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Rice Baseball 2019 Season Review: Erratic offense full of highs and lows

May 30, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

The offense prohibited Rice baseball from taking earnest strides in 2018. Here’s a rundown on the final numbers and a synopsis on how each bat performed.

The Rice offense faded to a .260/.360/.400 slash line by the end of the regular season, finishing eighth or worse in Conference USA in each metric while leading the conference with 534 strikeouts. The offense as a whole was top heavy, failing to get consistent production from the bottom half of the lineup and leading toward the discouraging final numbers.

But a few accurate macro-level numbers don’t fully encapsulate what the Rice offense was in 2019. There were individuals who put together solid, if not superb, season. It was the lack of an ability to string those good games and good days together which did this team in. Here’s a closer look at the final lines for some of the Owls’ most important hitters.

Cade Edwards

Games – 59 | AVG .308 | OBP .360 | SLG .498 | 2B – 16 | 3B – 4 | HR – 6 | BB – 17 | K – 46

A JUCO transfer who has been on campus for less than a year, Edwards finished with a team-best .308 batting average. His approach at the plate was consistent as he quickly became the best pure contact hitter on the team. Edwards was one of two players to start all 59 of the Owls games this season.

Trei Cruz

Games – 58 | AVG .305 | OBP .393 | SLG .519 | 2B – 11 | 3B – 6 | HR – 9 | BB – 35 | K – 54

Trei started the season with a bang with his 9-RBI day against Rhode Island in February. He never really slowed down, finishing second on the team in RBI despite batting out of the leadoff spot for the first half of the season. He finished tied for the longest hitting streak of the season (nine games) and was one of the most productive hitters on the team from start to finish.

Andrew Dunlap

Games – 57 | AVG .302 | OBP .419 | SLG .559 | 2B – 9 | 3B – 2 | HR – 13 | BB – 23 | K – 49

One of the most feel-good stories on the team this season, senior Andrew Dunlap became a fixture in the Rice lineup following a 5-for-6, 7-RBI outing against Prairie View A&M. Dunlap led the team with a gaudy .342 batting average in conference play with nine home runs and a 1.075 OPS in 30 games.

Braden Comeaux

Games – 53 | AVG .299 | OBP .388 | SLG .421 | 2B – 16 | 3B – 1 | HR – 3 | BB – 16 | K – 32

The junior infielder was a tremendous table setter for an offense in need of a spark. Comeaux finished second to Trei Cruz in runs (46) and tied with Cade Edwards for the team lead in doubles (16). Whether it was one of his 17 hit by pitches or 66 hits, he found ways to get on base.

Bradley Gneiting

Games – 59 | AVG .295 | OBP .366 | SLG .378 | 2B – 12 | 3B – 0 | HR – 3 | BB – 25 | K – 51

A versatile option in the field by necessity, Gneiting’s defensive assignment for the day never seemed to bother his production at the plate. An early member of a wide-open outfield platoon, Gneiting solidified his spot in the lineup and delivered some key strokes at the top of the order.

Justin Collins

Games – 58 | AVG .260 | OBP .387 | SLG .425 | 2B – 12 | 3B – 0 | HR – 7 | BB – 41 | K – 53

A modest season given the offseason hopes, Collins battled through a hand injury to finish his first season as the Owls’ full-time catcher. Collins led the team with 41 walks and finished third with seven home runs. He’s got work to do before he moves closer to the cleanup spot many thought he’d be able to take this season, but his ability to extend innings and get on base cannot be undervalued.

Mutli-game starters

Dominic Cox | Games – 45 | AVG .238 | OBP .382 | SLG .338 | 2B – 7 | 3B – 0 | HR – 2 | BB – 30 | K – 52
Aaron Beaulaurier | Games – 55 | AVG .187 | OBP .297 | SLG .307 | 2B – 11 | 3B – 3 | HR – 1 | BB – 18 | K – 64
Dominic DiCaprio | Games – 21 | AVG .229 | OBP .301 | SLG .265 | 2B – 3 | 3B – 0 | HR – 0 | BB – 7 | K – 20
Brandt Frazier | Games – 39 | AVG .125 | OBP .261 | SLG .150 | 2B – 3 | 3B – 0 | HR – 0 | BB – 20 | K – 35

Injuries and inconsistent bats kept these four players from becoming season-long starters for the Owls in 2019. Cox and Beaulaurier won time later in the season as their bats began to wake up, but both were primarily defensive assets with a decent amount of doubles power.

