smith

2012 BASEBALL media guide

REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

Score Overall L, 9-6 0-1 W, 6-1 1-1 W, 6-1 2-1 L, 4-0 2-2 L, 9-3 2-3 L, 6-0 - L, 7-2 2-4 W, 13-12 3-4 W, 15-0 4-4 W, 4-1 5-4 W, 6-4 6-4 L, 18-0 6-5 L, 3-1 6-6 L, 15-6 6-7 L, 4-3 6-8 W, 7-4 7-8 L, 4-3 7-9 W, 4-1 8-9 L, 3-2 8-10 W, 5-3 9-10 W, 2-1 10-10 L, 8-1 10-11 L, 2-1 (11) 10-12 L, 4-0 10-13 L, 19-4 10-14 L, 7-6 (5) 10-15 W, 16-5 11-15 L, 10-6 11-16 W, 5-3 12-16 W, 6-4 (11) 13-16 L, 15-10 13-17 L, 9-2 13-18 L, 7-5 13-19 L, 9-2 13-20 W, 6-1 14-20 L, 2-0 14-21 L, 8-1 14-22 L, 10-8 14-23 L, 5-4 (10) 14-24 W, 8-0 15-24 L, 17-0 15-25 W, 5-4 (11) 16-25 L, 4-0 16-26 L, 2-1 (10) 16-27 L, 15-5 16-28 L, 4-3 16-29 L, 4-2 16-30 W, 4-0 17-30 L, 9-4 17-31 L, 10-0 17-32 L, 6-1 17-33

PLAYERS

Opposing team at Coastal Carolina vs. Indiana vs. Tennessee Tech at #1 Florida at #1 Florida at Boston Red Sox# at #1 Florida at Bethune-Cookman vs. SIU Edwardsville vs. Michigan State at Bethune-Cookman at UCF at #5 Florida State* 29 at #5 Florida State* at #5 Florida State* at Maryland* at Maryland* at Maryland* at Holy Cross VIRGINIA TECH* VIRGINIA TECH* VIRGINIA TECH* at Northeastern at Rhode Island MIAMI* MIAMI* BRYANT at Duke* at Duke* at Duke* at Dartmouth CLEMSON* CLEMSON* CLEMSON* vs. Northeastern% at #9 Georgia Tech* at #9 Georgia Tech* at #9 Georgia Tech* at #30 St. John’s vs. Harvard% #1 VIRGINIA* #1 VIRGINIA* #1 VIRGINIA* at Wake Forest* at Wake Forest* at Wake Forest* LE MOYNE LE MOYNE NC STATE* NC STATE* NC STATE*

COACHES

Game date February 18 February 19 February 20 February 24 February 25 February 26 February 27 March 4 March 5 March 6 March 8 March 9 March 11 March 12 March 13 March 18 March 19 March 20 March 23 March 25 March 26 March 27 March 29 March 30 April 3 April 6 April 8 April 9 April 10 April 12 April 15 April 16 April 20 April 22 April 23 April 24 April 25 April 26 April 29 April 30 May 1 May 6 May 7 May 8 May 14 May 15 May 19 May 20 May 21


BOSTON

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

30

COLLEGE

2011 statistics

COLLEGE

Player AVG GP GS AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB SLG% BB HBP SO GDP OB% SF SH SB ATT PO A E FLD% 18 Matt McGovern .371 34 30 124 21 46 4 3 1 18 59 .476 8 2 13 2 .412 2 3 5 8 76 2 1 .987 1 Philip Miclat .333 2 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 .333 0 0 0 0 .333 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1.000 25 Koury Hajjar .333 3 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 .333 0 0 2 0 .333 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1.000 11 Anthony Melchiond .304 49 49 181 21 55 17 3 1 34 81 .448 24 0 26 8 .385 0 0 3 6 42 94 9 .938 7 Tom Bourdon .289 49 46 152 20 44 7 0 1 17 54 .355 6 1 34 3 .317 2 4 6 10 115 2 4 .967 15 Nate LaPointe .282 20 12 39 5 11 1 0 1 8 15 .385 3 1 14 0 .349 0 0 1 2 63 13 3 .962 14 Andrew Lawrence .271 43 40 144 22 39 9 2 5 24 67 .465 8 5 31 2 .329 1 1 2 3 51 4 0 1.000 4 Garret Smith .267 47 47 180 19 48 17 0 0 17 65 .361 3 2 23 8 .285 1 0 0 0 296 40 4 .988 9 Marc Perdios .267 41 38 135 20 36 10 2 0 11 50 .370 18 1 38 4 .355 1 2 3 6 58 0 1 .983 6 Matt Hamlet .264 45 42 140 15 37 4 1 0 11 43 .307 12 1 28 3 .327 0 2 1 4 82 120 2 .990 33 Spenser Payne .242 31 8 33 3 8 1 0 1 5 12 .364 7 2 10 0 .405 0 0 1 2 90 9 1 .990 2 Brad Zapenas .229 50 50 192 31 44 10 1 1 18 59 .307 25 2 35 2 .321 2 2 4 8 84 149 6 .975 24 Matt Watson .207 28 27 87 10 18 2 0 0 11 20 .230 21 6 22 2 .395 0 0 0 0 98 18 0 1.000 27 Kyle Prohovich .195 19 9 41 6 8 0 0 1 3 11 .268 4 1 14 0 .283 0 0 0 0 1 4 0 1.000 8 Mike Sudol .193 44 40 145 13 28 7 3 1 13 44 .303 17 2 33 4 .285 1 0 0 3 162 9 3 .983 12 Jimmy Dowdell .125 6 1 8 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 .125 2 0 3 0 .300 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 1.000 16 Rob Moir .115 21 3 26 2 3 0 0 1 3 6 .231 1 0 10 0 .148 0 0 1 1 18 0 0 1.000 29 Jim Laufer .111 16 3 18 1 2 1 0 0 1 3 .167 1 1 8 1 .200 0 0 0 0 35 1 1 .973 28 John Hennessy .095 13 5 21 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 .095 1 0 9 0 .136 0 0 0 1 6 17 1 .958 19 Matt Demitroff .000 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals .258 50 50 1674 210 432 90 15 14 195 594 .355 161 27 353 39 .331 10 14 27 54 1304 539 44 .977 Opponents .290 50 50 1694 307 491 104 11 34 282 719 .424 204 41 288 38 .376 21 28 71 90 1335 542 45 .977 LOB - Team (342), Opp (377). DPs turned - Team (46), Opp (51). CI - Team (0), Opp (1). IBB - Team (3), Watson, M 2, Sudol, M 1, Opp (9). Picked off - Melchionda,A 3, Zapenas, B 2, Sudol, M 2, Perdios, M 1, Lawrence, A 1, Hennessy, J 1, LaPointe, N 1, Bourdon, T 1, McGovern, M 1. Player ERA W L APP GS CG SHO CBO SV IP H R ER BB SO 2B 3B HR AB B/Avg WP HBP BK SFA SHA 4 Garret Smith 2.87 0 2 17 0 0 0 2 6 15.2 13 7 5 9 14 4 0 0 60 .217 2 1 0 1 1 27 Kyle Prohovich 3.46 3 1 24 1 0 0 1 0 39.0 34 15 15 16 34 8 0 2 140 .243 5 3 2 2 3 26 Hunter Gordon 4.09 1 4 26 0 0 0 1 0 33.0 30 18 15 11 23 8 0 3 129 .233 2 3 0 0 1 14 Andrew Lawrence 4.26 2 3 20 12 0 0 1 0 25.1 23 15 12 13 16 2 1 3 92 .250 4 4 1 0 1 44 Eric Stevens 4.38 2 1 27 6 0 0 2 0 49.1 46 26 24 23 36 9 1 1 180 .256 8 7 2 1 3 10 John Leonard 5.38 4 7 14 13 1 0 0 0 75.1 87 53 45 22 38 19 3 3 295 .295 4 5 0 6 5 31 Dave Laufer 5.79 0 2 23 4 0 0 1 0 32.2 39 23 21 14 21 9 2 5 129 .302 7 4 2 1 0 39 Matt Brazis 5.79 0 4 20 0 0 0 1 1 23.1 26 19 15 18 14 2 1 3 91 .286 7 3 0 0 3 20 Nate Bayuk 5.82 4 4 23 4 0 0 2 0 60.1 75 41 39 24 35 14 2 5 238 .315 4 3 1 1 7 30 Matt Alvarez 5.88 0 2 23 3 0 0 1 0 33.2 38 26 22 26 34 11 1 1 133 .286 9 1 1 3 2 21 Mike Dennhardt 5.89 1 2 5 4 0 0 0 0 18.1 18 14 12 8 11 6 0 3 70 .257 1 1 1 1 0 40 Steve Green 10.32 0 1 13 1 0 0 0 0 11.1 18 15 13 11 7 5 0 0 48 .375 2 0 0 0 2 22 Geoff Oxley 10.80 0 0 9 2 0 0 0 0 10.0 23 12 12 3 3 4 0 1 48 .479 2 3 0 2 0 32 Dane Clemens 27.00 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 7.1 21 23 22 6 2 3 0 4 41 .512 1 3 0 3 0 Totals 5.63 17 33 50 50 1 3 3 7 434.2 491 307 272 204 288 104 11 34 1694 .290 58 41 10 21 28 Opponents 3.68 33 17 50 50 2 7 6 8 445.0 432 210 182 161 353 90 15 14 1674 .258 27 27 2 10 14 PB - Team (14), LaPointe, N 7, Watson, M 3, Smith, G 3, Laufer, J 1, Opp (5). Pickoffs - Team (9), Smith, G 4, Laufer, D 2, Watson, M 2, Leonard, J 1, Opp (13). SBA/ATT - Watson, M (26-33), Smith, G (20-29), Leonard, J (22-24), LaPointe, N (15-18), Stevens, E (7-12), Alvarez, M (10-11), Laufer, J (10-10), Brazis, M (6-8), Bayuk, N (7-8), Lawrence, A (4-7), Dennhardt, M (4-6), Prohovich, K (5-5), Gordon, H (3-3), Laufer, D (1-3), Oxley, G (1-2), Green, S (1-1).

RETURNING LEADERS HITTERS GP-GS Melchionda 49-49 Bourdon 49-46 Lawrence 43-40

RUNS Lawrence 22 McGovern 21 Melchionda 21

HR Lawrence 5 Seven tied with... 1

AVG McGovern .371 Melchionda .304 Bourdon .289

RBI Melchionda 34 Lawrence 24 McGovern 18

TB Melchionda 81 Lawrence 67 McGovern 59

AB Melchionda 181 Bourdon 152 Lawrence 144

HITS Melchionda 55 McGovern 46 Bourdon 44

SB Bourdon 6 McGovern 5 Perdios 3

PITCHERS ERA Prohovich 3.46 Gordon 4.09 Lawrence 4.26

GS Lawrence 12 Stevens 6 Bayuk 4

SO Stevens 36 Bayuk 35 Alvarez 34 Prohovich 34

WINS Bayuk 4 Prohovich 3 Stevens 2 Lawrence 2

SV Brazis 1

BB Prohovich 16 Stevens 23 Bayuk 24

APP Stevens 27 Gordon 26 Prohovich 24

IP Bayuk 60.1 Stevens 49.1 Prohovich 39.0

OPP AVG Prohovich .243 Stevens .256 Bayuk .315

2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

ACC HONORS

COLLEGE

First Team All-ACC 2010 Mickey Wiswall, Jr. 2009 Tony Sanchez, Jr.

ACC All-Tournament Team 2009 Pat Dean, So. Mickey Wiswall, So.

P 3B SS C OF

ACC Player of the Week April 26, 2010 Robbie Anston April 6, 2009 Tony Sanchez March 9, 2009 Tony Sanchez May 8, 2006 Shawn McGill

BIG EAST HONORS Big East Player of the Year 2005 Jared McGuire All-Rookie Team 1997 Steve Langone Andy Sullivan

INF U/DH P

BIG EAST PITCHER OF THE YEAR 2004 Chris Lambert, Jr. 2002 Chris Lambert, Fr.

P P

BIG EAST Rookie of the Year 2002 Chris Lambert, Fr.

P

BIG EAST Coach of the Year 2002 Pete Hughes 2000 Pete Hughes

OF C SS OF OF SS OF/3B C/U OF P DH U 1B OF OF P INF. P P OF P DH P C OF C 2B 1B U 1B C OF 1B P 2B 2B 2B P P 2B P OF 2B DH OF OF

2004 April 12 April 26 May 10 May 10 May 17

Matt O’Donnell, P Ryan Leahy, SS Jason Delaney, OF Chris Lambert, P Chris Lambert, P

2003 March 10 March 17 April 28 April 28 May 5 2002 Feb. 18 Mar. 26 April 1 April 15 April 30 May 13 2001 March 12 April 30 May 7

Chris Lambert, P Kevin Shepard, P Jason Delaney Chris Lambert, P Chris Lambert, P Brian Macchi, OF Vinny Scavone, 1B Jason Delaney, 3B Drew Locke, OF Brian Durkin, 1B Kevin Shepard, P Brian Durkin, 1B Jeff Mackor, C Mark Sullivan, P

2000 Feb. 21 Feb. 21 April 11 May 1

Jarett Mendoza, OF Steve Langone, P Mike Gambino, 2B Steve Langone, P

1999 March 10

Sean McGowan, 1B

2012 BASEBALL media guide

1998 April 27

Steve Langone, P

1996 April 8

Kevin Penwell, OF

1995 April 10 May 2 May 8

Mark Bettencourt, P Curt Romboli, P urt Romboli, P

1994 April 11 May 5

Mark Bettencourt, P Mike Martin, 2B

1993 April 12

Chris Taylor, P

1991 April 2 April 8 April 30 May 7

Brian Kelly, Brian Looney, P Doug MacNeil, P Joe Hayward

1990 May 8

Doug MacNeil, P

1989 May 1

Doug MacNeil, P

1988 April 25

Gregg Radachowsky, P

1986 April 29 T 1985 April 30

om Otto, P Rocky Daley, P

BC

First Team All-BIG EAST 2005 Joe Martinez Jared McGuire Mike Wlodarczyk 2004 Chris Lambert, Jr. Jason Delaney, Jr. 2003 Chris Lambert, So. 2002 Brian Durkin, Sr. Chris Lambert, Fr. Jeff Mackor, Sr. Neal McCarthy, Sr. 2001 Jeff Mackor, Jr. 2000 Mike Gambino, Sr. Joe Kealty, Jr. Steve Langone, Sr. 1999 Sean McGowan, Sr. Jeff Waldron, Sr. 1996 Kevin Penwell, Jr. 1995 Brian Sankey, Jr. Curt Romboli, Sr. 1994 Mike Martin, Sr. 1993 Mike Martin, Jr. 1991 Brian Kelley, Sr. Brian Looney, Jr. Doug MacNeil, Sr. 1990 Brian Kelley, Sr. 1989 Doug MacNeil, So. Bryan McGourthy, Jr. 1988 Mike Nyhan, Sr. 1987 Tom Otto, Sr. 1986 Joe Giaquinto, Sr. 1985 Joe Giaquinto, Sr.

