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Two Zips taken in MLB Draft

Friday, June 6th, 2008

Baseball

Two MLB teams selected Akron players in this week’s Amateur Draft.

The Minnesota Twins drafted pitcher Tom Farmer for the second-straight June. Farmer made his name in the Cape Cod league two summers ago. The Twins drafted him in the 20th round, but Farmer returned to school. This time, Minnesota selected him in the 47th round.

Two rounds later, the New York Mets drafted Doug McNulty, an outfielder/first baseman with whom I have shared several interesting conversations at local establishments. McNulty hit .321 and belted 12 home runs this season.

Track

Four Zips will compete for an NCAA Championship next weekend.

Stevi Large might be the Zips’ best shot at a national champion. She took first at regionals in the hammer throw last weekend.

Auston Papay is appearing at the NCAA Championships for the third time. The discus thrower placed 15th last spring.

Cadeau Kelley is making his second appearance at nationals. The MAC’s long jump champion placed fifth at regionals.

High jumper Ryan Jones earned one of 10 at-large berths to nationals. It will be the senior’s first and only chance at the meet.

The NCAA Championships will be held in Des Moines, Iowa from June 11-14.

A ravishing Third-Team All-American

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

“Ravishing” Josh Collmenter

Baseball

Central Michigan’s Josh Collmenter is an All-American.

That is great news for “Ravishing” Rick Rude fans in the wake of the Chris Benoit tragedy.

A ravishing pitcher of the year

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

Baseball

I don’t know how I missed this, but Central Michigan’s Josh Collmenter won MAC Pitcher of the Year last week.

Ravishing Josh Collmenter

It must have been a rude awakening for the rest of the conference.

Braves draft Farmer

Friday, June 8th, 2007

Baseball

The Zips might have lost their ace for 2008.

Tom Farmer, who scorched the prestigious Cape Cod League last summer, has a chance to be a Brave after Atlanta drafted him in the 20th round today.

The righthander struggled through his sophomore season, then sat out 2007 with a shoulder injury.

With two years of eligibility remaining, Farmer still may return to the Zips. From a scout I spoke with, he could improve himself to second-round status by proving his shoulder is fine and the Cape Cod performance was no fluke.

The scout also said some pitchers are just better facing hitters with wooden bats, like they use in most summer leagues. The sweet spot on an aluminum bat is much higher. Some metal bat homers are broken-bat dinkers with wood.

I heard Kurt Davidson, Akron’s first baseman and career home run leader, also was a likely draftee. Him being a junior probably scared some teams away. You have a stronger hand in negotiating a signing bonus when you can tell the team you will just return to school, meaning the organization wasted a pick.

Davidson, McNulty earn All-MAC honors

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

Baseball

Kurt Davidson and Doug McNulty will return for their senior seasons as All-MAC First Team players.

With these two guys in the middle of the order, Akron’s offense should be a powerhouse. Like I wrote earlier, the Zips will need some young pitchers to step up in order for the team to be a conference contender.

Track

The Midwest Regional begins today Friday.

Twenty-three Zips will attempt to finish in the top five in order to advance to the NCAA Championships.

You can follow the action online at this link.

By the way, six Zips earned a spot on the All-MAC academic team.

Softball

Jaclyn Spirtos, the senior catcher, is also an all-conference academic performer.

Turocy earns honor

Monday, May 21st, 2007

Baseball

After a complete-game four hitter against Miami on Thursday, Frank Turocy is the MAC East Pitcher of the Week.

With a team ERA of 6.08 — nearly a run higher than the opposition — pitching was the team’s weakness this year. The Zips’ rotation should be stronger next season, despite the loss of seniors Billy McKinney and Pat Gliha.

Turocy, Zach Yike and Steven Zemanek – all underclassmen — should be anchors of the rotation for the next two years. Assuming he doesn’t leave for pro baseball, Tom Farmer will return from injury as the team’s ace — and perhaps the MAC’s best pitcher.

