![]() is expected to pitch the first game of the Super Regionals against Stanford. |
Trojans Get Ready for Stanford
Baseball heads to Palo Alto seeking CWS berth.
June 1, 1999
LOS ANGELES - The No. 10 USC baseball team - coming off its unprecedented 12th NCAA championship in 1998 - is 36-24 overall. After winning an NCAA Regional at Dedeaux Field, USC moves on to the Super Regionals for a best-of-three series against Pacific-10 Conference rival and No. 3 Stanford (46-13) this weekend (June 4-6) in Palo Alto. Friday's game is at 7 p.m., Saturday's game is at 1 p.m., and Sunday's game (if necessary) is at 1 p.m. The winner will be the Pac-10's lone representative at the College World Series, which runs June 11-19. Stanford won the 1999 Pac-10 title with a 19-5 mark, while USC placed second at 17-7.
RANKINGS - USC currently is ranked No. 10 by Baseball America and No. 11 by Collegiate Baseball. In the preseason polls, USC was ranked No. 1 by Baseball America and USA Today Baseball Weekly/ESPN. Stanford is ranked No. 3 by Baseball America and No. 5 by Collegiate Baseball.
THE SERIES - USC leads the all-time series, which began in 1923, 190-130-3. In both 1998 and 1999, the Trojans won two of three games at Sunken Diamond. USC has also won 13 of the last 19 meetings there. USC and Stanford have never met in the NCAA playoffs, and only once before in the postseason. The Trojans defeated the Cardinal, 9-3, in the 1971 Pac-8 Playoffs.
IN 1999 - The season series is tied, 3-3. USC and Stanford will meet at least eight (and possibly nine) times this season, the most games USC has ever played against another opponent in a single season. Stanford took two of three non-conference games earlier this season (Feb. 26-28) at Dedeaux Field. The Cardinal won the first two by scores of 10-7 and 5-2, while the Trojans won the finale, 9-7. But in the Pac-10 series at Sunken Diamond (April 16-18), USC took two of three. The Trojans won the opener, 10-1, followed by a 13-2 Cardinal win, but USC captured the finale, 17-15.
PITCHING ROTATION - USC will put junior LHP Barry Zito (12-2, 3.44), senior RHP Justin Lehr (7-2, 4.11) and sophomore RHP Rik Currier (5-7, 6.38) on the mound. Stanford will go with sophomore RHP Jason Young (10-3, 3.36), sophomore RHP Justin Wayne (8-1, 5.12) and freshman RHP Brian Sager (6-0, 3.98).
NCAA LOS ANGELES REGIONAL - Second-seeded USC went 3-1 in winning its own NCAA Regional at Dedeaux Field over the weekend. Junior C Eric Munson was named Most Outstanding Player, and he was joined on the All-Tournament team by senior RHP Justin Lehr, freshman 3B Beau Craig, sophomore SS Seth Davidson and senior LF Jason Lane.
In the opener, Lehr scattered six hits and struck out 10 in a complete-game shutout as the Trojans defeated No. 3-seed Virginia Commonwealth, 10-0, on Friday (May 28). Lehr's shutout was the first of his collegiate career and the first for a USC pitcher this season. He walked only one batter and faced only six batters more than the minimum.
Two bases-loaded walks in the bottom of the eighth inning on Saturday (May 29) lifted USC over top-seeded Pepperdine, 5-3, and into the championship game. The game was tied, 3-3, when junior 1B Justin Gemoll and senior RF Greg Hanoian both walked with the bases loaded. Junior LHP Barry Zito (12-2) won his 11th straight start. The crowd of 2,384 was the largest at Dedeaux Field since May 25, 1991, when USC hosted the NCAA West Regional and 2,887 saw USC defeat Pepperdine, 17-7.
Three USC errors in the bottom of the seventh inning allowed Pepperdine to score three unearned runs and capture a 4-3 victory in Sunday's first championship game (May 30), forcing a second game later in the day. The errors spoiled a strong effort by USC sophomore RHP Rik Currier (5-7), who went 6 1/3 innings with four strikeouts while giving up seven hits, one walk and four runs (only one earned).
