Oklahoma State University Athletics

Cowboys Head To NCAA Regional Filled With Familiar Foes
May 31, 2017 | Cowboy Baseball
Game Notes
Â#3-seed Oklahoma State (30-25)
at theÂ
NCAA Fayetteville Regional
Baum Stadium (10,737)
Fayetteville, Ark.
Fri., June 2-Mon., June 5
Oklahoma StateÂ
   Oklahoma State makes its fifth consecutive appearance in the NCAA Baseball Championship in 2017 as the Cowboys are the No. 3 seed at the Fayetteville Regional. Winners of six in a row and coming off a Big 12 Conference Baseball Championship tournament title to earn an NCAA berth, the Cowboys are 30-25 on the season.
   Led by Garrett McCain's Big 12 Conference-best .394 batting average, OSU is hitting .265 as a team, while the pitching staff owns a 4.37 ERA.
   The Cowboys are coming off a 43-22 season in which they advanced to the College World Series for the 20th time in program history, making their first trip to Omaha since 1999 and finishing tied for third. Seven starters returned from a year ago, led by corner infielders Garrett Benge and Dustin Williams, while Preseason All-American Tyler Buffett, along with Trey Cobb and Jensen Elliott, returned to anchor the pitching staff.
   The 2017 season marks OSU's fifth under head coach Josh Holliday, who has compiled a 200-104 record at his alma mater.
Cowboys At The NCAA Baseball Championship
   Oklahoma State is making its 43rd appearance in the NCAA Baseball Championship, which ranks as fourth most all time, and the Cowboys own a 147-91 (.618) record in the tourney, with the 147 wins sixth on the all-time list. The Cowboys' 20 College World Series appearances are tied for sixth all time.
   OSU is seeking to advance to the fifth NCAA Super Regional in program history (1999, 2007, 2014, 2016). Should the Cowboys advance out of the Fayetteville Regional, they will face the winner of the NCAA Fort Worth (TCU) Regional in a Super Regional.
   The 2017 NCAA Regional berth is OSU's fifth in as many seasons under head coach Josh Holliday. OSU is coming off a 2016 season in which it swept through the NCAA Clemson Regional and Columbia (S.C.) Super Regional en route to Omaha. In Holliday's first season at the helm of his alma mater, the Cowboys advanced to the finals of the 2013 NCAA Louisville Regional as the No. 3 seed, and in 2014, top-seeded OSU captured its first Regional championship since 2007. In 2015, OSU hosted a Regional as a No. 1 seed for a second-straight year and went 1-2.
The NCAA Fayetteville Regional Field
   Host Arkansas is the top seed at the Regional and is 42-17 on the season. The Razorbacks are hitting .287 and sport a 3.60 team ERA. OSU is 46-21 all time against Arkansas, including a 1-2 mark under Josh Holliday. The last meeting came at this season's Frisco College Baseball Classic in Frisco, Texas, on March 5; the Cowboys won that game, 8-3.
   Missouri State is the No. 2 seed at the tourney and owns a 40-17 record. The Bears are hitting .280 with a team ERA of 3.58. OSU is 13-6 all time against the Bears, including a 7-0 mark under Josh Holliday (three of those games have been decided in by one run in extra innings). The two teams last met on March 7 in Stillwater, with the Cowboys claiming a 7-3 victory.Â
   Oral Roberts rounds out the field as the No. 4 seed. The Golden Eagles are The Summit League champions and own a .294 batting average and 3.00 ERA. OSU is 35-35 all time against ORU, including a 3-7 mark under Josh Holliday. The Cowboys are 1-2 against their in-state foe this season as each team won on its home field.
Watch, Listen, Follow
   Every game of the NCAA Fayetteville Regional airs on ESPN3/WatchESPN app, with Alex Perlman and Lance Cormier on the call.
   All OSU baseball games are carried live by Stillwater Radio and air on KSPI 93.7 FM or Pete 94.3 FM/780 AM. Rex Holt, who is in his 35th season on the air with Cowboy baseball, will call the action, with Matt "Chief" Davis providing color commentary. Select radio broadcasts are also available online at okstate.com/watch.
   Live stats for all games can be found at www.okstate.com, with links available under Schedule tab on the baseball home page. Fans can also follow the official OSU Baseball Twitter account, @OSUBaseball, for in-game updates.
