Oklahoma State University Athletics
Cowboys Wrap Up Regular Season At Michigan
May 13, 2015 | Cowboy Baseball
The Cowboys are 32-16 overall and finished the season with a 14-8 Big 12 Conference record
#13 Oklahoma State (32-16)
at
Michigan (32-21)
Thurs., May 14 • 5 p.m.
Fri., May 15 • 5 p.m.
Sat., May 16 • 11 a.m.
Ray Fisher Stadium (4,000)
Ann Arbor, Mich.
Oklahoma State
Oklahoma State concludes the 2015 regular season in Ann Arbor, Mich., where the 13th-ranked Cowboys battle Michigan in a three-game series beginning Thursday night. The Cowboys are 32-16 overall and finished the season with a 14-8 Big 12 Conference record, which currently puts them second in the league standings. OSU won six conference series this season.
OSU is 13-7 against ranked teams this season and checks in at No. 13 in the latest official NCAA RPI. The Cowboys have had five scheduled games canceled due to weather in 2015.
The Cowboys rank second in the Big 12 in both batting average and ERA. Led by Corey Hassel, they sport a .282 team batting average, while the pitching staff owns a 2.90 ERA and has six hurlers who have posted a sub-3.00 ERA.
The Cowboys are in their third season under head coach Josh Holliday, and the defending Big 12 Conference champions are coming off a year in which they went 48-18, advanced to an NCAA Super Regional and finished 10th in the national rankings. Five position players who made at least 29 starts last season return in 2015, as do 12 members of the pitching staff. Among that group are All-Big 12 performers Gage Green, Donnie Walton, Jon Perrin and Tim Arakawa.
About Michigan
Michigan is 32-21 on the season, which includes a 14-5 record on its home field. The Wolverines own a collective .301 batting average, while the pitching staff sports a 3.65 ERA. This series marks the first-ever meeting between OSU and Michigan.
Expected to start on the mound for the Wolverines are:
Thursday - LHP Evan Hill (1-1, 5.32) Friday - RHP Ryan Nutof (4-3, 3.34)
Saturday - LHP Brett Adcock (7-4, 3.57)
Watch, Listen, Follow
All OSU baseball games are carried live by Stillwater Radio and air on KSPI 93.7 FM or 780 AM. Rex Holt, who is in his 33rd season on the air with Cowboy baseball, will call the action, while Matt "Chief" Davis will provide color for most home games. Radio broadcasts are also available to online for a fee at www.okstate.com, with links available under the Schedule tab on the baseball home page.
Live stats for all games can be found at www.okstate.com, with links available under the Schedule tab on the baseball home page. Additionally, fans can follow the official OSU Baseball twitter page, @OSUBaseball, for in-game updates.
The first two games of the series will be carried by BTN Plus, while Saturday's finale airs on the Big Ten Network.
In The Polls
OSU is nationally ranked in six polls this week and is as high as 13th in the USA Today Coaches, Baseball America and D1Baseball.com polls. The Cowboys are ranked 14th by Collegiate Baseball and the NCBWA and 15th by Perfect Game.
OSU has been ranked in at least one national poll for 46 consecutive weeks dating back to 2013, when the Cowboys were in the polls for the final 14 weeks of the season, and on March 6, they had an 11-week streak of being in the top 10 snapped. They were ranked as high as No. 3 (NCBWA) in 2014 and finished the season ranked 10th in each of the final polls, marking the 19th time in program history OSU ended the season in the top 10 in the national polls.
2,500 Club
With its series-opening win over Baylor, Oklahoma State became just the 18th program in Division I history to reach 2,500 victories. Of those achieving that feat, only one has played fewer season's than OSU's 104 (Florida State with 68).
OSU entered the 2015 season ranked sixth all time in NCAA history with a .665 winning percentage.
The Century Mark
In his third season as head coach at his alma mater, Josh Holliday became the sixth skipper to record 100 career wins at Oklahoma State. Holliday's 100th win came against Grand Canyon in his 143rd game, making him the second-fastest Cowboy boss to reach 100 victories.
Comeback Cowboys
Come-from-behind victories have become a trend for the Cowboys under Josh Holliday. OSU overcame deficits to win 46 games over the last two seasons, notching 28 comeback wins a year ago and 18 such triumphs in 2013, and the Pokes have 14 comeback wins this season.
