Dayton Daily News

Gators look to build on first CWS title

- By Mark Long

GAINESVILL­E, FLA. — The lifesize picture is impossible to miss, a constant reminder of what Florida accomplish­ed last year and the goal for this season.

The enlarged photo of the Gators celebratin­g their first baseball national championsh­ip in Omaha, Nebraska, adorns the lobby of the team facility. The championsh­ip trophy is there, too.

Players and coaches walk by them all the time. The Gators hope to add to the display in five months. No one would be surprised if they did.

Florida is No. 1 in every major preseason poll, and for good reason. Coach Kevin O’Sullivan returns five starters and most of the nation’s best pitching staff, a rotation that includes two right-handers (Brady Singer and Jackson Kowar) projected to be first-round draft picks in June.

No doubt, the Gators are stacked and capable of repeating. They opened the season Friday against Siena.

“We’re not just trying to make it to Omaha,” righthande­r Tyler Dyson said. “We’re not just trying to make it to the Super Regionals. We’re trying to win it (all). You’ve got to compete. You’ve got to be willing to sacrifice what you can to win it all because we know how it feels to win it all. We don’t want to lose the last game of the year.”

Florida relied on pitching and defense to get to the College World Series in 2017 and used that combinatio­n to sweep LSU in the best-of-three finals.

The Gators lost a few key pieces in the draft, most notably ace Alex Faedo, shortstop Dalton Guthrie and catcher Mike Rivera. But they return a trio of right-handed starters — Singer, Kowar and Dyson — as well as All-American closer Michael Byrne, infielders Deacon Liput and Jonathan India, senior captain JJ Schwarz and outfielder­s Austin Langworthy, Nick Horvath and Nelson Maldonado. Throw in one of the nation’s top recruiting classes, led by highly touted shortstop Brady McConnell, and Florida was the popular preseason pick.

O’Sullivan knows his team has everything needed to return to Omaha and understand­s how much pressure will be on his players. He even called Oregon State coach Pat Casey a few weeks ago and “picked his brain a little bit.”

Oregon State (2006-07) is one of four teams to repeat as national champions in the last 40 years, joining Stanford (1987-88), LSU (1996-97) and South Carolina (2010-11).

“If you look at the national champions over the last 10 years, there have been quite a few teams that have not lived up to expectatio­ns the following year,” O’Sullivan said. “I’ve reached out to quite a few people and asked, ‘What would you have done differentl­y?’”

O’Sullivan learned that keeping the locker room together is a key, so he included the team’s 16 newcomers (12 freshmen and four junior college transfers) in every championsh­ip-related celebratio­n. They were recognized on the football field last fall, on the basketball court last week and been part of autograph sessions since.

He also has talked extensivel­y to his team about turning the page.

“We’re not defending a national championsh­ip,” O’Sullivan said. “We’ve got different players; it’s a different team. I want this team to write their own chapter, their own book . ...

“The fact of the matter is we’ve got a good team, but we’ve got to get better. We’ve got some question marks like everybody else does. I do like this team. I do think they are heading in the right direction as far as putting last year behind them, but time will tell.”

 ?? (FLA.) SUN 2017 BRAD MCCLENNY / THE GAINESVILL­E ?? “I want this team to write their own chapter,” Florida coach Kevin O’Sullivan says.
(FLA.) SUN 2017 BRAD MCCLENNY / THE GAINESVILL­E “I want this team to write their own chapter,” Florida coach Kevin O’Sullivan says.

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