Joe Martinez, P Jason Delaney, OF Jason Delaney, OF ared McGuire, INF

REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

ACC Pitcher of the Week April 12, 2010 Mike Dennhardt March 15, 2010 Pat Dean May 4, 2009 Pat Dean

Second Team All-BIG EAST Instituted in 1994 2005 Drew Locke Shawn McGill 2004 Ryan Leahy, Sr. Drew Locke, Jr. 2003 Drew Locke, So. 2001 Mike Hubbard, Sr. Brian Macchi, Jr. Chris Rosado, Sr. 2000 Neal McCarthy, So. Steve Langone, Sr. 1999 Steve Langone, Jr. 1998 Steve Langone, So. Sean McGowan, Jr. 1996 Bryan Manahan, Sr. 1995 Kevin Penwell, So.

2005 May 16 April 25 March 14 March 8 J

PLAYERS

All-ACC Academic Team 2010 Brad Zapenas 2009 Tony Sanchez 2007 Johnny Ayers

CF 1B/P 3B 3B

OF P C P 2B P OF OF OF/3B

BIG EAST Pitcher/Player of the Week

COACHES

Second Team All-ACC 2009 Robbie Anston, Jr. Mike Belfiore, Jr. Mickey Wiswall, So. 2007 Eric Campbell, So.

1B C

Third Team All-BIG EAST Instituted in 2001 2005 Jason Delaney Dave Preziosi 2004 Garrett Greer, Sr. Kevin Shepard, Jr. 2003 Josh DiScipio, Jr. Kevin Shepard, So. 2002 Drew Locke, Fr. Brian Macchi, Sr. 2001 Brian Durkin, Jr.

OUTLOOK

HONORS

31


BOSTON

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

32

REGIONAL HONORS

honors COLLEGE

First Team All-ECAC 1998 Sean McGowan, Jr. 1993 Mike Martin, Jr.

1B 2B

NCBWA District I Player of the Year 2009 Mike Belfiore, Jr. 2003 Chris Lambert, So.

1B/P P

NCBWA Smith Super Team Honorable Mention 1994 Mike Martin NECBC New England Coach of the Year 2000

2B

Pete Hughes

ABCA/Diamond Sports Company Northeast Region Coach of the Year 2000 Pete Hughes NEICBL All-Star Head Coach 2000 Pete Hughes 1ST Team ABCA All-Northeast

2009 2004 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1994 1993

Mike Belfiore, Jr. Tony Sanchez, Jr. Jason Delaney, Jr. Chris Lambert, Fr. Brian Macchi, Jr. Mark Sullivan, Jr. Mike Gambino, Sr. Steve Langone, P Sean McGowan, Sr. Jeff Waldron, Sr. Steve Langone, So. Sean McGowan, Jr. Mike Martin, Sr. Mike Martin, Jr.

1B/P C OF P 3B P 2B P 1B C DH 1B 2B 2B

2nD Team ABCA All-Northeast

2010 2009 2004 2003 2002 1998 1996 1995

John Spatola Mickey Wiswall Pat Dean Mickey Wiswall Chris Lambert, Jr. Chris Lambert, So. Drew Locke, So. Brian Durkin, Sr. Mark Sullivan, Sr. Drew Locke, Fr. Jeff Waldron, Jr. Kevin Penwell, Jr. Kevin Penwell, So.

COLLEGE

OF 1B P 3B P P OF DH P OF C OF OF

College Baseball Insider Northeast Region Player of the Week April 28, 2003 Jason Delaney

NEIBA All-Star 2011 Matt McGovern, So. Kyle Prohovich, Jr. Garret Smith, Sr. 2010 John Spatola, Sr. Mickey Wiswall, Jr. 2004 Jason Delaney, Jr. Chris Lambert, Jr. 2003 Chris Lambert, So. Drew Locke, So. Kevin Shepard, So. 2002 Brian Durkin, Sr. Chris Lambert, Fr. Drew Locke, Fr. Brian Macchi, Sr. Vinny Scavone, Jr. Mark Sullivan, Sr. 2001 Brian Durkin, Jr. Brian Macchi, Jr. Jeff Mackor, Sr. 2000 Mike Gambino, Sr. Steve Langone, Sr. Jeff Mackor, Jr. 1999 Mike Gambino, Jr. Steve Langone, Jr. 1998 Steve Langone, So. Sean McGowan, Jr. Jeff Waldron, Jr. 1997 Sean McGowan, So. * Selected but did not play.

All-New England First Team All-New England First Team 2010 John Spatola 2006 Shawn McGill 2001 Brian Macchi 2000 Mike Gambino 1999 Steve Langone Sean McGowan Jeff Waldron Mike Martin 1988 Mike Nyhan

OF P P OF 1B OF P* P* OF P DH P OF OF 1B P 1B 3B * C 2B P C 2B P P 1B C 1B

ABCA/Rawlings Second Team All-America 2009 Mike Belfiore, Jr. 2000 Steve Langone, Sr.

NATIONAL HONORS 1B/P U

ABCA/Rawlings Third Team All-America 2009 Tony Sanchez, Jr. 1999 Sean McGowan, Sr. 1993 Mike Martin, Jr. Baseball America First Team All-America 2009 Tony Sanchez Baseball America Third Team All-America 1999 Sean McGowan, Sr.

C 1B 2B

C 1B

Collegiate Baseball Third Team All-America 1999 Sean McGowan, Sr. 1989 Doug MacNeil, So.

1B P

Louisville Slugger Third Team All-America 2009 Tony Sanchez, Jr.

C

Louisville Slugger Freshman All-America 2002 Chris Lambert Drew Locke

P OF

Baseball America Freshman All-America 2002 Chris Lambert

P

CollegeBaseballInsider.com Second Team All-America 2009 Tony Sanchez C

Collegiate Baseball National Player of the Week April 21, 1999 Sean McGowan

NCBWA Third Team All-America 2003 Chris Lambert, So. P 2000 Steve Langone, Sr. DH/U

Louisville Slugger National Player of the Week April 20, 1999 Sean McGowan

NCBWA Honorable Mention All-America 1999 Sean McGowan 1B

OF C 3B 2B P 1B C 2B SS

All-New England Second Team 2010 Mickey Wiswall 2006 Ted Ratliff 2006 Kevin Boggan 2001 Jeff Mackor Mike Gambino Sean McGowan 1994 Mike Martin ECAC Player of the Week April 30, 2003 Jason Delaney ECAC Pitcher of the Week April 12, 2004 Matt O’Donnell May 5, 2003 Chris Lambert NESN Athlete of the Week May 1, 1998 Sean McGowan

2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE

2011 GARRET SMITH – P................................................................Tampa Bay Rays - 20th round (630th overall) JOHN LEONARD – P......................................................LA Angles of Anaheim - 32nd round (975th overall) MIKE DENNHARDT – P............................................................Cincinnati Reds - 32nd round (985th overall) BRAD ZAPENAS – INF..............................................................Chicago Cubs - 42nd round (1269th overall)

2009 TONY SANCHEZ – C................................................................Pittsburgh Pirates - 1st round (fourth overall) MIKE BELFIORE – P................................................ Arizona Diamondbacks - Comp Round A (45th overall) JB MacDONALD – P.................................................................... Houston Astros - 18th round (551st overall) HOUSTON ASTROS – 2B.......................................................... Houston Astros - 21st round (641st overall)

2007 KEVIN BOGGAN – RHP ..............................................Tampa Bay Devil Rays - 19th Round (575th overall) JOE AYERS – 2B/SS ...............................................Arizona Diamondbacks - 48th Round (1,398th overall) 2006 MATT MEYER – LHP ........................................................... Cleveland Indians - 15th Round (461st overall) SHAWN MCGILL – C ........................................................Philadelphia Phillies - 23rd Round (697th overall) RYNE REYNOSO – RHP ......................................................... Atlanta Braves - 26th Round (790th overall)

2000 STEVE LANGONE – RHP.............................................. Los Angeles Dodgers - 21st Round (627th overall) 1999 SEAN McGOWAN.............................................................San Francisco Giants - third round (108th overall) 1995 CURTIS ROMBOLI - LHP........................................................Boston Red Sox - 21st Round (578th overall) 1994 MIKE MARTIN – 2B....................................................................Detroit Tigers - 50th Round (1,354th overall) GLENN FOREY – 1B.............................................................. Florida Marlins - 72nd Round (1,639th overall) 1993 MATT WALSH – RHP.......................................................... Oakland Athletics - 41st Round (1,161st overall) JOSEPH HAYWARD – OF....................................................Boston Red Sox - 45th Round (1,251st overall) 1991 BRIAN LOONEY – LHP.............................................................Montreal Expos - 10th Round (269th overall) 1990 TIMOTHY SMITH – RHP..........................................................Boston Red Sox - 24th Round (654th overall) GREGG RADACHOWSKY – OF..................................................Detroit Tigers - 25th Round (664th overall) 1978 GEORGE RAVANIS – RHP..................................................Cleveland Indians - 42nd Round (767th overall) 1969 ROBERT GREEN – 3B....................................................... Milwaukee Brewers - 14th Round (331st overall) 1968 GARY MATZ – 3B.......................................................................Minnesota Twins - 2nd Round (38th overall)

Boston College in MLB Name BC Career MLB Teams Frank Wilson.............1921-24....................... Boston Braves ................................................................. Cleveland Indians ................................................................... St. Louis Browns Ike Kamp...................1919-24....................... Boston Braves Bill Vargus.................1921-25....................... Boston Braves Dinny McNamara.....1924-27....................... Boston Braves Luke Urban...............1917-21....................... Boston Braves Freddie Moncewicz..1922-28.................... Boston Red Sox John Shea.................1923-28.................... Boston Red Sox Al Weston.................1924-29....................... Boston Braves Pat Creeden.............1925-30.................... Boston Red Sox Jud McLaughlin........1930-31.................... Boston Red Sox Ed Gallagher.............1929-32.................... Boston Red Sox Andy Spognardi........1928-32.................... Boston Red Sox Emil Roy....................1930-33............ Philadelphia Athletics Eddie Waitkus...........1938..............................Chicago Cubs .............................................................. Philadelphia Phillies .................................................................. Baltimore Orioles Lennie Merullo..........1939..............................Chicago Cubs Joe Coleman............1940.................. Philadelphia Athletics .................................................................. Baltimore Orioles ........................................................................ Detroit Tigers Bill DeKoning............1938-41.............................N.Y. Giants Eddie Pellagrini.........1937-38.................... Boston Red Sox ................................................................... St. Louis Browns .............................................................. Philadelphia Phillies .................................................................... Cincinnati Reds ................................................................. Pittsburgh Pirates

Name BC Career MLB Teams Joe Morgan...............1950-52................. Milwaukee Braves ............................................................ Kansas City Athletics ................................................................. Cleveland Indians .............................................................. Philadelphia Phillies ............................................................... St. Louis Cardinals Mike Roarke.............1949-52......................... Detroit Tigers Brian Looney............1989-91......................Montreal Expos ................................................................... Boston Red Sox Chris Lambert...........2002-04......................... Detroit Tigers .................................................................. Baltimore Orioles Joe Martinez.............2002-05............San Francisco Giants

2012 BASEBALL media guide

BC

Name BC Career MLB Teams Denny Sullivan..........1875-77..................Providence Grays ................................................................. Boston Red Caps Steve Dignan............1878-80.................. Boston Red Caps ........................................................... Worcester Ruby Legs Asa Stratton..............1874-75............Worcester Ruby Legs Tom Gunning............1881-84................Boston Beaneaters .............................................................. Philadelphia Phillies ........................................................... Philadelphia Athletics Jimmy Ryan..............1881-85......Chicago White Stockings ....................................................................... Chicago Colts Jack Slattery.............1896-01................. Boston Americans .................................................................... Cleveland Blues ..................................................... Chicago White Stockings ............................................................... St. Louis Cardinals ........................................................... Washington Senators Tom Stankard...........1901-04.................. Pittsburgh Pirates Hub Hart...................1898-01................Chicago White Sox Allie Strobel...............1902-05................Boston Beaneaters Charlie Maloney.......1905-08........................ Boston Doves Joe Casey.................1906-09......................... Detroit Tigers ........................................................... Washington Senators Andy Harrington.......1908-13..................... Cincinnati Reds Eddie Phillips............1920-23....................... Boston Braves ........................................................................ Detroit Tigers ................................................................. Pittsburgh Pirates ......................................................................... N.Y. Yankees ........................................................... Washington Senators ................................................................. Cleveland Indians

REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

2005 MIKE WLODARCZYK – LHP ........................................Tampa Bay Devil Rays - 7th Round (208th overall) JASON DELANEY – OF .......................................................Pittsburgh Pirates - 12th Round (361st overall) JOE MARTINEZ – RHP ................................................San Francisco Giants - 12th Round (372nd overall) ANDY LOCKE – OF .......................................................Los Angeles Dodgers - 19th Round (586th overall) MARCO ALBANO – 2B/SS .......................................LA Angels of Anaheim - 33rd Round (1,003rd overall)

