Auburn announces attendance policy for 2021 baseball games

Auburn will allow fans in Plainsman Park at the limited capacity of 20 percent for the 2021 Tigers baseball season.

There will be fans in Plainsman Park this season but not nearly as many as Auburn is used to having for a Tigers baseball game.

On Thursday, the athletic department announced that attendance will be limited to just 20 percent at the park during the 2021 season.

Per the press release:

Seats will be arranged in pods of two and four with proper social distancing between each available seating group. Available and unavailable seats will be marked accordingly. Plainsman Patio and Tiger Terrace will be unavailable to begin the season. In addition, alternative viewing spaces outside the park, including the stadium parking deck, will not be available for the 2021 season.

Ticket information will be sent directly to 2020 baseball season ticket holders, who will have first priority when purchasing tickets. Single-game tickets may become available to the general public at a later date based on remaining inventory. All tickets for the 2021 season will be delivered digitally. Auburn Athletics’ priority is to maximize opportunities to attend games to as many fans as possible over the course of the season while maintaining a safe environment for our student-athletes, fans and staff.

Student seating will be available in sections 109-111 as well as sections 52-73. Student tickets will be general admission and distributed on a first come, first served basis. A valid Auburn Ignited Card is required. Additional information will be sent directly to current Auburn students leading up to the home opener on February 19 vs. Presbyterian.

Face coverings (over the nose and mouth) will be required for all spectators and gameday workers upon entry and while inside Plainsman Park. Guests may remove face coverings while actively eating or drinking.

Directional signage, stanchions and barriers will be installed to facilitate six-foot social distancing at entry gates, concourse pathways, concessions and merchandise queues and seating areas. Physical distancing will be maintained throughout the facility to the fullest extent possible.

All transactions for concessions and merchandise locations at Plainsman Park will be contactless and cashless (credit/debit and Tiger Cards only).

Enhanced cleaning and sanitization procedures throughout the park prior to and during all games will be in effect for the 2021 season.

Auburn begins the season in 15 days against Presbyterian.

Ryan Bliss, Richard Fitts named preseason All-America by Baseball America

The preseason accolades keep coming in for Ryan Bliss and Ruchard Fitts ahead of the 2021 season.

Auburn shortstop Ryan Bliss and right-handed pitcher Richard Fitts were named Preseason third team All-America by Baseball America.

It is the third honor for Bliss, who has also been named Preseason third team All-America by Collegiate Baseball and Perfect Game/Rawlings.

It was the second for Fitts, who earned Preseason second team All-America honors from D1 Baseball.

A native of LaGrange, Georgia, Bliss ranked second in the SEC and sixth in the country in hits (29) in 2020. He also appeared in the top 10 in the league in runs (21), doubles (seven), triples (two) and total bases (46).

Making the move from second base to shortstop prior to the 2020 season, Bliss started in all 18 games and didn’t commit an error in 58 chances en route to earning third team All-America honors from Collegiate Baseball at the position. He enters the 2021 season regarded by Baseball America as the No. 76 overall prospect for the 2021 MLB Draft.

Fitts has also emerged as one of the top prospects ahead of the 2021 season. He has been ranked the No. 8 and No. 9 college prospect by Perfect Game and D1 Baseball, respectively, and has been tabbed the No. 13 overall prospect by Perfect Game, the No. 15 overall prospect by Baseball America and the No. 17 overall prospect by MLB.com.

Fitts has posted a 6-3 record with a 4.88 ERA in 27 appearances. He went 1-0 with a 2.77 ERA in six appearances as a sophomore.

Everything Butch Thompson said while previewing 2021 Auburn baseball season

Auburn head baseball coach Butch Thompson previewed the Tigers’ 2021 season.

On what he’s seen from Rankin going back to the fall…

“Yeah, just maturity. I heard his conversation with you and what I witness every day is just that level of maturity. One reason why I wanted him to come back, selfishly, is because he’s been part of a College World Series at every stop and every year of college. Nothing else but just how brilliant he is, how sharp he is. He’s a great team member. You know, he hit the doubles, got off to a great start last year, but, you know, he’s had pretty much a college career of success. And he does a lot for younger people. And he does, I would back him up. He’s not just he’s not just connecting with the guys that he has played with before. He’s connecting with our first-year guys and our young guys. I think Rankin is interested in the legacy he’s going to leave eventually, at the end of this year. I think he’s going to go into med school and I think he will continue some amazing work now that, you know, baseball is winding down. He’s a great student, great person, and, you know, he adds a ton of value to us. It’s like having another coach on the field. When you have that, you always feel good as a coach. Not only a guy that can knock in the runs or make a play and be one of your best players, but when you have a coach that’s actually on that field that can direct traffic and keep guys engaged, sometimes it’s more powerful coming from a player than a coach, and Rankin offers us that.”

