Auburn baseball heading back to Arlington in 2025

Auburn baseball is heading back to Globe Life Field in Arlington, Texas to compete in the 2025 College Baseball Series after previously playing there in 2022.

Auburn baseball is already preparing for next season’s action with the 2024 campaign coming to a close. Over recent years, the team has had a history of playing in at least one event at the beginning of the season, and the same holds true for next year.

The Tigers will once again travel to Arlington, Texas, in 2025 to take part in the 2025 College Baseball Series at Globe Life Field from Feb. 28 – March 5. There, they will take on three big name programs in the Baylor Bears, Ohio State Buckeyes and Oregon State Beavers.

Auburn is a combined 4-5 against the field. It is 0-1 against Baylor, 2-3 against Ohio State and 2-1 against Oregon State. The most recent matchup it had with a team in this lineup was in the super regionals of the 2022 NCAA Baseball Tournament, where it took two out of three against the Beavers in Corvallis, Oregon.

This will be the team’s first trip back to the city since it competed at the State Farm College Baseball Showdown in 2022, taking on Oklahoma, Texas Tech and Kansas State. The Tigers went 2-1 in that event.

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Auburn star Ike Irish set to return this weekend against Ole Miss

Before suffering his injury, Irish was the cornerstone of the Tiger lineup, slashing .326 with 11 home runs and an OPS well over 1.000.

Good news regarding the Auburn baseball team has been rarer than game day buttons at the bookstore on a Fall Saturday this season, but Butch Thompson’s team did receive a tremendous update on Friday.

Sophomore catcher Ike Irish, who has been out with an injured hand since April 21, is reportedly expected to suit up for Auburn in a winnable series against Ole Miss this weekend. Before suffering his injury, Irish was the cornerstone of the Tiger lineup, slashing .326 with 11 home runs and an OPS well over 1.000.

His return will be welcomed by an Auburn lineup seemingly lost at the plate recently without Irish and fellow leaders Bobby Peirce and Mason Maners. Maners was able to return for last Sunday, while Peirce is still expected out for the time being. Still, an Auburn lineup featuring Maners and Irish holding down the middle should provide a major spark to a lineup that has managed just 13 runs in its last 5 SEC games.

Backup catcher Cale Stricklin, who may still see a start or two if Butch Thompson opts to DH Irish, seems to agree. “He’s a spark plug for our team. We’re playing good baseball going back to the last game against LSU. He’s really going to help our team and we’re going to get going.”

Irish and the Tigers open up their series with Ole Miss on Friday at 6 PM CST at Plainsman Park.

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Auburn announces weekend rotation for series vs. Texas A&M

For the first time in three weeks, Auburn head coach Butch Thompson is sticking with the same pitching rotation he did a week ago for the Tigers’ upcoming series against No. 4 Texas A&M.

For the first time in three weeks, Auburn head coach Butch Thompson is sticking with the same pitching rotation he did a week ago for the Tigers’ upcoming series against No. 4 Texas A&M.

[autotag]Conner McBride[/autotag], [autotag]Chase Allsup[/autotag], and [autotag]Joseph Gonzalez[/autotag] will toe the rubber against the Aggies. The former will open the series for the second straight weekend while Gonzalez closes things out on “get-away day” on Sunday.

McBride (3-1) has been a revelation for Butch Thompson’s Tigers this season, pitching to a 2.38 earned run average to lead all Auburn starters. The junior did everything he could to earn a win last Friday against Arkansas, but the Auburn bats weren’t able to help him out in a 1-0 loss at home.

As for Allsup, the junior will start on Saturday for the second consecutive weekend after starting every series openers prior. The Dothan, AL native put together his best start in a while last time out, shoving six innings of 3-run ball in a 6-5 loss.

Joseph Gonzalez ( rounds things out for a second consecutive weekend after missing out on the weekend rotation three weeks ago due to struggles to begin the season. He’ll look to secure back-to-back wins for the first time this season.

 

McBride. Allsup, Gonzalez, and the Tigers open up their series against Texas A&M in College Station on Friday night. First pitch is scheduled for 6 PM central.

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Auburn announces weekend rotation for series against Arkansas

With the nation’s No. 1 team looming, Auburn’s coach has shaken up his weekend rotation for the second straight week.

The Auburn Tigers had a miserable opening SEC a week ago against Vanderbilt in Nashville. Things don’t get much easier for [autotag]Butch Thompson[/autotag]’s squad this weekend as the No. 1 ranked Arkansas Razorbacks are due to visit Plainsmark Park for a three-game set.

With the nation’s No. 1 team looming, Auburn’s coach has shaken up his weekend rotation for the second straight week, this time not only changing up the order but the personnel as well.

After starting every series opener for the Tigers so far this season, junior Chase Allsup will get the ball on Saturday, giving way to fellow junior Conner McBride for the series opener.

McBride has been the most consistent Auburn hurler this season in limited work. He most recently threw 5 innings of 1-run, 2-hit ball against Troy on March 12. The San Diego, CA native leads all Auburn starters with a 2.41 ERA this season.