Close Calls
OSU went 1-3 in its first four games of the season, but those four games were decided by a combined total of six runs. The Cowboys played a pair of one-run contests against Arizona State, with OSU going 1-1 in those, while the Sun Devils also claimed a two-run victory. OSU also lost a 5-3 contest to Oregon State in the opener of the Big 12/Pac-12 Challenge.
OSU was 11-1 in one-run ball games last season and 11-3 in contests decided by two runs. In 2015, the Cowboys are 4-4 in one-run games and 2-8 in two-run contests.
Coming Up Clutch
OSU is hitting .302 (179-for-592) with runners in scoring position this season, and of the Cowboys' 291 RBIs, 127 of those (44 percent) have come with two outs.
New Faces Impressive
Joining Oklahoma State's 34-man roster for 2015 are 13 newcomers, eight of those from the high school ranks and five coming via the junior college route.
The recruiting class, which was ranked as high as No. 5 nationally, boasts numerous players having impacts, including:
• Junior college pitchers Koda Glover and Remey Reed have helped bolster the OSU pitching staff. Reed is 3-0 in 19 appearances and has allowed only four earned runs in 39.1 innings, while Glover has been used mainly in the Cowboys' closer role and is 2-2 with five saves and a 2.11 ERA in 20 appearances.
• Sophomore Kevin Bradley, the son of former big leaguer and current Princeton head coach Scott Bradley, redshirted last season at State College of Florida after playing in 37 games at Clemson in 2013. He was named the Big 12 Newcomer of the Week on Feb. 16 and is hitting .283 with three homers and 21 RBIs.
• Freshman Jon Littell was a prep All-American at Stillwater High School and joined his hometown Cowboys after being drafted in the 39th round by Washington. He has started 23 games in the outfield and earned Big 12 Co-Newcomer of the Week honors Feb. 23 after hitting .429 (6-for-14) with five RBIs in four games at the Big 12/Pac-12 Challenge.
• Jacob Chappell started on the infield in OSU's first 27 games this season. The freshman filled the void of the injured Donnie Walton at shortstop in 23 games and also has 19 starts at third base. He owns a .275 batting average.
• Prior to suffering a hand injury in the K-State opener, freshman Garrett McCain played in 22 games with 17 starts and was hitting .313 with 11 RBIs, five stolen bases and a .432 on-base percentage.
Small Ball
OSU has smashed program records for sacrifice bunts each of the last two years. A year ago, the Cowboys were third nationally with 88 sacrifice bunts, which trumped the 2013 team's 74 sac bunts to set a program record. Donnie Walton ranked fourth in the NCAA in 2014 with 22 sac bunts, while Gage Green tallied 11.
OSU ranks third nationally with 66 sac bunts this season, with Green's 15 leading the Cowboys.
Ball Four, Take Your Base
OSU ranked seventh out of nine Big 12 teams in batting average (.275) last season, but the Cowboys led the league with a .385 on-base percentage. The reason? OSU topped the conference and ranked second nationally with 324 walks, 36 more than the next-highest Big 12 team.
The Cowboys sport a Big 12-best .383 on-base percentage this season and rank 29th nationally with 233 walks.
The Pen Is Mighty
OSU's bullpen was the strength of its pitching staff in 2014 as Cowboy relievers combined to go 31-2 with 21 saves in 187 relief appearances. The bullpen racked up 286 strikeouts in 322.0 innings of relief and allowed only 87 earned runs (for a 2.43 ERA).
That trend has continued in 2015 as 13 relievers have combined for 142 appearances, and the OSU bullpen is 14-6 with eight saves, a 2.76 ERA and 183 strikeouts in 198.2 innings.
Strong-Armed
In two seasons under the direction of coach Rob Walton, OSU's pitching staff has turned in some impressive numbers.
In 2013, the Cowboys' 3.04 team ERA was the lowest by an OSU pitching staff since 1973. They followed that last season by ranking second in the Big 12 in strikeouts (479) and saves (21), and in the Cowboys' 24 conference games, the staff recorded a league-best 2.43 ERA with Big 12 opponents only hitting .232 against them.
OSU recorded seven shutouts in both 2013 and 2014, marking just the fourth and fifth times in program history the Cowboys had reached that mark. In the 26 seasons prior to 2013, the program had reached seven shutouts only once.
Over the last two seasons, OSU has also had a pitcher drafted in the first round of the Major League Baseball Draft (Jason Hursh in 2013) and a hurler earn consensus All-America honors (Brendan McCurry). The Cowboys return eight pitchers in 2015 who combined for 30 of OSU's 48 wins a year ago. Of those eight, four turned in an ERA of 3.00 or less.