On the comfort level of having so many experienced leaders back…

“Yeah, it’s always been to a certain degree. I think you know exactly how I’m wired. After you coach for 20, and then you get to a new decade, a third decade of coaching, there’s a there’s a style that you’ve kind of learned through experience. You know, people at Auburn student athletes, students, families, fans of Auburn and all across the country have been through a ton here. I’ve been thankful to have people like Rankin (Woley) and Ryan Bliss and Cody Greenhill and Jack Owen (who) have helped our program persevere until I speak to you today, three weeks before season starts. They’ve done a great job of morale and leadership. You know, I asked during one section, one month of us spending time together as a team, when we had, you know, Hal Baird and Jonathan Schuerholz and John Smoltz and Bo Jackson and all these men come and talk to our team on this zoom. Once we get through hearing from those 20 amazing people, I asked this leadership group, all these players that I mentioned are on my legacy group, and I said, ‘I want you to come up with your three words for the program’, because for the first five, it’s been attack, legacy, vision. And we make that run. And I asked those guys to come up after listening to those 20 guys, give me new three new words for us to kind of change while we’re in a good position, while the program’s in a good place. But what I was after was their conviction and ownership to go to an even more of a depth I guess, and, you know, they came up with confident, committed and unified. You know, so as we go through our challenges this year, they built the narrative. I think that’s powerful. I think when we get to challenging moments, well they built the narrative and they have skin in the game now and they’ve taken ownership of our program. I’m happy to give that to our players because we have a group of seasoned players that, like you say, have a ton of experience, game experience, but are grown men. For them to have skin in the game, I feel great about it, and to go through what we’ve been through to this point, it’s been amazing having a great level of maturity to lead our programming in these guys.”

On the position battles at first base and DH…

“We’ve kept Rankin over at third. For an example, Rankin will probably play at third base today, and since we haven’t really, you know, in the small group stuff, and now we’re going to play, we go from zero to playing in three squad games in a row Friday, Saturday, Sunday, so I would envision that Rankin would probably play tomorrow at first base. So he’s back and forth. Tyler Miller would probably play first base today and then tomorrow go over to third base. I just think for the left-side infielders, we could just work to keep from them throwing back-to-back days, since we haven’t played one game in a row yet, much less add in three. You’ll see some of those corner guys do that. Rankin and Tyler Miller have played at both positions. Bryson Ware, our new junior college transfer from Mississippi, is a guy that’s in that category, that has just amazed us all. We’ve been so impressed with Bryson. Johnny Ceccoli, a second-year freshmen from Texas, has primarily only worked at first base, so he’s working there every single day. The second person that’s only working at first base at this point is John Samuel Shenker from the football team. So there’s five guys and that lets you know in the past we really haven’t had these awesome problems of having so many guys that can play two positions. We all know if you’re looking for one of the best defenders on the field, then Brody Moore can play, you know, seven positions and we might squeak him in for an inning or two this year to let him play all nine. He still reminds me that every day when we go out to stretch, but, you know, he’s kind of a super-utility guy. We have five guys that we have to get at-bats for. The middle infield still has a bunch of guys competing. All three outfield starters are back, but they’re being pushed. A Bryson Ware, a Bobby Peirce, a Cole Foster at shortstop, are first-year players that have pushed these returning veterans and I don’t (any) of the veterans have done anything wrong. We just have some good new players and have to get a lot of guys some playing time. So we’ll manage back-and-forth, third-to-first and to try to protect arms, but that’s the good thing about having three weeks of squad games here and maybe 11 or 12 squads is they’ll all get their at-bats, they’ll all be able to show us how ready they are, but there’s some competition these three weeks for sure.” 