DiCaprio and Frazier were veteran players who never got healthy enough to truly showcase their abilities. DiCaprio was shut down midseason and Frazier left the Conference tournament with an arm injury.

Reserves

Justin Dunlap | Games – 18 | AVG .216 | OBP .396 | SLG .243 | 2B – 1 | 3B – 0 | HR – 0 | BB – 10 | K – 7
Khevin Brewer | Games – 18 | AVG .208 | OBP .259 | SLG .250 | 2B – 1 | 3B – 0 | HR – 0 | BB – 2 | K – 9
Rodrigo Duluc | Games – 30 | AVG .205 | OBP .302 | SLG .349 | 2B – 3 | 3B – 0 | HR – 3 | BB – 10 | K – 33
Antonio Cruz | Games – 26 | AVG .167 | OBP .254 | SLG .300 | 2B – 2 | 3B – 0 | HR – 2 | BB – 4 | K – 25

The opportunities off the bench were sporadic for this group. Unlike the prior quartet, inconsitent days at the plate kept any of these four from earning more than the occasional at bat or spot start. The Rice lineup wasn’t deep this year. When your best four reserves are hitting at or below the Mendoza line there wasn’t much more coach Bragga could have done to generate better days at the plate. More work in the cages and a fresh influx of talent should make the bench much more palatable next season.

Daniel Russell

Games – 6 | AVG .429 | OBP .556 | SLG .429 | 2B – 0 | 3B – 0 | HR – 0 | BB – 1 | K – 2

The bullpen catcher brought on for a single season with no intent to play, Russell saw more action than he ever expected. The dugout might have been most excited this season when Russell entered a one-sided 15-3 win over Rhode Island late and delivered an RBI single. He’ll be missed.

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Filed Under: Featured, Archive, Baseball Tagged With: Andrew Dunlap, Braden Comeaux, Bradley Gneiting, Cade Edwards, Justin Collins, Rice baseball, Trei Cruz

Rice Baseball sweeps MTSU, earns Matt Bragga’s first home sweep

April 21, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball picked up their first home series sweep under head coach Matt Bragga, winning three games against Middle Tennessee State to improve to .500 in conference play.

Rice entered Easter weekend with a bad taste in their mouth. The Owls had blasted Charlotte in their series opener and outscored them by 10 runs over the course of three games only to drop the series. With no midweek game to take their mind off the tough blow, all efforts turned to Middle Tennessee.

Coach Bragga’s charge to his team this weekend was straightforward. “We need to start making a move if we’re going to make one.” Rice made their move, sweeping their second conference opponent this season. Here are some notes on an encouraging series at Reckling Park.

THURSDAY | Rice 10 – MTSU 4

Rice RBI leader Andrew Dunlap got things going in the series opener with an RBI single in the first inning. The Owls took the 1-0 lead into the third where they broke the game open, batting around and scoring eight runs on six hits and four walks. Justin Collins and Braden Comeaux picked up two RBI apiece, with four other Owls driving in one run during the big inning.

The nine-run cushion was more than enough for Matt Canterino, who put together what was arguably his best outing of the season. He struck out 10 in seven innings, earning his team-leading fifth win of the season. Middle Tennessee would tack on four against Rice reliever Drake Greenwood, but the sizable lead would hold for the Owls’ fourth-straight win in series openers.

FRIDAY | Rice 7 – MTSU 2

The Owls’ bats got off to a slightly slower start on Friday night, but once they woke up, they caught fire. Two home runs, one by Cade Edwards another Dominic Cox, put Rice ahead 2-0 in the fourth inning. Then the Owls exploded for five runs in the fifth.

Bradley Gneiting, Trei Cruz, and Andrew Dunlap strung together three consecutive RBI hits. Dunlap came around to score the seventh run on an error. The 7-0 lead would hold until the ninth inning where once more MTSU would collect a flurry of hits, scoring two, not enough to give the Owls much of a scare.