Through 48 games in 2015, OSU owns a 2.90 team ERA, the 12th-lowest in the NCAA, has recorded four shutouts and ranks third in the Big 12 with an average of 7.89 strikeouts per nine innings. In 22 conference games, the Cowboys' pitching staff has compiled a league-best 2.50 ERA and opponents are hitting just .230 against them.
Thievery
Oklahoma State ranks second in the Big 12 and 39th nationally with 73 stolen bases. Three Cowboys -- Gage Green, Corey Hassel and Conor Costello -- rank in the top 10 in the league in steals, with Green's 16 third in the conference.
OSU has not recorded 100 stolen bases in a season since 1999 (117), and Green is vying to become the first Cowboy to record 20 steals in back-to-back seasons since Billy Gasparino in 1997-98.
Versatile, Dependable, Productive
All those adjectives can be used to describe Cowboy senior Gage Green. A year ago, the Texan led OSU with a .310 batting average and 20 stolen bases while turning in a .392 on-base percentage and recording 24 multi-hit games. He also ranked in the top 10 in the Big 12 with 74 hits.
And it's a safe bet that Green is one of a very few collegiate players -- and likely the only one -- splitting time between catcher and the outfield. Of his 62 starts during his junior season, 25 were behind the plate, 23 were in center field and 14 came in left field. He was named to the All-Big 12 First Team as a catcher.
Green has continued his musical chairs of positions in 2015, starting 23 games at catcher, 20 in left field, four in center field and one in right field, and he is hitting .290 with five homers while leading the Cowboys with 16 stolen bases and 13 multi-hit games. He ranks in the top 10 in the Big 12 in stolen bases and triples (3).
Friday Night Lights
Jon Perrin returns to the Cowboy pitching rotation for his senior season despite being a 33rd-round pick of the Detroit Tigers last June, and his return helps bolster the OSU staff.
Perrin started his junior season in the Cowboy bullpen, but in mid-March he made his first start against UTPA. The right-hander started every Friday the rest of the way, and the move to the weekend paid big dividends.
After a no-decision against UTPA, Perrin took losses against Baylor and TCU despite solid outings. However, in his next three starts, he went 3-0 and allowed just one run in 21.1 innings. A native of Olathe, Kan., Perrin dominated both Big 12 teams from his home state, recording his first-career shutout in a nine-strikeout performance vs. Kansas and topping that with a 10-strikeout shutout of Kansas State.
On the season, Perrin, who was named to the All-Big 12 First Team, was 8-5 with a 2.38 ERA, which ranked as the fourth lowest in the Big 12. He also ranked in the top 10 in the conference in six other categories: wins, shutouts (2), complete games (2), innings pitched (102.0), strikeouts (81) and opponent batting average (.249).
In 13 starts this season, Perrin is 5-4 with a 4.39 ERA, and opponents are hitting .244 against him.
Hawaiian Punch
Tim Arakawa proved to be quite a clutch hitter in his first season in a Cowboy uniform in 2014, and that ability resulted in 13 multi-RBI games and 44 RBIs overall for the Honolulu native, helping him earn All-Big 12 Second Team honors.
Arakawa put the Cowboys ahead on the scoreboard with RBIs 16 times last year, and on eight of those occasions, he either drove in what proved to be the winning runs or were walk-off runs. On three other occasions, he collected game-tying RBIs in contests that OSU went on to win.
Arakawa also finished the season ranked second in the Big 12 and 11th nationally in walks (47).
In 2015, Arakawa has continued his production at the plate. He hit safely in OSU's first 13 games and is hitting .293 with a team-high 34 RBIs on the season. He also leads the Big 12 with 11 multi-RBI games.
Making A Sacrifice
Donnie Walton has rewritten the OSU record books for sacrifice bunting. As a freshman in 2013, he set the program's single-season record with 18, and he broke that a year ago with 22. The 40 sac bunts in only two seasons vaulted him to the top of OSU's career chart, besting the previous mark of Fred Ocasio, who finished his career in 1994 with 36.
Walton has 10 sac bunts in 29 games this season, bringing his career total to 50.
Big Mike
Mike Freeman is having a breakout senior season for the Cowboys.