As far as the offense goes, Charlie Lenhard is the only senior. Kurt Davidson must be a preseason player of the year candidate.

I’m not very high on Pat Bangston’s first two years as coach, but there’s no arguing the team’s record improved eight games in his second season.

Season ends with blowout

Sunday, May 20th, 2007

Baseball

Miami shelled Pat Gliha in his final career appearance for eight runs in 3.2 innings in a 13-0 blowout.

The Zips’ season concluded with a 23-24 record, as Miami also won 5-4 in game two of the series.

UA sports are almost over for this school year. The track team has several athletes who will compete at Regionals this week.

Zips take game one

Friday, May 18th, 2007

Baseball

Frank Turocy allowed only four hits and one run in a complete game 2-1 win over Miami Thursday.

The Zips (23-22, 8-14 MAC) will finish their season with two more games against the RedHawks — one today and one tomorrow.

I suppose an above-.500 record would be a decent consolation prize.

Football

“Dandy” Dan Kadar previewed Toledo’s season today.

I know the Zips won’t play the Rockets this year, but it’s interesting to know what they’re up to over in the MAC West (besides point shaving).

Zips season nearly over

Monday, May 14th, 2007

Baseball

Akron added a final home game to the schedule.

Youngstown State, whom the Zips (21-22, 7-14 MAC) planned to play April 11, will come to town Tuesday before Akron finishes off its season this weekend at Miami (Ohio).

Kent State won this weekend’s series at Lee Jackson Field by taking Sunday’s rubber match in extra innings. Ryne Romick and Steven Zemanek surrendered a boatload of runs in the 11th inning.

Now that the team has no chance at the postseason, you are excused from paying attention.

Football

Akron extended an offer to Okechuckwu Okoroha, a safety from Maryland.

Forget three times fast, just say his name once if you can.

Okoroha has several offers, including one from Penn State, which made him cry in happiness upon receiving it.

I don’t expect Akron will beat out the Nittany Lions, along with Boston College and Virginia for the 6-foot, 180-pound prospect, although he only runs a 4.8 in the 40-yard dash.

2008: a big recruiting year

Thursday, May 10th, 2007

Men’s basketball

As the Zips coaches enter the summer recruiting season, they have a larger task ahead than most years.

They will grant four scholarships. The level of success Akron has in bringing in its top targets — or more importantly, players who fit in Keith Dambrot’s system — could determine the team’s success from 2009 to 2013.

That’s not to mention that the team will need to replace Nick Dials, Jeremiah Wood, Cedrick Middleton and Quade Milum.

“2008 is a big year for us,” assistant coach Jeff Boals said this morning. “After we lose that class, we’ll be pretty young.

Akron has a database of a couple hundred high school juniors, broken down into three lists (A, B and C).

“Out of that class, we”ll probably bring in two guards and two power forwards or big kids,” Boals said. “We just try to identify the guys we really want.”

Per NCAA policy, coaches cannot discuss players they are recruiting until the player signs a letter of intent. The two major recruiting sites, however, say Akron already has extended six scholarship offers.

    Scout.com mentions small forward Nick Fruendt and power forward Marquise Simmons. Fruendt has offers from nine of the nation’s best mid-majors.

    Akron is Simmons’ only scholarship offer, but he has interest in Kentucky and Central Florida.

    Rivals.com adds four more to the list. Point guard Anthony Hitchens has offers from six MAC schools, plus Butler.

    The Zips also are going after Hitchens’ AAU teammate, Hakim McCullar, who is a 6-foot-7 power forward with offers from Akron, Miami (Ohio), Ball State and Oakland.

    Shooting guard Brian Walsh is considering offers from Memphis, West Virginia, Maryland and Pitt, among others.

    Drazen Zlovaric is a 6-8 European power forward with high-major offers.

Almost every Akron target was on campus a couple weeks ago for the King James Classic AAU tournament. That kind of national exposure helps the program.