2001 JED ROGERS – RHP............................................................. Boston Red Sox - 22nd Round (663rd overall)

PLAYERS

2008 DAN HOUSTON.........................................................................Colorado Rockies - 7th round (227th overall) ERIC CAMPBELL – 3B.................................................................. New York Mets - 8th round (254th overall) TERRY DOYLE...................................................................Chicago White Sox - 37th round (1,110th overall)

2002 JEFF MACKOR – C ..................................................................Houston Astros - 15th Round (461st overall)

COACHES

2010 PAT DEAN – P............................................................................ Minnesota Twins - 3rd round (102nd overall) MICKEY WISWALL – 1B............................................................ Seattle Mariners - 7th round (222nd overall) KEVIN MORAN – P.................................................................Chicago White Sox - 9th round (278th overall) ROBBIE ANSTON – OF...........................................................Seattle Mariners - 26th round (792nd overall) JOHN SPATOLA – OF....................................................... Chicago White Sox - 35th round (1,058th overall) JOHN LEONARD – P.................................................... San Francisco Giants - 36th round (1,098th overall)

2004 CHRIS LAMBERT – RHP .......................................................St. Louis Cardinals - 1st Round (19th overall) JAKE MARSELLO - RHP............................................................ Chicago Cubs - 18th Round (546th overall) KEVIN SHEPARD – LHP...................................................Philadelphia Phillies - 30th Round (902nd overall) RYAN MORGAN – 1B.............................................................Chicago Cubs - 42nd Round (1,265th overall) MATT ELFELDT – RHP...........................................Signed as a free agent by the Boston Red Sox in 2003

OUTLOOK

EAGLES IN THE DRAFT

33


BOSTON COLLEGE

eagles in the pros

COLLEGE ROBBIE ANSTON - OF

Selected by the Seattle Mariners in the 26th round (792nd overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Clinton LumberKings (A) of the Midwest League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION AVG GP AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2010 Everett Northwest A- Seattle Mariners .292 65 264 41 77 24 13 1 2 23 15 2011 Clinton Midwest A Seattle Mariners .243 56 181 25 44 16 11 2 0 31 11 Totals .272 121 445 66 121 40 24 3 2 54 26

MIKE BELFIORE - LHP Selected by the Arizona Diamondbacks in Comp Round A (45th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Visalia Rawhide (A Advanced) of the California League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2009 Missoula Pioneer Rookie Arizona Diamondbacks 2.17 2-2 14 11 0 58.0 59 29 14 13 55 2010 South Bend Midwest A Arizona Diamondbacks 3.99 3-10 25 25 0 126.1 139 75 56 42 105 2011 Visalia California A+ Arizona Diamondbacks 5.94 4-4 35 8 0 79.0 86 58 52 57 79 Totals 4.17 9-16 74 44 0 263.1 284 162 122 112 239

eric Campbell - 3b Selected by the New York Mets in the 8th round (254th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Binghamton Mets (AA) of the Eastern League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION AVG GP AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2008 Brooklyn New York-Penn A New York Mets .260 66 215 27 56 28 9 0 4 28 1 2009 Savannah South Atlantic A New York Mets .248 95 339 42 84 47 23 0 5 48 6 St. Lucie Florida State A+ New York Mets .273 7 22 5 6 0 2 0 0 5 0 2010 Mets Gulf Coast Rookie New York Mets .273 3 11 1 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 St. Lucie Florida State A+ New York Mets .335 46 170 37 57 20 14 1 4 21 2 Binghamton Eastern AA New York Mets .279 50 179 26 50 30 11 0 6 12 1 2011 Binghamton Eastern AA New York Mets .247 126 405 46 100 46 23 2 4 54 6 Totals .265 393 1341 184 356 172 83 3 23 168 17

PAT DEAN - LHP Selected by the Minnesota Twins in the 3rd round (102nd overall). He finished the 2011 season with the New Britain Rock Cats (AA) of the Eastern League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2010 Elizabethton Appalachian Rookie Minnesota Twins 2.59 2-2 5 5 0 24.1 17 10 7 1 32 Twins Gulf Coast Rookie Minnesota Twins 0.00 0-0 4 0 0 5.0 3 0 0 0 5 2011 Beloit Midwest A Minnesota Twins 2.86 2-0 8 8 0 44.0 40 15 14 9 37 Fort Myers Florida State A+ Minnesota Twins 6.67 3-6 11 11 0 58.0 83 51 43 15 36 New Britain Eastern AA Minnesota Twins 4.50 0-1 1 1 0 6.0 9 3 3 1 3 Totals 4.40 7-9 29 25 0 137.1 152 79 67 26 113

TERRY DOYLE - RHP Selected by the Chicago White Sox in the 37th round (1,110th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Birmingham Barons (AA) of the Southern League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER 2008 Bristol Appalachian Rookie Chicago White Sox 1.87 1-2 10 0 0 24.0 27 11 5 2009 Great Falls Pioneer Rookie Chicago White Sox 2.98 5-1 12 10 0 57.1 51 20 19 2010 Kannapolis South Atlantic A Chicago White Sox 0.96 4-2 7 7 0 47.0 31 5 5 Winston-Salem Carolina A+ Chicago White Sox 3.71 8-8 20 20 0 121.1 115 60 50 2011 Winston-Salem Carolina A+ Chicago White Sox 2.84 1-5 11 11 0 73.0 71 27 23 Birmingham Southern AA Chicago White Sox 3.24 7-5 15 15 0 100.0 91 38 36 Totals 2.94 26-23 75 63 0 422.2 315 161 138

34

BB 3 15 12 34 11 22 97

SO 27 75 58 99 49 73 381

dan houston - Rhp Selected by the Colorado Rockies in the seventh round (227th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Tulsa Drillers (AA) of the Texas League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2008 Casper Pioneer Rookie Colorado Rockies 4.17 6-4 14 14 0 69.0 61 39 32 20 68 2009 Asheville South Atlantic A Colorado Rockies 3.63 8-9 26 26 0 148.2 141 77 60 63 121 2010 Modesto California A+ Colorado Rockies 5.92 5-7 21 20 0 114.0 157 84 75 43 80 2011 Modesto California A+ Colorado Rockies 2.53 7-1 13 13 0 85.1 71 35 24 22 67 Tulsa Texas AA Colorado Rockies 4.27 4-4 13 13 0 78.0 89 43 37 18 51 Totals 4.15 30-25 87 86 0 495.0 519 278 228 166 387

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE

drew locke - OF

joe martinez - rhp

ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 7.50 3-2 9 5 0 30.0 46 27 25 12 19 4.91 0-1 4 1 0 11.0 15 6 6 6 3 3.12 0-0 5 0 0 8.2 11 5 3 3 6 6.16 3-3 18 6 0 49.2 72 38 34 21 28

SHAWN Mcgill - c Selected by the Philadelphia Phillies in the 23rd round (697th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Lynchburg Hillcats (A Advanced) of the Carolina League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION AVG GP AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2006 Batavia New York-Penn A Philadelphia Phillies .200 21 60 6 12 3 1 0 0 7 2 2007 Phillies Gulf Coast Rookie Philadelphia Phillies .273 6 11 1 3 1 1 0 0 1 0 2010 Myrtle Beach Carolina A+ Atlanta Braves .154 6 13 2 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 Mississippi Southern AA Atlanta Braves .313 13 48 5 15 10 5 0 1 2 3 2011 Gwinnett International AAA Atlanta Braves .250 6 16 2 4 0 1 0 0 2 0 Lynchburg Carolina A+ Atlanta Braves .289 60 201 25 58 18 11 1 5 17 3 Totals .269 112 349 41 94 33 20 1 6 30 7

matt meyer - Lhp

2012 BASEBALL media guide

BC

Selected by the Cleveland Indians in the 15th round (461st overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Salt Lake Bees (AAA) of the Pacific Coast League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2006 Mahoning Valley New York-Penn A Cleveland Indians 1.98 2-2 19 0 2 27.1 23 6 6 15 31 2007 Lake Country South Atlantic A Cleveland Indians 0.50 0-0 11 0 0 18.0 12 6 1 5 20 Kinston Carolina A Cleveland Indians 4.32 3-4 32 0 3 50.0 50 28 24 32 58 2008 Kinston Carolina A Cleveland Indians 4.23 4-2 42 0 1 55.1 48 27 26 29 61 2009 Kinston Carolina A Cleveland Indians 3.49 2-1 19 0 0 28.1 19 12 11 9 25 Akron Eastern AA Cleveland Indians 7.36 0-1 23 0 0 22.0 27 21 18 20 22 Columbus International AAA Cleveland Indians 4.50 1-0 2 0 0 2.0 3 1 1 1 1 2010 Rancho Cucamonga California A+ Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 4.32 1-0 7 0 1 8.1 10 4 4 0 12 Springfield Texas AA St. Louis Cardinals 6.64 0-2 21 0 0 20.1 25 19 15 14 20 2011 Angels Arizona Rookie Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 1.13 0-0 6 0 0 8.0 3 1 1 1 17 Arkansas Texas AA Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 2.87 1-2 15 0 2 15.2 5 6 5 13 27 Salt Lake Pacific Coast AAA Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 2.30 1-2 14 0 0 15.2 15 11 4 11 15 Totals 3.86 15-16 211 0 9 270.1 240 142 116 150 309

REVIEW HISTORY RECORDS

MARTINEZ IN THE MAJORS YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION 2009 San Francisco National MLB San Francisco Giants 2010 San Francisco National MLB San Francisco Giants Pittsburgh National MLB Pittsburgh Pirates Totals

PLAYERS

Selected by the San Francisco Giants in the 12th Round (372nd overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Columbus Clippers (AAA) of the International League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2005 Salem-Keizer Northwest A San Francisco Giants 4.30 4-3 15 13 0 69.0 69 33 33 15 59 2006 Augusta South Atlantic A San Francisco Giants 2.99 15-5 26 26 0 165.2 153 66 55 26 134 2007 San Jose California A San Francisco Giants 4.26 10-10 28 28 0 162.2 172 85 77 36 151 2008 Connecticut Eastern AA San Francisco Giants 2.49 10-10 27 27 0 148.0 131 58 41 37 112 2009 Giants Arizona Rookie San Francisco Giants 10.12 0-0 1 1 0 2.2 4 3 3 0 1 San Jose California A+ San Francisco Giants 2.45 0-0 2 2 0 7.1 3 2 2 2 7 Fresno Pacific Coast AAA San Francisco Giants 4.89 0-2 7 5 0 35.0 39 21 19 8 22 2010 Fresno Pacific Coast AAA San Francisco Giants 3.32 5-3 14 13 0 81.1 78 35 30 26 65 Indianapolis International AAA Pittsburgh Pirates 5.72 1-2 7 4 1 28.1 46 22 18 7 18 2011 Columbus International AAA Cleveland Indians 4.04 8-9 35 16 0 118.0 136 54 53 29 101 Totals 3.64 53-44 163 136 1 820.0 834 379 332 186 671

COACHES

Selected by the L.A. Dodgers in the 19th round (586th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Oklahoma City Redhawks (AAA) of the Pacific Coast League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION AVG GP AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2005 Ogden Pioneer A Los Angeles Dodgers .272 50 169 34 46 31 9 0 13 19 1 2006 Columbus South Atlantic A Los Angeles Dodgers .325 62 243 49 79 50 16 4 8 21 5 Vero Beach Florida State A Los Angeles Dodgers .286 61 231 33 66 39 16 0 7 20 5 2007 Inland Empire California A Los Angeles Dodgers .280 79 286 30 80 30 11 3 7 17 4 2008 Inland Empire California A Los Angeles Dodgers .311 122 470 81 146 85 37 4 11 42 5 2009 Corpus Christi Texas AA Houston Astros .338 129 503 81 170 109 31 3 20 46 2 2010 Round Rock Pacific Coast AAA Houston Astros .279 135 477 71 133 74 36 4 17 43 6 2011 Oklahoma City Pacific Coast AAA Houston Astros .264 125 375 41 99 58 26 2 11 35 9 Totals .297 763 2754 420 819 476 182 20 94 243 37

OUTLOOK

eagles in the pros

35


BOSTON

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

36

COLLEGE

eagles in the pros

COLLEGE KEVIN MORAN - Rhp

Selected by the Chicago White Sox in the 9th round (278th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Kannapolis Initimdators (A) of the South Atlantic League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2010 Bristol Appalachian Rookie Chicago White Sox 2.37 0-2 16 0 9 19.0 14 7 5 6 22 Kannapolis South Atlantic A Chicago White Sox 3.52 1-0 5 0 0 7.2 5 3 3 5 6 2011 Kannapolis South Atlantic A Chicago White Sox 7.33 1-2 12 3 1 27.0 29 23 22 16 25 Totals 5.08 2-4 33 3 10 53.2 48 33 30 27 53

RYNE reynoso - rhp Selected by the Atlanta Braves in the 26th round (790th overall). He finished the 2010 season with the Gwinnett Braves (AAA) of the International League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2007 Rome Atlantic A Atlanta Braves 1.98 3-4 40 0 9 59.0 48 19 13 32 71 Myrtle Beach Carolina A Atlanta Braves 0.00 0-0 2 0 0 2.1 1 0 0 4 4 2008 Myrtle Beach Carolina A Atlanta Braves 3.36 10-6 27 26 0 131.1 121 58 49 37 105 2009 Mississippi Southern AA Atlanta Braves 3.47 7-9 25 24 0 148.0 127 66 57 59 89 Gwinnett International AAA Atlanta Braves 10.80 0-1 1 1 0 5.0 7 6 6 2 0 2010 Red Sox Gulf Coast Rookie Boston Red Sox 10.12 0-0 3 1 0 2.2 4 3 3 1 2 Portland Eastern AA Boston Red Sox 3.54 3-0 9 0 1 20.1 17 8 8 5 17 Mississippi Southern AA Atlanta Braves 5.68 0-1 6 0 0 12.2 11 8 8 4 14 Gwinnett International AAA Atlanta Braves 5.40 2-7 14 10 0 56.2 76 41 34 26 40 Totals 3.66 25-29 127 62 10 438.0 412 209 178 170 342