One of 30 players on the watch list for the Golden Spikes Award, given annually to baseball's top amateur player, the 6-foot-8 southpaw has solidified a spot in OSU's weekend rotation and in 11 starts is 8-2 with a 1.16 ERA. He leads the Big 12 with three complete games and a .184 opponent batting average and also ranks in the top three in the league in wins, ERA, innings pitched (85.2) and strikeouts (77). He has allowed just six earned runs in 76.0 innings over his last 10 starts, and he ranks fifth nationally in ERA. Freeman has tied a record by capturing Big 12 Pitcher of the Week honors four times this season -- March 2, 23 and 30 and April 27 -- to become one of only three pitchers in Big 12 history to achieve that feat (West Virginia's Harrison Musgrave in 2013 and Texas A&M's Ryan Rupe in 1998).
Freeman's first weekly honor came following his performance in a win over Western Illinois in which he recorded a career-high 10 strikeouts in eight innings of work. In that contest, he was dominant throughout and nearly unhittable as he retired 23-straight hitters after WIU reached on an error to lead off the game and did not give up a hit through 7 2/3 innings.
The big lefty turned in an even better performance at TCU, tossing his first-career complete game in the series finale against the top-ranked Horned Frogs and leading the Cowboys to a series win as he racked up nine strikeouts and allowed only one earned run in OSU's 7-2 victory.
Freeman continued his dominance on the mound in a series-clinching win over Kansas State as he went 8 1/3 innings without allowing a hit before surrendering a pair of singles in the ninth. In becoming the first Cowboy pitcher since All-American Andrew Heaney in 2012 to toss back-to-back complete games, he issued only one walk and the one run he allowed was unearned as the result of an error and a passed ball. Freeman opened the game by hitting the leadoff batter but then retired 15-straight Wildcats. In the ninth, K-State's only two hits in the game brought the tying run to the plate, but Freeman recorded his sixth strikeout of the day to end it.
In a win at No. 18 Texas Tech, Freeman matched a career high with 10 Ks and did not surrender an earned run in eight innings of work. He did not allow a hit for the first 5 1/3 innings and at one point retired 12-straight Red Raiders.
5-3, 6-3, 4-3, 3U, 1-3
To say Michael Freeman is a ground ball pitcher is like saying grass is green and the sky is blue.
Of Freeman's non-strikeout outs this season, 134 have come via ground ball and only 32 via fly out. Factor in his 77 strikeouts, and 87 percent of Freeman's outs have come via ground ball or strikeout.
Back In The Saddle
A wrist injury kept Donnie Walton out of the OSU lineup for most of the first half of the season as the Cowboys' All-Big 12 First Team shortstop played in just five of the Pokes first 24 games in 2015.
Walton started and played the first 7 1/2 innings of OSU's season opener at Arizona State on Feb. 13, then was used briefly as a pinch runner in the eighth inning the following day before going on the shelf.
On Feb. 24, Walton underwent surgery to remove the hamate bone in his right wrist. After missing 18 games, Walton returned to action in the opener at TCU on March 20 when he was inserted into the game at shortstop in the eighth inning. In Sunday's game against the Frogs, he returned to the starting lineup, filling in at second base for an injured Tim Arakawa.
Walton returned to the starting lineup at shortstop for the K-State series and was 4-for-10 with three RBIs. He is hitting .320 with two homers and 19 RBIs in 29 games on the year.
Hometown Hero
Corey Hassel played in 86 games in his first two seasons at OSU, but the Stillwater native is having a breakout junior campaign for his hometown Cowboys in 2015.
Used mostly as a late-game defensive replacement and pinch runner in 2013 and 2014, Hassel has become a regular starter in the outfield and leads the Pokes with a .316 batting average. In Big 12 play, Hassel is hitting .344 with two home runs and 18 RBIs and leads OSU in numerous offensive categories, including RBIs, hits (31) and doubles (6).
Hassel was the hero in OSU's series-opening win over Texas as he delivered a three-run, walk-off home run in the bottom of the 18th inning and also earned his first-career win on the mound with three strikeouts in three scoreless innings.
Sluder's Sophomore Surge
Another breakout star for the Cowboys in 2015 is outfielder Ryan Sluder, who hit .284 with 67 at-bats in 35 games as a freshman a year ago.