“There were probably 300 Division I coaches here,” Boals said. “A lot of coaches said, ‘I can’t believe how nice your campus is.’”

While the football team has a recruiting advantage over the rest of the MAC because of its outstanding facilities and the promise of a new stadium, the basketball program has a subpar arena, offices and locker rooms. Boals did not want to be negative, but said there is room for improvement.

“They’re OK. They’re not bad. They’re not great,” he said. “(Athletic director) Mack Rhoades and coach (Dambrot) have been talking about a new locker room complex, making a team video room, a player’s lounge. There have been some talks about restructuring the JAR.”

Akron also could add two more guards before the summer is over. Lance Jeter, who transferred from Cincinnati’s football program, probably will join the team soon, although nothing is official yet. NCAA transfer rules would require him to sit out next year, and he already lost a year of eligibility.

Darryl Roberts also could join the team. The point guard from the Toledo area was recruited in 2006, but could not qualify academically.

“He’s finishing up some academic work,” Boals said. “I can’t tell you one way or another if he’ll be eligible.”

If Roberts can play, he would join a battle for the point guard position. As of now, true freshman Ronnie Steward and redshirt freshman Steve McNees will get most of the minutes. However, Boals mentioned how difficult it is for a player to sit out an entire year, without even practicing with the team. One example of that is Jimmy Conyers, who looked lost on offense at times last year.

“Jimmy had a good year, not a great year,” Boals said. “It’s so hard for a kid to sit out a whole year and not practice or play. Rec Center ball is one thing, but the speed of the game, learning the system. I can’t tell you (Roberts) would or wouldn’t play. It would be a big learning curve.”

Here are some other notes from my conversation with the assistant coach…

    Dambrot was upset to see John Rybak transfer. His shooting helped the team in games at the end of last season. In my opinion, it’s probably for the best. Rybak was at the back end of a logjam at small forward and didn’t appear to have a high ceiling.

    The coaching staff did pursue Alex Kellogg, the son of former Buckeye Clark Kellogg. Alex eventually signed with Providence. The three finalists were Providence, Akron and Miami (Ohio). “He was an athletic power forward — didn’t have a great skill level but had a great upside,” Boals said. “There’s not a lot of big kids out there.”

    Boals expects Conyers, a junior-to-be, to recover the year of eligibility that he lost due to a transcript error, effectively making him a sophomore-to-be. In order to play the fifth year, Conyers must be on track to graduate.

    You can’t out-Cedrick Cedrick Middleton, but if there’s a secondary workout warrior this offseason, it’s Nick Dials. The senior guard has done extensive abdominal work and run in marathon relays. “Nick Dials is having an unbelieveable spring,” Boals said.

    Akron’s coaches just love to rave about Middleton, though. “Cedrick … there’s not many kids like him in the country,” Boals said. “Coach says, ‘You need to hang out with Cedrick. You need to work out with Cedrick.’”

    The biggest position battle in the fall will be point guard. But maybe it won’t be a battle at all… “It will be a committee thing,” Boals said. “McNees is looking good. Ronnie Steward had a great year. It’s probably going to be freshmen coming in and playing. That’s a good thing with coach Dambrot’s system. It could be a situation where both Steve and Ronnie are on the court together.”

    Both guards run a faster paced offense than Dru Joyce. If you had to compare the combo to an NBA backcourt, it would be Phoenix’s. Steward is faster and a better shooter, like Leandro Barbosa. McNees is the better ballhandler and passer, like Steve Nash. “Both of those guys can put more pressure on the defense in pushing the ball up the floor than Dru,” Boals said. “Are they going to be better than Dru? Probably not.”

Softball

Pitcher Lindsey Bodeker is one of 10 players on the MAC’s All-Freshman team.

Baseball

The ABJ’s Stephanie Storm wrote about the first baseman Kurt Davidson, the new holder of UA’s career home run record.

If you follow the Aeros at all, I’d suggest bookmarking Storm’s blog. It’s a good read.