TONY SANCHEZ - C Selected by Pittsburgh Pirates in the first round (fourth overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Altoona Curve (AA) of the Eastern League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION AVG GP AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2009 State College New York-Penn A Pittsburgh Pirates .308 4 13 2 4 1 1 0 0 1 0 West Virginia South Atlantic A Pittsburgh Pirates .316 41 155 29 49 46 15 1 7 21 1 Lynchburg Carolina A+ Pittsburgh Pirates .200 3 19 2 2 1 2 0 0 1 0 2010 Bradenton Florida A+ Pittsburgh Pirates .314 59 207 31 65 35 17 0 4 28 2 2011 Altoona Eastern AA Pittsburgh Pirates .241 118 402 46 97 44 14 1 5 47 5 Totals .278 225 787 110 217 127 49 2 16 98 8

GARRET SMITH - P Selected by the Tampa Bay Rays in the 20th round (630th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Princeton Rays (Rookie) of the Appalachian League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION ERA W-L APP GS SV IP H R ER BB SO 2011 Princeton Appalachian Rookie Tampa Bay Rays 0.82 0-0 10 0 4 11.0 8 1 1 5 5 Totals 0.82 0-0 10 0 4 11.0 8 1 1 5 5

JOHN SPATOLA - OF Selected by the Chicago White Sox in the 35th round (1,058th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Winston-Salem Dash (A Advanced) of the Carolina League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION AVG GP AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2010 Bristol Appalachian Rookie Chicago White Sox .264 42 159 18 42 21 9 0 7 7 1 Kannapolis South Atlantic A Chicago White Sox .212 17 52 7 11 6 1 3 1 2 0 2011 Kannapolis South Atlantic A Chicago White Sox .256 42 121 20 31 19 7 2 4 12 0 Winston-Salem Carolina A+ Chicago White Sox .161 10 31 0 5 1 2 0 0 2 0 Totals .245 111 363 45 89 47 19 5 12 23 1

MICKEY WISWALL - INF Selected by the Seattle Mariners in the 7th round (222nd overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Clinton LumberKings (A) of the Midwest League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION AVG GP AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2010 Everett Northwest A- Seattle Mariners .271 12 48 7 13 17 3 0 5 2 0 Clinton Midwest A Seattle Mariners .301 33 136 13 41 18 14 0 4 6 1 2011 Clinton Midwest A Seattle Mariners .240 130 509 49 122 57 19 1 10 25 4 Totals .254 175 693 69 176 92 36 1 19 33 5

BRAD ZAPENAS - INF Selected by the Chicago Cubs in the 42nd round (1269th overall). He finished the 2011 season with the Boise Hawks (A) of the Northwest League. YEAR TEAM LEAGUE LEVEL ORGANIZATION AVG GP AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR BB SB 2011 Boise Northwest A Chicago Cubs .238 45 151 18 36 18 10 1 1 13 9 Totals .238 45 151 18 36 18 10 1 1 13 9

2012 BASEBALL media guide


Year GP W-L-T CONFERENCE Coach

Captains

Year GP W-L-T CONFERENCE Coach

Captains

REVIEW

* Earned an NCAA bid ** advanced to College World Series BE member of Big East $ Eddie Pellagrini did not coach because of illness @Joe Morgan was elected captain at the end of the 1952 season but declined when he signed with the Red Sox.

PLAYERS

1984......24.....7-17............................Eddie Pellagrini 1985......34.....12-22..........................Eddie Pellagrini 1986......37.....14-23..........................Eddie Pellagrini 1987......34.....13-21..........................Eddie Pellagrini................................................................Jay Adams 1988......31.....15-16..........................Eddie Pellagrini................................. Marty Naughton, Mike Nyhan 1989......37.....20-17..........................Richard “Moe” Maloney.................Kevin Connelly, Mary Naughton 1990......44.....21-22-1.......................Richard “Moe” Maloney...Gregg Radachowsky, Bryan McGourthy 1991......42.....23-19..........................Richard “Moe” Maloney..........................Brian Kelly, Doug MacNeil 1992......35.....18-17........5-13BE........Richard “Moe” Maloney...Dave Fraser, Chris Taylor, Jerry Varnum 1993......36.....22-14.......11-10BE.......Richard “Moe” Maloney........................Chris Higgins, Tom Mandile 1994......39.....14-23-2.....5-14BE........Richard “Moe” Maloney...............Michael Martin, Pete Carmichael 1995......45.....21-24........8-13BE........Richard “Moe” Maloney............ Mark Bettencourt, Steve Marciano 1996......42.....15-27........6-18BE........Richard “Moe” Maloney................... Brian Manahan, Brian Sankey 1997......43.....20-23........8-17BE........Richard “Moe” Maloney..........................Craig Katz, Kevin Penwell 1998......41.....17-23-1.....4-15BE........Richard “Moe” Maloney....................Steve Dunlea, Sonny Nictakis 1999......48.....26-21-1....10-15BE.......Pete Hughes...................................... Sonny Nictakis, Jeff Waldron 2000......55.....35-20...... 12-11BE......Pete Hughes............................................Mike Quirk, Andy Sullivan 2001......51.....29-22.......11-13BE.......Pete Hughes...............................................................Mike Hubbard 2002......55.....30-25.......15-11BE.......Pete Hughes...................Brian Macchi, Jeff Mackor, Mark Sullivan 2003......54.....33-21.......13-11BE.......Pete Hughes...................................... Matthew Duffey, Ryan Leahy 2004......59.....32-27........15-9BE........Pete Hughes.................. Mike Gauthier, Zach Keenan, Eric Wright 2005......57.....37-20%.....17-8BE........Pete Hughes.................................... Jason Delaney, Dave Preziosi 2006......54.....28-25-1...... 9-21.........Pete Hughes ...........Dave Preziosi, Shawn McGill, Nate Jeanes 2007......52.....24-27-1..... 12-17........Mik Aoki.................................................. Peter Frates, Nate Jeanes 2008......53.....26-27......... 9-21.........Mik Aoki...............................................Eric Campbell, Harry Darling 2009*.....60.....34-26........ 13-15........Mik Aoki............................................. Harry Darling, JB MacDonald 2010......58.....30-28........ 14-16........Mik Aoki................... Robbie Anston, Chris Kowalski, John Spatola 2011......50.....17-33......... 7-22.........Mike Gambino......................................... Geoff Oxley, Garret Smith

COACHES HISTORY RECORDS

1946......18.....16-2............................Fred Maguire 1947......22.....13-9............................Fred Maguire 1948......20.....16-4............................Fred Maguire 1949*.....21.....17-4............................Fred Maguire............................... John Brosnaham, John Yurewicz 1950......20.....12-8............................Johnny Temple........................... John Fitzgibbons, Edward Clasby 1951......20.....12-8............................Johnny Temple......................................................Bill “Butch” Walsh 1952......19.....12-7............................Johnny Temple..............................................................Mike Roarke 1953**...20.....13-7............................Johnny Temple......................................................Jim Casternelli @ 1954......15.....9-6...............................Johnny Temple........................................................... Bill McMorrow 1955*.....18.....12-6............................Johnny Temple............................................................Bob Flanagan 1956......15.....9-6...............................Johnny Temple................................................................ Paul Carey 1957......16.....5-10-1.........................Johnny Temple...................................................... Bernie Telizewski 1958......17.....7-10............................Eddie Pellagrini......................................................Eddie Densmore 1959......16.....12-4............................Eddie Pellagrini............................................................Ray Stebbins 1960**...21.....15-6............................Eddie Pellagrini................................................ Bob “Beaver” Martin 1961**...24.....18-6............................Eddie Pellagrini................................................ Bob “Beaver” Martin 1962*.....22.....12-10..........................Eddie Pellagrini........................................................Frank Faggiano 1963......19.....13-6............................Eddie Pellagrini........................................................... Bob DeFelice 1964......19.....11-8.............................Eddie Pellagrini..............................................................John Frame 1965......19.....10-9............................Eddie Pellagrini.................................................................................. 1966*.....18.....13-5............................Eddie Pellagrini..........................................................Tom Anderson 1967**...22.....14-5-3.........................Eddie Pellagrini...................................................................Bill Kitley 1968......23.....14-9............................Eddie Pellagrini..............................................................Mike Finnell 1969...................................................Bob Cunis$ 1970......21.....13-8............................Eddie Pellagrini................................................... Richie McLaughlin 1971......23.....11-12...........................Eddie Pellagrini................................................................ Bill Medea 1972......23.....9-14............................Eddie Pellagrini................................................................Bill Bedard 1973......23.....8-14-1.........................Eddie Pellagrini 1974......25.....15-9-1.........................Eddie Pellagrini 1975......25.....13-12..........................Eddie Pellagrini 1976......23.....10-13..........................Eddie Pellagrini 1977......27.....17-10..........................Eddie Pellagrini..............................................................Tom Songin 1978......25.....14-10-1.......................Eddie Pellagrini 1979......24.....6-18............................Eddie Pellagrini 1980......23.....8-15............................Eddie Pellagrini 1981......23.....11-12...........................Eddie Pellagrini 1982......25.....13-12..........................Eddie Pellagrini 1983......20.....11-9.............................Eddie Pellagrini

OUTLOOK

year-by-year results

BC

2012 BASEBALL media guide

37


BOSTON COLLEGE

bc in the ncaa tournament

COLLEGE

Year Opponent

Score

1949 1953 1955 1960 1961 1962 1963 1966 1967 2009

L, 10-5 June 13 L, 7-2 June 13 W, 10-6 June 1 W, 9-2 June 2 W, 4-1 June 11 L, 6-2 June 12 W, 7-6 (11) June 13 L, 2-1 (11) June 14 L, 4-3 June 2 W, 2-1 June 4 W, 5-4 June 5 W, 8-3 June 14 L, 5-2 June 16 L, 1-0 June 17 W, 11-8 W, 4-1 L, 3-2 W, 14-4 W, 3-2 June 10 L, 10-3 June 11 W, 4-3 (10) June 12 L, 4-3 June 13 L, 3-2 L, 4-3 L, 4-0 May 29 L, 7-4 May 29 W, 8-5 L, 10-2 W, 4-3 May 28 L, 9-8 May 28 W, 15-13 May 29 W, 4-1 June 2 L, 6-5 (11) June 2 W, 7-6 (12) June 3 W, 3-1 June 13 L, 8-1 June 13 L, 3-2 (13) June 14 W, 8-7 May 29 L, 3-2 (25) May 30 L, 4-3 May 31

St. John’s St. John’s Trinity Springfield Houston Michigan Duke Lafayette Springfield Connecticut Holy Cross Northern Colorado USC Oklahoma State Springfield Connecticut Connecticut Connecticut Western Michigan USC Duke USC Vermont Bridgeport Holy Cross Holy Cross UMass-Amherst Northeastern Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth UMass-Amherst UMass-Amherst UMass-Amherst Rider Arizona State Houston Texas State Texas Army

Date

Tournament Eastern Championship Playoffs Eastern Championship Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs New England NCAA Crown New England NCAA Crown NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA District I Playoffs NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series NCAA College World Series Austin Regional Austin Regional Austin Regional

Location Dexter Field, N.Y. Dexter Field, N.Y. Fitton Field, Worcester, Mass. Fitton Field, Worcester, Mass. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Springfield, Mass. AIC Park, Springfield, Mass. AIC Park, Springfield, Mass. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Springfield, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Shea Field, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Shea Field, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Omaha, Neb. Austin, Texas Austin, Texas Austin, Texas

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

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2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

COLLEGE

Boston College’s baseball greats who have been inducted into the BC Varsity Club Hall of Fame:

1970

1971

1972

Mike Roarke (’52) – This two-sport athlete captained both the football and baseball teams his senior year, earning him the title “Mr. Captain.” This solid hitter was also one of the best catchers to ever don the maroon and gold. After his career at the Heights, Mike enjoyed a short stint with Detroit Tigers before entering the majorleague coaching ranks. Mike was inducted into the Boston College Varsity Club Hall of Fame in 1972.

1973

1976

Bob DeFelice (’63) – This backstop doubled as guard and linebacker on the Eagle football squad. Bob finished his collegiate career with a batting average over .300 and was arguably the best defensive catcher in Boston College history. In his four-year career, Bob went to the NCAA District I playoffs four times, twice advancing to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. Bob is now the baseball coach and athletic director at Bentley College. John Dixon (’31) – The “Norwood Lamplighter,” as he was dubbed because of his large stature, was the cornerstone of a BC pitching staff that dominated New England baseball. This staff, under coaches Hugh Duffy and Frank “Cheese” McCrehan, was one of the greatest in New England baseball history.

1981

Rev. Bill Commane (’43) – Anyone who knows BC baseball history will agree that Bill is one of the premier hitters to ever play at the Heights. He batted .425 as a sophomore, .454 as a junior, and encored with a .440 mark as a senior. When he wasn’t blasting his fabled “tape-measure” home runs, he was making key blocks as a fullback for the 1943 football team that went to the Orange Bowl.

1982

Hugh “Duffy” O’Regan (’21) – The powerful left-handed batter and fine defensive catcher was a mainstay of the outstanding Boston College baseball teams of the early 1920’s. He was inducted into the Boston College Varsity Club Hall of Fame in 1982.

1983

Bob “Beaver” Martin (’61) – “Captain,” as he was affectionately called by his teammates, earned the title by captaining both the 1960 and 1961 squads. Beaver led the 1961 Omaha-bound squad in hitting (.370). He was also selected to the GBL All-Star team in each of his three years on the varsity squad and earned all-New England honors in each of his last two years. Following his senior campaign he received Second Team All-America accolades, as well as garnering Frank “Cheese” McCrehan Award distinction. Bob was inducted into the Boston College Varsity Club Hall of Fame in 1983.