This season, Sluder has produced a .315 batting average and team-high 13 doubles and six homers in 40 games (35 starts), and he's been on a tear in Big 12 Conference play. In league games, he leads OSU with a .403 average -- the second-highest in the league in Big 12 games -- to go along with five homers, 10 RBIs and a .710 slugging percentage.
at
Michigan (32-21)
Thurs., May 14 • 5 p.m.
Fri., May 15 • 5 p.m.
Sat., May 16 • 11 a.m.
Ray Fisher Stadium (4,000)
Ann Arbor, Mich.
Oklahoma State
Oklahoma State concludes the 2015 regular season in Ann Arbor, Mich., where the 13th-ranked Cowboys battle Michigan in a three-game series beginning Thursday night. The Cowboys are 32-16 overall and finished the season with a 14-8 Big 12 Conference record, which currently puts them second in the league standings. OSU won six conference series this season.
OSU is 13-7 against ranked teams this season and checks in at No. 13 in the latest official NCAA RPI. The Cowboys have had five scheduled games canceled due to weather in 2015.
The Cowboys rank second in the Big 12 in both batting average and ERA. Led by Corey Hassel, they sport a .282 team batting average, while the pitching staff owns a 2.90 ERA and has six hurlers who have posted a sub-3.00 ERA.
The Cowboys are in their third season under head coach Josh Holliday, and the defending Big 12 Conference champions are coming off a year in which they went 48-18, advanced to an NCAA Super Regional and finished 10th in the national rankings. Five position players who made at least 29 starts last season return in 2015, as do 12 members of the pitching staff. Among that group are All-Big 12 performers Gage Green, Donnie Walton, Jon Perrin and Tim Arakawa.
About Michigan
Michigan is 32-21 on the season, which includes a 14-5 record on its home field. The Wolverines own a collective .301 batting average, while the pitching staff sports a 3.65 ERA. This series marks the first-ever meeting between OSU and Michigan.
Expected to start on the mound for the Wolverines are:
Thursday - LHP Evan Hill (1-1, 5.32) Friday - RHP Ryan Nutof (4-3, 3.34)
Saturday - LHP Brett Adcock (7-4, 3.57)
Watch, Listen, Follow
All OSU baseball games are carried live by Stillwater Radio and air on KSPI 93.7 FM or 780 AM. Rex Holt, who is in his 33rd season on the air with Cowboy baseball, will call the action, while Matt "Chief" Davis will provide color for most home games. Radio broadcasts are also available to online for a fee at www.okstate.com, with links available under the Schedule tab on the baseball home page.
Live stats for all games can be found at www.okstate.com, with links available under the Schedule tab on the baseball home page. Additionally, fans can follow the official OSU Baseball twitter page, @OSUBaseball, for in-game updates.
The first two games of the series will be carried by BTN Plus, while Saturday's finale airs on the Big Ten Network.
In The Polls
OSU is nationally ranked in six polls this week and is as high as 13th in the USA Today Coaches, Baseball America and D1Baseball.com polls. The Cowboys are ranked 14th by Collegiate Baseball and the NCBWA and 15th by Perfect Game.
OSU has been ranked in at least one national poll for 46 consecutive weeks dating back to 2013, when the Cowboys were in the polls for the final 14 weeks of the season, and on March 6, they had an 11-week streak of being in the top 10 snapped. They were ranked as high as No. 3 (NCBWA) in 2014 and finished the season ranked 10th in each of the final polls, marking the 19th time in program history OSU ended the season in the top 10 in the national polls.
2,500 Club
With its series-opening win over Baylor, Oklahoma State became just the 18th program in Division I history to reach 2,500 victories. Of those achieving that feat, only one has played fewer season's than OSU's 104 (Florida State with 68).
OSU entered the 2015 season ranked sixth all time in NCAA history with a .665 winning percentage.
The Century Mark
In his third season as head coach at his alma mater, Josh Holliday became the sixth skipper to record 100 career wins at Oklahoma State. Holliday's 100th win came against Grand Canyon in his 143rd game, making him the second-fastest Cowboy boss to reach 100 victories.
Comeback Cowboys
Come-from-behind victories have become a trend for the Cowboys under Josh Holliday. OSU overcame deficits to win 46 games over the last two seasons, notching 28 comeback wins a year ago and 18 such triumphs in 2013, and the Pokes have 14 comeback wins this season.
Close Calls
OSU went 1-3 in its first four games of the season, but those four games were decided by a combined total of six runs. The Cowboys played a pair of one-run contests against Arizona State, with OSU going 1-1 in those, while the Sun Devils also claimed a two-run victory. OSU also lost a 5-3 contest to Oregon State in the opener of the Big 12/Pac-12 Challenge.