SATURDAY |Rice 7 – MTSU 5

For the first time in the weekend, Rice was forced to come from behind. Starting pitcher Jackson Parthasarathy wasn’t as sharp as his predecessors on the mound. He would have been serviceable had the defense not committed three errors on the day, two of which resulted in three unearned runs charged to Parthasarathy.

Trailing 4-0 after Parthasarathy was removed midway through the third inning, Rice began to chip away. Rice got two in the third, one in the fourth and one in the fifth before tying the game in the seventh on a Cade Edwards sac fly. Justin Collins would drive a two-out single to left later in the inning, scoring what would be the game-winning run.

MTSU didn’t make it easy, loading the bases in the ninth. With the tying run in scoring position, Kendall Jeffries induced a double-play to clinch the victory and the series sweep.

TAKEAWAYS | Rice wins series 3-0

1. Pitch like this every weekend

It’s been no secret the Rice starting pitching is the strength of this team. When all three of the Owls’ rotation are locked in this team is going to have a chance to win most series. Aside from the sloppy defense on Saturday, the starting pitching was nearly as good as it’s been all season this weekend against Middle Tennessee, and the results were the first home series sweep of the Matt Bragga era.

Canterino, Kravetz and Parthasarathy combined for 27 strikeouts with five walks, and one earned runs allowed. That’s a stellar line through 16.2 innings on the bump. More length out of their Sunday starter would have been ideal, but an extremely fresh bullpen gave coach Bragga a bit more leeway with how long he left Parthasarathy on the mound. If Rice pitches this well, they’ll have a chance to win each of their remaining CUSA series.

2. Cade Edwards

The Rice lineup has become more consistent as the season has gone on. Slowly but surely the top three became the top four. Somewhat quietly, Cade Edwards has entrenched himself as part of the glue which holds this offense together. Batting fifth throughout the weekend, Edwards picked up six hits, batting .600 in the series with the go-ahead home run on Friday and the game-tying sac fly on Saturday.

Edwards is riding a 7-game hitting streak. The Rice offense has scored five or more runs in five of those seven games, and Edwards has been in the thick of the action. Bragga likes what he’s seeing from the Owls’ second baseman, calling Edwards “a real solid hitter [who has] some really good bat speed and drives through the ball really well.”

3. Come and take it

Rice has officially passed the midway point of conference play. It’s been a bumpy ride, but after starting 0-5, Rice has won nine of their next 14, pulling themselves back to .500 in conference play. It’s no guarantee of future success, but it is a testament to a team willing to fight.

With four series remaining, Rice is in the thick of the pack in Conference USA. FAU leads the way at 14-4 with the Owls five games behind, tied for fifth. They entered the weekend tied for seventh, with tiebreakers putting them in ninth place.

Winning the conference is still mathematically possible, but even without an incredible late surge, Rice has enough season left to position themselves for the conference tournament in Biloxi.

Entering the weekend D1 Baseball projected Conference USA to be a two-bid league with league-leading FAU sitting in the First Five Out. Rice has a few signature wins (TCU, Baylor), but the chances of reaching the postseason with a sub-.500 overall record will be slim to none.

Rice is 18-23 right now, meaning the most likely avenue to postseason play is a CUSA Tournament win. That’s much easier to do as a three seed than an eight-seed. Coach Bragga says he’s aware of the numbers and the scenarios, but “at the end of the day, we have to go perform. If we perform, we’ll have an opportunity, if we don’t we won’t.”

ON DECK | vs Louisiana Tech (Fri-Sun)

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Filed Under: Baseball, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Andrew Dunlap, Cade Edwards, Evan Kravetz, Jackson Parthasarathy, Matt Canterino, Rice baseball

Rice Baseball: Owls flying high with road sweep vs Old Dominion

March 31, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

It’s been a season of streaks, both good and bad, for Rice baseball. A road series sweep of Old Dominion has the Owls on the upswing.

The back and forth swings of the 2019 Rice baseball season hit a high note in Virginia. After winning their first conference game on Sunday against UTSA, Rice extended their CUSA winning streak to four games in a row with a three game sweep of Old Dominion.

The strong weekend boosts the Owls’ record to 12-18 (4-5 CUSA). While it wasn’t quite a “must win” series, the impact from the impressive showing will have repercussions in the days to come. Here are how each game finished and three final takeaways from one of the Owl’s best weekends of the season.

