Home 2009 Season Coverage2009 Polls 2009 Collegiate Baseball releases 2009 Division 1 Pre-season Poll

2009 Collegiate Baseball releases 2009 Division 1 Pre-season Poll

by Donald J. Boyles
3 comments

25067201FROM CBB NEWS SOURCE

TUCSON, Ariz. — Louisiana State University has been ranked No. 1 in Collegiate Baseball newspaper’s Fabulous 40 pre-season NCAA Division I baseball poll.

Not since Louisiana State put together a run of five national championships from 1991-2000 have the Tigers been this loaded with talent. LSU features five Louisville Slugger pre-season All-Americans from a team that finished fifth at the College World Series last season. The players include:

OF Blake Dean (.353, 20 HR, 18 2B, 73 RBI).

SS D.J. LeMahieu (terrific defense, .337, 6 HR, 11 2B, 44 RBI).

C Micah Gibbs (great defense, .322, 16 2B, 35 RBI).

2B Ryan Schimpf (.320, 12 HR, 18 2B, 54 RBI, 16 SB).

OF Jared Mitchell (remarkable speed, .297, 6 HR, 10 2B, 29 RBI, 16 SB).

Seven position player starters are back along with a number of quality pitchers. The talent level is so high that at least four players may be picked in the first or second round of the Free Agent Draft in 2009 and 2010.

Many of the starters are from a recruiting class ranked No. 1 in the nation by Collegiate Baseball in 2007. That class featured nine players who were drafted, eight high school All-Americans and three first team junior college All-Americans among the 19 players the Tigers brought in.

This year’s projected high draft picks include OF Jared Mitchell (first round), SS D.J. LeMahieu (first round) and OF Blake Dean (second round). All-American catcher Micah Gibbs is expected to be a first rounder in 2010 since he is a sophomore this season. Last year’s ball club came on like gangbusters toward the end of the season with a 23-game winning streak, the longest single-season streak in Southeastern Conference history. Tiger Head Coach Paul Mainieri has now guided two different squads to 23-game win streaks – his 2006 Notre Dame ball club and LSU’s 2008 team.

Pitching, despite losing three terrific hurlers from a year ago in Jared Bradford (10-4, 4.48 ERA), Ryan Verdugo (9-4, 4.12 ERA) and Blake Martin (5-3, 5.08 ERA), is expected to be strong.

“We brought in several talented freshmen pitchers last season who played more of a secondary role behind junior college transfers,” said Mainieri.

“We needed the experience of the JUCO kids right away. While the JC guys were pitching most of the innings, (6-foot-7, 225-pound) Anthony Ranaudo, Daniel Bradshaw and Austin Ross gained valuable experience as we brought them along slowly. Ranaudo is a former 11th round pick in the draft and sat at 92-94 mph all fall for us and topped out at 96 mph. He also has a good breaking ball and changeup. He has the makings of being a top-flight Friday night starter for us. Bradshaw and Ross are solid, although not overpowering with 88-91 mph fastballs. We have a solid 3-man rotation and also have Louis Coleman (8-1, 1.95 ERA, 62 K, 10 BB) back for his senior year. He will probably be our closer. Plus, we have other quality pitchers. I am extremely happy at our prospects in this area of the team.”

Mainieri said his position players are special.

“It is rare to have seven starting position players back after playing at the College World Series the year before. In fact, we really have eight. Shawn Ochinko (1B/C) played in 47 games last season. While we did lose Matt Clark who hit the most home runs in the nation last year with 28, we have a bunch of quality players who are very experienced. We also had a solid recruiting class which will help with team depth.”

Mainieri said that he is striving to have a balance between power and speed on offense which his teams have been noted for over the years.

“We have some speed guys such as Mitchell and Leon Landry in the outfield who will help track down a number of balls. But both have line drive power and can hit pitches out of the park. They are tremendous athletes. A couple of others with underrated speed are Schimpf and LeMahieu.”

Catching is an area Mainieri is extremely excited about.

“Micah Gibbs, after his junior year in two seasons, will be a solid first or second round pick,” said Mainieri.

“He is a good receiver (threw out 17 runners trying to steal last season, only one error all season in 392 chances) and swings from both sides of the plate. He is as good as there is in the nation and was the starting catcher for Team USA last summer when they went 24-0. If you look back on our final 29 games of the season, we won 26 of them with Micah behind the plate. Then Team USA won 24 in a row through the summer. So as a starting catcher, his teams have gone 50-3 in one year which is absolutely amazing.”