OSU was 11-1 in one-run ball games last season and 11-3 in contests decided by two runs. In 2015, the Cowboys are 4-4 in one-run games and 2-8 in two-run contests.
Coming Up Clutch
OSU is hitting .302 (179-for-592) with runners in scoring position this season, and of the Cowboys' 291 RBIs, 127 of those (44 percent) have come with two outs.
New Faces Impressive
Joining Oklahoma State's 34-man roster for 2015 are 13 newcomers, eight of those from the high school ranks and five coming via the junior college route.
The recruiting class, which was ranked as high as No. 5 nationally, boasts numerous players having impacts, including:
• Junior college pitchers Koda Glover and Remey Reed have helped bolster the OSU pitching staff. Reed is 3-0 in 19 appearances and has allowed only four earned runs in 39.1 innings, while Glover has been used mainly in the Cowboys' closer role and is 2-2 with five saves and a 2.11 ERA in 20 appearances.
• Sophomore Kevin Bradley, the son of former big leaguer and current Princeton head coach Scott Bradley, redshirted last season at State College of Florida after playing in 37 games at Clemson in 2013. He was named the Big 12 Newcomer of the Week on Feb. 16 and is hitting .283 with three homers and 21 RBIs.
• Freshman Jon Littell was a prep All-American at Stillwater High School and joined his hometown Cowboys after being drafted in the 39th round by Washington. He has started 23 games in the outfield and earned Big 12 Co-Newcomer of the Week honors Feb. 23 after hitting .429 (6-for-14) with five RBIs in four games at the Big 12/Pac-12 Challenge.
• Jacob Chappell started on the infield in OSU's first 27 games this season. The freshman filled the void of the injured Donnie Walton at shortstop in 23 games and also has 19 starts at third base. He owns a .275 batting average.
• Prior to suffering a hand injury in the K-State opener, freshman Garrett McCain played in 22 games with 17 starts and was hitting .313 with 11 RBIs, five stolen bases and a .432 on-base percentage.
Small Ball
OSU has smashed program records for sacrifice bunts each of the last two years. A year ago, the Cowboys were third nationally with 88 sacrifice bunts, which trumped the 2013 team's 74 sac bunts to set a program record. Donnie Walton ranked fourth in the NCAA in 2014 with 22 sac bunts, while Gage Green tallied 11.
OSU ranks third nationally with 66 sac bunts this season, with Green's 15 leading the Cowboys.
Ball Four, Take Your Base
OSU ranked seventh out of nine Big 12 teams in batting average (.275) last season, but the Cowboys led the league with a .385 on-base percentage. The reason? OSU topped the conference and ranked second nationally with 324 walks, 36 more than the next-highest Big 12 team.
The Cowboys sport a Big 12-best .383 on-base percentage this season and rank 29th nationally with 233 walks.
The Pen Is Mighty
OSU's bullpen was the strength of its pitching staff in 2014 as Cowboy relievers combined to go 31-2 with 21 saves in 187 relief appearances. The bullpen racked up 286 strikeouts in 322.0 innings of relief and allowed only 87 earned runs (for a 2.43 ERA).
That trend has continued in 2015 as 13 relievers have combined for 142 appearances, and the OSU bullpen is 14-6 with eight saves, a 2.76 ERA and 183 strikeouts in 198.2 innings.
Strong-Armed
In two seasons under the direction of coach Rob Walton, OSU's pitching staff has turned in some impressive numbers.
In 2013, the Cowboys' 3.04 team ERA was the lowest by an OSU pitching staff since 1973. They followed that last season by ranking second in the Big 12 in strikeouts (479) and saves (21), and in the Cowboys' 24 conference games, the staff recorded a league-best 2.43 ERA with Big 12 opponents only hitting .232 against them.
OSU recorded seven shutouts in both 2013 and 2014, marking just the fourth and fifth times in program history the Cowboys had reached that mark. In the 26 seasons prior to 2013, the program had reached seven shutouts only once.
Over the last two seasons, OSU has also had a pitcher drafted in the first round of the Major League Baseball Draft (Jason Hursh in 2013) and a hurler earn consensus All-America honors (Brendan McCurry). The Cowboys return eight pitchers in 2015 who combined for 30 of OSU's 48 wins a year ago. Of those eight, four turned in an ERA of 3.00 or less.