FRIDAY | Rice 3 – Old Dominion 1

Despite a 1-4 record entering the series, Rice ace Matt Canterino has been steady. Ufnoratunetly for him, one bad inning had spoiled his last few starts as the offense behind him sputtered. He only got three runs of support on Friday night, but Canterino was so locked in that would prove to be more than enough.

Canterino’s only run allowed came by way of a wild pitch in the fifth inning, an inning in which he recorded three of his season-high 12 strikeouts. The run could only even the score — Bradley Gneiting had opened up a 1-0 edge in the top half of the inning with an RBI single.

Rice would tack on two additional runs in the seventh and eighth innings on solo home runs to left field by Braden Comeaux and Justin Collins, respectively. Kendal Jeffries would relieve Canterino after six innings and silence Old Dominion for the remainder of the game, allowing one hit and zero runs as he faced the minimum to earn his third save of the year.

SATURDAY AFTERNOON | Rice 14 – Old Dominion 10

Both offenses came out swinging following the pitcher’s duel on Friday night. Neither starting pitcher made it past the third inning. Tommy Gertner recorded five outs and was charged with five runs after hitting four batters, walking two and allowing five hits. Rice starter Addison Moss was equally ineffective, allowing seven runs while walking three in 2+ innings of work.

Fortunately for the Owls, they had proven starter Jackson Parthasarathy waiting in the pen. He came on in the third and closed out the game, throwing seven innings of three-run ball. Old Dominion wasn’t nearly as fortunate. The Monarchs turned to six pitchers on the day, none of which lasted at least three innings. All but one, Trey Fisher who got the last two outs in the ninth, allowed fewer than two hits and one run.

Outfielder Dominic Cox led the way with seven RBI on three extra base hits, highlighted by his first home run on the season. Andrew Dunlap blasted two home runs of his own driving in four. Every player in the Owls’ lineup reached base at least once and the team totaled just seven strikeouts, tied for the fewest in conference play.

SATURDAY NIGHT| Rice 11 – Old Dominion 2

Bumped up from the previously scheduled Sunday start, Rice picked up where they left off in the earlier game, blasting past Old Dominion in the series finale to sweep the series. Evan Kravetz had arguably the best outing of his career, allowing three hits and two runs in eight innings of work against an Old Dominion lineup which had scored 10 runs against Rice only a few hours before he took the mound.

Kravetz allowed a single in the first before holding the Monarchs without a hit from the second to the sixth inning. Old Dominion scored twice on a pair of sacrifice flies in the seventh, but an 8-0 Rice advantage made the damage seem paltry in comparison.

As Kravetz dealt on the mound, Rice pounded out 16 hits, the most against any conference opponent yet this season. Dunlap hit his third home run of the day, extenind a 1-0 Rice lead to a 4-0 lead in the third inning. Collins would follow with another home run. The five-run margin proved to be more than enough, but Rice would tack on three runs in the seventh and ninth innings for good measure.

TAKEAWAYS | Rice wins series 3-0

1. The offense actually looks balanced

At the beginning of the season it felt like it was Trei Cruz against the world. The talented shortstop carries a big stick, but he’s since fallen down in the stat sheet following his hot start. Four every day starters are hitting .300 or better — that doesn’t include Cruz or Collins behind the plate. Nor does it count red-hot Dominic Cox.

The first seven batters Rice started in the last game of the series on Saturday were hitting .286 or better. Rice scored 11 runs. It’s not rocket science, but seven strong hitters typically leads to more productive offenses than weak lineups with one big-time slugger. That was where the Owls found themselves early on as Cruz flirted with a ,400 average. Now, they’re fairly even keeled with players emerging from all over the roster to make big hits.

This offense is more than just Trei Cruz right now. And perhaps not so coincidentally, the production increased exponentially.

2. More often that not, the rotation is going to be enough

Matt Canterino only went six innings, but he struck out 12. In quick relief of Addison Moss, Jackson Parthasarathy went seven innings on Saturday before Evan Kravetz slammed the door in the final game to secure the sweep. As a unit, it was a pretty good weekend, especially when you consider how much Rice needed to win to a weekend series.

