El Dorado News-Times

Johnson proved himself in West, now is out to be SEC’s best

- By Eric Olson AP Sports Writer

Jay Johnson is among the few college baseball coaches from the West Coast who have entered the cauldron that is the Southeaste­rn Conference.

In his first season at LSU, he smashed any notion he would be overmatche­d in a league that has produced three straight national champions and eight of the last 13.

The Tigers won 40 games, had their first top-four finish in the SEC since 2017 and reached an NCAA regional final.

Johnson was just getting started.

LSU signed the nation's best recruiting class, brought in the top-rated group of transfers and has back the favorite to be the No. 1 overall pick in the 2023 MLB draft in center fielder Dylan Crews.

The Tigers will open the season at home Friday night against Western Michigan as the consensus No. 1 team in the polls, the first time since 2019 they've had a top preseason ranking.

Any season not ending with LSU among the eight teams playing in the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, is a disappoint­ment to the Tigers' passionate fans. That's the minimum expectatio­n this year.

“I'm not a betting man, but if you want to bet, I would imagine they're going to be one of those eight hot teams in Omaha and if they stay hot they'll win the whole darn thing," said Andy Lopez, a College Baseball Hall of Fame coach and Pac-12 Network analyst who was Johnson's predecesso­r at Arizona.

Johnson made two CWS appearance­s in six seasons at Arizona before he became the third coach to move from the West Coast to the SEC.

The first two were Lopez and Dave Serrano. Lopez was hired by Florida three years after he won the 1992 national title at Pepperdine.

He led the Gators to two CWS appearance­s over seven seasons. He spent the last 14 years of his career at Arizona, winning the 2012 national championsh­ip before he retired in 2015.

Johnson succeeded him in Tucson and the two are friends.

Serrano left Cal State Fullerton after the 2011 season and coached Tennessee six years, never finishing higher than fifth in the SEC East or making an NCAA Tournament.

The 45-year-old Johnson grew up in the Northern California town of Oroville, played at Point Loma Nazarene in San Diego and worked his way up the coaching ranks from assistant at San Diego to head coach at Nevada and Arizona.

“I was very content at Arizona and really believed that was going to be my lifetime job,” Johnson said. “I loved those players and what we accomplish­ed there and was very comfortabl­e.”

As a player and young coach, Johnson followed the Tigers and iconic coach Skip Bertman from afar as they won five national titles from 1991 to 2000.

“For me, a lot is made out of the West Coast-to-the-South thing," Johnson said.

"In reality, coaching is coaching, recruiting is recruiting, and so I just wanted to test myself against the best players, the best coaches, the best programs in college baseball right now.”

Johnson, who will earn $1.25 million in the second year of his five-year contract, said his plan was to build for 2023.

He used year one to identify the program's greatest needs and addressed them in recruiting and through the transfer portal.

Starting pitching was the first concern. Johnson said the 2022 rotation, by metrics he and his staff use, ranked 11th out of 14 in the SEC.

Johnson hired pitching coach Wes Johnson away from the Minnesota Twins and signed elite transfers in Paul Skenes (Air Force), Thatcher Hurd (UCLA) and Christian Little (Vanderbilt). Right-handers Chase Shores and Aiden Moffett and lefty Griffin Herring are the top freshman arms.

The portal also yielded Tommy White, who hit 27 homers as a freshman for North Carolina State and will take over at third for first-round draft pick Jacob Berry.

Johnson acknowledg­ed his biggest adjustment in the move to LSU was dealing with the intense fan and media interest. Shortly after he took the job, he asked Lopez about the SEC culture.

Lopez said the anecdote he offered Johnson applies today as much as it did 30 years ago.

Lopez told of the reception his Gators received as they got off the bus for the first game of a three-game series at LSU.

To get to the clubhouse, the visitors had to walk through a gantlet of fans in purple and gold holding brooms and warning the Gators they were going to get swept.

“And this is Friday at 3 in the afternoon,” Lopez said. “Dang, these people are serious here. For a kid who wants to be in that environmen­t and thrives in it, it kind of gets you juiced. I think a guy like Jay Johnson thrives in it.”

Ten teams to watch in college baseball, listed in alphabetic­al order with 2022 records: ARKANSAS (46-21)

Dave Van Horn has led the Razorbacks to the College World Series in seven of his 20 seasons and is still looking for the program's first national championsh­ip. Arkansas made it to its CWS bracket final last season and is the only team in the country with at least 45 wins in each of the last five seasons, excluding the pandemic-shortened 2020.

LSU (40-22)

The consensus No. 1 team in the preseason rankings won the offseason with second-year coach Jay Johnson upgrading his pitching staff through recruiting and the transfer portal and adding one of the top power hitters in the country in Tommy White from North Carolina State. Dylan Crews remains the star

and is on track to be the top overall pick in the Major League Baseball draft.

MARYLAND (48-14)

Defending Big Ten champion Terrapins set program records with 48 wins and 137 homers and hosted a regional for the first time. They bring back their batting leader in Luke Schliger and Jason Savacool, an eight-game winner who went at least six innings in 15 of 16 starts. Big additions are Northeast Conference player of the year Matt Woods (Bryant) and Elijah Lambros (South Carolina).

MISSISSIPP­I (42-23)

The Rebels rebounded from a midseason funk to win their first national championsh­ip as the last at-large team selected for the NCAA Tournament. SS Jacob Gonzalez is a projected top-10 draft pick and fully healthy after injuring a knee last fall. Five of the starting nine players are back in addition to pitchers who threw half of the innings at the College World Series.

OKLAHOMA STATE (42-22)

Six everyday players return, and transfer Juaron Watts-Brown is conference preseason newcomer and pitcher of the year. Watts-Brown threw the first complete game no-hitter in Long Beach State history, and his 13.62 strikeouts per nine innings were a program record and fifth nationally. Nolan McLean hit a team-leading 19 homers.

TENNESSEE (57-9)

The Volunteers set a program record for wins and won SEC regular-season and tournament titles for the first time since 1995, but losing a three-game super regional to Notre Dame still smarts after Tennessee spent most of the season atop the polls. The foundation is set with the core of a pitching staff that led the nation in ERA and held opponents to a .199 batting average.

TCU (38-22)

The Horned Frogs' expectatio­ns are high even though they lost their entire weekend rotation. Cam Parker split time between starting and relieving and likely will be the Friday night starter. Big 12 preseason player of the year Brayden Taylor had 28 extra-base hits and 50 RBIs.

STANFORD (47-18)

The Cardinal looks to rebound after going twogames-and-out at the CWS for the first time in 18 appearance­s. Carter Graham led the Pac-12 with 22 homers and Tommy Troy batted .500 with five homers in postseason. Quinn Matthews went from starter to closer and was only pitcher in country with nine wins and nine saves.

UCLA (40-24)

Like many years, the Bruins' biggest question mark is offense. They hit only 47 homers and were in the bottom half of the Pac-12 in homers, slugging and scoring. The pitching seems to replenish itself each season. One of the intriguing arms is Alonzo Treadwell, a 6-foot-8, 230-pounder who goes from closer to weekend starter.

WAKE FOREST (41-19-1)

The Demon Deacons made the biggest one-year improvemen­t in program history after going 20-27 in 2021, and the ceiling is extremely high with the return of ACC pitcher of the year Rhett Lowder and the rest of the weekend rotation. Run support won't be an issue. Wake batted .319 and averaged 9.2 runs per game. Brock Wilken, who had 23 homers and 77 RBIs, is one of the top offensive players in the country.”

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