Through 48 games in 2015, OSU owns a 2.90 team ERA, the 12th-lowest in the NCAA, has recorded four shutouts and ranks third in the Big 12 with an average of 7.89 strikeouts per nine innings. In 22 conference games, the Cowboys' pitching staff has compiled a league-best 2.50 ERA and opponents are hitting just .230 against them.
Thievery
Oklahoma State ranks second in the Big 12 and 39th nationally with 73 stolen bases. Three Cowboys -- Gage Green, Corey Hassel and Conor Costello -- rank in the top 10 in the league in steals, with Green's 16 third in the conference.
OSU has not recorded 100 stolen bases in a season since 1999 (117), and Green is vying to become the first Cowboy to record 20 steals in back-to-back seasons since Billy Gasparino in 1997-98.
Versatile, Dependable, Productive
All those adjectives can be used to describe Cowboy senior Gage Green. A year ago, the Texan led OSU with a .310 batting average and 20 stolen bases while turning in a .392 on-base percentage and recording 24 multi-hit games. He also ranked in the top 10 in the Big 12 with 74 hits.
And it's a safe bet that Green is one of a very few collegiate players -- and likely the only one -- splitting time between catcher and the outfield. Of his 62 starts during his junior season, 25 were behind the plate, 23 were in center field and 14 came in left field. He was named to the All-Big 12 First Team as a catcher.
Green has continued his musical chairs of positions in 2015, starting 23 games at catcher, 20 in left field, four in center field and one in right field, and he is hitting .290 with five homers while leading the Cowboys with 16 stolen bases and 13 multi-hit games. He ranks in the top 10 in the Big 12 in stolen bases and triples (3).
Friday Night Lights
Jon Perrin returns to the Cowboy pitching rotation for his senior season despite being a 33rd-round pick of the Detroit Tigers last June, and his return helps bolster the OSU staff.
Perrin started his junior season in the Cowboy bullpen, but in mid-March he made his first start against UTPA. The right-hander started every Friday the rest of the way, and the move to the weekend paid big dividends.
After a no-decision against UTPA, Perrin took losses against Baylor and TCU despite solid outings. However, in his next three starts, he went 3-0 and allowed just one run in 21.1 innings. A native of Olathe, Kan., Perrin dominated both Big 12 teams from his home state, recording his first-career shutout in a nine-strikeout performance vs. Kansas and topping that with a 10-strikeout shutout of Kansas State.
On the season, Perrin, who was named to the All-Big 12 First Team, was 8-5 with a 2.38 ERA, which ranked as the fourth lowest in the Big 12. He also ranked in the top 10 in the conference in six other categories: wins, shutouts (2), complete games (2), innings pitched (102.0), strikeouts (81) and opponent batting average (.249).
In 13 starts this season, Perrin is 5-4 with a 4.39 ERA, and opponents are hitting .244 against him.
Hawaiian Punch
Tim Arakawa proved to be quite a clutch hitter in his first season in a Cowboy uniform in 2014, and that ability resulted in 13 multi-RBI games and 44 RBIs overall for the Honolulu native, helping him earn All-Big 12 Second Team honors.
Arakawa put the Cowboys ahead on the scoreboard with RBIs 16 times last year, and on eight of those occasions, he either drove in what proved to be the winning runs or were walk-off runs. On three other occasions, he collected game-tying RBIs in contests that OSU went on to win.
Arakawa also finished the season ranked second in the Big 12 and 11th nationally in walks (47).
In 2015, Arakawa has continued his production at the plate. He hit safely in OSU's first 13 games and is hitting .293 with a team-high 34 RBIs on the season. He also leads the Big 12 with 11 multi-RBI games.
Making A Sacrifice
Donnie Walton has rewritten the OSU record books for sacrifice bunting. As a freshman in 2013, he set the program's single-season record with 18, and he broke that a year ago with 22. The 40 sac bunts in only two seasons vaulted him to the top of OSU's career chart, besting the previous mark of Fred Ocasio, who finished his career in 1994 with 36.
Walton has 10 sac bunts in 29 games this season, bringing his career total to 50.
Big Mike
Mike Freeman is having a breakout senior season for the Cowboys.