1985

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Ed Gallagher (’32) – The great fire-balling, left-handed pitcher, who led BC to an era of unprecedented baseball success, also played both ways on the gridiron. After graduation, he played professional baseball with the Red Sox and later returned to BC as the elected President of the Alumni Association (1955-56).

1977

George Colbert (’32) – As well as being both the quarterback and punter for the football team, George’s real prowess was on the diamond. He led the team in batting his sophomore year, hitting .459, to set a mark that would not be eclipsed for a long time. He also led the team in hitting his junior and senior years, and he was named captain his senior year. He later served as the coach of BC’s freshman baseball team.

Harold “Mickey” Connolly (’43) – A highly-talented fullback who scored the Eagles first touchdown in Boston College’s 19-13 victory over Tennessee in the 1941 Sugar Bowl. Also a member of the BC backfield for the 1943 Orange Bowl. Played baseball during his collegiate career at the Heights. Following a professional football career, Mickey became a college football coach at Xavier University.

BC

Rev. Msg. Bernard O’Kane (’09) – Monsignor O’Kane was probably Boston College’s first real star athlete. Like fellow hall of famer Luke Urban, O’Kane captained three sports – baseball, basketball and track. While he was most successful in the track meets, he was a star on the diamond as well. This standout center fielder was also dominant at the plate, even against such names as Notre Dame’s Jean Debuc’s (later a teammate of Ty Cobb in Detroit) and famous Red Sox pitcher Smokey Joe Wood.

Ed Mullowney (’26) – An outstanding right-handed hurler, he pitched the Eagles to Eastern baseball supremacy. Also the hockey team’s defenseman, Mullowney spurned professional offers from baseball’s Washington Senators and hockey’s Boston Bruins to attend law school.

HISTORY RECORDS

Frank “Cheese” McCrehan (’25) – “Cheese” was the ace of the 1923 pitching staff, the year that the yearbook editor claimed the unofficial national championship for the Eagles. His greatest moment came when, in front of 40,000 people, he defeated Owen Carroll and Holy Cross, 4-1, at Braves Field. The three-game series between the top-ranked Crusaders and second-ranked Eagles for the Eastern Title drew a total of 83,000 spectators. He later coached at the Heights for eight years.

1975

Bill O’Brien (’67) – Bill is one of the best pitchers in Boston College history. During his senior year he led Eddie Pellagrini’s team to Omaha, Neb., where he picked up the win in the Eagles’ first game in Rosenblatt Stadium.

REVIEW

Al Weston (’29) – This talented first baseman graduated with a career batting average over .400. In 1928, he led all eastern college players in batting, posting a .465 mark. After his playing days at Boston College, he went on to a professional career with the former Boston Braves (now Atlanta Braves).

Phil Corrigan (’21) – One of four student-athletes to letter in four sports at Boston College, he participated in hockey, track, baseball and football. The versatile athlete, played infield, outfield and catcher for the Eagles.

Bob Niemiec (’61) – This knuckleballer was the ace of head coach Eddie Pellagrini’s staff that dominated New England baseball for three years. During his time at the Heights, in which the Eagles went to the College World Series twice, the team posted records of 12-4, 15-6 and 18-6, respectively. In the 1960 College World Series, Niemiec held the USC Trojans (who went on to win the national championship) scoreless for 7.0 innings until a back injury forced him out of the game.

PLAYERS

Louis “Luke” Temple (’21) – “Luke” is not only one of the greatest athletes to ever wear the Boston College maroon and gold but he was one the premier athletes in America in his time. He is one of the few athletes to earn letters in four different sports. This infielder/catcher captained three sports his senior year (football, basketball, baseball) as well as played goalie on the hockey team. After his BC days, he went on to excel professionally in football, basketball and baseball.

1974

1978

COACHES

Charles “Duck” Darling (’25) – “Chuck” is one of the finest hitters in Boston College history, finishing his playing days with an average over .400. Despite his prowess at the plate, he was even more successful on the football field. He earned All-America honors at both quarterback and fullback, and served as captain in 1923.

Andy Spognardi (’32) – Andy earned his spot as one of the great infielders in Boston College baseball history. An outstanding shortstop, he was known for his lightningfast pivot on double plays. On the very day he graduated from BC, he was given a contract with the Boston Red Sox and took over the shortstop role that same day. His career as a major league infielder was cut short in favor of his lifelong ambition: to become a doctor.

OUTLOOK

EAGLE GREATS


BOSTON

BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

40

1986

EAGLE GREATS COLLEGE 1993

Bill Cunis (’62) – Cunis hit cleanup on three-consecutive Eagle squads, including the 1960 team that finished third in the College World Series and the 1961 team that returned to Omaha, Neb. Three times he was named to the Greater Boston League All-Star team (1960-62) as a left fielder. He later coached at the Heights for 23 years (five years with the freshman, three with the junior varsity and 15 as an assistant on the varsity squad).

1987

John Temple (’31) – John played four years of baseball and one year of hockey at Boston College. This talented outfielder went on to coach hockey at BC (for one year while the legendary “Snooks” Kelly was in the Navy) as well as baseball. The highlight of his eight-year coaching career came in 1953 when he took the Eagles on their first trip to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. Boston College beat Houston in the first game and went on to finish fourth in the nation behind teams such as Michigan and Texas.

1988

Bill Robinson (’61) – Though he played three years on the Eagle football squad, “Robbie” left his mark on the Shea Field diamond. Bill is one of the winningest pitchers in Boston College history, posting a 5-0 mark with a 1.94 ERA in his sophomore campaign. He followed suit his junior year, going 5-1, and was equally successful in his final season, compiling a 6-2 record. During that span, he helped lead coach Pellagrini’s team to Omaha, Neb. in back-to-back seasons (1960 and 1961), and picked up a win in each trip.

1989

Mike Robertson (’69) – Mike can lay a legitimate claim to the title of best athlete ever to don the maroon and gold, starring on the gridiron and ice as well as on the diamond. As a senior, this power-hitting second baseman ranked in the nation’s top 10 in home runs, while still posting an impressive .330 average. He earned all-New England and Greater Boston League all-star honors for his efforts.

1990

Joe O’Brien (’78) – The two-sport athlete was the ace pitcher in the Eagles’ 1977 squad while also starting at quarterback and running back for the football team.

1991

COLLEGE

Greg Stewart (’79) – Greg graduated with a career batting average of over .400. As a junior first baseman, he led all ECAC District I batters with a .467 average and earned all-ECAC honors. He was also named the Greater Boston League’s Most Valuable Player that year, hitting .563 in the conference. The following year, he appeared on the GBL all-star team as well as the ECAC District I team.

Frank Faggiano (’62) – This great defensive third baseman (who, as baseball lore goes, never had a bad game) graduated with a career batting average over .300. He helped take the Eagles to two consecutive appearances in the College World Series, and batted .320 in Omaha, Neb. Frank was captain his senior year and won the Frank “Cheese” McCrehan Award for character, scholarship and ability. He would later found and serve as the first President of the Diamond Club (a support group for Eagle baseball).

1994

Rev. Kevin MacDonald (’78) – Kevin finished his collegiate career with a .407 batting average, one of the highest in BC history. As a junior, the shortstop topped the team in hitting, posting a .437 mark. His senior year, he led all Eastern schools, hitting an impressive .470, including an even more impressive mark of .500 against Greater Boston League foes. He also led the team in home runs (5), hits (39), doubles (7) and RBIs (28). After graduation, he signed a professional contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates and played six years of professional baseball before retiring to become a missionary priest. John Salmon (’69) – The football and baseball dual athlete registered a school-record 17 interceptions in 29 varsity games and posted an outstanding .350 career batting average as a center fielder. He was a key ingredient in BC’s appearance in the 1966 World Series.

1995

Charlie Bunker (’62) – This hard-throwing southpaw set a single-game strikeout record, fanning 17 batters. He helped lead the team to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. Twice (1960, 1961) in his three-year career. He earned All-New England as well as Greater Boston League All-Star honors before playing for the hometown Red Sox.

1996

Tom Songin (’77) – Tom earned eight letters in his four years at the Heights, playing both baseball and hockey. He established himself early as one of Boston College’s great power hitters, leading all Division I hitters in home runs per at bat (one out of every seven) as a freshman shortstop. He earned NCAA District I, New England and GBL honors that year and finished his career with a batting average over .300. As a senior, he captained the team that advanced to the ECAC regional finals – one win away from a trip to the NCAA tournament.

1997

Doug MacNeil (’91) – Doug was a dazzling pitcher who established BC career records for strikeouts (303), innings pitched (315) and victories (25). His 1.60 ERA was one of the lowest in Division I baseball in 1989, earning him AllAmerica honors that season. He was a two-time all-BIG EAST selection and Cape Cod League all-star for Cotuit, and received all-Greater Boston League accolades as well. The twice-named team MVP captained the first BC squad to play in the BIG EAST tournament (1991). MacNeil pitched in the Boston Red Sox organization before an arm injury curtailed his career. Eddie Miller (’57) – In his first varsity baseball season, he hit over .300 and demonstrated dazzling defensive skills at his post in left field. Although his athletic career came to a premature end, his loyalty and service to the Eagles never ceased. As president of the Class of 1957, he headed up the students’ division of the fund-raising drive that resulted in the construction of Alumni Stadium. He was named Athletic Business Manager in 1957 and was Sports Publicity Director from 1960 through 1974. He later served as the University’s Director of Public Relations and in several University-wide administrative posts.

1998

Bill Kitley (’67) – Kitley played three years for legendary coach Eddie Pellagrini, starting in 1966 and earning a captainship in 1967, batting .300 over his career. The first baseman capped the 1967 “Dream Season,” by winning two of three over host UMass-Amherst to earn a trip to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb.

1999

Dan Zailskas (’69) – Although, the high school All-America came to Boston College on a football scholarship, Dan graduated with a spot on the Philadelphia Phillies, where he would be employed for the next two years. Zailskas starred in both football and baseball for three years at Boston College. He was one of the few underclassmen on the 1967 World Series team, batting .409 in his first varsity season. Recruited as a quarterback out of high school, Zailskas played in the defensive backfield for two years before switching to defensive end his senior season under head coach Joe Yukica.

2000

John Coyle (’62) – Coyle was a key contributor to the Eagles’ Greater Boston League Championships, New England Championships, and berths in the College World Series in 1961 and 1962. The two-time Greater Boston League All-Star as a second sacker twice led the Eagles in batting (1960, 1961) and crafted an extraordinary .326 career average. John founded of the Boston College Diamond Club.

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BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

2001

COLLEGE 2006

2002

2005

Brian Kelley (’91) – Known as a “gamer” who helped the Eagle baseball team win with his bat, his glove and his base-running skills. Kelley led the Big East Conference in hits for two consecutive years; his 67 safeties in 1990 set a Boston College season record. He posted a career batting average of .353 and he had 19 multiple-hit games. Kelley was a first-team All-Big East Conference second baseman in 1990 and 1991 and twice won All-Northeast, All-New England and All-Greater Boston League honors. He was the team captain and Most Valuable Player of Boston College’s 1991 squad. After graduation, Kelley played professional baseball in Europe.

2008

Steve Langone (’00) - A multi-talented athlete, Steve Langone excelled both as a pitcher and designated hitter - capturing All-America and All-Big East accolades for his versatile diamond skills. From the mound, this ace pitched 24 career victories, the most of any BC hurler. During his senior season, his sparkling 1.54 earned-run average was best in the nation, and he led the BC pitching staff in wins, strikeouts, complete games and innings pitched. At the plate, he had a hefty .356 batting average and 30 career home runs. In addition to his national honors, he was first team All-New England and Most Valuable Player of the 1999 Beanpot Baseball Tournament. After graduation, he played professional baseball in the Los Angeles Dodgers and Philadelphia Phillies organizations before a shoulder injury ended his baseball career.

2011

Jack Farrell (‘50) - Jack Farrell is one of the few studentathletes in BC sports history to earn eight varsity letters. He returned from Navy service in World War II to play baseball and football. In baseball, he was a speedy outfielder. In football, he was a running back and defensive back. He scored a touchdown against Holy Cross in the final game of his career. Farrell captured All-New England honors in football. George Ravanis (‘78) - George Ravanis was a true power pitcher during his time at Boston College. Playing for longtime head coach HYPERLINK “http://www.bceagles.com/ genrel/pellagrini_eddie00.html” Eddie Pellagrini, he was a dominant force from 1976-78. BC won 41 games during his time in the program. Ravanis himself recorded 17 of those wins. He was a two-time All-Greater Boston League selection, an ECAC all-star and a participant in the Cape Cod Baseball League. To this day, he holds Boston College’s career record for earned-run average at 2.49. Bernie Teliszewski (‘57) - Bernie Teliszewski was a threeyear starter in two sports -- at running back and in the outfield. In baseball, he earned Greater Boston League MVP Honors as a senior captain after hitting .444 and pacing the league in home runs and RBIs. He finished with a .315 career batting average. On the gridiron, Teliszewski scored nine career touchdowns and won the Scanlan Award as the program’s top scholar-athlete. He is deceased.

2009

2012 BASEBALL media guide

BC

Gerry Hamel (’61) - Gerry Hamel was a three-year starter on the BC baseball team. He batted third and played right field for the Eagles. He led the team in RBIs twice and in runs scored once. Hamel was noted for his great speed and his terrific defense. He earned Greater Boston League all-star honors twice and NCAA Tournament District 1 all-star honors in 1961. BC went to consecutive College World Series (1960 and 1961) during his collegiate career.

HISTORY RECORDS

Mike Martin (’94) – Over his four-year playing career at the Heights, Mike Martin established a school record with 205 hits, batting .380 for his career in 147 games. Martin finished his junior and senior seasons among the nation’s offensive elite. He hit .462 (3rd nationally) his junior year to earn All-BIG EAST and Third Team All-American honors. In his senior campaign, Martin posted a .441 average (7th), meriting All-BIG EAST and regional distinction. Post graduation, he spent one-and-one-half seasons playing professionally with the Detroit Tigers organization.

