Clemson’s season teetering following another loss

CHARLOTTE – The wait begins. And it will be a nerve-wracking one for Clemson’s baseball team. The Tigers’ postseason chances clashed with a virtual must-win scenario Thursday after Clemson dropped its ACC Tournament opener to North Carolina two days …

CHARLOTTE – The wait begins.

And it will be a nerve-wracking one for Clemson’s baseball team.

The Tigers’ postseason chances clashed with a virtual must-win scenario Thursday after Clemson dropped its ACC Tournament opener to North Carolina two days earlier. But top-seeded Virginia Tech made sure the Tigers left the Queen City empty-handed in their bid to enhance a bubbly resume for the NCAA Tournament.

Max Wagner tied a program record with his 27th home run of the season, but it was one of the few highlights for Clemson (35-23) in a tournament finale in which the Tigers trailed from the start. Tech (41-11) swatted six homers against five Tiger pitchers, including four as part of a seven-run third, in handing Clemson an 18-6 loss Thursday at Truist Field. Beginning the week with an RPI ranking in the high 30s but just 13 ACC victories, the Tigers were outscored 27-8 in its tournament losses.

Now they’ll be sweating and hoping their body of work is good enough for a regional berth when the 64-team field is announced Monday. Clemson is in danger of missing consecutive NCAA Tournaments for the first time since the Reagan administration.

Tech finished with 15 hits and had 10 runs less than three frames in against a Clemson pitching staff with an earned run average north of 4.6 coming into the tournament. The Hokies scored in each of the first three innings against freshman right-hander Billy Barlow (2-4), who allowed five runs (three earned) on four hits and walked three in his 13th start of the season.

Carson Jones ended Barlow’s night with a no-doubter to right with two outs in the third. Clemson coach Monte Lee brought on another freshman, Austin Gordon, but Tech kept the long balls coming, hitting back-to-back-to-back jacks off the right-hander in the inning to push its lead to 10-2.

Wagner brought Will Taylor home in the bottom half of the inning with a two-run homer to left-center, tying the record set by Khalil Greene in 2002 for the most home runs in a single season. Freshman outfielder Camden Troyer got the Tigers a little closer with another two-run shot in the fourth, but the Hokies blanked Clemson over the final five innings while the Tigers’ pitching continued to struggle.

Senior Jackson Lindley walked three of the four batters he faced in the fourth as Clemson issued 10 free passes on the night. Geoffrey Gilbert, who started each of the previous five games he pitched, came on with one out in the inning for his first relief appearance since April 20. His 2 2/3 innings of work tied the longest outing of the night for a Clemson pitcher, though he yielded two more runs on three hits, including Nick Biddison’s solo shot in the seventh.

Jones tagged Tech’s final homer off Ryan Ammons as part of a four-run ninth for the Hokies. Ammons allowed four hits and walked one over the final two innings.

Troyer finished with two of Clemson’s six hits. Biddison went 3-for-3 with five RBIs for Tech.

This story will be updated.

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Bullpen helps Clemson outlast Florida State for key series win

Clemson’s baseball team once again got a short outing from its Sunday starter. So did Florida State. That turned the teams’ series finale at Doug Kingsmore Stadium into a bullpen duel – one that tilted in the home team’s favor late to give the …

Clemson’s baseball team once again got a short outing from its Sunday starter. So did Florida State.

That turned the teams’ series finale at Doug Kingsmore Stadium into a bullpen duel – one that tilted in the home team’s favor late to give the Tigers an all-important victory.

Clemson plated three runs in the eighth inning, helping the Tigers outlast the ninth-ranked Seminoles in an 8-5 win that saw the teams use 13 pitchers and combine for 10 errors. The win – the Tigers’ seventh in their last nine games – clinched Clemson’s second straight ACC series win, which also helps the Tigers (26-14, 6-11) keep pace in the race for a spot in next month’s ACC Tournament.

“A critical win for our team,” Clemson coach Montee Lee said. “During this time of year, it’s just a critical series. I think we know where we’re at and what we’ve got to do.

“We’re trying to do everything we can to put ourselves in position to play baseball as long as we can. You’ve got to win series at this point. Just really proud of our guys and the way we fought.”

The Tigers would still be on the outside looking in if the tournament started this week, though their two wins over FSU (24-15, 11-10) improved their conference winning percentage to .352. Duke, with its 8-13 ACC record (.380 win percentage), is slightly ahead of the Tigers for the final spot in the conference tournament for the time being after winning a series over Georgia Tech this weekend.

Clemson still has four conference series left starting with a trip to Louisville on Friday.

“The last two weekends were big,” said second baseman Blake Wright, who had two of Clemson’s six hits, both doubles. “I think we’ve been playing a lot better baseball of late. We’re just going to have to keep that rolling. Have some good opponents coming up.”

Lee made his second change to the rotation in as many days, giving the start to freshman Billy Barlow instead of Nick Clayton, who hadn’t gone deeper than the fourth inning in any of his previous three Sunday starts. It looked like Barlow might not last long after the Tigers’ usual midweek starter threw four innings in Clemson’s win over Georgia on Tuesday.