In The Polls
   OSU fell out of the national rankings in early April (4/3), snapping a streak of 77 consecutive weeks of being ranked in at least one national poll, a streak that dated back to March 4, 2013. During that time, the Cowboys spent 18 weeks in the Top 10 and were ranked as high as No. 3 (by the NCBWA in 2014). They have finished in the top 10 in the final national polls twice in the last four seasons — 10th in 2014 and fourth in 2016 — and have ended the season in the top 10 in the national polls 20 times in program history.
2,500 Club
   Oklahoma State entered 2017 as one of only 23 programs in Division I history to reach 2,500 victories, beginning the year with 2,556 all-time wins to rank 15th all time. Of the 23 teams with 2,500 wins, only three have played fewer season's than OSU's 105 (Florida State - 69; Miami (Fla.) - 72; Fresno State - 88).
   OSU entered the 2017 season ranked fifth all time in NCAA history with a .665 winning percentage.Â
Omaha
   The Cowboys' coaching staff is no stranger to the College World Series, with Josh Holliday and Rob Walton combining for 11 CWS appearances as either a player or coach.Â
   Prior to leading his alma mater to Omaha in 2016, Holliday previously played on a pair of CWS teams at OSU (1996 & 1999) and coached in the CWS as an assistant at Georgia Tech (2006), Arizona State (2009) and Vanderbilt (2011).
   Holliday is one of only 17 people to reach the College World Series as both a player and head coach.
   Walton spent four seasons as a pitcher at OSU from 1983-86, and each of those teams appeared in the CWS.Â
Baseball In Their Blood
   Baseball — and Oklahoma State — is definitely a family affair for Josh Holliday.
   Josh's father, Tom, served as an OSU assistant coach for 19 years then took over as the Cowboys' head coach from 1997-2003, leading the program to a College World Series appearance in 1999 (and coaching Josh in his final three college seasons). Tom spent four decades as a collegiate coach and was inducted into the OSU Cowboy Baseball Hall of Fame in 2016.
   Josh's younger brother, Matt, is an outfielder for the New York Yankees. In 13 major league seasons, Matt has been named to seven MLB All-Star teams.
   Josh's uncle, Dave Holliday, was an OSU assistant coach from 1981-88 and has since held a variety of roles in Major League Baseball, including his current spot as a professional scout for the Atlanta Braves.
Home Sweet Home
   Allie P. Reynolds Stadium has been home to Oklahoma State baseball since April 4, 1981, and in those 37 seasons, the Cowboys have been nearly unbeatable on their home field.Â
   OSU is 914-229 (.800) all time at Reynolds Stadium and has lost more than two consecutive games on its home turf only eight times (six in a row in 2007; five straight in 2017; four in a row in 2016; three straight in 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2017).
   The Cowboys were 16-14 on their home field in 2017 and won the 900th game at Reynolds Stadium against Texas State on Feb. 26.
   OSU won 11 of its 12 home Big 12 Conference series that spanned three games in its first four seasons under Josh Holliday, the lone setback coming last season vs. Texas Tech. From 2013-15, the Cowboys won nine consecutive three-game league series on their home field following a split in a rain-shortened two-game series with Baylor to open league play in 2013. (In 2015 OSU lost its only game vs. West Virginia in Stillwater — the final two games of the series were canceled due to weather).
On The Road Again and Again and Again and Again and Again and Again and Again and...
   As has become commonplace, OSU opened Big 12 Conference play on the road in 2017.
   The Cowboys have begun league play at Allie P. Reynolds Stadium only twice since 2003 (in 2005 and 2013), and the trend of opening Big 12 action away from Stillwater will also continue in 2018.
   Since 2004 and spanning through 2018, OSU will have opened conference play on the road 13 times and only two times at home. Since Big 12 baseball began play in 1997, the Cowboys will have opened league play on the road 16 times and just six times in Stillwater.
Building A Winner
   In the first four seasons as head coach at his alma mater (2013-16), Josh Holliday built quite an impressive resume. Just a few of the highlights:
   • The Cowboys earned four NCAA Regional berths, advanced to two Super Regionals and earned a berth in the College World Series for the first time since Holliday was a senior for the Cowboys in 1999;
   • OSU finished first or second in the Big 12 Conference standings each year (1st in 2014; 2nd in 2013, 2015 and 2016). The Cowboys won at least five of eight Big 12 Conference series each season (5 in 2013, 7 in 2014, 6 in 2015, 5 in 2016).
