Friday, April 17, 2009

Dwyer a first-rounder?

By: Will Vandervort

A few months ago, Clemson pitcher Chris Dwyer told my good friend Paul Strelow at The State (Columbia) Newspaper that he isn’t worried about anything other than helping Clemson reach its goals this year.

Those are admirable words and are probably true. But after pitching a two-hit complete game against one of the best hitting teams in college baseball last Saturday, the 6-foot-2 freshman might have a little bit more on his mind right now.

See Dwyer, a lefty who can throw the baseball in the mid-to-low 90s on a consistent basis, turned 21 years old last Friday. What does that have to do with anything, you may ask? Everything.

See Dwyer is one of those few college freshmen that can be selected in the Amateur Baseball Draft this June. Usually a baseball player has to wait three years from the time he starts taking college classes to be considered for the draft, but any college player who turns 21 within 45 days after the June draft is eligible to be selected.

“This usually comes into play for some sophomores every once in a while, and rarely does it happen for a freshman,” said Kevin Goldstein of baseballprospectus.com.

Goldstein said Dwyer is being looked at by some scouts as a possible first-round selection in the June draft and what he did last week to the Miami Hurricanes did not hurt his stock. Dwyer, who will get the start today at Virginia Tech, has a 4-2 record with a 4.20 ERA so far for the Tigers. In his 47 innings of work, opponents are batting just .210 and he has recorded 47 strikeouts to 18 walks.

Because of his college status Dwyer has a rare bargaining tool should clubs want to bid for his services. Several clubs offered to draft him in the fifth round last year but they passed because he intentionally carried such a high price tag. He eventually was selected by the New York Yankees in the 36th round and thanks to a stress fracture in his lower leg; the Yanks did not really try and sign him.

Some think Dwyer might be a low-end first-round pick in June and if that’s the case, some might be willing to pay the asking price he had last year. If the 6-foot-2, 200-pound lefty decides not to go pro this year, then he will face this same question again next year and the year after that.

Though it is a nice bargaining tool to have, it can also become annoying or become a curse. It’s hard to imagine, however, Dwyer being a pick somewhere in the first three rounds and not jumping to the next level. But nobody thought he would turn down fifth-round money either.

In case you are curious how Dwyer became a 21-year old freshman in the first place, he started elementary school a year late and then chose to repeat his junior year of high school when he transferred to a prep boarding school.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

The bats come alive

By: Will Vandervort

It appears the Tiger that was lurking in the weeds for better than half
the college baseball season has now started to pounce on its prey.

That Tiger of course is the Clemson baseball team which just completed an
impressive two game sweep of Western Carolina with a 13-2 win last night
at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. In all, Clemson outscored the Catamounts 24-3
in the two games combined and have now won four straight.

Keep in mind this is the same Western Carolina team that took two of three
games from then No. 24 Southern Cal in Los Angeles earlier in the season
and was 20-12 coming into the series.

During the Tigers four-game winning streak, which included two wins over a
top five Miami team last weekend, the y have scored 42 runs off 49 hits.
It's the kind of consistency the team was missing earlier in the year.

Since the first day of spring on March 21, Clemson has scored five or more
runs 15 times, seven or more runs 11 times and eight or more runs seven
times.

Ben Paulsen has been solid at the plate all season, but finally guys like
Kyle Parker and Jeff Schaus are starting to heat up at the same time.
Parker went 7-for-8 with a homer, six RBIs, and five runs in the two
games, while Paulsen added four hits, and Schaus had three. Wilson Boyd,
who was just inserted in to the lineup last week following injury, totaled
three hits and six RBIs.

Over the last 10 games, Clemson has scored at least six runs in every one
and is averaging 8.7 runs, while posting a 7-3 record during that stretch.

And who says scoring doesn't help pitching? The Tigers' pitching staff had
a 1.50 ERA and 25 strikeouts against only three walks in the Western
Carolina series and in the second game against Miami, freshman Chris Dwyer
had a complete game two-hitter against the Hurricanes. The Tigers won that
game 9-1.

Clemson (25-12, 11-7 ACC) should continue the hitting this weekend as it
faces a Virginia Tech pitching staff that has a 5.20 ERA collectively.
Though the Hokies have won four straight ACC games and are 22-12 overall,
the No. 18 Tigers have a solid chance to continue their current climb in
the ACC standings.

Clemson is currently in first place in the Atlantic Division and is in
second place overall behind Georgia Tech (10-5-1). The Tigers are 11-1
against Virginia Tech since the Hokies joined the ACC and have won five
straight in Blacksburg, the site of the weekend series.

Can they keep it up? I guess we will see. But you have to like their
chances as they try to continue that momentum before heading into next
week's schedule which will have Coast Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia
Tech on the docket.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Odds and ends

By: Will Vandervort

I'd like to take a second to go ahead and recommend Dan Scott's Big League BBQ in Liberty. Some of my friends over in Clemson and I made the short trip
yesterday for his opening and it was well worth it.