Sean McGowan (’99) - Sean McGowan ranks among Boston College baseball’s leaders in many hitting categories. The Burlington, Mass., native provided the unique combination of hitting for power and hitting for average. He finished with a career batting average of .402 in 149 games. He registered 208 hits (fourth on the school’s career list) and 148 runs scored (also fourth). He sits atop BC’s career lists with 53 home runs and 184 runs batted in. As a junior, McGowan captured All-Big East secondteam honors. As a senior, he earned All-Conference firstteam accolades and All-America third-team honors from the ABCA, Baseball America and Collegiate Baseball. McGowan was selected by the San Francisco Giants in the third round of the 1999 MLB Draft.

Kevin Penwell (‘97) - Kevin Penwell, a right fielder for the Eagles (1994-97), is one of the most prolific hitters in school history. He won two Big East batting titles, one of only two players in league history to do so. He hit .439 in 21 league games in 1995, and .440 in 23 league games in 1996. In 1996, he ranked 11th nationally with a .428 overall batting average. He completed his collegiate career with a .387 batting average. Penwell, a native of Meriden, Conn., played for the Bourne Braves in the Cape Cod Baseball League in 1996.

REVIEW

2003

2007

2010

PLAYERS

Frankie Wilson (’24) – The three-sport athlete accumulated 11 varsity letters while matriculating at Boston College for football, baseball and track. He shone on the diamond in particular where he started in left field all four years. He set an intercollegiate record when he hit safely in 23 games, batting .450 for that entire season. Those 1923 Eagles racked up 22-straight victories for a final record of 30-3. Upon graduation, Frankie signed with the Boston Braves where he played with legend Casey Stengal; he remained in professional balls for two years with the Braves and another year at a couple of clubs.

Charlie Marso (‘36) – Although born without a full right hand, Charlie Marso overcame his physical handicap to become one of the premier pitchers in the “Golden Age” of Boston College Baseball. Marso compiled a 23-1 record as the Eagles’ ace hurler during his varsity career, which included Boston College’s 1935 New England Championship. Marso also played in the renowned Cape Cod and Northern New York Amateur Baseball Leagues. After graduation, he enjoyed a long and successful tenure as baseball coach at Natick High School where his teams won 10 Bay State League Championships and qualified for the State Championship tournament on numerous occasions.

COACHES

Mike Mayock (’81) – One of the most gifted student-athletes to attend BC, Mayock was a two-sport star for the Eagles, having played both football and baseball. While the majority of his success came on the gridiron, he will always be considered one of the best baseball players to ever play at Boston College. Mike earned all-New England, all-East and team most valuable player honors as a senior in baseball. Mayock earned many honors and had several shining moments on the field. As a senior, he earned third team All-America and first team All-East honors. That same season he was named the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference Defensive Player of the Year.

OUTLOOK

EAGLE GREATS

41


BOSTON

SINGLE SEASON HITS 1. Robbie Anston ’10 2. Mickey Wiswall ’10 Jared McGuire ’07 4. Tony Sanchez ’10 5. Anthony Melchionda ’12 Mike Gambino ’99 7. Robbie Anston ’10 Jason Delaney ’05 Sean McGowan ’99 10. Ryan Leahy ’04

85 82 82 79 78 78 77 77 77 76

2009 2009 2005 2009 2010 2000 2010 2004 1999 2004

HOME RUNS 1. Sean McGowan ’99 2. Mickey Wiswall ’11 3. John Spatola ’10 Brian Macchi ’02 5. Tony Sanchez ’10 Mickey Wiswall ’11 Brian Durkin ’02 8. Steve Langone ’00 9. Mike Belfiore ’10 10. Vinny Scavone ’03

25 19 17 17 14 14 14 13 11 10

1999 2010 2010 2001 2009 2009 2002 1999 2009 2002

RECORDS HISTORY BC 42

Tony Sanchez

RUNS BATTED IN 1. Sean McGowan ’99 2. Mickey Wiswall ’11 3. Mike Belfiore ’10 Brian Macchi ’02 5. John Spatola ’10 Mickey Wiswall ’11 7. Brian Macchi ’02 8. Sean McGowan ’99 Sean McGowan ’99 10. Tony Sanchez ’10

COLLEGE

RECORDS COLLEGE Career Records

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

BOSTON

70 63 62 62 61 61 56 55 55 51

BATTING AVERAGE (Min. 75 at bats) 1. Steve Moriarty ’82 .476 2. Kevin MacDonald ’78 .470 3. Mike Nyhan ’87 .466 4. Mike Martin ’94 .462 5. Mike Martin ’94 .441 6. Sean McGowan ’99 .432 7. Sean McGowan ’99 .430 8. Chris Taylor ’93 .429 9. Kevin Penwell ’97 .428 10. Kevin Penwell ’97 .425 Kevin MacDonald ’78 .425

1999 2009 2009 2002 2010 2010 2001 1998 1997 2009 1982 1978 1987 1993 1994 1998 1999 1993 1996 1995 1977

RUNS SCORED 1. Tony Sanchez ’10 2. Steve Langone ’00 Sean McGowan ’99 4. Mickey Wiswall ’11 5. Robbie Anston ’10 Robbie Anston ’10 Johnny Ayers ’08 8. Mike Gambino ’00 Jared McGuire ’07 10. Neal McCarthy ’02 Sean McGowan ’99

63 60 60 56 55 55 55 52 52 49 49

2009 1999 1999 2010 2010 2009 2006 2000 2005 2002 1998

STOLEN BASES 1. Jared McGuire ’07 2. Dave Fraser ’92 3. Mike Hubbard ’01 Pete Frates ’07 5. Robbie Anston ’10 Dave Fraser ’01 Ryan Hutchinson ’07 8. Ryan Leahy ’04 Kevin Penwell ’97 Johnny Ayers ’08 Jared McGuire ’07

27 26 19 19 18 18 18 17 17 17 17

2005 1991 2001 2006 2010 1992 2006 2003 1996 2006 2006

WINS 1. Mark Sullivan ’02 Mike Wlodarczyk 3. Chris Lambert ’02 Doug MacNeil ’91 Joe Martinez ’05 6. Kevin Moran ’11 Kevin Shepard ’05 Kevin Shepard ’05 Chris Lambert ’02 Steve Langone ’00 Steve Langone ’00 George Ravanis

HOME RUNS 1. Sean McGowan ’99 2. Mickey Wiswall ’11 3. Steve Langone ’00 4. Brian Durkin ’02 5. Brian Macchi ’02 6. Tony Sanchez ’10 Eric Olsen ’00 Jason Delaney ’05 9. John Spatola ’10 10. Gregg Radachowsky ’90 Jeff Mackor ’02

10 10 9 9 9 8 8 8 8 8 8 8

2002 2005 2002 1989 2005 2010 2004 2003 2003 2000 1999 1977

RUNS BATTED IN 1. Sean McGowan ’99 2. Jason Delaney ’05 3. Mickey Wiswall ’11 4. Brian Macchi ’02 5. Drew Locke ’05 6. Tony Sanchez ’10 7. Brian Sankey ’96 Jared McGuire ’07 9. Steve Langone ’00 10. Chang Choe ’98 Joe Kealty ’01

184 157 152 136 128 124 120 120 117 115 115

WINS 1. Steve Langone ’00 2. Chris Lambert ’02 Doug MacNeil ’91 4. Kevin Shepard ‘05 5. Mark Sullivan ’02 6. Terry Doyle ’08 7. Tim Smith ’90 8. Mike Wlodarczyk ’05 9. Kevin Moran ’11 Curt Romboli ’95 Andy Sullivan ’00

STRIKEOUTS 1. Chris Lambert ’05 2. Mark Sullivan ’02 3. Pat Dean ’11 Brian Looney ’91 5. Chris Lambert ’02 6. Chris Lambert ’02 7. Steve Langone ’00 8. Doug MacNeil ’91 9. Kevin Boggan ’07 10. Curt Romboli ’95

107 94 90 90 88 87 82 81 78 77

2004 2002 2009 1991 2003 2002 1999 1991 2007 1995

RUNS SCORED 1. Drew Locke ’05 2. Jason Delaney ’05 3. Steve Langone ’00 4. Sean McGowan ’99 5. Jeff Waldron ’99 6. Mike Martin ’94 Jared McGuire ’07 8. Mickey Wiswall ’11 9. Tony Sanchez ’10 10. Robbie Anston ’10

157 153 151 148 138 136 136 133 127 122

STRIKEOUTS 1. Chris Lambert ’02 2. Terry Doyle ’08 3. Doug MacNeil ’91 4. Steve Langone ’00 5. Kevin Boggan ’07 6. Joe Martinez ’05 7. Mark Sullivan ’02 8. Nate Jeanes ’07 9. Pat Dean ’11 10. Kevin Shepard ’05

BATTING AVERAGE (Played at least 75% of games) 1. Sean McGowan ’99 2. Kevin Penwell ’97 3. Mike Martin ’94 4. Rick Murphy ’85

.402 .384 .380 .375

EARNED RUN AVERAGE (Min. 50 innings) 1. Steve Langone ’00 1.54 2000 2. Doug MacNeil ’91 1.60 1989 3. George Ravanis ’79 1.98 1977 4. George Ravanis ’79 2.09 1977 5. Nate Jeanes ’07 2.38 2005 6. Kevin Shepard ’05 2.44 2003 7. Andy Sullivan ’00 2.51 2000 8. Chris Lambert ’02 2.71 2003 9. Kevin Moran ’11 2.75 2009 10. Chris Lambert ’02 2.76 2002

HITS 1. Jason Delaney ’06 2. Drew Locke ’05 3. Mickey Wiswall ’11 Jared McGuire ’07 Sean McGowan ’99 6. Michael Martin ’94 7. Tony Sanchez ’10 8. Jeff Waldron ’99 9. Steve Langone ’00 10. Matt Hamlet ’11

2012 BASEBALL media guide

263 244 208 208 208 205 202 198 191 185

STOLEN BASES 1. Jared McGuire ’07 2. Drew Locke ’05 3. Dave Fraser ’92 4. Kevin Penwell ’97 Bryan Manahan ’96 6. Ryan Hutchinson ’07 7. Josh DiScipio ’04 8. Robbie Anston ’10 Ryan Leahy ’04 Mike Hubbard ’01 Mike Nyhan ’88

70 49 47 42 42 41 38 37 37 37 37

53 37 30 28 27 24 24 24 22 20 20 Chris Lambert

24 23 23 21 19 18 17 16 15 15 15 272 258 235 230 207 195 181 177 172 160

EARNED RUN AVERAGE (Min. 100 innings) 1. Chris Lambert ’02 2.84 2. Kevin Shepard ’05 3.31 3. Kevin Boggan ’07 3.41 4. Brian Looney ’91 3.54 5. Tim Smith ’90 3.60 6. Kevin Boggan ’07 3.92 7. Mike Wlodarczyk ’05 3.93 8. Doug MacNeil ’91 3.96 9. Terry Doyle ’08 4.14 10. Matt O’Donnell ’04 4.25 Joe Martinez ’05 4.25


Gene D e Filippo

Athletic Recruiting ranked Boston College 13th among NCAA Division I universities in its annual power rankings, which assess the combined academic and athletics standards of all NCAA athletic programs across the country.

His coaching experience includes three years as offensive backfield coach at Vanderbilt (1980-82), which included the 1982 Hall of Fame Bowl. From 1975-79, he was offensive coordinator at Youngstown State University, during which time the team won two consecutive Mid-Continent Conference championships, 1978-79. In 1973-74, he was graduate assistant football coach for the University of Tennessee, coaching in the 1973 Gator Bowl and 1974 Liberty Bowl.

DeFilippo renamed the Athletics Association’s fundraising arm (formerly Blue Chips) in honor of longtime Athletics Director Bill Flynn. Alumni, parents and friends of Boston College contributed nearly $20 million during the past year including more than 40 commitments of $100,000 or more in support of intercollegiate athletics. During the Light the World Campaign, DeFilippo has led an athletics fundraising effort that has totaled more than $150 million.

A 1973 graduate of Springfield College with a Bachelor of Science degree, DeFilippo earned three varsity letters as a quarterback in football during his undergraduate career. He received a master’s degree in educational administration from the University of Tennessee in 1974.

Anne and Gene DeFilippo cemented their commitment to Boston College by announcing their pledge of $100,000 to endow a scholarship. The scholarship will be awarded annually to a female student-athlete who demonstrates outstanding academic achievement and financial need.

DeFilippo and his wife, Anne, are the parents of three children – Christine Eldred (married to Matt Eldred), John and Mary and recently welcomed their first grandchild, Katherine Eldred.

RECORDS BC

In May, Boston College’s varsity sports teams scored big when the NCAA released its annual Academic Progress Rate report. The average APR score of the 28 BC teams that were counted was 989 - 19 points above the national average (970). Every BC team scored 960 or above, and six teams - men’s fencing, men’s golf, men’s skiing, women’s lacrosse, women’s skiing and women’s tennis - scored a perfect 1,000. Boston College’s football team scored a 971 - a full 25 points above the national average. The men’s basketball team scored a 972 - 27 points above the national average. “Boston College is, above all, an academic institution,” DeFilippo said. “We want to field competitive sports teams, and we want to win, which our teams do. But when we recruit student-athletes, we tell them they have an opportunity to receive a degree from one of the greatest universities in the country, and our mission is to ensure that they are successful. We are extremely proud of our student-athletes’ accomplishments in the classroom.” Last year, 349 BC student-athletes maintained a grade point average of 3.0 or better, earning the Athletic Director’s Award for Academic Excellence. BC’s graduation rate for all studentathletes has consistently ranked in the nation’s top ten. NCSA

HISTORY

In athletics competition, DeFilippo has overseen some of the most successful seasons in Boston College Athletics history. During the 2010-11 season, the football team appeared in a school-record 12th consecutive bowl game, the women’s soccer team advanced to its first Final Four and the women’s ice

He was recently named the 2010 recipient of the New England Prep School Athletic Council (NEPSAC) Martin Williams Souders Award, presented annually to a graduate of a New England independent school who made a distinguished record in sports and who since made a distinguished record in life through his/ her ideals, leaderships and accomplishments. Past recipients have included George H.W. Bush, Sargent Shriver, Michael Erizione, Dee Rowe, Bill Cleary, and former BC Athletics Director Bill Flynn.