On Bryson Ware and how many positions he might play…

“In some of our drill work yesterday, we kind of did an up-tempo day, he played short, so I think short, third base, I would call third base primary. He came to us as a shortstop like a lot of these guys have done. That’s a position on the field that can really move to other spots and pick up on it pretty quick. I would say primarily third, first. Shortstop, because you still have Bliss, and Brody Moore and Foster, so that would be a secondary position. I would say another distant secondary position could be one of the corner outfields if we have any challenges, whether it’s health, COVID or sometimes the potential of his bat has been so dynamic, you’re hunting for a way to get him on the field. We ask him to power shag when other guys are hitting in that outfield just to try to keep up some skills because I would say that’s an outside potential as well moving forward even though it’s not at the forefront today.”

 On the power potential this team has…

“I just see more. From inside of our walls, we feel like we’re a little more depth positionally. We feel like somebody like Josh Hall and Kason Howell that has been up and running full speed, those two guys add an element of speed where we feel like we have a tick more of that. Steven Williams, some big swings that he’s had in the past and the potential that we all see when he takes batting practice every day and the number of bats he has, you feel like there’s potential power there. I think for you and our fans, I think some of the biggest gains are going be like, Judd Ward has taken another step with just being able to drive the ball to all parts of the field and a ton of experience. Kason Howell has some power that we haven’t seen in a game yet, but we feel like those two guys in the outfield have made a jump there. Ryan Bliss can get on anybody’s fastball. He showed that in his first full year as a freshman and again when he played 18 games last year. He’s getting ready to play his third season now, so he’s bigger, faster, stronger than he was as a freshman when you remember him playing a complete season. Bryson Ware, he might have as many springs and coils as anybody that we have of electricity in his hands and in his body. You’ll just see it when he gathers or loads up to hit that there’s an intention. For me, I’m like, ‘Can you put the bat on the ball enough?’ You know, as we start moving into a season, if I can be frank and honest for a minute, and he did in the fall and I’m looking forward to it because there’s a lot of power. I think Rankin has a right-centerfield approach that served him well for a college career. You know, hit a ton of doubles. He and Bliss were just having a great, great little short season for us heading into SEC play. Bobby Peirce from Arizona has real power. And I just, you know, Shenker, we just believe in his character so much. You know, Gus and those (football) coaches had told us about his character. We sensed it last year. He was fighting to get a single last year, but you have to look at it and say, ‘Man, he probably hadn’t had a meaningful baseball at-bat in three years’ and then he jumps out and he plays a little bit. What I will tell you, we’re getting him in that same timeframe. We’ve had that same time to work with him, but it does not look anymore like he hadn’t had that at-bat in three years. That’s exciting. Because this is a young man that, you know, every time he swings a bat, it’s coming off about 110. When he walks up to the plate, if Gabe Gross is standing at third, nobody says a word, but he backs up. And you see the left-side infielders like, ‘Yeah, ease on back to the grass a little bit’. Nobody’s saying anything, you’re just seeing that natural ability when he squares it up, it comes off the bat different. I think he’s closer to being able to have real at-bats and be a huge impact for us in the category you’re asking about, Mark, power. I feel like we’re ahead. I feel like we’ve been a pretty good defensive team in the last couple years. You know, maybe just throwing the baseball might have kept us from winning a big one at some point. But our power’s up, and we still think we can defend the three acres out here Plainsman Park pretty good. Our power and speed by a couple guys in the middle of field makes us feel like we, you know, are a little bit further offensively, further along at the start of the season than we’ve been. Compound that with a little bit more depth. Brayton Brown’s another guy that has power potential that’s definitely in our program. Cam Hill’s another freshman, so those are a couple young guys. We’ll be able to play the hot hand. There’ll be more options as opposed to just 10 or 11 position players available. You’re looking at 13-14 guys sometimes being able to pick bats that are really swinging it well might be able to help us on a on a day or a series offensively.”