In the finale, Munson went 3-for-5 with a home run and scored four times to help USC win the regional, as the Trojans beat Pepperdine, 12-7. The Trojans had a 3-2 lead entering the bottom of the third inning. Then, Lane led off with a solo home run, allowing him to become only the fifth Trojan in history to hit 20 or more home runs in a season. That set off a five-run inning, pushing the Trojans' lead to 8-2. Lane (2-0) also pitched 2 1/3 innings of effective relief to earn the victory.
TEAM OF THE CENTURY - No other university can match the collegiate baseball tradition of USC, and it showed when Baseball America awarded the Trojans the title of "Greatest Program of the 20th Century" in its Feb. 1, 1999 issue. Troy has captured an unprecedented 12 NCAA championships (no other school has more than five), 36 conference titles and 19 College World Series appearances (second most in the nation). Legendary former coach Rod Dedeaux has been named "Coach of the Century" by both Collegiate Baseball and Baseball America. Trojan players have been named All-American first teamers 40 times, and more than 70 players have gone on to play in the majors, including such stars as Tom Seaver, Fred Lynn, Ron Fairly, Randy Johnson, Mark McGwire, Jeff Cirillo and Bret Boone.
AGAINST THE NCAA TOURNAMENT FIELD - During the regular season, USC played nine of the other 63 teams in the NCAA Tournament in 1999 - Arizona, Cal State Fullerton, Long Beach State, Loyola Marymount, Pepperdine, Stanford, Texas, Texas Tech and UCLA - and amassed an 11-19 (.367) record. USC played two of the other 15 teams that reached the Super Regionals - Cal State Fullerton and Stanford - and went 3-5 (.375).
USC IN THE NCAA REGIONALS - USC has had 32 regional berths, including the last seven years in a row. USC is 83-36 (.697) all-time in the regionals. The Trojans have been in the College World Series 19 times (72-22 record) and have 12 NCAA titles.
ALL-AMERICANS - To date, two All-American squads has been released, and USC has been well represented. Junior LHP Barry Zito and senior OF Jason Lane were named to the first team by USA Today Baseball Weekly. It's the second straight year, and the third time in five years, that the Trojans have had multiple All-American first teamers. Then, Collegiate Baseball named Zito to the first team and Lane to the third team.
ALL-PAC-10 SELECTIONS - Junior LHP Barry Zito highlighted USC's conference honors, as he was named the 1999 Pac-10 Pitcher of the Year. All-Pac-10 first team honors went to sophomore SS Seth Davidson (for the second time), senior 2B Dominic Correa, senior OF Greg Hanoian and senior OF Jason Lane. USC had five players honored, more than any other team. Three Trojans earned honorable mention notice: freshman 3B/C Beau Craig, senior RHP Justin Lehr and junior C Eric Munson.
FINISHING STRONG - USC began the season with a 4-11 mark while dealing with multiple injuries and several close losses. But since then, the Trojans went 29-12 to close out the regular season.
INJURY UPDATE - In the postseason, USC is finally at full strength. Junior C Eric Munson made his return from a hand injury on May 2, almost two weeks earlier than expected. In the first game of the Washington State series (March 27), his right (throwing) hand was struck by a foul tip, breaking a small bone in his hand, causing him to miss the next 21 games. USC went 15-6 without Munson. His injury wasn't the only one that the Trojans have had to endure in 1999. USC's full lineup has only been intact for 22 of 60 games, including three of the first 20. USC is 15-7 with its complete lineup, 21-17 when missing players. Senior OF Brad Ticehurst (bruised elbow/pulled groin; missed nine games), sophomore SS Seth Davidson (broken jaw/pulled quadricep muscle; missed five games) and senior OF Jason Lane (broken thumb; missed eight games) all were lost for a period of time early in the season.
