The Victory Lap: Episode 6

We are excited to release the next episode of The Victory Lap. Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt both signed NIL deal(s) with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do this weekly show. In this week’s episode Caden Grice joins the show. Grice goes …

We are excited to release the next episode of The Victory Lap.

Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt both signed NIL deal(s) with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do this weekly show.

In this week’s episode Caden Grice joins the show.  Grice goes in-depth on why he became a Tiger, his favorite restaurant in Clemson and much more.  Learn more from all three about how the program has changed under the new leadership of coach Bakich.

Dear Old Clemson has loaded up our online store with some great collectibles for Clemson baseball.  

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

The Victory Lap: Episode 4

Tonight we release the next episode of The Victory Lap. Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt both signed NIL deal(s) with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do this weekly show. A special thanks to Corbitt for coming into the studio on his …

Tonight we release the next episode of The Victory Lap.

Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt both signed NIL deal(s) with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do this weekly show.

A special thanks to Corbitt for coming into the studio on his birthday to film this episode.  Learn about the preparations for the ECU game, helping support the students building the displays for Homecoming and much more.

Get a behind the scenes look at life as a Tiger and much more in this episode.

The Victory Lap: Episode 3

Tonight we release the next episode of The Victory Lap. Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt both signed NIL deal(s) with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do this weekly show. Get a behind the scenes look at life as a Tiger and much more in this …

Tonight we release the next episode of The Victory Lap.

Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt both signed NIL deal(s) with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do this weekly show.

Get a behind the scenes look at life as a Tiger and much more in this episode.

The Victory Lap: Episode 2 with Special Guest Riley Bertram

Tonight we release the second edition of The Victory Lap. Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt both signed NIL deal(s) with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do a weekly show. In this episode, Fairey and Corbitt are joined by Michigan transfer …

Tonight we release the second edition of The Victory Lap.

Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt both signed NIL deal(s) with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do a weekly show.

In this episode, Fairey and Corbitt are joined by Michigan transfer Riley Bertram.  Learn about coach Bakich from someone that knows him well and didn’t have to think long about joining him at Clemson.  Also learn about the differences he sees at Clemson.

Dear Old Clemson is excited to announce a limited edition football and poster signed by Clemson’s Avengers.

Now there is a new way you can support Clemson student-athletes. Purchase collectibles from Dear Old Clemson and the proceeds with go to support Clemson student-athletes. Visit Dear Old Clemson to find out how you can help!

The Victory Lap – Episode 1

We are excited to release the first episode of The Victory Lap. Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt signed an NIL deal with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do this weekly show. In this episode Fairey and Corbitt give you a behind the scenes …

We are excited to release the first episode of The Victory Lap.  Chad Fairey and Tyler Corbitt signed an NIL deal with The Clemson Insider and Dear Old Clemson to do this weekly show.

In this episode Fairey and Corbitt give you a behind the scenes look at Clemson baseball.  Find out how things have changed with the new staff, how coach Leggett is playing a role again and who some of the behind the scenes staff that keep Clemson baseball moving smoothly.

What is a day in the life like for a fifth year baseball player?  Why did they choose to be Tigers?  Even a discussion of their golf games and fishing skills.  These are just some of the things you will hear in Episode 1.

Lee doesn’t rule out more potential lineup changes amid Clemson’s offensive lull

Monte Lee doesn’t want to overreact now that his team is dealing with its first extended bout of adversity. “It’s part of the process,” Clemson’s baseball coach said. “You’re going to go through this because we weren’t going to be perfect throughout …

Monte Lee doesn’t want to overreact now that his team is dealing with its first extended bout of adversity.

“It’s part of the process,” Clemson’s baseball coach said. “You’re going to go through this because we weren’t going to be perfect throughout the season. We knew, at some point, you’re going to go through some tough spells, and we’re going through one right now.”

But there’s been one constant regardless of each outcome of the Tigers’ first 18 games, and that’s a lack of timely offense. It’s starting to catch up to No. 15 Clemson as the quality of competition stiffens.

Clemson lost its opening ACC series as well as its fourth straight game Saturday with a 4-1 setback to No. 23 Miami at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. The skid has come on the heels of the Tigers’ 14-0 start to the season, though strong pitching – the Tigers’ staff has a collective 3.09 earned run average – helped Clemson mask its offensive woes even when the wins were coming.

Four of Clemson’s wins have been decided by two runs or less, games in which the Tigers didn’t score more than four runs. With production at the plate falling off even more during the losing streak, which began with a 5-2 loss to Northeastern in last weekend’s series finale, Lee said there could be more changes to the lineup coming.

He’s already shaken things up the last few games. Sophomore Mac Starbuck got his first career start at second base in Clemson’s midweek loss to Georgia State, though Blake Wright was back in the starting lineup in the series opener against Miami on Friday. Lee moved shortstop Ben Blackwell, normally Clemson’s 9-hole hitter, to the leadoff spot, and J.D. Brock got his first start of the season in left field Saturday in place of Chad Fairey, who’s hit just .213 in the 16 games he’s played.

“Now that the game is over, I’ll look at the pieces and see if there’s something that makes sense to move in and out and those kinds of things,” Lee said following Saturday’s game.

Things haven’t improved much in the first two games against the Hurricanes, who have held Clemson to just five runs in the series. Saturday’s offensive performance was the bleakest it’s been all season for the Tigers, who had a season-low four hits. Blackwell, Wright and Brock combined to go 0-for-12 while preseason All-American Caden Grice, who slid down to the No. 6 spot in the lineup, went hitless in two at-bats to drop his average to .246.