   • The Cowboys finished in the top 10 in the national rankings in 2014 (10th) and 2016 (4th) after ending the 2013 season ranked as high as No. 19. In 2015, they were ranked as high as 17th in the final polls;
   • In 2014, OSU advanced to the third Super Regional in program history and won its first-ever Big 12 Conference regular season championship;
   • OSU hosted NCAA Regionals in 2014 and 2015 and was the top-seeded team both times;
   • Holliday coached 38 All-Big 12 performers, five All-Americans, two Big 12 Pitcher of the Year honorees and a Big 12 Player of the Year.
Making History
   Last weekend in Oklahoma City, OSU became the first-ever No. 8 seed to win the Big 12 Conference Baseball Championship, knocking off sixth-seeded Texas in the title game. The Cowboys had to win their final two regular season games against Bedlam-rival Oklahoma just to qualify for the tourney, and they went on to go 4-0 to claim the crown.Â
   The title marked OSU's third Big 12 championship — along with the 2004 tournament and 2014 regular season titles — and is the 32nd conference championship in program history.
   Garrett McCain was named the Big 12 Championship Most Outstanding Player after going 6-for-10 with seven RBIs over the final two games of the tourney. Joining him on the all-tournament team were Colin Simpson, Ryan Cash, Ryan Sluder, Bryce Fischer, Blake Battenfield and Carson Teel.
Award Tour
   Five Cowboys earned All-Big 12 recognition in 2016. Garrett McCain and Garrett Benge were both All-Big 12 First Team selections, while Tyler Buffett and Colin Simpson earned All-Big 12 honorable mention accolades. Ryan Cash was named to the Big 12 All-Freshman Team.
Nobody Did It Better
   Josh Holliday posted a 61-32 record in Big 12 Conference play in his first four seasons at OSU (2013-16), and that .656 winning percentage ranked as the highest of any coach in league history entering the 2017 season. TCU's Jim Schlossnagle was second at .653 with a 62-33 mark.Â
Big 12's Best
   Oklahoma State's .683 winning percentage (170-79) from 2013-16 was the second highest in the Big 12 during that span, trailing only TCU at .691 (177-79).
   OSU also finished first or second in the league standings each of those four years, and the Cowboys were the only Big 12 team during that span to finish over .500 in conference play each year.
Comeback Cowboys
   Come-from-behind victories have become a trend for the Cowboys under Josh Holliday. OSU has overcome deficits to win 78 games in Holliday's five seasons, notching 18 comeback wins in 2013, 28 in 2014, 15 in 2015 and nine in 2016. The Cowboys have come from behind to win 11 times this season.
Close Calls
   OSU is 49-31 in one-run games since 2013. Under head coach Josh Holliday (2013-pres.), 52 of the Cowboys' 104 losses have come by two runs or less, including 13 this season.
   The Cowboys are 8-10 in one-run games this season. Thirteen of OSU's 22 conference games were decided by two runs or less; the Cowboys were 4-9 in those games with six one-run defeats and three two-run setbacks.
Small Ball
   OSU is second in the Big 12 with 42 sacrifice bunts this season, continuing a trend that has seen the Cowboys smash program records for sac bunting under Josh Holliday.
   In 2014, the Cowboys were third nationally with a program-record 88 sacrifice bunts, which trumped the 2013 team's total of 74. In 2015, OSU led the NCAA with 81 sacrifice bunts, and four different Cowboys had at least 10 sac bunts, while the 2016 campaign saw the Cowboys post 64. OSU leads the Big 12 and is 24th nationally with 33 sacrifices this season.
   Donnie Walton finished his OSU career in 2016 with a school-record 55 sacrifice bunts, a total which ranks seventh on the NCAA's all-time list. Five other Cowboys who have or are playing under Holliday — Gage Green, Corey Hassel, Saulyer Saxon, Jacob Chappell and Ryan Sluder — also rank in the top 10 on OSU's career sac bunt list.