A TO ZITO - The 1999 Pac-10 Pitcher of the Year and an All-American first teamer, junior LHP Barry Zito (12-2, 3.44 ERA) has won 11 straight starts and ranks among the national leaders with an average of 12.6 strikeouts per nine innings. With an 8-0 conference mark in eight starts, he became only the third Pac-10 pitcher in the last 11 years (USC's Seth Etherton in 1996 and Arizona's Scott Erickson in 1989) to win all of his league starts. He had 16 strikeouts on three different occasions: vs. Oregon State (March 12), Arizona (March 19) and UCLA (April 30). Sixteen strikeouts are the most by a Trojan pitcher since at least 1987 (as far back as USC single-game records are currently available), and Zito has done it three times, including twice in an eight-day span.
THE STRIKE(OUT) ZONE - USC pitchers mowed down their Pac-10 opponents at an impressive rate, with 259 strikeouts in 214 innings, including 43 against Oregon State and 40 against Arizona ... Overall, USC has 555 strikeouts in 527 1/3 innings pitched, and is closing in on the school record of 579 K's, which was set last season.
HOME RUN HAPPENINGS - Three current Trojans appear in the top 10 on USC's career home run list: junior C Eric Munson (third place with 43), senior OF Jason Lane (fifth with 34) and senior OF Brad Ticehurst (tied for seventh with 32) ... Lane had one stretch with eight home runs in seven games, and three of them were multi-homer games over a five-game period. With 20 home runs this season, he is only the fifth Trojan ever to reach that figure ... On April 25, Ticehurst became only the 17th player to hit a home run over ASU's "Green Monster" in center field ... Senior 2B Dominic Correa homered in four consecutive games (April 23-27) ... USC has hit 86 round-trippers and is averaging 1.43 a game (down from the 1998 average of 1.72 a game, when the Trojans hit a school-record 114) ... The home runs have come despite the fact that the Trojans lost several of their top home run hitters (such as Morgan Ensberg, Robb Gorr and Jeremy Freitas) from last year and that their top three returning sluggers - Eric Munson, Brad Ticehurst and Jason Lane - were injured for parts of this season.
CLOSE CALLS - If it wasn't for some very close games during the Trojans' early-season slide, their record could be much better. Eight of USC's first 13 games were losses by one or two runs. Overall, 16 of the 24 losses have been by one or two runs. The Trojans are 5-11 in one-run games and 5-5 in two-run games. In sevenof the losses, USC has had the tying run on base when the final out was made, and in another seven losses, the tying run was at the plate.
RANDOM NOTES - USC has won nine straight NCAA elimination games ... Senior OF/LHP Jason Lane was the winning pitcher in each of the last three postseason championship games: the 1998 NCAA Regional, the 1998 College World Series and the 1999 NCAA Regional ... Junior C Eric Munson has been named Most Outstanding Player of two straight NCAA Regional tournaments ... USC Coach Mike Gillespie won the 500th game of his USC career against San Diego State on March 30 ... USC has won 15 consecutive night games after starting the season 0-4 under the lights ... USC won seven of its eight Pac-10 series in 1999 ... The Trojans won their first four conference games for the first time since 1987 ... During one early-season stretch, USC was unranked in all three polls for first time since May 17, 1993 ... USC hit into a triple play against Washington (May 14) ... The first game of the Washington State series (March 26) was snowed out. It was actually USC's second "snowout" in the last three years (at Nevada in 1997) ... USC's 17-1 win over Arizona (March 19) was the Trojans' largest margin of victory over the Wildcats since a 19-1 victory in 1930 ... USC's five-game losing streak was its longest since 1988.
WEEKLY HONORS - Junior LHP Barry Zito has twice been named both a National Player of the Week by Collegiate Baseball and the Pac-10 Pitcher of the Week. His second award (May 3) was after a 16-strikeout, two-hit complete game win against UCLA. The first (March 23) came after he struck out 16 in seven innings against Arizona ... Senior OF Jason Lane was named the Pac-10 Player of the Week on April 19 after batting .478 (11-for-23) with five doubles, three home runs and 12 RBI in five games, including two victories over then-No. 2 Stanford ... Junior C Eric Munson was named a National Player of the Week by Collegiate Baseball on Feb. 15 after batting .615 with four home runs and 11 RBI in four games against Loyola Marymount and Texas Tech.
