The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

With sluggers gone, Georgia Tech seeks new formula

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

Georgia Tech’s baseball program celebrated in July when eight of its players were selected in the MLB draft, tied for fourth-highest in Division I and the most at Tech since 2010. The coming season, which begins today with a home series against Miami (Ohio), brings a challenge for coach Danny Hall to compete in the ACC after such a massive talent drain.

“We’re not ranked in many polls, and that’s a good thing,” Hall said at the start of his 30th season at Tech. “If I was voting in a poll, I probably wouldn’t rank us right now, either. I think we have to prove ourselves to see where we’re going to go.”

From their lineup that finished ranked in the top 10 in Division I in batting average, scoring, slugging percentage, on-base percentage and home runs per game, the Yellow Jackets lost 65% of their at-bats and 69% of their home runs to the profession­al ranks, most notably first-round pick Kevin Parada (school-record 26 home runs in 2022) and fellow All-americans Chandler Simpson (Ncaa-leading .433 batting average) and Andrew Jenkins (.381 batting average).

Last season’s team and this season’s, Hall said, are totally different.

“We need to be a way-better pitching team and play way-better defense, particular­ly infield defense, than we did last year,” Hall said.

Banking on improved pitching and defense has become something of a tradition at Russ Chandler Stadium. For where hitting rarely has been a problem, getting opponents out has. In the past 10 seasons, the Jackets’ slugging percentage has ranked in the top 50 nationally eight times. Over the same decade, Tech’s ERA — a reflection of both pitching and fielding — has not been in the top 50 once and outside of the top 150 seven times, including 227th last season. Long of bat and short of arm, the Jackets finished 36-24 and reached the NCAA Tournament, where their season ended in the Knoxville, Tennessee, regional.

“We’ve been placing a lot of time on defense, pitching, bunting, stealing bases — everything — so we’re ready to manufactur­e runs any way we can,” said John Giesler, a candidate to start at first base.

Tech, picked fifth in the ACC

Coastal Division, isn’t just replacing most of its batting production. The Jackets also lost pitchers who covered 59% of the team’s innings and made 46 out of 60 starts, perhaps most notably Marquis Grissom, son of the former Braves outfielder. And it wasn’t as though the Jackets’ pitching was so deep as to deny younger arms opportunit­ies. The Jackets ranked 207th in Division I in walks per nine innings.

Against Miami (Hall’s alma mater) this weekend, Tech will start Dawson Brown (son of Tech great and six-time MLB All-star Kevin Brown) today, Logan Mcguire on Saturday and Jackson Finley on Sunday. Brown and Mcguire primarily pitched out of the bullpen last season. Finley is a twoway player who pitched a total of four innings after returning from Tommy John surgery.

“I think for the fall, the majority of the time, we were focused on first-pitch strikes, winning 1-1 counts,” Finley said. “But the overall goal was to be more consistent with throwing strikes, especially with off-speed pitches and not worrying so much about getting strikeouts. Just getting the ball in play to where our fielders can make plays and get more outs.”

Hall expressed his utmost confidence in his coaching staff, including associate head coach and hitting coach James Ramsey, pitching coach Danny Borrell and volunteer coach Zeke Pinkham. (The Jackets staff is augmented by perhaps the only undergradu­ate assistant coach anywhere who made four MLB All-star games — Tech great Matt Wieters, who has returned to campus to finish his degree after his 12-year MLB career.)

Despite losing the likes of Parada, Simpson and Jenkins, it won’t be a surprise if the Jackets end up mashing the ball. Outfielder Stephen Reid (.333 batting average in 2022), third baseman Drew Compton (58 RBIS) and middle infielder Jadyn Jackson (.252 batting average) are Tech’s returning everyday starters. A player to watch is Angelo Dispigna, who transferre­d from Mercer after leading the Bears in home runs (15) last season. A freshman of note is first baseman Carsten Sabathia, the 6-foot-4, 240-pound son of Cy Young Award winner C.C. Sabathia.

“He’s going to be a very good player one day,” Giesler said. “You watch his (batting practice), he puts balls over the batter’s eye (wall) like nobody’s business.”

 ?? DANNY KARNIK/GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS ?? Georgia Tech’s John Giesler, shown at bat in 2022, is a candidate to start at first base as the season opens.
DANNY KARNIK/GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS Georgia Tech’s John Giesler, shown at bat in 2022, is a candidate to start at first base as the season opens.

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