On the level of play in the SEC this year…

“Yeah. Bill, good to hear from you. It’s been a while, and I appreciate you. I think that’s one of the most, I’ll give you the question of the day thus far. That’s what I think about, Bill, because I do like our team, and shouldn’t I? I mean, seven out of nine starters return. We do feel like we’ve added some decent players. You know, (Matt) Scheffler has been our biggest deal. Can we replace a catcher that just makes everybody on the team better, especially the pitchers right in front of him? But (Nate) LaRue and (Ryan) Dyal have done a really good job with that. We’re excited about those two guys getting the opportunity to figure out how to hold down or share in that responsibility. Having all these, you know, a Cody Greenhill and a Jack Owen, in a normal year we would not have gotten those guys back. That makes us better. You know, both of those guys have had, you look at their last 100 innings, just pretty good 100 innings, you’d take it. And, you know, Richard Fits, to keep getting better and better and people recognizing it. Mason Barnett that may be second to none from a talent standpoint that people don’t really know about yet, except we do. It’s a strange narrative going into this season because I feel great about our team. This is my 20th year, I guess, getting to be on somebody’s team in the SEC, and I’ve never felt any better, but I would imagine every SEC head coach might feel exactly like I do. Then what kind of narrative do I have? How should my feelings be when, you know, I look and we’re ranked, I’ve seen 17, 23, 26, 37, you know, missing, in action. I don’t even know how to feel. I just know what I’ve got. I know everybody feels good about their team. And I’d say it’s hard. You know, I’m on a poll, and it’s hard. That is not enough, last year of a non-conference slate of 18 games, to honestly pick and now we’re talking about two years, really? So it’s hard. I’m saying it’s hard. So I don’t know which one of these gurus are right out there about our ballclub. In my brain, I’ve got to stay locked inside and we have to get prepared. We’ve been pretty good at the start of seasons. That’s important, but our challenge is we’ve been together less than we’ve ever been going into a season. My mind says control what you can control. Get this team as red as you possibly can because that’s been a strength of our ballclub these last few years for sure. We’ll get opportunities is what I’m going to sell to our guys. You don’t have to have this big chip on your shoulder. You don’t have to feel great. You don’t have to feel like you’re being disrespected. What you do is we’re preparing for an opportunity. We’ll get to do it first weekend against Presbyterian. Then we’ll get to go to Texas and play another three great teams, and then we’ll get to go through 10 weeks of SEC play. So, with my club, I just keep talking about opportunities and getting ready, but I just have to give you what I feel at the time. My narrative is this is the most complete team that we’ve had since I’ve been here. Does that mean something amazing is going to happen? There’s some people that are not as high on our team as I am. And that’s OK.”

On the biggest question mark heading into the season…

“Yeah, just we were apart 60 days, and any coach this time of the year, if you look at any point in time of the year where you’re the most susceptible for an arm injury, it’s right now. I think you could go back, and I look at the other sports. I’m a fan. I care. I’ve been in this thing. You guys have been covering it. And I look at the other sports and I look at health and how guys respond. Are they’re playing at their best? Are they hitting on all cylinders? So health in the arms the next three weeks when we were apart for 60 days and couldn’t be with our players, that’s probably paramount for me because I’m ready to go mix it up with, you know, some of these pitching staffs in the league, supposed to be the best maybe college baseball’s ever seen. I think that’s awesome. I think that’s great for our league. It might be, back to Bill, Bill, this might be the best SEC baseball we’ve ever seen on paper. How does that play out? When we’ve been in this COVID maybe not with our guys. We need to march healthy into the season. You know, we marched in the last year and we had Steven Williams and Kason Howell, they were out for a little bit. That can affect our ballclub if one of these good arms, these four or five top arms on our staff, you know, need more time or are not ready or not sharp opening weekend, that affects our ballclub. So those are the things that I think about. We’ve always been pretty cautious and doing everything we can with arms, but as of right now we’re trying to get every one of these guys we talked about ready to compete, and they should be. The thing that can stop you quicker than anything else leading up these three weeks is making sure you’re not trying to do too much this opening weekend of the squad games to curtail. If communication for the players can be honest, and if the coaches can try to push in the right areas, but make sure that we’re allowing them time to ramp up where we have our whole team complete heading into opening weekend, that’s probably what we’re thinking about the most right now coming out of our staff meeting this morning.”