COACH'S CORNER - Mike Gillespie, in his 13th season as the Trojans' head coach, has a 519-291-2 (.640) career record and has led USC to the 1998 national championship, three conference titles (1991-95-96), 11 trips to the NCAA Regionals in 13 years (reaching the regional finals nine times), and trips to the 1995 and 1998 College World Series (Troy finished as the nation's runner-up in 1995). He was named the 1998 National Coach of the Year, the Pac-10 Coach of the Year three times (1991-95-96) and the West Region Coach of the Year twice (1996-98). The starting leftfielder on USC's 1961 NCAA-winning team, he is one of just two men who have both coached and played on championship teams.
GILLESPIE IN THE NCAAs - Gillespie has a 61-27 (.693) record in the postseason (both as a player and as a coach). In his three-year playing career (1960-62), the Trojans went 8-2 in the district playoffs and 9-2 in the CWS (17-4 overall). As the Trojan mentor, Gillespie has a 31-19 regional record in 11 trips to the regionals, 9-3 at the CWS and 4-1 in the league playoffs.
PAC-10 POWERHOUSE - USC is arguably the most successful Pacific-10 Conference team this decade. Here are the facts:
TOUGH SCHEDULE - USC has again played one of the most difficult schedules in the nation. Of the 56 games, 34 were against 10 teams that appeared in the Collegiate Baseball preseason Top 40 (Arizona, Arizona State, Cal State Fullerton, Long Beach State, Loyola Marymount, Stanford, Texas, Texas Tech, UCLA and Washington). USC went 8-8 against four teams (Cal State Fullerton, Pepperdine, Stanford and Texas Tech) currently ranked in the Top 25.
SILVER ANNIVERSARY - This season marks the 25th anniversary of Dedeaux Field, where USC has an all-time record of 550-248-1 (.689). When USC hosted San Diego State on March 30, it was 25 years to the day from when the first game was played at Dedeaux Field. The inaugural game turned out to be special, as in the first game of a doubleheader, Russ McQueen threw a no-hitter against California.
PRESEASON ACCOLADES - Junior C Eric Munson was the most honored player in the nation in the preseason. First and foremost, he was named Collegiate Baseball's Preseason Player of the Year. Baseball America also named him to its All-American first team. The team was voted on by 23 major league scouting directors, and Munson was the only unanimous pick. In addition, junior LHP Barry Zito was named a Baseball America preseason All-American second teamer, senior UT Jason Lane was named a Collegiate Baseball preseason All-American second teamer and sophomore RHP Rik Currier was named a Collegiate Baseball preseason All-American third teamer.
WHO'S NEW - Though 12 of 26 letterwinners return from the team that won the 1998 national championship, including five starting position players, newcomers make up a large part of the 1999 team. Seven of the 15 pitchers that USC has used are newcomers, including two weekend starters: junior LHP Barry Zito (UC Santa Barbara and Pierce JC) and senior RHP Justin Lehr (UC Santa Barbara). Lehr has also started at first base and designated hitter. Another transfer, junior Justin Gemoll (UC Santa Barbara), has started at five different positions. Freshman C Beau Craig has started 55 games, freshman OF Brian Barre has started five times and junior OF Chris Ponchak, a transfer from Orange Coast CC, has started once.
ROSTER NOTES - Junior IF Kevin Schultz, expected to be the starting second baseman, quit the team in January. Junior C Josh Townsend also left the team early in the season. Junior RHP Peter Krogh was advised by doctors to retire due to the broken arm he suffered over the summer.
DRAFT PREVIEW - In the Feb. 15 Baseball America, the magazine printed its annual Early Draft Preview. Eric Munson was projected as the No. 2 overall selection, first among all college players. Other Trojans ranked among the top 100 college prospects were Barry Zito (15th), Brad Ticehurst (65th) and Justin Lehr (93rd). Five of USC's seven fall letter-of-intent signees were ranked among the top 100 high school prospects.
