Imperial Valley Press

College ball poised to gain fans longer MLB lockout drags on

- BY ERIC OLSON

Kush Patel showed up at Minute Maid Park wearing the No. 43 jersey of Houston Astros ace Lance McCullers Jr. and hankering for some baseball.

This time, instead of watching his favorite team, Patel was there to see the Tennessee Volunteers play the Texas Longhorns in a battle of college baseball heavyweigh­ts.

“I’m a diehard Astros fan so it’s just good to be back in this building, watching some baseball,” Patel said. “I’m more of an MLB guy, but I started watching college baseball last year for the College World Series. In college, it seems like the players are allowed to have more passion, so that definitely makes the game a little more interestin­g and fun to watch.”

The college game might turn out to be an attractive alternativ­e for Patel and other fans if the Major League Baseball lockout extends deep into the spring.

College baseball has experience­d unpreceden­ted growth over the past decade with schools spending hundreds of millions of dollars to build new stadiums and facilities and increase coaching salaries. The level of play is at an all-time high and will get even better, people in the game say, because the reduction of rounds in the MLB draft means more elite players will go to school, or stay in school, rather than head to the pros.

Those factors, plus the lockout, give the college an opportunit­y to expand its fan base.

“For someone that doesn’t know much about the college game, once they see it, they may not want to go back to watching the pro game as much as the college game,” American Baseball Coaches Associatio­n executive director Craig Keilitz said. “The passion in the college game and the love for the game itself, every game seems to be ‘ the game.’ It’s a little bit different than a 162-game season. The passion, excitement, the collegiate feel can’t be matched.”

One of the college game’s premier events, the Shriners Children’s College Classic, was held over the weekend at Minute Maid Park. Houston is in between the campuses of Texas and LSU, and a game between those teams on Saturday attracted 24,787. Crowds of better than 16,000 turned out for other matchups.

Oklahoma coach Skip Johnson said the lively atmosphere differenti­ates college ball from MLB.

“You look at Major League Baseball and their playoffs – all our kids aspire to be major leaguers,” Johnson said. “But there’s something different about March Madness and the super regionals and (CWS in) Omaha, and you hear, ‘Boomer Sooner!’ Or the regional we played in at Florida State and they were doing, ‘ K-Time, K-Time, K-Time!’

“That’s the spirit of the game, and it makes the hairs stand up on the back of your neck, and it makes you want to go out there and compete and get after it. It’s almost like a football game on a baseball field at times. So, I think that’s what’s been fun about it.”

Schools, especially in the Power 5 conference­s, are showing more commitment to their baseball programs as the sport’s profile is rising nationally.

Sports Business Journal reported total spending on college baseball and softball stadiums went over $256 million in 2020, up from $100 million in 2019.

 ?? PHILLIP/AP DAVID J. ?? Oklahoma’s Jackson Nicklaus (15) is tagged out at second by LSU’s Jordan Thompson (13) while trying to stretch a single into a double during an NCAA college baseball game at Minute Maid Park, home of the Houston Astros on Friday in Houston.
PHILLIP/AP DAVID J. Oklahoma’s Jackson Nicklaus (15) is tagged out at second by LSU’s Jordan Thompson (13) while trying to stretch a single into a double during an NCAA college baseball game at Minute Maid Park, home of the Houston Astros on Friday in Houston.

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