On what attendance will look like in 2021…

“Just rumors. I’ve heard nothing. No guidance has been handed down. I’ve got a lot of a lot of fans, you know, we worked to the point where we get amazing support and sold out Plainsman Park last year for the first time ever. What’s awesome about that is just, you know, seeing it and being a part of it. What’s negative is not getting to finish the season and get into SEC play. It’s not a negative. It’s actually been fuel for me the last couple of weeks, is all these people that have built and walked in that door with us, they want to know. I’m asking for patience. As soon as we get some direction and guidance, we’re going to support it and try to get it to people, but at this point, there’s been nothing handed down. I think there’s been more and more discussion. Our softball team’s probably part of that. We’re kind of the brother-sister combination there. I know Coach Dean’s getting ready for an amazing season so every now and then we’ll reach out to each other. We’re kind of in the same boat. A lot of our student-athletes and a lot of our people around campus, we tip our hats to everybody that’s done good work to where we feel like we’re going to get our opportunity to play. We’re not going to be too pushy. I know it’s getting close for our people, our season ticket holders, people that want to come to these games. It’s exciting, but we just have to wait. I think that waiting later is to try to get it right. That’s what from our commissioner, Greg Sankey, has been the narrative that worked to get some of these other sports off the ground and really to have successful seasons. Of course, we’re in the middle of basketball right now, but for our spring sports, I feel like we’re just taking another page out of that book that he set forth as we began in August, and it’s been a pretty good script so far.”

Casey Mize named No. 11 prospect by MLB.com for 2021

Casey Mize is the No. 11 overall prospect going into the 2021 season by MLB.com.

Casey Mize remains one of the top prospects in all of baseball heading into the 2021 season.

The former Auburn standout and current Detroit Tigers right-hander is ranked the No. 11 overall prospect by MLB.com and the second-ranked prospect in the Tigers organization.

Getting a taste of the Majors in 2020 with seven starts, Mize posted a 6.99 ERA with 26 strikeouts over 28 1/3 innings. That followed a season in the Minor Leagues in which he quickly moved from Class A Advanced Lakeland to Double A Erie, where he threw a no-hitter in his debut for the Seawolves.

The first overall pick in the 2018 MLB draft, Mize enjoyed his best season on the Plains as a junior in 2017 when he went 8-2 with a 2.04 ERA and 109 strikeouts in 83 2/3 innings. As a senior the following year, he fanned 156 batters over 114 2/3 frames while posting a 3.30 ERA in 17 starts.

Butch Thompson ‘excited’ for a full 2021 Auburn baseball season

Auburn coach Butch Thompson is looking forward to a full baseball season after the 2020 campaign was suspended.

Following the abrupt cancellation of the 2020 baseball season, head coach Butch Thompson and his team is excited to get back on the diamond.

This week the SEC’s coaches and administrators approved a regular schedule which will start on Feb. 19 and include 30 conference games and up to 26 non-conference games.

“It’s great and reassuring,” Thompson said. “There was a consensus with the 14 SEC head coaches. There was a consensus with the SEC office with Herb Vincent, who runs baseball, and our commissioner Greg Sankey. We have got another level of approval from the athletic directors. I don’t know what covid has in store for us, but at least for the coaches and players we kind of know what to prepare for.”

Thompson expects to get a schedule next week and to decide how to handle hosting fans at Plainsman Park, which Thompson acknowledged will look different. He also gave credit to the nurses, doctors and Auburn University for making it as safe as possible and for the return to happen.

“Doctors and nurses and nurses have been working to save lives and helping people and helping families. People have been through a lot. From the top of Auburn University on down and through all of our SEC schools there has been a Dr. (Mike) Goodlett and others behind the scenes doing everything they can to make our student-athletes as safe as they possibly can be, but also paving a way for them to be able to participate and compete and play.”

He also added that watching football and other fall sports play their seasons gave him hope that they would be able to play a season.

“We tip our hats to football finishing the season and basketball tipping off and now in the conference schedule. That is hope. That is exciting for us. I believe we’re going to play. I’m excited about playing. Our players are excited. A lot of that hope lies with people that have worked so hard to make these other seasons happen.”

Ryan Bliss, Rankin Woley named preseason All-Americans

Auburn infielders Ryan Bliss and Rankin Woley were named 2021 Preseason Third Team All-America by Collegiate Baseball Tuesday.

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Auburn infielders Ryan Bliss and Rankin Woley were named 2021 Preseason Third Team All-America by Collegiate Baseball Tuesday.

