North Carolina State University Athletics
Baseball Game Notes - March 23, 2000 vs. North Carolina
3/23/2000 12:00:00 AM | Baseball
NC State (15-8, 4-2) vs. North Carolina (22-4, 0-3) March 24-27, 2000 Boshamer Stadium / Chapel Hill, N.C.
A year ago at Doak Field, NC State won two of three games from the Tar Heels, dropping the series opener 13-12, but winning the final two games 8-7 and 3-1. Two years ago in Chapel Hill, North Carolina took two of three from NC State, winning the first two games 4-0 and 17-5 before the Wolfpack came back to win the finale 9-4 in 10 innings.
Sophomore righthander Mike Sollie (3-2, 4.05) will start the middle game of the series on Saturday. Like D'Amato, Sollie tossed his first collegiate complete game this past weekend against Virginia and was just as dominant as D'Amato, but far less fortunate. Sollie took a three-hitter and a 1-1 tie into the ninth inning, onlt to absorb a tough 3-1 defeat. Sollie had 20 of the last 23 men he had faced through the eighth inning, but gave up two runs on four hits in the ninth. One of Virginia's ninth-inning hits was a one-out bunt single, and another was a two-out Baltimore chop to third base. For the year, Sollie has made seven appearances, all of them starts, and has allowed 46 hits in 40 innings. He has walked eight and struck out 26.
Freshman lefthander Mike Prochaska (2-0, 0.51) will make his first ACC start in the series finale on Sunday. Prochaska's last appearance was March 11 vs. Wake Forest at Doak Field. Prochaska picked up his second win with two scoreless innings in relief, allowing one hit and striking out two in the Wolfpack's 8-6 victory in the middle game of the series. In his only start of the season, Prochaska pitched 6 2/3 shutout innings February 16 vs. Elon, walking one and striking out four. For the season, Prochaska has made seven appearances, six of them in relief, and has allowed 13 hits in 17 2/3 innings. He has walked three and struck out 13.
The rained-out game will be played at Doak Field on Friday, May 12 at 7 p.m. The two teams then will play their regularly scheduled game at Doak Field the following night, Saturday, May 13, also at 7 p.m.
Avent's first three seasons as head coach did nothing but enhance the Wolfpack's longstanding baseball tradition. Avent's first team had lost four of its best players and had seen its recruiting class wiped out by the major league baseball draft. Avent guided the *97 Wolfpack to a 43-20 overall record and had the Pack in contention for first place in the conference standings until the last weekend of the regular season.
Avent's 1998 team was just as big a success story as its predecessor. The Wolfpack had lost a 1997 senior class that batted .345 with 48 home runs offensively and posted a 23-9 record on the mound with a 3.98 ERA. Despite the personnel losses, the Pack just kept on winning, running up a 41-23 overall record and finishing third at the NCAA West Regional at Palo Alto, Calif.
The success continued in 1999. Despite heavy losses to graduation and the baseball draft the previous two seasons, Avent's *99 team jumped from the gate quickly, winning 17 of its first 18 games, including 14 in a row at one point. NC State won five of its last seven regular-season games, and then won a pair of games in the ACC Tournament to nail down the program's 12th NCAA Tournament appearance in the last 14 years, finishing the year at 37-25.
In Avent's three seasons at NC State, four Wolfpack players have earned All-America honors, two have been named Freshman All-Americans, and 11 have been named first- or second-team All-ACC. That success has carried over to the professional ranks, with 15 NC State players signing professional contracts after playing for Avent.
The 10 Winningest Coaches Age 45 Or Younger (Through 1999)
No. Coach (School) Years Record
1. Jack Leggett (Clemson) 20 665-402
2. Ray Tanner (South Carolina) 12 537-238
3. Pat Murphy (Notre Dame) 12 506-279
4. Bill Brown (George Mason) 18 501-438
5. Danny Hall (Georgia Tech) 12 461-237
6. Jim Wells (Alabama) 10 436-179
7. Rod Delmonico (Tennessee) 10 404-207
8. Mike Stone (Massachusetts) 17 399-306
9. Elliott Avent (NC State) 11 346-279
10. Gary McClure (Austin Peay) 12 337-337
Although the starters have a combined won-lost record of just 8-8, their cumulative ERA is a solid 3.77. NC State starters have allowed 142 hits and 45 walks in 129 1/3 innings while striking out 86. Wolfpack starters are averaging 9.88 hits and 3.13 walks allowed per nine inning. They have made 12 quality starts (3 earned runs or less in 6 or more innings) in 23 games, including back-to-back complete games by Dan D'Amato and Mike Sollie on March 18-19 vs. Virginia.
For the season, the NC State bullpen is 7-0 with four saves and a 4.46 ERA. Relievers have made 55 appearances and worked 82 2/3 innings. They have allowed 86 hits, walked 21 and struck out 65. They are averaging 9.36 hits and 2.29 walks allowed per nine innings pitched. Wolfpack relievers have inherited 45 runners and stranded all but 13 of them.