After notching just one hit in 13 at-bats with runners on Saturday, Clemson is hitting just .153 (8 of 52) in that category during its losing streak. The Tigers are 0-for-14 with runners in scoring position so far against Miami and just 3 of 26 over their last four games. Clemson hasn’t scored more than four runs in any of them.

“Typically when you’re not scoring runs, you want to try to run another guy or two in there and see what he can do,” Lee said. “I don’t want to move the pieces to the puzzle all over the place, but we’ll still continue to look at it and maybe tinker with one or two more guys to see if we can find a spark there.”

Regardless of who’s in the lineup, though, Lee said it’s on him and his coaching staff to practice positive reinforcement as their players go through their first extended bout of adversity of the season.

“The psyche of a baseball player, it can be tough,” Lee said. “You’re dealing with a lot of pressure to play at a school like Clemson. You’re dealing with failure constantly, and the players have to feel like you have their back and that you’re the person they can come to that’s going to help them and not shun them. When you have to deal with the amount of failure a baseball player has to deal with, they need somebody on their side.”

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

Fairey shaping up for breakout season

With Clemson baseball’s fall season underway, Monte Lee is taking inventory of the talent within this year’s team and the seventh-year head coach has been pleased with what he has seen so far. One of those bright spots so far has been senior Chad …

With Clemson baseball’s fall season underway, Monte Lee is taking inventory of the talent within this year’s team and the seventh-year head coach has been pleased with what he has seen so far.

One of those bright spots so far has been senior Chad Fairey. The outfielder, who missed the majority of last season due to injury, had a stellar summer playing with the Strasburg Express in the Valley League in Virginia, coming away with a .326 slugging percentage, 11 home runs, 41 RBIs, and 40 runs.

In his first three seasons with the Tigers, the Greenwood, S.C. native has recorded a double, four homers, 13 RBIs, and 14 runs along with holding a .333 slugging percentage and a .361 on-base percentage over the course of 42 games and 26 starts.

“Chad had a heck of a summer in the valley league,” Lee told The Clemson Insider. “Unfortunately, we didn’t have Chad last year, he was hurt for us, but he got a lot of at-bats as a freshman and even in the Covid season. He actually had the last hit of the Covid season, so we’ve seen Chad Fairey do big, big things here.”

Fairey’s production on the field seemingly continued into the Tigers’ first exhibition game of the fall against UAB last weekend. In Clemson’s 20-8 victory over the Blazers, Fairey accounted for 5 of the Tigers 20 runs along with two back-to-back home runs in the first and second inning.

“It’s just good to have him healthy and have that presence there in the middle of the lineup with that kind of power, you know, between him and Bryar Hawkins,” Lee said. “Those two guys swung the bat very, very well for us today. They’re older guys, they have some power, they’re veterans, and we expect big things out of those guys.”

The Tigers open up the 2022 season on Friday, February 18, when they host. Indiana on opening weekend in a three game set.

Clemson Variety & Frame is doing their part to help bring you some classic new barware and help one of the local businesses that helps make Clemson special.

 

Order your Nick’s barware and do your part to help.  #SaveNicks

Tigers blast Blazers 20-8 in scrimmage

Clemson took control early on in Saturday’s fall scrimmage at Doug Kingsmore Stadium, overtaking the UAB blazers 20-8. A six-run second inning secured the exhibition win for the Tigers with big-time hits from both catcher Cooper Ingle and outfielder …

Clemson took control early on in Saturday’s fall scrimmage at Doug Kingsmore Stadium, overtaking the UAB blazers 20-8. A six-run second inning secured the exhibition win for the Tigers with big-time hits from both catcher Cooper Ingle and outfielder Chad Fairey, who together accounted for six of Clemson’s twenty runs on the day.

Through fourteen innings of play, Clemson put together 20 runs on 19 hits with 5 homers and 2 errors along with putting fourteen different Tigers on the mound.

“It was just a great day of baseball for us,” head coach Monte Lee told The Clemson Insider. “To be able to play fourteen innings against somebody else. Really appreciate UAB coming up to play us here and I thought the guys played really really well. Thought we threw the ball really well, you know, had an inning or two where we had some mishaps and we gave them too many free 90’s, but overall, I thought our pitching staff did a great job and we swung the bats extremely well. A lot of quality at-bats, competitive at-bats.”

“Defensively, I thought we played really well. Ran the bases really hard, a lot of dirt ball reads, first to thirds, and just did a good job on the bases. Still a lot of areas to improve on, but we got a chance to play every position player who was healthy and available, and we threw fourteen different pitchers today. All in all, I thought we did great.”

The Tigers got on the board first thanks to a leadoff homer to right field by sophomore Cooper Ingle along with a two-run bomb also to right field from Chad Fairey. Clemson’s bats continued to stay hot into the second, tacking on six runs, three of which came from Fairey’s deep shot to right center field.

Clemson tacked on another three runs thanks to RBI singles from Tyler Corbitt, Chad Fairey, and J.D. Brock.

Bryar Hawkins struck again for the Tigers in the eleventh inning, hitting Clemson’s fourth homer of the day, good for two runs. Dylan Brewer tacked on another run with a solo bomb to right center field along with Blake Wright’s 3 RBI double and Jonathan French’s RBI double to round out the scoring in the fourteenth.

The Blazers attempted to answer in the second with two runs, the tenth with four, and once again with a homer by Josh Sears in the twelfth, but Clemson ultimately came away with the exhibition victory with a final score of 20-8.

“I think we set the tone early… I think there in the first inning being able to get on the board in the fashion that we did set the tone for the whole day and all in all, just really swung the bats well,” Lee said. “I was really pleased to see that.”

Clemson plays its second and final scrimmage of the fall season against outside competition at Auburn on Saturday, Oct 23 with first pitch scheduled for noon.