Allsup will take the hill in game 2 of the series as he attempts to bounce back from giving up 7 earned runs over 4 innings his last time out.

Junior Joseph Gonzalez is set to start for the second-straight Sunday after surrendering 3 runs (1 earned) over 3 1/3 innings of work last time out. Despite his 6.92 ERA, Gonzalez has been able to hold onto a rotation spot because of the recent struggles of left-hander Carson Myers. The UAB transfer was bumped out of the weekend rotation this week in favor of McBride.

McBride. Allsup, Gonzalez, and the Tigers open up their series against Arkansas Friday night. First pitch is scheduled for 6 PM central.

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Auburn baseball sets rotation for Jax College Baseball Classic

Coach Butch Thompson has clearly shown what three Tiger hurlers he has the most faith in.

The 4-0 Auburn Tigers make the short trip to Jacksonville, FL this weekend to take part in the “Jax College Baseball Classic”. The 3-game event will be anything but a vacation for Butch Thompson’s squad.

Auburn opens the action against No. 18 Iowa on Friday evening before facing off against 2-1 Wichita State at 11 A.M. The Tigers’ toughest test comes on Sunday when they take on No. 10 Virginia to close out their time in Jacksonville.

Luckily for Auburn, reigning SEC Pitcher of the Week Carson Myers lined up perfectly to get the ball against the top-ranked Cavaliers.

Myers will close out the weekend behind juniors Chase Allsup and Joseph Gonzalez.

The Dothan, AL native Allsup is set to open things up against Iowa after an up-and-down opening day start, while Gonzalez will be asked to slow down a Shockers lineup that just scored 36 runs in their opening three-game series.

While Myers was the talk of the staff after the first week of the season, Gonzalez wasn’t too shabby either (5 IP, 1 ER) and he could seemingly have the best numbers on the staff after this tournament.

Either way, coach Butch Thompson has clearly shown what three Tiger hurlers he has the most faith in. Most likely, this will be Auburn’s weekend pitching rotation moving forward.

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Former Auburn pitcher Peyton Glavine has signed with the Washington Nationals

The former Tiger has found a home in the MLB.

Auburn left-handed pitcher Peyton Glavine signed a free-agent contract with the Washington Nationals Monday.

Glavine becomes the seventh member of the 2021 team to enter professional baseball, including the third to join the Nationals. Ryan Bliss, Richard Fitts, Tyler Miller, and Steven Williams were drafted last week, while Cody Greenhill and Jack Owen have also signed free-agent contracts.

A native of Alpharetta, Georgia, Glavine made 29 career appearances and two starts in the orange and blue, striking out 44 batters in 39.0 career innings pitched.

Glavine saved his best for last as he registered career bests in ERA, appearances, strikeouts, and innings in 2021. The southpaw nearly tripled his strikeout total and quadrupled his innings total in his final season.

This is from a release from Auburn University. 

Former Auburn pitcher Peyton Glavine has signed with the Washington Nationals

The former Tiger has found a home in the MLB.

Auburn left-handed pitcher Peyton Glavine signed a free-agent contract with the Washington Nationals Monday.

Glavine becomes the seventh member of the 2021 team to enter professional baseball, including the third to join the Nationals. Ryan Bliss, Richard Fitts, Tyler Miller, and Steven Williams were drafted last week, while Cody Greenhill and Jack Owen have also signed free-agent contracts.

A native of Alpharetta, Georgia, Glavine made 29 career appearances and two starts in the orange and blue, striking out 44 batters in 39.0 career innings pitched.

Glavine saved his best for last as he registered career bests in ERA, appearances, strikeouts, and innings in 2021. The southpaw nearly tripled his strikeout total and quadrupled his innings total in his final season.

This is from a release from Auburn University. 

Richard Fitts gets drafted by the New York Yankees in the MLB Draft

Richard Fitts was the second Auburn Tiger selected in the MLB Draft.

The wait was longer than he expected, but Richard Fitts was drafted by the New York Yankees in the sixth round of the MLB Draft.

The Auburn pitcher was selected with the 183rd overall pick. The 6-foot-3, 215-pound selection is slotted to make $266,000 based on where he was selected.

Here’s MLB.com’s scouting report on Fitts.

Fitts was a key reliever for Auburn as a freshman in 2019, throwing six shutout innings to beat Georgia Tech in the NCAA regional playoffs, winning the clincher against North Carolina in the super regionals and pitching well in two College World Series appearances. He remained in the bullpen during the shortened 2020 season but raised his profile significantly as a starter during summer play and fall practice. Viewed as a potential first-rounder, he instead has become an enigma after sustaining a foot injury in early March and pitching sparingly afterward. After operating with a low-90s sinker as a reliever, Fitts began employing a four-seam fastball as a starter. He showed the ability to sit at 93-95 mph for several innings and reach 97 with quality vertical life on his heater last year and has mostly held that velocity in 2021. He has two promising secondary pitches, with his upper-80s changeup with some splitter action currently a more reliable option than his improving mid-80s slider, but both have regressed this spring. Fitts’ stuff has gotten better as he has grown into his 6-foot-3 frame, which is strong enough for him to handle a starter’s workload. His arm action and delivery are sound, and he throws strikes with his entire arsenal. Adding to the package is his competitiveness, which draws as much praise as his stuff.