Wolfpack Relievers And Inherited Runners
Pitcher IP IR Scored
Daniel Caldwell 17.1 8 1
Conrad Clark 7.0 8 3
Corey Mattison 5.2 6 0
Josh Miller 11.2 5 2
Mike Prochaska 17.2 5 1
Josh Schmitt 2.1 2 0
Ryan Steadham 8.2 5 2
Kyle Stephenson 4.0 6 4
On the one hand, Avent wanted his young team tested by strong competition. On the other hand, Avent knew it would be easy to overschedule such a young team, so while Avent put together a very competitive schedule this season, he softened things by opening up with an extended homestand. A school-record 20-game homestand, to be precise.
Originally drawn up as 19 consecutive home games, the Pack began the season with a snowout February 5 against Elon and rescheduled that game for February 16, after the team's trip to Charleston, S.C., for the Trademark Properties Classic. In addition to the Elon match-up, the homestand included three-game series with Rutgers, Cleveland State, George Mason, Wake Forest and Virginia, a two-game series with Richmond, and single games with Davidson and Pace.
The Wolfpack 14 of the 20 games on the homestand. The previous longest homestand by an NC State team was a 16-game homestand in 1986.
In four games that week, Wright batted .571 (8-for-14) with two doubles, two home runs (including a grand slam) and nine RBIs. For the season, he is hitting .337 with four home runs and 19 RBIs. He is tied for the team lead in home runs and is second in RBIs.
Wright's 21-game hitting streak a year ago not only was the longest ever by a Wolfpack freshman, it was the third longest in school history, behind Greg Briley's 27-game streak in 1986 and Tom Sergio's 26-game streak in 1995.
First baseman/outfielder Mike Prochaska has not only been the Wolfpack's Rookie of the Year to date, he is the leading candidate for team MVP honors as well. Through 23 games, Prochaska leads the team in hitting at .373, doubles with six and RBIs with 23. He is third in slugging percentage at .493, but just .001 behind the co-leaders, and in on-base percentage at .427.
Beyond mere stats, Prochaska has been Mr. Clutch for the Wolfpack. He has 12 two-out RBIs (no one else on the team has more than 7). He leads the team in batting average with runners on base, with the bases loaded, with two outs, and with runners in scoring position. He is a perfect eight for eight driving in runs when there is a man on third with less than two outs. He has struck out just five times in 82 plate appearances.
On the mound, Prochaska is 2-0 with a team-best 0.51 ERA, although he has only worked 17 2/3 innings. He has allowed 13 hits, walked three and struck out 13. He has inherited five runners and allowed just one to score.
Other freshmen are making a mark as well. Third baseman Jeremy Dutton is hitting just .269, but is tied for the team lead with six doubles and is tied for third in RBIs with 16. Ryan Strain, who missed 10 games with a broken hand, is hitting a deceptively solid .259 and has been versatile enough to play second base and the outfield. Infielder Chris Goodman has provided excellent glovework at shortstop.
Daniel Caldwell has made a mark for himself as a bullpen stopper, coming into games with runners on base and pitching out of jams. Caldwell has stranded eight of the nine runners he has inherited through his first eight appearances. He has struck out 17 and walked just two in 17 1/3 innings.
D'Amato shut down the Cavaliers 4-2 on March 18, walking one and striking out seven. After yielding two runs in the top of the third, one on an error and the other on an RBI single, D'Amato retired 10 men in a row from the beginning of the fourth inning into the seventh, and set down 17 of the last 19 men he faced.
Sollie wound up taking a 3-1 loss to the Cavs the following day, despite a dominating performance on the mound. After surrendering a leadoff homer in the top of the second inning, Sollie retired 20 of the next 23 batters he faced through the end of the eighth inning. Two of the three men who reached base in that time were erased on the bases. Sollie carried a three-hitter and a 1-1 tie into the ninth inning, but wound up allowing two runs in the top of the ninth on four hits, one of them a bunt single, and another one a Baltimore chop that went for an infield single.
Brian Wright got the inning rolling with a sharp single up the middle, and Eric Mosley laid down a bunt that the Wake defense botched for an error. Mike Prochaska walked to load the bases, and Dan Mooney singled to left to score the first run of the inning. Craig Lee hit a grounder to short to force Mooney at second, driving in a run, and Josh Schmitt walked to load the bases for the second time.
Daniel Caldwell followed with a one-hopper to third base, but all hands were safe and a run scored when Wake catcher Dan Conway dropped the throw home for an error, giving the Wolfpack a 4-0 lead. Jeremy Dutton walked to force in the fourth run of the inning, and Jason Smith made it 5-0 with a squeeze bunt up the first-base line.
Wright, up for the second time in the inning, walked to load the bases for the third time, spelling the end of the afternoon for Wake Forest starter Ben Clayton. Matt Briggs came on in relief and walked Mosley to force in a run and make it 6-0. Prochaska followed with a line-drive double to the left-center-field gap, clearing the bases and giving NC State an insurmountable 9-0 lead. The Pack went on to win, 12-4.
That all changed when freshman second baseman Ryan Strain broke his left hand on February 26, depleting the team's infield depth to the point that head coach Elliott Avent offered Mosley the opportunity to play right away if he had a change in heart regarding his redshirt season.