WOOD VS. ALUMINUM - USC was forced to use wood bats in its first two games of the season while the Pacific-10 Conference worked out an indemnification agreement with Louisville Slugger. An agreement was reached during the Friday afternoon game (Feb. 5) while USC was playing Texas, so the two teams began using aluminum in the second game of that series.
1998 RECAP - USC's 12th national championship was won in 1998 thanks to an extraordinary postseason run. The Trojans lost early-round games at both the East Regional and College World Series, but came back to win all eight of the games where they could have been eliminated. After losing the first game of the CWS, 12-10, to two-time defending champion LSU, the Trojans won four games over the next five days, including back-to-back wins over LSU, to reach the final. There they met Pac-10 rival Arizona State, and a slugfest resulted in a 21-14 Trojan win. USC went 49-17 overall and took second place in the Pacific-10 Conference with a 21-9 mark. Among the players not returning in 1999 are RHP Seth Etherton (The Sporting News' Player of the Year), RHP Jack Krawczyk (the NCAA all-time save leader), 3B Morgan Ensberg (USC's first 20 home run/20 stolen base player), 2B Wes Rachels (the College World Series MVP), 1B Robb Gorr, RHP Mike Penney and OF Jeremy Freitas.
USC HITTERS:
ERIC MUNSON (#3, C, Jr., 6-3, 220, San Diego)
Considered one of the very best players in all of college baseball,
junior catcher Eric Munson missed 21 games due to a broken bone in his
right hand, but was ready in time for the postseason (and played in the
final five games of the regular season). The injury was caused at
Washington State (March 27) when he was struck by a foul tip while
catching. Overall, he is batting .338 with 14 home runs and 40 RBI. Since
his return from the injury, he is batting .444 (16-for-36) with four home
runs, and he was named Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA Los Angeles
Regional after hitting .500 (8-for-16) with two home runs. He is one of 12
semifinalists for the Rotary Smith Award, a national player of the year
honor, and earned 1999 All-Pac-10 honorable mention honors. Munson is No. 3
on USC's career home run list with 43. He has 18 multiple-hit games and 11
multiple-RBI games. Munson hit four home runs in the three-game series
against Texas Tech (Feb. 12-14), two in the finale, including a
ninth-inning solo shot that won the game. For that, and his .615 batting
average and 11 RBI over four games, he was named a National Player of the
Week by Collegiate Baseball on Feb. 15. He went 3-for-5 with two home runs
against Long Beach State (Feb. 20). He was named Collegiate Baseball's
Preseason National Player of the Year and a preseason All-American first
teamer by Baseball America. The Baseball America team was selected by 23
major league scouting directors and Munson was the only unanimous
selection. Baseball America also listed him as the Pac-10's "Best Raw
Power," "Best Defensive Catcher" and "Catcher/Best Arm." He is a two-time
USA National Team member. In 1998, Munson missed a third of the season due
to injury but still earned All-American second team honors after batting a
team-high .392 with 16 home runs and 56 RBI.
GREG HANOIAN (#25, RF, Sr., 5-9, 170, Huntington Beach)
Senior rightfielder Greg Hanoian, one of USC's most dangerous hitters, is
batting .316 with career highs of seven home runs and 46 RBI. He earned
1999 All-Pac-10 first team honors. His season-best hitting streak is eight
games. Hanoian went 5-for-6 with four RBI against California (April 10),
3-for-5 with a home run against Cal State Dominguez Hills (Feb. 2), 3-for-5
with four RBI against Cal State Northridge (April 2) and 3-for-4 with a
home run against San Diego State (March 30). Staying healthy has been a key
for Hanoian, as he was forced to the bench at times the previous two
seasons with a variety of ailments. Hanoian's career batting average of
.343 is good for No. 12 (tied) in USC history.