REVIEW

Under DeFilippo’s leadership, Boston College student-athletes’ achievements in the classroom have become an immense source of pride for the University and its supporters. Twentyone Boston College sports teams received a perfect Graduation Success Rate score of 100, according to data released by the NCAA last November. That figure represents the most teams with a perfect 100 score of any Division I intercollegiate athletics program in the country for the second consecutive year. In addition, BC football – with a score of 90 – was one of only six FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision) programs in the country to receive a score of 90 or better.

DeFilippo was instrumental in raising money to build the privately funded $27 million, 72,000-square-foot Yawkey Athletics Center, which houses the football program, the Office of Learning Resources for Student-Athletes, and a large function area for general University use. After football moved into the Yawkey Center, BC undertook a multi-million dollar renovation Conte Forum to provide additional locker room and office space for many of BC’s 31 varsity sports.

PLAYERS

Since Gene DeFilippo became Director of Athletics in September of 1997, he has led the BC athletics program to an unprecedented period of innovation, growth, fundraising, athletic and academic success. He also led the program through one of the most significant periods in its history as it transitioned to full membership in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

From 1993-97, DeFilippo served as director of athletics at Villanova University. He served as Associate Director of Athletics at the University of Kentucky from 1987-93, Director of Athletics at the University of South Carolina-Spartanburg from 1984-87 and Director of Administrative Services at Vanderbilt University from 1983-84.

COACHES

DeFilippo has undertaken an impressive overhaul of BC’s athletics facilities that includes new football practice facilities, a total renovation of Conte Forum, including a new sound system, floor and video boards, new soccer, field hockey and lacrosse stadiums on the Newton campus, new Field Turf for Alumni Stadium, and an air-inflated bubble to cover the stadium turf to provide an indoor practice facility for all sports during the winter months.

hockey team advanced to the Frozen Four. In 2010, the men’s ice hockey team captured its fourth national championship (its third since 2001). In 2008, the men’s soccer team captured both the ACC regular-season and tournament championships and entered the NCAA Men’s Soccer Tournament as the overall No. 1 seed.

OUTLOOK

athletics director

The DeFilippo Family: Matt Eldred, Katherine Eldred, Christine (DeFilippo) Eldred, Anne, Gene, Mary and John.

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BC

RECORDS HISTORY

REVIEW

PLAYERS COACHES OUTLOOK

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44

COLLEGE

THE ACC

Consistency.

COLLEGE

It is the mark of true excellence in any endeavor. However, in today’s intercollegiate athletics, competition has become so balanced and so competitive that it is virtually impossible to maintain a high level of consistency. Yet the Atlantic Coast Conference has defied the odds. Now, in its 59th year of competition, the ACC has long enjoyed the reputation as one of the strongest and most competitive intercollegiate conferences in the nation. And that is not mere conjecture, the numbers support it. Since the league’s inception in 1953, ACC schools have captured 123 national championships, including 65 in women’s competition and 58 in men’s. In addition, NCAA individual titles have gone to ACC student-athletes 140 times in men’s competition and 99 times in women’s action. ACC Baseball again made its mark nationally in 2011. The ACC saw six teams – Clemson, Florida State, Georgia Tech, Miami, North Carolina and Virginia– ranked nationally throughout the season. That produced a stellar field for the 38th annual ACC Baseball Championship, which was held May 25-29 at Durham (N.C.) Bulls Athletic Park. The championship game came down to a battle of division winners – Coastal co-champion Virginia and Atlantic champion Florida State. Virginia scored a 7-2 win over the Seminoles in the title game with the help of a threerun home run by Championship MVP Steven Proscia. The ACC Championship was the third for the Cavaliers in the 38-year history of league tournament play, with all three ironically coming at Durham Bulls Athletic Park. Virginia saw junior left-hander Danny Hultzen voted ACC Pitcher of the Year, while the Cavaliers’ Brian O’Connor was voted the league’s Coach of the Year for a second year in a row. Clemson shortstop Brad Miller, whose .419 batting average during the regular season was 61 points higher than any other league hitter, was voted the ACC Player of the Year. North Carolina third baseman Colin Moran, who hit .389 in ACC games and became just the fourth freshman in school history to drive in 60 or more runs, earned Freshman of the Year honors. Hultzen finished career at Virginia with a three-year record of 32-5 and a 2.08 ERA, the lowest among conference pitchers with 100 or more career innings from 2009 through 2011. Florida State pitcher Sean Gilmartin’s 32 career wins at the end of the regular season were the fifth-most among active NCAA pitchers, and he added one more in postseason play. Florida State outfielder James Ramsey, a first-team All-ACC selection and a Major League draft choice who also excelled in the classroom, was named the ACC Baseball ScholarAthlete of the Year. National honors went to Clemson’s Miller, who received the Brooks Wallace Award as the nation’s top shortstop, and Virginia’s Hultzen, the John Olerud Award recipient as the nation’s top two-way player. The regular season was also highlighted by Virginia pitcher Will Roberts’ perfect game against George Washington on March 29. It was just the second perfect game thrown by an ACC pitcher (and the first since 1959) and only the eighth nine-inning perfect game in NCAA history. The Major League Baseball Draft in June saw 58 studentathletes from Atlantic Coast Conference schools selected, the third-most in conference history. Four ACC student-athletes – Virginia’s Hultzen (second overall), Georgia Tech pitcher Jed Bradley (15th overall), Florida State’s Gilmartin (28th overall) and North Carolina shortstop Levi Michael (30th overall) – were selected in the first round.

At least 50 ACC players have been selected in each of the last six MLB Drafts, and the ACC has had multiple first-round selections in 10 of the last 11. The ACC has produced four No. 1 overall picks in North Carolina’s B.J. Surhoff in 1985, Florida State’s Paul Wilson in 1994, Clemson’s Kris Benson in 1996 and Miami’s Pat Burrell in 1998. The current 12 ACC schools have had 826 players selected in the MLB Draft since 1994, including 61 first-round picks. The conference’s four studentathletes chosen in the first round in 2011 extended the ACC’s streak of at least one player selected in the first round to 20 consecutive years. Clemson’s Miller, Florida State’s Gilmartin, North Carolina’s Moran and Virginia’s Hultzen and Branden Kline were each named to at least one All-America first team, and four other players – Georgia Tech’s Mark Pope, Florida State’s Ramsey, and Virginia’s Roberts and John Hicks – were each named second- or third-team All-America by at least one publication. Seven ACC teams earned spots in the 2011 NCAA Championship. It marked the sixth time in the last seven years that the ACC had placed at least seven teams among the 64-team field. The conference boasted three of the top five national seeds, as Virginia was seeded No. 1 overall, North Carolina was at No. 3 and Florida State at No. 5. Those teams were joined in postseason play by Clemson, Georgia Tech, Miami and NC State. All three of the ACC’s nationally-seeded teams advanced to Super Regional play, with Virginia and North Carolina moving on to the 65th College World Series at Omaha, Neb. The Tar Heels’ trip to the College World Series was their ninth overall and their fifth in six years under head coach Mike Fox. Virginia made its second CWS trip to Omaha, both of which have come in the last three seasons. The ACC, which placed multiple teams to the College World Series for the fourth straight year and the fifth time in six seasons, has sent 14 teams to Omaha since 2006. 2010-11 in Review The 2010-11 academic year concluded with the league pocketing two more national team titles and 18 individual crowns. The ACC has won 45 national team titles since the beginning of 2000. The conference has won two or more NCAA titles in 29 of the past 31 years. Overall, 132 ACC teams placed in NCAA championships during the past season, and ACC teams played in nine football postseason bowl games (winning four). The ACC placed at least one team in the final top 10 nationally in 19 of the 25 sponsored sports for which polls were available. In all, 40 ACC teams finished their seasons with a top 10 ranking, including two at the No. 1 spot. For the 2010-11 campaign, seven of the 12 ACC schools finished among the Top 50 of the final ranking of the NACDA Directors’ Cup, awarded annually to the honor the top institution maintaining a broad-based athletic program and achieving success in many sports. A total of 306 student-athletes from the ACC earned first-, second- or third-team All-America honors in the past year. In addition, the ACC produced three National Players of the Year, four National Freshmen of the Year and four National Coach of the Year recipients.

The Championships The conference will conduct championship competition in 25 sports during the 2010-11 academic year - 12 for men and 13 for women. The first ACC championship was held in swimming on February 25, 1954. The conference did not conduct championships in cross country, wrestling or tennis during the first year. The 12 sports for men include football, cross country, soccer, basketball, swimming, indoor and outdoor track, wrestling, baseball, tennis, golf and lacrosse. Fencing, which was started in 1971, was discontinued in 1981. Women’s sports were initiated in 1977 with the first championship meet held in tennis at Wake Forest University. Championships for women are currently conducted in cross country, field hockey, soccer, basketball, swimming, indoor and outdoor track, tennis, golf, lacrosse, softball and rowing with volleyball deciding its champion by regular season play. A History The Atlantic Coast Conference was founded on May 8, 1953, at the Sedgefield Inn near Greensboro, N.C., with seven charter members - Clemson, Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, North Carolina State, South Carolina and Wake Forest - drawing up the conference by-laws. The withdrawal of seven schools from the Southern Conference came early on the morning of May 8, 1953, during the Southern Conference’s annual spring meeting. On June 14, 1953, the seven members met in Raleigh, N.C., where a set of bylaws was adopted and the name became officially the ACC. Suggestions from fans for the name of the new conference appeared in the region’s newspapers prior to the meeting in Raleigh. Some of the names suggested were: Dixie, Mid South, Mid Atlantic, East Coast, Seaboard, Colonial, Tobacco, Blue-Gray, Piedmont, Southern Seven and the Shoreline. Duke’s Eddie Cameron recommended that the name of the conference be the Atlantic Coast Conference, and the motion was passed unanimously. The meeting concluded with each member institution assessed $200.00 to pay for conference expenses. On December 4, 1953, conference officials met again at Sedgefield and officially admitted the University of Virginia as the league’s eighth member. The first, and only, withdrawal of a school from the ACC came on June 30, 1971, when the University of South Carolina tendered its resignation. The ACC operated with seven members until April 3, 1978, when the Georgia Institute of Technology was admitted. The Atlanta school had withdrawn from the Southeastern Conference in January of 1964. The ACC expanded to nine members on July 1, 1991, with the addition of Florida State University. The conference expanded to 11 members on July 1, 2004, with the addition of the University of Miami and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. On October 17, 2003, Boston College accepted an invitation to become the league’s 12th member starting July 1, 2005.

2010-11 National Championships Field Hockey - Maryland, Men’s Lacrosse - Virginia

2012 BASEBALL media guide


BOSTON BOSTON

COLLEGE

The Schools

COLLEGE

North Carolina State University is located in the state capital of Raleigh. It opened in 1889 as a land-grant agricultural and mechanical school and was known as A&M or Aggies or Farmers for over a quarter-century. The school’s colors of pink and blue were gone by 1895, brown and white were tried for a year, but the students finally chose red and white to represent the school. An unhappy fan in 1922 said State football players behaved like a pack of wolves, and the term that was coined in derision became a badge of honor. The University of Virginia was founded in 1819 by Thomas Jefferson and is one of three things on his tombstone for which he wanted to be remembered. James Madison and James Monroe were on the board of governors in the early years. The Rotunda, a half-scale version of the Pantheon which faces the Lawn, is the focal point of the grounds as the campus is called. Jefferson wanted his school to educate leaders in practical affairs and public service, not just to train teachers.

2012 BASEBALL media guide

RECORDS BC

Next to I-85 in downtown Atlanta stands the Georgia Institute of Technology, founded in 1885. Its first students came to pursue a degree in mechanical engineering, the only one offered at the time. Tech’s strength is not only the red clay of Georgia, but a restored gold and white 1930 model A Ford Cabriolet, the official mascot. The old Ford was first used in 1961, but a Ramblin’ Wreck had been around for over three decades. The Ramblin’ Wreck fight song appeared almost as soon as the school opened, and it is not only American boys that grow up singing its rollicking tune, for Richard Nixon and Nikita Krushchev sang it when they met in Moscow in 1959.

The University of North Carolina, located in Chapel Hill, has been called “the perfect college town,” making its tree-lined streets and balmy atmosphere what a college should look and feel like. Its inception in 1795 makes it one of the oldest schools in the nation, and its nickname of Tar Heels stems from the tar pitch and turpentine that were the state’s principal industry. The nickname is as old as the school, for it was born during the Revolutionary War when tar was dumped into the streams to impede the advance of British forces.

HISTORY

Florida State University is one of 11 universities of the State University System of Florida. It was established as the Seminary West of the Suwannee by an act of the Florida Legislature in 1851, and first offered instruction at the postsecondary level in 1857. Its Tallahassee campus has been the site of an institution of higher education longer than any other site in the state. In 1905, the Buckman Act reorganized higher education in the state and designated the Tallahassee school as the Florida Female College. In 1909, it was renamed Florida State College for Women. In 1947, the school returned to a co-educational status, and the name was changed to Florida State University.

Wake Forest University was started on Calvin Jones’ plantation amid the stately pine forest of Wake County in 1834. The Baptist seminary is still there, but the school was moved to Winston-Salem in 1956 on a site donated by Charles H. and Mary Reynolds Babcock. President Harry S. Truman attended the ground-breaking ceremonies that brought a picturesque campus of Georgian architecture and painted roofs. Wake’s colors have been black and gold since 1895, thanks to a badge designed by student John Heck who died before he graduated.

REVIEW

Duke University was founded in 1924 by tobacco magnate James B. Duke as a memorial to his father, Washington Duke. Originally the school was called Trinity College, a Methodist institution, started in 1859. In 1892, Trinity moved to west Durham where the east campus with its Georgian architecture now stands. Nearby are Sarah P. Duke gardens, and further west the Gothic spires of Duke chapel overlook the west campus.

