El Dorado News-Times

USC takedown of Bruins latest highlight of baseball rebuild

- By Eric Olson

Southern California's rebuild under first-year coach Andy Stankiewic­z isn't necessaril­y on the fast track. It's certainly moving right along, though.

The Trojans, whose 12 national titles are twice as many as any other school despite a down cycle that's lasted 25 years, enter the last week of April in unfamiliar territory — in the upper half of the Pac-12.

With at least 19 games to play, USC (24-14-1, 11-7) is one win from matching last year's total, and it already has won three more Pac-12 games.

Stankiewic­z said before the season that his team isn't loaded with elite talent but good enough to win its share of games. That's borne out. The offense and pitching are mostly middle of the pack in the Pac-12.

The everyday lineup is made up of four transfers, three holdovers and two freshmen. One of those freshmen, center fielder Austin Overn, is batting a team-best .354, slugging .602 and leads the nation with 12 triples.

The staff ERA of 4.10 is third in the conference. Tyler Stromsborg is the No. 1 starter for the second straight year and Notre Dame transfer Caden Aoki, coming off an injury last year, has solidified himself as the No. 2.

“For lack of a better term, we've been piecing it together as best we can,” Stankiewic­z said Monday. “The guys have been great. They work hard, they're coachable, they listen, they enjoy being together. It's put us in good spots as we compete on the weekends.”

USC opened Pac-12 play with four straight series wins, including one over a top-five Stanford. After getting swept at Oregon State, the Trojans this past weekend won a home series against UCLA for the first time since 2005.

They're 19-7 since a 5-7-1 start and head to Washington two games behind Pac-12 co-leaders Stanford and Arizona State.

An NCAA Tournament bid, which would be only USC's second since 2006, is far from secure. The Trojans have lost six onerun games and are No. 60 in the RPI, largely because of their 4-9-1 road record.

“Great programs, it doesn't matter. They play well on the road or at home," Stankiewic­z said, “and that's a hurdle we have to address.”

IN THE POLLS

LSU (32-7), the consensus No. 1 team, swept Mississipp­i on the road after pinch hitter Hayden Travinski's two-out, three-run homer in the top of the ninth inning helped the Tigers to a 7-6 win Sunday.

D1Baseball.com and Collegiate Baseball newspaper rank Wake Forest (34-6) second and South Carolina (34-6) third. Baseball America promoted South Carolina from sixth to second and continues to have Wake Forest third.

Wake Forest outscored Pittsburgh by a combined 40-5 on Saturday and Sunday after getting shut out 3-0 on Friday. South Carolina took three from Florida for one of the notable sweeps of the season.

VOLS SWEEP VANDY AGAIN

Tennessee swept Vanderbilt for the second year in a row and has won seven straight against the Commodores, the Volunteers' longest win streak in the series since 1993-94.

Griffin Merritt's 12th-inning home run produced a 4-3 walk-off win Friday. The Vols scored nine

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States