Texarkana Gazette

Injuries imperil Horned Frogs’ tournament odds

- By Eric Olson

TCU came into the season shooting for a fifth straight trip to the College World Series. With a month left in the regular season, the Horned Frogs will be hardpresse­d to even make the NCAA Tournament.

The Frogs (19-17, 6-8) are fifth in the Big 12 and No. 86 in the RPI after losing three straight at Baylor over the weekend. They’ll likely have to win the Big 12 Tournament to make an NCAA regional for the 14th time in 15 years.

“No question about that,” coach Jim Schlossnag­le said Monday. “If we went on some crazy run, we might be able to do it. It’s certainly headed toward a conference tournament situation.”

For the second straight year, TCU will finish the season without offensive star Luken Baker. The junior first baseman broke a bone in his left leg while running the bases against Abilene Christian last Tuesday. Last year, he injured his left arm in a collision at first base and missed the last 21 games.

The Frogs also have been without No. 1 starting pitcher Jared Janczak for all but one inning since March 30, and he likely won’t return until the first week of May as he recovers from a nerve inflammati­on.

TCU’s margin for error already was thin. Three players in their recruiting class got drafted and didn’t come to school, and the Frogs entered 2018 having to replace six everyday players.

“Being a private school that doesn’t have extra financial aid, we’re like a small-market team in the big leagues,” Schlossnag­le said. “The guys that we’re invested in, they have to stay healthy, they have to have good seasons, and when they do, we can compete with anybody. When we have misfortune or we make a mistake in recruiting or get hit in the draft, then the depth of our team gets exposed.”

Schlossnag­le was counting on pitching to carry the Frogs. But in addition to Janczak’s problems, Saturday starter Sean Wymer had back issues in February and March. Janczak, Wymer and the other weekend starter, Nick Lodolo, have a combined 4.36 ERA—“not up to the level we like to pitch at,” Schlossnag­le said.

“Hopefully we figure something out and make a late run,” the coach added, “but without Baker offensivel­y, we have to play super, super clean fundamenta­l baseball—especially against good teams—to win.”

Here’s a look around the country:

IN THE POLLS

Florida (34-8), which lost a midweek game to Jacksonvil­le before winning two of three at Kentucky, remained No. 1 in the D1Baseball.com and Baseball America rankings. Stanford (30-5) swept three games at Arizona and was promoted to No. 1 by Collegiate Baseball newspaper.

LONGEST STREAK SINCE 2015

At 25 in a row, Tennessee Tech is on the longest win streak in Division I since Illinois reeled off 27 straight in 2015. The Golden Eagles (34-5) outscored Southern Illinois 33-9 in a three-game weekend sweep. They visit Tennessee today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States