One of 30 players on the watch list for the Golden Spikes Award, given annually to baseball's top amateur player, the 6-foot-8 southpaw has solidified a spot in OSU's weekend rotation and in 11 starts is 8-2 with a 1.16 ERA. He leads the Big 12 with three complete games and a .184 opponent batting average and also ranks in the top three in the league in wins, ERA, innings pitched (85.2) and strikeouts (77). He has allowed just six earned runs in 76.0 innings over his last 10 starts, and he ranks fifth nationally in ERA. Freeman has tied a record by capturing Big 12 Pitcher of the Week honors four times this season -- March 2, 23 and 30 and April 27 -- to become one of only three pitchers in Big 12 history to achieve that feat (West Virginia's Harrison Musgrave in 2013 and Texas A&M's Ryan Rupe in 1998).
Freeman's first weekly honor came following his performance in a win over Western Illinois in which he recorded a career-high 10 strikeouts in eight innings of work. In that contest, he was dominant throughout and nearly unhittable as he retired 23-straight hitters after WIU reached on an error to lead off the game and did not give up a hit through 7 2/3 innings.
The big lefty turned in an even better performance at TCU, tossing his first-career complete game in the series finale against the top-ranked Horned Frogs and leading the Cowboys to a series win as he racked up nine strikeouts and allowed only one earned run in OSU's 7-2 victory.
Freeman continued his dominance on the mound in a series-clinching win over Kansas State as he went 8 1/3 innings without allowing a hit before surrendering a pair of singles in the ninth. In becoming the first Cowboy pitcher since All-American Andrew Heaney in 2012 to toss back-to-back complete games, he issued only one walk and the one run he allowed was unearned as the result of an error and a passed ball. Freeman opened the game by hitting the leadoff batter but then retired 15-straight Wildcats. In the ninth, K-State's only two hits in the game brought the tying run to the plate, but Freeman recorded his sixth strikeout of the day to end it.
In a win at No. 18 Texas Tech, Freeman matched a career high with 10 Ks and did not surrender an earned run in eight innings of work. He did not allow a hit for the first 5 1/3 innings and at one point retired 12-straight Red Raiders.
5-3, 6-3, 4-3, 3U, 1-3
To say Michael Freeman is a ground ball pitcher is like saying grass is green and the sky is blue.
Of Freeman's non-strikeout outs this season, 134 have come via ground ball and only 32 via fly out. Factor in his 77 strikeouts, and 87 percent of Freeman's outs have come via ground ball or strikeout.
Back In The Saddle
A wrist injury kept Donnie Walton out of the OSU lineup for most of the first half of the season as the Cowboys' All-Big 12 First Team shortstop played in just five of the Pokes first 24 games in 2015.
Walton started and played the first 7 1/2 innings of OSU's season opener at Arizona State on Feb. 13, then was used briefly as a pinch runner in the eighth inning the following day before going on the shelf.
On Feb. 24, Walton underwent surgery to remove the hamate bone in his right wrist. After missing 18 games, Walton returned to action in the opener at TCU on March 20 when he was inserted into the game at shortstop in the eighth inning. In Sunday's game against the Frogs, he returned to the starting lineup, filling in at second base for an injured Tim Arakawa.
Walton returned to the starting lineup at shortstop for the K-State series and was 4-for-10 with three RBIs. He is hitting .320 with two homers and 19 RBIs in 29 games on the year.
Hometown Hero
Corey Hassel played in 86 games in his first two seasons at OSU, but the Stillwater native is having a breakout junior campaign for his hometown Cowboys in 2015.
Used mostly as a late-game defensive replacement and pinch runner in 2013 and 2014, Hassel has become a regular starter in the outfield and leads the Pokes with a .316 batting average. In Big 12 play, Hassel is hitting .344 with two home runs and 18 RBIs and leads OSU in numerous offensive categories, including RBIs, hits (31) and doubles (6).
Hassel was the hero in OSU's series-opening win over Texas as he delivered a three-run, walk-off home run in the bottom of the 18th inning and also earned his first-career win on the mound with three strikeouts in three scoreless innings.
Sluder's Sophomore Surge
Another breakout star for the Cowboys in 2015 is outfielder Ryan Sluder, who hit .284 with 67 at-bats in 35 games as a freshman a year ago.
This season, Sluder has produced a .315 batting average and team-high 13 doubles and six homers in 40 games (35 starts), and he's been on a tear in Big 12 Conference play. In league games, he leads OSU with a .403 average -- the second-highest in the league in Big 12 games -- to go along with five homers, 10 RBIs and a .710 slugging percentage.
Friday, June 05
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