Other players who had memorable summers include Schimpf who was MVP of the Valley League post-season tournament.

Leon Landry was MVP of the Cal Ripkin Sr. League post-season. And LeMahieu played in the Cape Cod League for Harwich and was the regular-season MVP.

“I feel we will be extremely strong up the middle with our catcher, two middle infielders and centerfielder.”

As far as injuries, LSU was healthy as Collegiate Baseball went to press.

Post-season experience is something that LSU has on its side as well after having success in regional, super regional and College World Series competition last season.

The final piece of the puzzle is post-season coaching experience. Mainieri, entering his third season at LSU, has now directed two different teams to the College World Series.

He led Notre Dame to the 2002 CWS, when the Irish posted a 1-2 mark in Omaha, and last year with LSU. He has been a college coach for 26 years with a record of 942-537-6.

For a detailed rundown on the top 40 teams, see the Jan. 2, 2009 edition of Collegiate Baseball newspaper.

The “Collegiate Baseball” Newspaper poll is the oldest college baseball poll. Its birth took place during the 1957 college baseball season.

Collegiate Baseball Newspaper’s

NCAA Div. I Pre-Season Poll (As of Dec. 22, 2008)

www.baseballnews.com
Rank School (’08 Final Record) Points
1. Louisiana St. (49-19-1) 495
2. North Carolina (54-14) 494
3. Rice (47-15) 489
4. Georgia (45-25-1) 486
5. Stanford (41-24-2) 484
6. Arizona St. (49-13) 482
7. Florida St. (54-14) 479
8. Louisville (41-21) 476
9. Texas A&M (46-19) 473
10. Texas (39-22) 470
11. Mississippi (39-25) 467
12. Georgia Tech. (41-21) 465
13. Cal. St. Fullerton (41-22) 462
14. Oklahoma St. (44-18) 459
15. Baylor (32-26) 457
16. Fresno St. (47-31) 456
17. San Diego (44-17) 453
18. Miami, Fla. (53-11) 451
19. Kentucky (44-19) 448
20. U.C. Irvine (42-18) 445
21. UCLA (33-27) 443
22. Missouri (39-21) 440
23. Pepperdine (38-21) 439
24. Southern California (28-28) 436
25. Florida (34-24) 435
26. Clemson (31-27-1) 432
27. Notre Dame (33-21-1) 430
28. Coastal Carolina (50-14) 428
29. Michigan (46-14) 425
30. U.C. Santa Barbara (35-21) 423
31. East Carolina (42-21) 422
32. Missouri St. (40-17) 420
33. Southern Mississippi (42-22) 417
34. Tulane (39-22-1) 415
35. Arizona (42-19) 414
36. Wichita St. (48-17) 410
37. Texas Christian (44-19) 409
38. Oregon St. (28-24) 406
39. California (33-21-2) 402
40. Alabama (35-28) 398
Other Teams Receiving Votes: Vanderbilt, South Carolina, Arkansas, Auburn, Long Beach St., Oregon, Virginia, North Carolina St., Houston, Kent St., Santa Clara, U.C. Riverside, Oral Roberts, Nebraska, Kennesaw St., Ohio St., Oklahoma, San Diego St., Tennessee, Mississippi St., New Mexico, Jacksonville St., Elon, Western Kentucky, Dallas Baptist, N.C. Charlotte, South Florida, St. John’s, Winthrop, Purdue, James Madison, Marshall, Central Florida, Washington, Washington St., Georgia Southern, Northwestern St., Lamar, Texas-San Antonio, Southern, Louisiana-Monroe, New Orleans, Hawaii, San Jose St., San Francisco.

Source: Collegiate Baseball Newspaper

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3 comments

scott December 22, 2008 - 2:19 pm

D.J. LeMahieu turns 21 after the June 2009, but his birthday falls within a 45 day window after the draft that allows him to be draft elgible.

Donald J. Boyles December 22, 2008 - 2:26 pm

You can make a case for North Carolina and LSU being #1- heck 1A and 1B in my book.

Texas might be a little too high at #10 right now-they have too mnay holes to fill that will dictate the success of their season.

OSU at #14- That might be dependent on Andy Oliver

Baylor- I would flip Baylor and Texas- Baylor could put a serious run on the BIG 12 this year.

BullysRHman December 22, 2008 - 4:25 pm

LSU rated too high. Stanford and Louisville rated too high. Baylor rated to low. San Diego is too low. ND, Michigan, and USC too high.

Many of the the “other” teams should be in the top 40. Lots of talent.

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