If Rice can get close to that level of effectiveness each weekend in conference play they’ll be a threat to take down all comers. That’s especially true considering the masterful work of the Rice bullpen over the weekend. The three relievers utilized by coach Matt Bragg over the weekend  — Jeffries, Parthasarathy and Gayle —  allowed three runs on nine hits in 11 innings.

3. Resiliency

It’s been a season of streaks. After opening with a series win over Rhode Island, Rice looked out of touch in losses to Arizona and Texas as well as weekend series dropped to UC Irvine and Oklahoma. They righted that ship with a huge weekend at the Shriner’s College Classic at Minute Maid Park.

Then things went south again. Rice dropped their first five conference games and looked bad doing it. There were questions about whether or not this team could do enough to earn a postseason berth, something which has been the expected outcome of season at Rice for some time. Sitting in another low spot, Rice rallied again.

Baseball is an intensive character to test. Players on all teams learn a lot about themselves during the strains of tough stretches on the plate or at the ound. It takes intestinal fortitude, guts, to weather the storm and keep fighting. Whether or not they’ll reach the postseason or not remains to be seen, but this team continues to prove they’re going to battle. That’s a good sign.

ON DECK | at Sam Houston (Tues),  vs FIU (Fri-Sun)

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Filed Under: Baseball, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Andrew Dunlap, Dominic Cox, Evan Kravetz, Jackson Parthasarathy, Justin Collins, Matt Canterino, Rice baseball

Rice Baseball: Owls fall to Sam Houston in Wednesday shootout

March 6, 2019 By Matthew Bartlett

Rice baseball couldn’t hold off a disciplined Sam Houston offense, falling on a bases-loaded walk in the ninth inning on Wednesday.

Runs were expected to come in bunches when Sam Houston came to town on Wednesday. The Bearkats did indeed bring their bats, striking first on a one out single in the first. Rice would quickly even the score in the second before the two squads exchanged 4-run innings in the third.

It took Sam Houston five hits to score their four runs. Rice only needed one, utilizing a sacrifice fly followed by a three-run blast from Andrew Dunlap to level the game. Dunlap would come up with another big hit in the next inning, capping off a four-run fourth inning with 2 RBI double down the left field line.

Leading 9-5, the Rice offense cooled down dramatically. Meanwhile, Sam Houston wasn’t done. The Bearkats struck for two runs in the sixth and two more in the eighth. The go-ahead run, which they scored in the final frame, came on a bases loaded walk to nine-hole hitter Diego Davila. That proved to be the deciding run as Rice would fall at home, 10-9.

Takeaways

1. The Owls have solved their 3-4-5 spots

Cleanup hitter Trei Cruz was promoted to the leadoff spot when the Owls’ offense sputtered out of the gate. He stayed consistent, leading the team in on base percentage and slugging percentage, but someone else was going to have to help drive in the runs.

Rice has found their answer in the trio of Braden Comeaux, Alex Collins and Andrew Dunlap. Those three were responsible for seven RBI against Sam Houston, coming through with big hits with runners on base. Comeaux didn’t have a hit on Wednesday, but he did reach base twice, scoring both times.

2. Work to be done behind the backstop

Sam Houston trimmed their deficit to one run in the eighth inning on a single to center field. Then, with two runners on base, two wild pitches allowed the base runners to advance, eventually scoring the game-tying run. Rice threw three wild pitches on Wednesday, bringing their total to 18 wild pitches over 14 games.

Justin Collins had a strong weekend behind the plate, but he’s been charged with five passed balls this year. The fielding errors are trending in the right direction and the connection from the mount to the plate needs some tuning up as well.

3. Midweek pitching remains a question mark

Addison Moss put together a strong outing on Tuesday against Houston, but it doesn’t seem likely he sticks in the midweek role for long. He’s going to challenge for a weekend spot, possible pushing someone else to an extended relief role or one of the midweek jobs.  That still leaves Rice in a quandary, especially on five-game weeks.

The combination of Drake Greenwood and Kel Bordwine have had their moments, but neither has taken the job for themselves, not yet. There are plenty of young arms in the pen waiting for their chance on the bump, too.

ON DECK | vs Oklahoma (Fri – Sun)

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Filed Under: Baseball, Archive, Featured Tagged With: Andrew Dunlap, Rice baseball, Trei Cruz

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