Strong-Armed
   In its first four seasons under the direction of coach Rob Walton, OSU's pitching staff turned in impressive numbers.Â
   The Cowboys' success under Walton from 2013-16 includes 16 All-Big 12 pitchers, two consensus first-team All-Americans, two Big 12 Pitcher of the Year winners and a first-round Major League Baseball Draft pick.
   Here's just a sampling of how the Cowboys have performed under Walton:
   • Each of OSU's pitching staffs under Walton has recorded an ERA of 3.29 or lower;Â
   • The Cowboys are coming off a 2016 season in which they led the Big 12 with 574 strikeouts, 10 shutouts and 21 saves, each totals that ranked as the second highest in a single season in school history;
   • OSU's pitching staff led the Big 12 in ERA in conference-only games in 2014 (2.43) and 2015 (2.50).
   • The Cowboys' 2.84 ERA in 2015 ranked eighth nationally and was the lowest by an OSU pitching staff since 1973.
   • OSU recorded seven shutouts in 2013 and 2014 and had 10 in 2016, the second most in a single season in program history. Those totals also marked three of only six times in program history the Cowboys have tallied seven shutouts or more in a season; in the 26 seasons prior to 2013, OSU reached seven shutouts only once.
   • Jason Hursh was a first-round pick in the 2013 MLB Draft, Brendan McCurry (2014) and Michael Freeman (2015) were first-team All-Americans and Freeman (2015) and Thomas Hatch (2016) were named Big 12 Pitcher of the Year.
   • Freeman's 1.31 ERA ranked sixth in the NCAA in 2015 and was the fifth lowest in a single season in OSU history.
   • McCurry set OSU records for single-season saves (19) and career saves (27).
All-American In The Rotation
   Tyler Buffett was named to a pair of 2017 Preseason All-America teams, earning a spot on the Collegiate Baseball Second Team and being tabbed a third teamer by the NCBWA.
I Feel A Draft...
   OSU has seven players on its 2017 roster who have been Major League Baseball Draft picks: Garrett Benge (2015, Cleveland, 22nd round); Tyler Buffett (2016, Houston, 7th); Cade Cabbiness (2016, St. Louis, 21st); Trey Cobb (2016, Chicago Cubs, 12th); Jon Littell (2014, Washington, 39th); Andrew Rosa (2013, Boston, 30th); and Dustin Williams (2016, Pittsburgh, 36th).
   In 2016, OSU tied a program record with 11 MLB Draft picks. (The 2007 Cowboys also had 11 draftees). The 11 draft picks tied the Cowboys with Mississippi State for the third most of any Division I program in 2016 behind only Texas A&M (13) and Southern California (12). Seven of the OSU players drafted were pitchers.
   Of the Cowboys drafted last year, five of those went in the first 10 rounds, which marked the most top-10-round picks for OSU since five Pokes were taken in the top-10 rounds in 2008.
...But I'm Not Feeling The Draft
   For the second consecutive year, OSU had multiple players drafted by Major League Baseball choose to return to Stillwater for their senior seasons.
   This time, it was Tyler Buffett, Trey Cobb and Dustin Williams each spurning professional baseball. Buffett is in rare company with his decision as he is one of only two players selected in the top 10 rounds of the 2016 draft — from a total of 316 players picked — not to sign.
   In 2015, Donnie Walton and Conor Costello were both drafted but returned for their senior year. Walton improved his draft status, moving up from a 23rd-round pick to a fifth-round choice, while Costello went from a 38th rounder in 2015 to a 32nd-round pick last year.
Battered & Bruised
   OSU has been hit hard by the injury bug this season, with four position starters missing key time and two-thirds of the expected weekend rotation — Jensen Elliott and Parker Scott — pitching briefly before being lost for the season.