Mosley, a transfer from Louisburg (N.C.) Junior College, decided to play, and has taken full advantage of the opportunity placed before him. In 10 games, eight of them starts at second base, he is hitting .367 with two doubles, four runs scored and 10 RBIs. He has hit safely in all but two of the games in which he has played.
Strain suffered the hairline-type fracture in the fourth metacarpal of his left hand when he dived for a ball in center field in the second inning of NC State's 7-3 win over Cleveland State. For the record, Strain, in only his third game ever in the outfield, did make the catch on the play.
A career middle infielder, Strain had agreed to give center field a try when the Wolfpack coaching staff suggested it as a way to get his bat into the lineup. His first game in center field came on a rainy Friday against Rutgers, and he handled numerous difficult chances without a miscue.
Wolfpack hitters have made the most of the bunt this season, converting 22 sacrifice bunts through 23 games, but more important, NC State hitters have bunted for base hits 18 times, including 12 by Jason Smith. That total is more than half of Smith's total of 23 hits for the season.
While some disparage the so-called little game, the Wolfpack has definitely used it to good effect in 2000.
NC State Hitters And The Bunt
Hitter SAC Hits
Jason Smith 9 12
Dan Mooney 1 3
Jeremy Dutton 0 2
Ryan Strain 1 1
Craig Lee 1 0
Brian Wright 2 0
Chris Goodman 2 0
Eric Mosley 4 0
John Whitley 1 0
Andy Baxter 1 0
Mason catcher Brian Anderson stood up and held his mitt out as a target, but Prochaska noticed that Murray's first pitch was a little too close to the plate. Prochaska decided that if the next pitch was in the same location he would swing at it. Sure enough, the pitch came in just a few inches off the plate, and Prochaska slapped the ball past the third baseman and down the left-field line for a two-run double. NC State went on to win, 14-9.
Richmond, which is in the Colonial Athletic Association with George Mason, came to Doak Field the following week, and when the Spiders faced a similar situation with Prochaska at the plate, the pitches in the intentional walk were well wide of home plate.
Prochaska already has made one dual pitching appearance this year, working twice in the same inning March 11 against Wake Forest. Arguably the Wolfpack's best hitter, Prochaska started the game in right field, but was called in to pitch with runners on first and second and none out in the top of the eighth inning. Prochaska retired the first two batters he faced, and Corey Mattison was brought in to face a pair of righthanded hitters. Prochaska went to first base.
Both of Mattison's hitters reached base, so Prochaska was brought back to pitch to the ever-dangerous Danny Borrell, who struck out to end the inning. NC State took the lead in the bottom half of the eighth, making Prochaska the pitcher of record. He pitched a scoreless ninth inning to preserve his own victory, his second against no defeats.
Smith, currently in graduate school in civil engineering, holds a bachelor's degree in construction engineering and management. He graduated last spring with a 3.84 GPA. Smith also has won a graduate scholarship from the American Science Foundation and the AGC Education and Research Foundation.
The Weaver-James-Corrigan Scholarships are named after former ACC commissioners Jim Weaver, Bob James and Gene Corrigan. NC State has had 14 Weaver-James-Corrigan Scholarship winners in the last four years, tops among ACC schools.
In its February 20 College Preview issue, Baseball America ranked the top 100 teams in the country, and the top of that list looks a lot like NC State's 2000 schedule. NC State had 22 games scheduled against BA's top 33 teams.
In the latest weekly poll by Collegiate Baseball, six NC State opponents are ranked in the top 25, including No. 1 Clemson, No. 3 Florida State and No. 7 North Carolina. The Wolfpack will play three games against each of those three teams, plus three-game series with No. 16 Georgia Tech. The Wolfpack already has played a single game with No. 22 East Carolina and a three-game series with No. 25 Wake Forest, splitting those four games.
Avent and his coaching staff signed Millbrook High School outfielder Joe Gaetti, plus three players from Raleigh's Broughton High School -- catcher Conor Clougherty, first baseman and lefthanded pitcher David Hicks, and shortstop Lee Kimball.
All four of the Wolfpack's signees were first-team all-conference selections as juniors, and Gaetti is a three-time All-Cap-8 honoree. In 25 games as a junior in 1999, Gaetti batted .514 with nine home runs, 26 RBIs and 13 stolen bases. Baseball America ranks him as the No. 3 player in the state and projects him as a fifth- to eighth-round draft pick in June.
Hicks led NC State's Broughton trio in 1999, setting school records for home runs with 12 and RBIs with 36, while hitting .418. Kimball also broke the old school mark for homers, stroking 11 long balls, while drive in 21 runs and batting .345. Clougherty, the younger brother of former Wolfpack All-American Pat Clougherty, batted .340 with six home runs and 15 RBIs.
This past summer, Hicks and Kimball helped lead the Garner American Legion team, coached by former Wolfpack shortstop Moe Barbour, to the state championship and a berth in the national tournament. Hicks batted .481 with 22 home runs, while Kimball batted .377 with 21 homers.