The duo were two of Auburn’s top performers in the shortened 2020 season. Bliss ranked second in the SEC and sixth in the country in hits (29) in 2020. He also appeared in the top 10 in the league in runs (21), doubles (seven), triples (two) and total bases (46). He was named to Collegiate Baseball Third Team All-America honors at shortstop.

Woley was named Third Team All-America by Collegiate Baseball, CoSIDA Academic All-America and the SEC Scholar-Athlete of the Year. Woley tied for the team lead and ranked tied for eighth in the SEC with a .412 average. He also ranked in the top 10 in the league in hits (28), doubles (eight), RBI (22) and total bases (42) and was the lone player in the NCAA to rank in the top 20 in hits, doubles and RBI.

Auburn baseball: Richard Fitts, Bryson Ware talk fall practice

Richard Fitts On building a mound and working out at home during the shutdown… “Yeah, it was really cool. So actually, me and my dad built that mound. Our idea around it was to have something that we can move around and not have to worry about …

Richard Fitts

 On building a mound and working out at home during the shutdown…
“Yeah, it was really cool. So actually, me and my dad built that mound. Our idea around it was to have something that we can move around and not have to worry about trying to find baseball fields that are open while COVID is going on. We’ve got plenty of baseball parks around us, but the city won’t open them because COVID and stuff so it was really tough. I was really wanting to work on my off-speed pitches, my fastball command, stuff like that. My dad loves having little projects and with him just sitting at home all day, he figured that he could start building it. We actually made it where it could fold up and go in my truck if we needed to, so it’s very mobile but it ended up just staying at the house. Just as far as my brother being in town, it was really cool having him there because he was kind of like a coach for me, which usually he’s just kind of been that mentor, someone that I look up to. Just having him there as kind of a coach aspect, telling me some different things that he sees based off of some data and stuff that I send him. Everything like that was really big. Just as far as him being there in person, he wasn’t there much just because he was having to do stuff in Tennessee and Austin Peay, but he was just awesome. I’d call anytime that I needed him and I think he really helped me kind of develop at least my changeup whenever I drop the splitter and figure out some different grips and stuff like that.”

On how early into quarantine they came up with the idea to build a mound…

“So, the idea probably came two days in. I stayed in Auburn I think through the whole month of March and I was throwing with Bailey Horn, but as soon as I got home we figured out that we needed to build a mound. It probably took us a week of planning and then a half a week of building. It was a really quick process. My dad got it done super fast. We put it all together. I was doing half of it, he was doing the other half, and by the time it was all done it was probably like two days before my first bullpen was supposed to be so it was perfect.”

On how he feels he’s performed this fall…

“I’m pleased with where I’m at right now. There’s always room for improvement, so that’s what I want to work on over the rest of this offseason. Yeah, my velo is up right now, but I never really stopped from the spring and I think that has a lot to do with it. We have a lot of guys that they’re just now ramping up, so they’re getting that velo up. Trace Bright last night hit 95, which that’s something good that we saw out of him. He didn’t play summer ball like I did, so now he’s getting the some (points) where we’re starting to see what he did over COVID and it’s starting to show. I think just for me personally, I never really stopped. Just as far as the velo goes, it’s just paying off a little bit faster than some other guys. I think we’re going to see a lot of our of our pitchers have that same kind of thing. Even with the hitters, Bryson (Ware) is doing very well right now. He’s hitting 108 pretty much every exit velo he has. I think just this COVID and everything has been really beneficial for our whole team.”

On getting back up to speed with in-game situations…

“I’d say, just from the pitching aspect, we had a lot of guys that weren’t in situations since February that are more than just throwing a pitch in the strike zone. It’s having to field your position. Just kind of going over our team defense was really big for our freshman pitchers, our veteran pitchers, everybody, just because we were put in those situations where we were having to think about different things and having our infielders behind really kind of helped us, but also put a little bit of pressure on us where we’re not just going through the motions and actually having to think. Just having that little practice with Coach Hudson, having him there is incredible, but everybody is starting to get back in the groove of things as we are going through intrasquads and just going through team practice.”