   Among those on the injured list this season:
    • Jensen Elliott - Freshman All-American in 2016 was 3-0 with a 3.63 ERA this season and had at least six strikeouts in each of his four starts, the last of which came on March 12. Had Tommy John surgery in mid-April and is out for season;
    • Parker Scott - freshman who made six appearances, including two starts, but hasn't pitched since March 12 and is out for the season following arm surgery in April;
   • Trey Cobb - All-Big 12 pitcher missed 25 games recovering from broken bone in elbow. Made season debut April 1;
    • Travis Wacker - catcher missed 16 games (3/1-3/31) with broken finger;
    • Ryan Cash - injured shoulder at TCU on March 25 and missed nine games;
    • Jon Littell - missed nine games after injuring shoulder and needing stitches in mouth following outfield collision vs. TCU on March 26;
    • Ryan Sluder - missed five games with shoulder injury suffered April 1 vs. West Virginia
One-Hit Wonder
   In its game against New Mexico on March 14, four Cowboy pitchers — Blake Battenfield, Jake Cowan, Cole Hearrean and Jonathan Heasley — combined to throw the 36th one-hitter in OSU history and first since 1998; it was the 13th combined one-hitter in program history and only the seventh one-hitter in a game that went nine innings.
   Battenfield started and took a no-hitter into the seventh before a sharply hit ground ball glanced off OSU third baseman Garrett Benge for a single. Cowan (1.1), Hearrean (0.1) and Heasley (0.1) finished off the one-hit performance against a New Mexico team that entered the game second in the NCAA with a .358 batting average.
I Got Five On It
   In OSU's series opener at Kansas on April 13, Garrett McCain became the first Cowboy since Tanner Krietemeier in 2014 to collect five hits in a game as McCain finished 5-for-5 — all singles — before being hit by a pitch in his finat at bat in the ninth inning.
   The five hits was one shy of OSU's single-game record of six, which was last recorded by Tom Belza in 2008.
Tank Smash
   Colin Simpson, aka "Tank", is having a breakout sophomore season for the Cowboys. The catcher/DH leads OSU with 11 home runs and ranks third with 40 RBIs and a .505 slugging percentage.
   Simpson did the majority of his damage against Big 12 competition as in 22 conference games he hit .272 with seven homers and 23 RBIs — no other Cowboy had more than two homers or 19 RBIs in league play. During one stretch, Simpson went deep in four-straight Big 12 contests, including smacking two homers vs. West Virginia on April 2.
The Candyman Can
   Tyler Buffett was reliable on the mound in his first two seasons in Stillwater, but he emerged as a star in 2016.
   In an OSU-record 37 appearances, 31 of those in relief, the junior right-hander was 9-3 with nine saves and a 2.81 ERA; the nine wins and nine saves marked career highs. A unanimous All-Big 12 First Team pick, he led the Big 12 in appearances and ranked second in saves while also being in the top 10 in wins, ERA and opponent batting average (.229).
   Also named to the National Pitcher of the Year Award Watch List by the National College Baseball Hall of Fame and the NCBWA's Stopper of the Year Watch List, Buffett was 2-0 with six saves in 13 relief outings in Big 12 play. He allowed only eight runs in 21.1 innings while racking up 21 strikeouts against league foes.
   Moved to the starting rotation for the NCAA Tournament, Buffett was dominant in OSU's run to a third-place finish at the College World Series as he went 3-0 with a 0.78 ERA and recorded wins over Clemson, South Carolina and Arizona.
   Buffett, whose 86 appearances is fifth on OSU's career list, is 6-5 in 15 starts this season and ranks fourth in the Big 12 with a team-high 79 strikeouts. He has also moved into eighth on OSU's all-time innings pitched list with 274.0.
Hit Man
   Garrett Benge put up video game numbers at the junior college level as a freshman in 2015, and he has continued to swing a consistent bat in an OSU uniform.
   As a freshman at Cowley County CC, Benge was the 2015 NJCAA Division I Player of the Year after hitting .502 with 19 home runs, 97 RBIs, 26 doubles and four triples. In 59 games, he collected 103 hits and a .946 slugging percentage.
   Manning the hot corner in Stillwater, Benge is OSU's leading returning hitter in 2017 as he hit .292 in his first season and ranked second on the club with 16 doubles and third with 40 RBIs while earning All-Big 12 Second Team accolades.Â
   One of OSU's top hitters again in 2017, Benge's .298 batting average is second on the team, and he ranks among the Big 12 leaders in homers (9), triples (3), RBIs (51), on-base percentage (.435) and walks (48).
Workhorse
   Trey Cobb became the Cowboys' go-to pitcher out of the bullpen in 2015. His team-high 31 appearances marked the third most in a single season in OSU history, and the right-hander compiled a 5-2 record and two saves to go along with a 2.61 ERA. In 58.2 innings — all in relief — Cobb racked up 53 strikeouts, and opponents hit just .221 against him.