BRAD TICEHURST (#7, CF, Sr., 6-2, 195, Los Alamitos)
Senior centerfielder Brad Ticehurst is batting .278 with 10 home runs and
39 RBI. Brad is tied for No. 7 on USC's home run list with 32 in his
career. On April 25, he became only the 17th player to hit a home run over
ASU's "Green Monster" in center field. Brad had a season-best nine-game
hitting streak. Ticehurst went 3-for-4 with a home run and three RBI
against Texas Tech (Feb. 12), 4-for-6 with a home run against Washington
State (March 27) and 4-for-6 against Stanford (April 18). He was banged up
earlier in the season, missing five games with a pulled groin and four
games with a bruised elbow. He was an eighth-round selection of the Texas
Rangers in last spring's professional draft, but he chose to return to USC
for his final season. Last season, Ticehurst batted .302 with 18 home runs
and 54 RBI. Baseball America lists him as having the best outfield arm in
the Pac-10.
SETH DAVIDSON (#2, SS, So., 6-0, 175, San Diego)
Sophomore shortstop Seth Davidson is again doing a tremendous job with
the bat and glove and has earned All-Pac-10 first team honors for the
second straight year. He is batting .348 with one home run and 35 RBI. Seth
made the NCAA All-Los Angeles Regional team. He is tied for the team lead
with 24 multiple-hit games. Davidson had a 12-game hitting streak (best by
a Trojan in 1999) and also had an eight-game hitting streak (six of those
were multiple-hit games). He had a career-high four hits at Texas (Feb. 6).
He went 3-for-5 with three RBI against Washington (May 16). Seth was
sidelined for four weeks due to a broken jaw suffered during a practice on
January 8, but missed only the first game of the season with that injury.
But he pulled a quadricep muscle in the Texas finale (Feb. 7) and missed
the next four games. One of the best defensive shortstops in college,
Davidson also had a strong freshman season in 1998 with the bat and made
Freshman All-American and All-Pac-10 team honors. He was also a member of
the 1998 USA National Team.
BEAU CRAIG (#9, 3B/C, Fr., 5-10, 170, Santee)
One of the top freshmen in the country, Beau Craig earned a starting job
immediately at third base, switched to catcher when Eric Munson was injured
and has returned to third base. He is batting .325 with four home runs and
49 RBI. Craig earned 1999 All-Pac-10 honorable mention notice and NCAA
All-Los Angeles Regional team honors. He went 2-for-3 with his first
collegiate home run and five RBI against UC Santa Barbara (April 13), had a
4-for-5 effort at Washington State (March 27) and was 3-for-4 with three
extra-base hits and three RBI against Pepperdine (April 27). His second
home run was a grand slam at Stanford (April 18). Baseball America named
him a preseason Freshman All-American first teamer. Craig was a prep
All-American last season at Grossmont High in La Mesa, Calif. He was a
third-round pick of the San Diego Padres last summer.
JUSTIN GEMOLL (#16, 1B/3B, Jr., 6-2, 200, San Jose)
Junior Justin Gemoll's versatility has been useful this season, as he has
started at five positions (all four infield spots and left field). He is
batting .305 with four home runs and 26 RBI. He went 3-for-4 with a home
run and five RBI against Long Beach State (Feb. 20), 3-for-4 with a home
run against Washington State (March 28) and 3-for-3 with four runs scored
against Stanford (April 18). Gemoll transferred from UC Santa Barbara and
was one of the Gauchos' top hitters the last two years. He was the team MVP
last season after batting .351 with nine home runs and a team-high 57 RBI.
ADDITIONAL HITTERS - Junior 1B/DH Carlos Casillas has started 33 times and is batting .300 with eight home runs and 26 RBI. Coming off the bench, he had a solo home run and an RBI double in the final two innings of a 12-10 win at Oregon State (March 13-14). Casillas also went 3-for-3 against Arizona (March 19) ... Sophomore UT Josh Persell has started 14 times and is batting .309 with nine RBI. He went 3-for-4 with two RBI against Washington State (March 27) ... Sophomore UT Josh Self has started eight times and is batting .206 with three RBI. He has played in 46 games, mostly as a late-inning defensive replacement ... Freshman OF Brian Barre has started five times and is batting .240 with one home run and two RBI.