The University of Miami was chartered in 1925 by a group of citizens who felt an institution of higher learning was needed for the development of their young and growing community. Since the first class of 560 students enrolled in the fall of 1926, the University has expanded to more than 15,000 undergraduate and graduate students from every state and more than 114 nations from around the world. The school’s colors, representative of the Florida orange tree, were selected in 1926. Orange symbolizes the fruit of the tree, green represents the leaves and white, the blossoms.

Virginia Tech was established in 1872 as an all-male military school dedicated to the original land-grant mission of teaching agriculture and engineering. The University has grown from a small college of 132 students into the largest institution of higher education in the state during its 132-year history. Located in Southwest Virginia on a plateau between the Blue Ridge and Alleghany Mountains, the campus consists of 334 buildings and 20 miles of sidewalks over 2,600 acres. The official school colors - Chicago maroon and burnt orange - were selected in 1896 because they made a “unique combination” not worn elsewhere at the time.

PLAYERS

Clemson University is nestled in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains near the Georgia border, and the tiger paws painted on the roads make the return to I-85 easier. The school is built around Fort Hill, the plantation home of John C. Calhoun, Vice President to Andrew Jackson. His son-in-law, Tom Clemson, left the land to be used as an agricultural school, and in 1893 Clemson opened its doors as a land-grant school, thanks to the efforts of Ben Tillman.

The University of Maryland opened in 1856 as an agricultural school nine miles north of Washington, D.C., on land belonging to Charles Calvert, a descendant of Lord Baltimore, the state’s founding father. The school colors are the same as the state flag: black and gold for George Calvert (Lord Baltimore) and red and white for his mother, Alice Crossland. Maryland has been called the school that Curley Byrd built, for he was its quarterback, then football coach, athletic director, assistant to the president, vice-president, and finally its president. Byrd also designed the football stadium and the campus layout, and suggested the nickname Terrapin, a local turtle known for its bite, when students wanted to replace the nickname Old Liners with a new one for the school.

COACHES

Boston College was founded in 1863 by the Society of Jesus to serve the sons of Boston’s Irish immigrants and was the first institution of higher education to be founded in the city of Boston. Originally located on Harrison Avenue in the South End of Boston, the College outgrew its urban setting toward the end of its first 50 years. A new location was selected in Chestnut Hill and ground for the new campus was broken on June 19, 1909. During the 1940s, new purchases doubled the size of the main campus. In 1974, Boston College acquired Newton College of the Sacred Heart, 1.5 miles away. With 15 buildings on 40 acres, it is now the site of the Law School and residence halls. In 2004, BC purchased 43 acres of land from the archdiocese of Boston; this now forms the Brighton campus.

OUTLOOK

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BOSTON COLLEGE

the city of boston

COLLEGE The Boston area is home to more than 50 colleges and universities and 250,000 college students. oston is home to America’s first public park (Boston ComB mon), first public library (1653) and first subway (1897). Bostonians led the charge for freedom in the Revolutionary War. uilt in 1912, Fenway Park is the oldest sports arena or staB dium in active use among the four main professional sports. he Boston Marathon is the oldest Marathon in the U.S. T and runs along Commonwealth Avenue, passing Boston College’s campus at the top of Heartbreak Hill. St. Patrick’s Day was first celebrated in Boston in 1737 and continues to be one of the most celebrated events for the city. The Bell & Hand Tavern (1784) is the oldest pub in America.

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EDUCATION The Boston area sports the world’s most concentrated collection of educational institutions. Many of the country’s top universities, including Boston College, are located in New England. Bostonians led the charge for freedom in the Revolutionary War, as the so-called “Minutemen” – bolstered by such eminent patriots as Paul Revere, Samuel Adams and John Hancock – fought and died for this country’s independence.

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HISTORY

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Boston, the capital of Massachusetts and largest city in the six-state region, is perhaps best known for its plethora of top-notch colleges and universities. It is also famous for a wide array of professional and amateur sports options and an appealing proximity to some of the Northeast’s finest vacationing spots.

COACHES

BC is located on the doorstep of one of America’s great cities, a center of culture and education for three centuries. With its unmatched history and present-day status as the cultural, educational and commercial center of New England, Boston has garnered a well-deserved reputation as one of the truly great cities in America and, indeed, in the world.

OUTLOOK

the city of boston

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In addition to a wide array of college sports, the Boston area is a hub of professional sports passion. The Boston Red Sox capture the imagination of the region year-round and have won the World Series twice since 2004. The New England Patriots have won three Super Bowl championships since 2001. The NBA’s Boston Celtics are widely considered the most successful and storied team in the history of sport, having won 17 world championships. The Boston Bruins were one of the NHL’s six original franchises and won their sixth Stanley Cup in 2010-11.

HISTORY

Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket, scenic islands off the coast of Massachusetts, are well-known for their bike trails, historic lighthouses and meandering beaches. The “arm of Southeastern Massachusetts,” Cape Cod serves as a relaxing summer haven for thousands of Bostonians, New Englanders and others.

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BOSTON COLLEGE

boston college COLLEGE

Boston College was founded in 1863 by the Society of Jesus to serve the sons of Boston’s Irish immigrants. It was the first institution of higher education to be founded in the city of Boston. Today, it is one of the foremost universities in the nation, with a coeducational enrollment of 14,500 undergraduate and graduate students. Boston College has drawn students from all 50 states and more than 80 countries. Boston College has grown not just in size, but also in stature and diversity. Today, it is ranked among the top 34 national universities by US News & World Report. Its Graduate School of Social Work is listed among the nation’s top 15, also by US News, while the graduate programs of its Lynch School of Education are among the top 20 and its Connell School of Nursing and Law School are among the top 30. In addition, eight undergraduate programs of the Carroll School of Management placed among the top 10 in the nation according to BusinessWeek, with accounting placing first in its category. Boston College is among the nation’s most selective universities, with nearly 30,000 applications received for its 2,250-member Class of 2013, and is numbered among the top American private research universities. After more than a century of growth and evolution, Boston College holds fast to the ideals that inspired its Jesuit founders. The University today remains focused on its mission of helping students to develop their minds and talents while providing them with the motivation and compassion to use those talents in the service of others. “Deeply rooted in its Catholic and Jesuit origins, Boston College offers an education that is distinctive in spirit and content, that is doubly rich with the best of human thought and with the profound insights of faith,” writes Reverend William P. Leahy, SJ, who assumed the presidency of Boston College in 1996. “We believe that Boston College provides a transforming experience for young men and women.”

A continued expression of this philosophy, based on the Jesuit principle of cura personalis, or care for the individual, is the faculty’s dedication to teaching. BC faculty members have been honored for their teaching by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Education, while the University’s overall commitment to teaching has been ranked among the nation’s top 20, also by US News & World Report.

BC offers a wide variety of resources that enrich intellectual and cultural life beyond the campus gates. Among these are the Jesuit Institute; Center for Ignatian Spirituality; Center for Catholic Education; Church in the 21st Century Center; Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life; Center for Human Rights and International Justice; Center for Christian-Jewish Learning; Winston Center for Leadership and Ethics; Center on Wealth A Boston College education focuses not only on intel- and Philanthropy; Center for Retirement Research; lectual development, but also on personal, spiritual and Sloan Center on Aging and Work; Center for the Study physical development. Students are asked to use their of Testing, Evaluation and Educational Policy; TIMSS abilities, education and acquired skills to help others in and PIRLS International Study Center; Center for Interneed, whether in Boston or Belize. Each year, more than national Higher Education; Burns Library of Rare Books 5,000 undergraduates give some 375,000 hours of com- and Special Collections; Robsham Theater Arts Center; munity service in the Boston area, while more than 650 McMullen Museum of Art; Center for Child, Family and students trade vacation for service during Spring Break. Community Partnerships; Center for Corporate CitizenNearly 2,000 students take part in retreats and spiritual ship; Center for Work and Family; Center for Irish Programs; Urban Ecology Institute and Weston Observatory. formation activities annually. Today, the Boston College motto “ever to excel” also extends to a broad array of extracurricular activities and opportunities ranging from sports to the arts. Athletics is integral to the University’s focus on the development of the whole person in body as well as in mind and spirit. BC offers 31 men’s and women’s varsity sports, all of which compete at the NCAA Division I level, and annually has one of the highest graduation rates in Division I.

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BOSTON

EDDIE PELLAGRINI 1918-2006

Head Coach of Baseball 1957-88 BOSTON COLLEGE OUTLOOK

Edward C. “Eddie” Pellagrini, a former major league baseball player who coached Boston College baseball teams from 1957 through 1988, died on Oct. 11, 2006 at South Shore Hospital in Weymouth. He was 88.

COLLEGE

During his 30-season coaching career at the University, Mr. Pellagrini led his teams to 359 victories – a school record – along with 17 winning seasons, seven post-season berths in the NCAA district I playoffs and three appearances in the College World Series – 1960, 1961 and 1967.

COACHES

A native of Roxbury, Mr. Pellagrini played in the Boston Red Sox’ minor league organization after graduating from Roxbury Memorial High School. He spent four years in the US Navy during World War II and returned to make the Red Sox’ major league roster in time for the 1946 season. In his Red Sox debut at Fenway Park on Opening Day, April 22, 1946, Mr. Pellagrini thrilled the hometown crowd by hitting a homerun in his first major league at-bat. The Red Sox went on to win the American League championship and play in the World Series against the St. Louis Cardinals that year.

PLAYERS

An infielder, Mr. Pellagrini played 11 years in the major leagues for the Red Sox, St. Louis Browns (now the Baltimore Orioles), Cincinnati Reds and Pittsburgh Pirates. When he retired from professional baseball in 1957, he was hired by Boston College Athletic Director Bill Flynn to coach the Eagles’ team. Mr. Pellagrini was the first coach to be hired by Mr. Flynn, who also was appointed Athletic Director that same year.

On May 3, 1997, Boston College named the baseball diamond on Commander Shea Field in Eddie Pellagrini’s honor. The plaque at the entrance to the baseball field reads:

This past April, Mr. Pellagrini joined other surviving members of the Red Sox’ 1946 World Series team for a special Opening Day tribute to the legendary squad held at Fenway Park.

Mr. Pellagrini was the husband of the late Helen Pellagrini. He is survived by three children and two grandchildren. By Reid Oslin ‘68

RECORDS

Mr. Pellagrini lived in Weymouth for many years, where he operated a successful real estate business.

HISTORY

Eddie Pellagrini led the baseball Eagles to three appearances in the College World Series – 1960, 1961 and 1967. Here the team is pictured departing for the 1961 College World Series in Omaha.

“A Teacher, Coach, Folklorist and Friend To Anyone Who Shared His Undying Love For the Sport of Baseball. Eddie Pellagrini Is A ‘Major Leaguer’ In Every Sense of the Term.”

This 1946 photograph features native Eddie Pellagrini, future Hall of Famers Ted Williams and Hang Greenburg and young Congressional candidate John F. Kennedy (photo courtesy of JFK Library).

REVIEW

Mr. Pellagrini, who was as revered for his baseball knowledge and engaging personality as much as his coaching success, was inducted into the American Baseball Coaches Hall of Fame in 1994. He is the only Boston College representative to receive the ABCA honor.

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COLLEGE

COLLEGE

2/17 2/18 2/19 2/24 2/25 2/26 3/1 3/2 3/3 3/4 3/6 3/7 3/9 3/10 3/11 3/16 3/17 3/18 3/20 3/21 3/23 3/24 3/25 3/27 3/28 3/30 3/31 4/1 4/3 4/4 4/6 4/7 4/8 4/10 4/18 4/11 4/13 4/14 4/15 4/17 4/20 4/21 4/22 4/24 4/25 4/27 4/28 4/29 5/4 5/5 5/6 5/12 5/13 5/15 5/17 5/18 5/19 5/23-27

vs. Virginia # vs. James Madison # at Coastal Carolina # at UCF at UCF at UCF at Florida Gulf Coast at Florida Gulf Coast Boston Red Sox ^ at Florida Gulf Coast at FIU at Florida Atlantic at Miami * at Miami * at Miami * at Clemson * at Clemson * at Clemson * vs. Holy Cross at Bryant University vs. Georgia Tech * vs. Georgia Tech * vs. Georgia Tech * at Northeastern vs. Bryant University vs. Maryland * vs. Maryland * vs. Maryland * vs. Connecticut at Harvard at Virginia Tech * at Virginia Tech * at Virginia Tech * vs. Harvard (Beanpot) Beanpot Championship at Massachusetts vs. Florida State * vs. Florida State * vs. Florida State * vs. Rhode Island at NC State * at NC State * at NC State * vs. St. John’s vs. Dartmouth vs. Wake Forest * vs. Wake Forest * vs. Wake Forest * at North Carolina * at North Carolina * at North Carolina * vs. Fordham vs. Fordham vs. Maine vs. Duke * vs. Duke * vs. Duke * ACC Tournament

Conway, S.C. Conway, S.C. Conway, S.C. Orlando, Fla. Orlando, Fla. Orlando, Fla. Fort Myers, Fla. Fort Myers, Fla. Fort Myers, Fla. Fort Myers, Fla. Miami, Fla. Boca Raton, Fla. Miami, Fla. Miami, Fla. Miami, Fla. Clemson, S.C. Clemson, S.C. Clemson, S.C. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Smithfield, R.I. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Boston, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Blacksburg, Va. Blacksburg, Va. Blacksburg, Va. Lowell, Mass. Lowell, Mass. Amherst, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Raleigh, N.C. Raleigh, N.C. Raleigh, N.C. Norwich, Conn. (Dodd Stadium) Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chapel Hill, N.C. Chapel Hill, N.C. Chapel Hill, N.C. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Portland, Maine (Hadlock Field) Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Chestnut Hill, Mass. Greensboro, N.C.

12:00 p.m. 11:00 a.m. 1:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 12:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 2:30 p.m. TBA 3:00 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 12:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 12:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. TBA

# Caravelle Resort Tournament * ACC Game

BCEAGLES.COM 2012 LACROSSE media guide


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