On if increasing his velocity was a conscious goal…

“My goal this offseason or my quarantine time was to not only increase my velocity, but I wanted to keep my velocity. My freshman year I touched 95 a couple of times, but I was dropping my velocity every inning. I wanted to make a conscious effort to stay at my constant velocity. I want to be sitting 94-95 for six innings. That’s something that I really worked on this offseason. I talked with our strength coach CJ (Chris Joyner) so much. I was probably calling him every week, probably bothering him and his family time, but he was awesome through it all. He was telling me specific workouts to do certain things and I was working with Coach Hudson to figure out some different things that I can do to work off my fastball as I had my velocity increase. Playing summer ball, I really worked on getting into better counts and, out of the stretch, keeping my velocity. I’ve had that struggle, too, as far as I was 93 out of the wind-up and 90 out of a stretch. Just staying consistent was my main goal, and CJ was a big help with that.”

On the new player development facility…
“I think it’s awesome. I know we’ve been waiting on it for a while, and it looks incredible, just from the way it looks on the field, and we know it’s not even done yet. I’m pumped to see how it looks as the final product. It will help all the pitchers have their own little zone other than the bullpen where the position players are getting moved out into that facility where they’re going to have the best opportunity to get better in those cages. They’ll have the opportunity for us to throw live BP in there, where we’re throwing off a mound to hitters when it’s raining and storming. So we’ll be able to get better in pretty much any kind of condition. We’re moving into the place where our old cages were, so I think just that little area is going to be big for us.”

On Coach Thompson’s “iron sharpens iron” mentality…

“He’s actually talked about that all three years, but this year, it’s been a real emphasis, just because of so many new guys we have, and as little experience as we have in SEC play. I think it’s ginormous for us as a pitching staff as far as sharpening each other, like going back and forth. For me personally, I’ve been with Cody Greenhill, and we’ve created this bond that we didn’t have the first two years that I’ve been here. Now that I’m able to work with him every day, I’m making him better. He’s making me 10 times better just because of his experience and what he’s been through and everything. I think just having those guys right there and sharpening each other every day is making the whole team better, not just individuals better.”

On his mentality as a possible weekend starter…

“It’s definitely a position I’m going for. I’m open to be whatever. I’ve said that since day one as far as being a bullpen guy or being a starter. I accepted that role freshman year as a relief guy, and I was happy in that, but this year, I want to make a difference from the starting aspect. I think I definitely have an opportunity to do that. I’ve just got to keep working at it. I think we have a lot of talent and it should be an ongoing competition to gets those spots. We’re going to have a lot of depth at any starting location, any relief location.”

On newcomers who have impressed him…

“Definitely Bryson. He’s making hard contact on every ball. Especially in the fall, not a lot of people have seen live pitching. It’s big to have hard contact, it’s not about getting a hit every time. Bryson is getting plenty of hits, but he’s just making hard contact, which makes a pitcher sit back a little bit, not in the driver’s seat like he wants to be. As far as the hitters go, Bryson’s as good as any of them. Brody’s really trying his hardest to claim a spot and he’s doing a great job of being a leader and he’s energetic. He’s doing everything he can with what he’s got. As far as pitchers go, Cody’s stepped up with his off-speed pitches and he’s getting to where he wants to be with those pitches. I think out of our freshmen, we’re going to see a lot of good guys. Joseph Gonzales, he’s got some good stuff. He’s getting better every day. He’s been talking to me, and he really wants to get better, which is really good to see from those guys.”

Bryson Ware

On how he has transitioned and how he think he’s done this fall…

“Yeah, it’s awesome. It’s definitely a lot different than junior college, just kind of getting acclimated to a bigger college lifestyle. The guys have been awesome, just kind of taking me in as one of their brothers and just getting to know everybody. It’s been really fun this fall. I’ve been just trying to have as much fun as possible, not trying to be too nervous or have too much weight on my shoulders or anything. I’m just kind of trying to let everything happen as it comes and trying to enjoy the process as much as possible.”

On if he had any second thoughts about coming to Auburn after COVID shut the season down…

“There wasn’t a doubt in my mind. My junior college coach kind of threw it at me, ‘If you want to come back then there’s always a spot for you’, but when everything happened, there wasn’t a doubt in my mind that I wanted to come to Auburn. I knew it was going to be more beneficial for me than anything. Just to kind of pick the minds of (Ryan) Bliss and Rankin (Woley), some guys that have been here for a while and just learning from them and seeing how I can perfect my craft as much as possible.”