USC PITCHER/HITTERS:
JASON LANE (#24, LF/LHP, Sr., 6-2, 210, Sebastopol)
Jason Lane has had a very special senior season and has earned
All-American first team and All-Pac-10 first team honors. He is batting
.361 with 20 home runs and 68 RBI (all team highs). He also leads the team
with 58 runs scored, 20 doubles, four triples and a .784 slugging
percentage. He is only the fifth Trojan to hit at least 20 home runs in a
season, and his 34 career home runs are fifth on USC's list. He made the
NCAA All-Los Angeles Regional team. He had one stretch with eight home runs
in seven games. He leads the team with 18 multiple-RBI games and is tied
for the team lead with 24 multiple-hit games. Lane was named the Pac-10
Player of the Week on April 19 after batting .478 (11-for-23) with five
doubles, three home runs and 12 RBI in five games, including two victories
over then-No. 2 Stanford. He went 4-for-6 with two home runs and six RBI
against Stanford (April 18), then had back-to-back two-home run games at
Arizona State (April 24-25), giving him three multi-homer games over a
five-game period. He missed the first eight games recovering from a broken
left thumb, suffered on January 23 during practice. Lane, who put together
a fantastic season both as a hitter and a pitcher in 1998, got a late start
as a pitcher in 1999 and is 2-0 with a 5.30 ERA in 18 2/3 innings.
Collegiate Baseball named him a preseason All-American second teamer. Last
year as the designated hitter, he batted .332 with 14 home runs and 50 RBI.
He was one of the stars at the 1998 College World Series, hitting a
ninth-inning grand slam against Arizona State and setting CWS records for
hits (15) and total bases (31). His nine wins ranked second on USC's staff
last season.
DOMINIC CORREA (#6, 2B/RHP, Sr., 5-11, 185, Sacramento)
Senior Dominic Correa has had a breakthrough 1999 season and earned
All-Pac-10 first team honors. He has started all 60 games and is batting
.333 with 12 home runs and 50 RBI. He once homered in four consecutive
games, including each of the three at Arizona State (April 23-25). He
batted .653 (9-for-14) against the Sun Devils and had back-to-back games
with four hits in the first two contests against ASU, and picked up his
first save in the opener. He went 3-for-5 with three RBI and was the
winning pitcher against Stanford (April 18). Correa had a career-best four
RBI against San Diego State (March 30). He went 4-for-5 with two doubles
and two RBI against Washington (May 14). Before the season, he didn't
figure to be a starter, but injuries and one player leaving moved him into
a starting position. That position has primarily been second base, but he
has also played left field and other infield positions. Midseason, he also
began pitching in a relief role. He is 1-1 with one save and a 2.31 ERA in
11 2/3 innings. Last season, Correa batted .278 as a reserve and did not
pitch.
JUSTIN LEHR (#14, RHP/1B, Sr., 6-1, 200, West Covina)
Senior RHP Justin Lehr is another standout two-way player for USC this
season after transferring from UC Santa Barbara. He earned 1999 All-Pac-10
honorable mention notice. As USC's No. 2 starting pitcher, he is 7-2 with a
4.11 ERA and has 105 strikeouts in 107 1/3 innings. He had one stretch of
18 1/3 innings without issuing a walk. He made the NCAA All-Los Angeles
Regional team after pitching a six-hit, 10-strikeout shutout against
Virginia Commonwealth (May 28). Lehr pitched a three-hit complete-game with
14 strikeouts at Oregon State (March 14), and also earned a save against
the Beavers (March 12). Lehr pitched six no-hit innings against Texas Tech
(Feb. 14) but eventually got a no-decision. He is used in relief
occasionally and has three saves. He has also started at first base or
designated hitter regularly and is batting .297 with four home runs and 27
RBI. He is batting .419 (13-for-31) when he comes to the plate as the
pitcher. A three-year player for the Gauchos, Lehr was primarily a catcher
and occasional relief pitcher (1-3 with five saves and a 7.69 ERA in three
seasons).