   An honorable mention All-Big 12 pick for a second-straight year in 2016, Cobb made 24 appearances on the season, 12 as a starter, and was 4-7 with six saves and a 3.09 ERA. He ranked fourth in the Big 12 with 100 strikeouts in 81 2/3 IP.
   The 2016 opening day starter for the Cowboys vs. UT Arlington, Cobb's next six appearances came in relief before he re-joined the weekend starting rotation March 14 against Abilene Christian.
Off The Shelf, Out Of The Bullpen
   Trey Cobb took the mound for the first time in 2017 on April 1 against West Virginia after missing the first seven weeks of the season recovering from a broken bone in his elbow. With his relief outing against OU on May 20, Cobb became OSU's career leader in appearances with 88 (the record has now reached 91), and he is tied for sixth on the program's all-time list with 11 career saves.
   Cobb thrived as the Cowboys' closer in the 2016 NCAA Tournament, recording a tourney-high four saves. In six relief outings, he turned in a 0.64 ERA, allowing only one earned run in 14 innings and recording 15 strikeouts.
Cowboys In The Outfield
   In outfielders Garrett McCain, Ryan Sluder and Jon Littell, the Pokes returned their most experienced group of position players in 2017. That trio has now combined to make 361 career starts and play in 442 games.Â
   In his final collegiate season, Sluder looks to return to his 2015 form when he was named to the All-Big 12 Second Team after leading the Big 12 with a .403 batting average and .710 slugging percentage in conference-only games. He finished the season with a .309 batting average and a team-best six homers.
   Littell caught fire in last season's NCAA Tournament, where he was OSU's second-leading hitter with a .379 batting average (11-for-29) in nine games. He carried that into 2017, where he was hitting over .300 with three homers and 21 RBIs before suffering injuries in an outfield collision with McCain at TCU on March 26 and missing nine games.
   McCain leads the Big 12 with a .394 batting average and .494 on-base percentage, and he paces the Pokes in 11 offensive categories. In conference play, McCain owned a .434 batting average, which was also the highest in the league.
Breaking Out In A Big Way
   Garrett McCain is enjoying a breakout junior season for the Cowboys and has emerged as the Big 12's top hitter. One of just two OSU players to start all 55 games this season, McCain's .394 batting average is the highest in the Big 12 by 33 points as he vies to become the fourth Cowboy to win a Big 12 batting title and first since Tom Belza hit .386 in 2008.
   McCain's versatility has proven valuable in the field, where he's started 35 games in left field and 18 in center field, and at the plate, where he's batted cleanup 19 times, been in the two-hole 22 times and also hit in the leadoff spot 12 times.
   The Texan leads OSU with 27 multi-hit games and is second with 13 multi-RBI efforts. He also owns the longest hitting streak by a Cowboy this season (13) as well as the longest streak of reaching base safely (30).
New Additions Producing
   OSU's active roster includes 15 newcomers, and 14 of those have made their debuts this season.
   Nine pitchers have toed the rubber for the first time, with three of those — C.J. Varela, Jonathan Heasley and Cole Hearrean — making at least 13 appearances. Heasley's 21 outings have seen him used as a starter and closer; the freshman won his first two starts and his three saves are tied for the team lead. A JUCO transfer, Hearrean is second on the team with 25 appearances and has 25 strikeouts in 23 1/3 innings.
   Seven new OSU position players have earned significant playing time and/or starting roles. Freshmen infielders Cameron Dobbs and Ryan Cash have combined for 69 starts at shortstop and second base, while fellow frosh Cade Cabbiness (31 starts) Michael Neustifter (27) and Trevor Boone (16) also have become regulars in the lineup.
Short Hops
   OSU ranks 25th nationally in walks (276) and strikeouts per nine innings (9.0) ... OSU's 22 hits against Arizona State on Feb. 21 were the most ever by a Josh Holliday-coached club ... OSU is 40th in the official NCAA RPI ... OSU is 9-5 against ranked teams in 2017, with wins over Arizona State, Arkansas, Missouri State, Texas Tech (3) and Oklahoma (3).