Fitts was the second Auburn Tigers to be drafted in the 2021 MLB Draft after Ryan Bliss was taken by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the second round.

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Rival SEC baseball atmospheres prove Auburn is lagging far behind

While other SEC baseball stadiums have become atmospheres you have to witness, Auburn’s Plainsman Park remains as dull as ever.

If you’ve been watching the NCAA Baseball Tournament during the past week, you’ve noticed quite amazing atmospheres from Starkville to Fayetteville and many other places in the SEC.

It made me jealous. Not because these SEC teams were winning, in fact the complete opposite. I’m rooting for them. Yet what made me jealous was the fact that these baseball stadiums — Dudy Noble, Baum-Walker, Lindsey Nelson — are much better than Auburn has ever had and, possibly, ever imagined of having.

Let that sink in.

The scenes have been phenomenal. The crowd? Noisy as possible. Heck, Mississippi State set a Super Regional record with 14,385 fans on Saturday.

And what do we have at Auburn? It’s rarely filled to the 4,096 capacity that Plainsman Park holds. We have the three or four guys in that one section along the third-base line that continue yelling things that are as funny as the latest Adam Sandler movie. Oh, and that parking deck. Yes, we have the parking deck full of people drinking but too far away — and disinterested in the game — to make any impact on the home-field advantage.

Heck, we don’t even have outfield seating. I’ve seen some people on Twitter mention putting seats on top of the left-field wall and, yes, that would be a great start but when you see 4,000 people (again, more than we average at a game) in the outfield at an Ole Miss game throwing beer in the air after a home run, the Plainsman Park atmosphere looks like a Jefferson-Pilot noon game at Vanderbilt.

It’s not like the Tigers haven’t won. Taking this year out of the equation, the Butch Thompson era has brought back some glory to the program with a trip to the Super Regionals in 2018 and to Omaha for the College World Series in 2019.

We’ve seen the Auburn fan base turn Jane B. Moore Field into a true home-field advantage. Auburn Arena has become one of the most intimidating environments in college basketball.

So what is lacking for Auburn baseball? Why have SEC stadiums at Ole Miss, Mississippi State and elsewhere become so much wild while Plainsman Park resembles a 9 a.m. World History lecture in Haley Center?

I don’t have all the answers but I can suggest some.

Build a section beyond the right-field wall that allows students to bring coolers with their beverages of choice where they can also see the game. It worked to a degree with K Corner but … well … students tend to be more rowdy than alumni in their 50’s.

Make the game more of an experience than it is right now. Besides baseball, what is the really attraction of going to Plainsman Park right now? It’s not for a great atmosphere that you witness across the street at Jordan-Hare Stadium or Auburn Arena.

Of course, this might also just come down to fan indifference. Are Auburn fans truly bought into baseball? Do they even care if the Tigers succeed or not? It’s been some time since the program put out a successful winner consistently but the same can be true for many other sports that are better supported on campus.

Granted, it is hard to compare a regular season series to a Super Regional but, when it comes to attendance, the stadiums are full to almost full in other places where the Tigers are lucky to play in front of 2,000.

Yes, watching the NCAA Regionals and Super Regionals have made me extremely jealous of the environments that other SEC teams enjoy and use to their advantage. There’s no reason Auburn can’t make Plainsman Park an atmosphere to fear.

Former Auburn baseball great Joe Beckwith passes away at 66

Joe Beckwith is the program record holder in most complete games with 20 and helped lead the 1976 Auburn team to the College World Series.

Auburn baseball has lost a legend.

On Saturday, the athletic department announced the death of Joe Beckwith, a former Auburn pitcher and two-time World Series winner. He was 66.

“Auburn University, Auburn baseball and the Auburn community lost a legend in Joe Beckwith,” head coach Butch Thompson said. “I’m so thankful for his contributions through the years. He has represented us so well. I’m thankful to Auburn and our athletics department for recognizing Joe and his family a few weeks ago at Plainsman Park.

 “I’ll never forget his friendship and how he stayed connected and continued to root for his alma mater and for this baseball team,” Thompson added. “Our thoughts and prayers are with Joe and his family during this time.”

Beckwith played for the Tigers from 1974-77 where he was a four-year letter winner. He still holds the program record for career complete games (20) and ranks third in career ERA (1.92) and fourth in wins (31.) He was key member of the Auburn team that reached the College World Series in 1976.

Drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the second round of the 1977 MLB draft, Beckwitch won a World Series with the Dodgers in 1981 and then with the Kansas City Royals in 1985.