USC PITCHERS:
BARRY ZITO (#34, LHP, Jr., 6-4, 205, El Cajon)
Junior LHP Barry Zito, who joined USC in January, has proven himself as
one of the best pitchers in all of college baseball, earning All-American
first team and Pac-10 Pitcher of the Year honors. He is 12-2 with a 3.44
ERA and has 146 strikeouts in 104 2/3 innings. He has won 11 straight
starts, including all eight of his Pac-10 starts. He's only the third
Pac-10 pitcher in the last 11 years to win all of his conference starts.
Zito tied a career high with 16 strikeouts in seven innings in a win at
Oregon State (March 12), matched it with 16 in seven innings one week later
against Arizona (March 19) and did it again in a complete-game two-hitter
against UCLA (April 30). Both the Arizona and UCLA performances earned him
Collegiate Baseball National Player of the Week and Pac-10 Pitcher of the
Week honors. Sixteen strikeouts are the most by a Trojan pitcher since at
least 1987 (as far back as USC single-game records are currently
available). He had 12 strikeouts in 6 2/3 innings in a win at Arizona State
(April 23). He had 11 strikeouts in six innings in a no-decision against
Stanford (Feb. 26). He once had streaks of 18 straight innings with a
strikeout and 13 straight innings with at least two strikeouts. Baseball
America named him a preseason All-American second teamer and the top
newcomer in the Pac-10. He pitched at Los Angeles Pierce JC last season
(where he was all-state) and at UC Santa Barbara in 1997 (he was a Freshman
All-American). He was a third-round draft pick of the Texas Rangers in 1998
but elected to transfer to USC.
RIK CURRIER (#8, RHP, So., 5-10, 175, Dana Point)
Sophomore RHP Rik Currier, who had a terrific freshman season, is having
a steady 1999 season. He is 5-7 with two saves and a 6.38 ERA and has 88
strikeouts in 79 innings pitched. His career mark of 11.26 K's per nine
innings is the best in school history. Against Cal Lutheran (March 16), he
went 7 2/3 innings, gave up one hit, one walk and zero runs and tied a
career high with 14 strikeouts. Collegiate Baseball named Currier a
preseason All-American third teamer and Baseball America lists him as
having the best breaking ball in the Pac-10. Currier moved into the
starting rotation midway through the season in 1998 and earned Freshman
All-American honors with a 6-1 record and a 5.30 ERA. He placed second
nationally and set a school record with an average of 12.62 strikeouts per
nine innings (100 K's in 71 1/3 IP).
STEVE SMYTH (#18, LHP, So., 6-0, 195, Temecula)
Sophomore LHP Steve Smyth has been one of the busiest members of USC's
staff in 1999, having pitched in a team-high 28 games (nine starts) and
picking up 14 decisions. He is 6-8 with three saves and has a 5.47 ERA with
80 strikeouts in 80 2/3 innings. Steve pitched five scoreless innings
against UC Santa Barbara (April 13) to get a win, and went five innings
against Michigan (March 3) to earn a win, allowing four hits, one walk and
one run while striking out six. Smyth is a transfer from Cypress JC.
ADDITIONAL PITCHERS - Veteran RHP Steve Immel (1-1, 6.28 ERA, one save), a senior, saw a great deal of work his first three seasons and is a mainstay in the bullpen. In his first start this year, he gave up two hits and one run in six innings to beat Pepperdine (April 27) ... A few freshmen have made contributions this season, most notably RHP Tim Petke (0-0, 4.68) of Portland Lutheran HS and RHP Pete Montrenes (2-0, 5.77) of Ocean View HS. Petke went 7 1/3 innings in relief against UCLA (March 6), giving up six hits, two walks and one run while striking out two. Montrenes started and threw six scoreless innings against Cal State Los Angeles (March 9) ... Sophomore RHP Shaun Kramer has seen some action on the mound and is 0-2 with a 8.71 ERA ... Sophomore LHP Ronald Flores (0-0, 5.14) is the younger brother of USC's all-time winningest pitcher, Randy Flores.