On what he has seen out of Brody Moore…

“Brody’s definitely one of our most solid infielders. He’s one of those guys that can do it all. He can pick it at any position. Whenever you need him to hit he’s always there in clutch situations in intrasquads. He’s one of those guys that is a great leader on the team and in the infield, especially, and kind of knows where everybody needs to be in every situation. With some of the freshmen pitchers, some of the newer guys, if they’re out there struggling, he’s always there to talk to them, calm them down. He’s definitely a leader on the field and he’s one of our most solid players, for sure.”

On getting back up to speed with in-game situations…

“It’s definitely taken some time. Once we got here, I think everybody was a little rough, especially guys that hadn’t been playing summer ball, but it’s definitely gotten a whole lot better. I know Coach (Nonemaker) and Dan (Gamache) have been working in the infield especially, and probably the same with Coach Gross and the outfield. They’ve been working a lot with us on situational stuff like team defense, whether that’d be bunt defense, first and third, all that kind of stuff. It’s definitely coming along and it’s gotten a whole lot better.”

On what the competition in the infield has been like…
“It’s definitely awesome. Everybody in the infield can play multiple positions at a very high level, and it’s good to be around that kind of competition. It makes me a better player and it gets me more ready for the season, whereas if I was just playing with a bunch of guys that didn’t really know what they were doing. It’s definitely been great to see some of the more experienced guys, even freshman Cole Foster – he’s one of the best infielders I’ve ever played with, so it’s great to be around these kind of guys just to get better.”

On being able to play multiple positions…
“My high school coach always talked about if someone got hurt, it was always the next best available player, not the next best available position player at that spot in particular, so it’s been huge being versatile for me just to be able to get in the lineup any way that I can. I’m not really picky as to where I play, I’m just trying to be open-minded to wherever Coach wants to put me in, and try to learn that spot to my best of my ability.”

On the new player development facility…

“It’s going to up a lot of opportunities for not only us as position players, but also the pitchers moving into the old hitting facility, hopefully sometime soon. It’s going to be awesome. Coming from a junior college, there was not really much in facilities, so it’s opened my eyes when I got here, especially even with the old hitting facilities. It’s been awesome.”

On Coach Thompson’s “iron sharpens iron” mentality…

“A bunch of the guys in the infield are amazing players and I’m learning a ton from them, and hopefully, they’re learning a little bit from me. I’m just trying to pick their brains as much as possible and try to help them make me a better player.”

On newcomers who have impressed him…

“I think I can speak for any position player when you step up to the plate, and Fitts is on the bump, he catches us off guard just about anything he throws. He can locate just about anything for a strike, and it’s pretty hard to catch up to 97. As far as position players go, probably Brody is one of the guys that has really stood out. Judd, Steven, all those guys that have been here for a little bit and are just continuing to get better and better every day. I’m going to learn from them as much as possible, especially Ryan Bliss and Rankin Woley. It’s been awesome.”

Watch: Bo Jackson posts highlight video of Bo Jackson doing Bo Jackson things

Bo Jackson once against proves that he is the G.O.A.T.

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Whatever Bo Jackson does, it turns out awesome.

On Friday, the greatest athlete of all-time posted an old highlight video of him throwing out a runner at first base from left field along with some commentating on the moment.

First of all, you could have literally hung some laundry on the line of that baseball. Two, Jackson should post these more often. He once proves he is the GOAT.

Watch: Auburn coach Butch Thompson wishes Casey Mize luck in MLB debut

Casey Mize will make his MLB debut on Wednesday night for the Detroit Tigers.

Casey Mize will take the bump tonight for the Detroit Tigers against the Chicago White Sox as he makes his MLB debut.

The former Auburn standout and No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 MLB Draft has already received well wishes from some Auburn legends in Frank Thomas and Tim Hudson, but his former coach wanted to send his best regards as well.

Thompson took over the Auburn program in 2015 and has led its rejuvenation including a trip to the 2019 College World Series.

Watch: Former Auburn big leaguers wish Casey Mize luck on his debut

Casey Mize takes the mound on Wednesday night for the Detroit Tigers.

It is Casey Mize day on Wednesday as the former Auburn standout and No. 1 overall pick in the 2018 MLB Draft is set to make his major league debut for the Detroit Tigers against the Chicago White Sox.

A bunch of former Tigers who also played in the majors wanted to wish the pitcher luck on his debut.

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