I'm not just saying that because Dan is my friend. It was truly great and
the sweet tea was awesome. I got the chopped pork plate with fries and Mac
'n' cheese. It was outstanding. It is really good stuff. I hear the potato
salad and the slaw are good as well. You should go and check it out.

Now that I'm hungry again, let's talk some Clemson sports.

The baseball program will be back in action tonight as it makes the trip
to Cullowhee, N.C. to play Western Carolina at 6 p.m. The same two play
again tomorrow night at The Doug. Those this mini-series doesn't have the
same draw or feel as last week's two with South Carolina and Miami, this
is a chance for the Tigers to show some consistency by beating a pretty
good Western Carolina ballclub.

The fact Clemson is a relatively young squad as a whole, means it is due
for a possible let down after two emotionally charged series. I guess we
will see.

The 18th-ranked Tigers hope to keep the bats going against Western
Carolina. In their last eight games, they have scored no fewer than 6 runs
in an outing and are averaging 7.9 runs per game. Clemson is coming off a
series in which it outscored the Hurricanes 26-19 and outhit them .352 to
.255. The Tigers had 38 hits in the three-game series.

Clemson also hit .405 with runners in scoring position and .452 with two
outs. Matt Sanders went 6-for-9 with a homer and seven RBIs, while Jeff
Schaus went 7-for-14 with four runs scored. Wilson Boyd totaled six hits
and five runs and Kyle Parker went 4-for-10 with two homers and seven RBIs
in the series.

As for the Trevor Adair situation, there is more to the story than what we
have heard through news outlets and we should no more in the coming weeks.
However, the men's soccer coach still remains on a leave of absence until
a full investigation by the university is completed.

Because of the nature of the situation and since this is a family issue,
I'm going to respect Coach Adair and the situation and not speculate on
anything other than what the facts are. Right now, those facts are, Adair,
who has been in charge of the men's program since 1995, was charged with
two counts of assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature stemming
from a family dispute this past weekend.

I will try to provide more when the situation warrants it.

Now back to the playing fields. I want to wish Nancy Harris and her
women's tennis team good luck at the ACC Championships this week. The
Tigers, the No. 3 seed, are the defending champions. I have had the
pleasure to cover this team the last couple of years and they are a fun
team to watch.

Of course keep in touch with us at CUTigers.com. We will have more
football news and recruiting information over there so go check us out. We
will have some of that up later today and throughout the week.

Now it's time to go eat some more BBQ. I'll talk at you later.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Parker is the man

By: Will Vandervort

Happy Easter everyone! I hope you all have a wonderful day and enjoy this
nice weather that we will have. I know I will because I will be at Doug
Kingsmore this afternoon taking in the third game of this three-game
series.

So far the Tigers have split the first two games with No. 5 Miami and a
win today would be huge for this team’s confidence.

Speaking of confidence, how about the confidence of Kyle Parker? After
putting on a show in the Annual Orange and White game yesterday by
throwing for a touchdown and rushing for another, he goes across the
street to Doug Kingsmore Stadium and puts on a bigger show.

The sophomore on the baseball diamond finished the doubleheader 3-for-7
with two home runs and 5 RBIs. In his first at bat, he singled up the
middle in the third inning with two outs to drive in his first RBI. That’s
impressive no matter what, but to do it against a Top 5 team and to do it
after playing in a complete football game that takes a special kind of
athlete.

By the way, in case you’re wondering, Parker completed 13-of-21 passes for
171 yards with no interceptions in leading the White team to a 30-13
victory in the Orange and White game.

Speaking of the Orange and White game, there were a lot of things that
came out of the game that can be encouraging. For one, the defense appears
to have a lot of quality depth across the board. There were guys on both
sides making plays.

Da’Quan Bowers, Jarvis Jenkins and Brandon Thompson stood out the most to
me as they kind of did what they wanted to when they wanted to do it.
Bowers is a beast that I feel very few people can block and Jenkins and
Thompson remind me of the days when Clemson had one of the best interior
defenses in the country with guys like William Perry, William Devane,
Michael Dean Perry, Chester McGlockton, Brenston Buckner and Trevor Pryce.

The secondary showed its depth by picking off three passes and the
linebackers have some players, but they are still young and are a work in
progress. There is no doubt Kevin Steele will have them ready by the time
the season starts.

Offensively it is hard to judge anything because the offensive line was so
split up and everything they did was vanilla. Besides Parker’s
performance, what I took away from the game was the play of the wide
receivers. If this group is supposed to be Clemson’s weakness this year,
then Tiger fans should feel good about the team’s chances to be
successful.

I believe only one guy had a drop yesterday and Brandon Ford again showed
us that he has a chance to be a special player here before it is all said
and done. Marquan Jones showed off his speed and Xavier Dye looked solid
as he has all spring when we have had the chance to watch the team.

The most impressive part of the game was the play of the tight ends.
Michael Palmer caught five passes for 86 yards and Durrell Barry had three
for 29 yards. When was the last time any of us saw the tight ends catch
eight passes in a Clemson game?