The right-hander needed 41 pitches to get through the Seminoles’ three-run first inning, one of which came around to score on shortstop Ben Blackwell’s throwing error that extended the frame. But Barlow needed just 31 pitches to get through the next two innings and returned to the mound to start the fourth before a hit batter and Tyler Martin’s two-out single ended his day.

Barlow finished with 82 more pitches after throwing more than 60 five days earlier. He scattered four hits, walked two and struck out five in the first weekend start of his career.

“He was on four full days of rest. He was certainly recovered enough to be able to start,” Lee said of Barlow. “We wanted to run somebody out there that had the ability to get through a lineup twice, and Billy has done that now several times over the course of this season. We felt like we was the right guy to run out there.”

Caden Grice got those runs back for Clemson in the bottom of the second with a three-run homer into the seats in left, helping chase FSU starter Carson Montgomery after an inning. But Clemson couldn’t muster much against reliever Wyatt Crowell, who held the Tigers to just two hits over the next five frames.

Meanwhile, Barlow’s early exit left the Tigers’ bullpen with more than four innings to work for the second straight day. But six Clemson relievers combined to yield just one earned run on four hits over the final 5 1/3 innings.

“After giving up a big inning in the first, if you give up one earned run for the rest of the game, you would sign up for that,” Lee said. “I would say the bullpen was outstanding.”

Fellow freshman Jay Dill kept FSU at bay for 1 ⅓ innings with some help from the Tigers’ rollercoaster defensive performance. Treyton Rank beat out Wright’s throw on a slow roller with two outs and two on in the top of the fifth, but first baseman Bryar Hawkins threw out Brett Roberts trying to score from second to keep the game knotted at 3.

The Seminoles got to Grice the next inning. The sophomore left-hander, making just his seventh relief appearance of the season, threw wide of first on Alex Toral’s leadoff bunt before issuing a walk. Jordan Carrion then cleared the bases with a double down the third-base line to end Grice’s day after retiring just one of the four batters he faced, leaving another freshman, Austin Gordon, to finish the inning.

Clemson’s first hit since the second came on Wright’s double to start the home half of the frame. Wright scored when Logan Lacey threw away Max Wagner’s grounder, and Wagner moved to third on Tyler Corbitt’s bunt, though Crowl fanned Grice and induced a popup from Dylan Brewer to strand him there.

Clemson brought on its fifth and sixth pitchers of the day after FSU’s one-out single in the seventh. Left-hander J.P. Labriola retired the only batter he faced before Corbitt chased down Colton Vincent’s drive toward the left-center gap to keep the Tigers’ deficit from growing. 

Jackson Burmeister relieved Crowl in the home half of the frame but walked two of the three batters he faced, prompting FSU skipper Mike Martin Jr. to call on lefty Jonah Scolaro to face the heart of Clemson’s lineup. Scolaro got Cooper Ingle to fly out, but the Tigers drew even again when Wright delivered a two-out RBI double to left. The Seminoles intentionally walked Wagner to load the bases for Corbitt, who faced right-hander Davis Hare ahead 2-0 in the at-bat. But Corbitt grounded Hare’s first offering into a fielder’s choice to keep the game tied going to the eighth.

Clemson committed a pair of errors in the eighth, though a heads-up play by Wright after booting Jaime Ferrer’s grounder up the middle helped keep things even. Wright chased down the ball in the shallow outfield and nabbed Martin trying to advance to the third for the second out. Lefty Ryan Ammons came on and walked cleanup hitter James Tibbs but got Lacey swinging to preserve the tie.

“I think we just have a bunch of dogs in our bullpen that are all looking to get in there,” Grice said. “I know nobody’s afraid to be taken out, but nobody wants to be taken out. Everybody wants to keep going and keep rolling, but we all have trust in each other. And I think that’s the biggest thing.”

Clemson caught a break to begin its half of the frame when Grice reached on a dropped third strike. He advanced to third on Hawkins’ ensuing single and scored the go-ahead run on Hawkins’ stolen base. The Tigers tacked on two more insurance runs with the help of another error later in the inning, and Ammons (1-2) retired three of the four batters he faced in the ninth to polish off his first win of the season.

“We threw the ball very, very well today in my opinion. We didn’t help ourselves early in the game. Felt bad for Barlow in the first inning. We could’ve helped them a little bit there but ultimately we kept grinding it out. … We kept chipping away and won the back half of the game, and we won the series.”

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Clemson’s offense breaks out, pitching concerns still linger midway through ACC slate

Clemson’s ACC baseball season got a much-needed jolt over the weekend, but do the Tigers have enough pitching to make a postseason push in the last month of the season? That’s still the most pressing question facing the Tigers with the first half of …

Clemson’s ACC baseball season got a much-needed jolt over the weekend, but do the Tigers have enough pitching to make a postseason push in the last month of the season?

That’s still the most pressing question facing the Tigers with the first half of the conference slate in the books. Clemson (22-13, 4-10 ACC) ended it on perhaps its highest note of the season so far, taking two out of three at No. 23 Wake Forest for its first league series win.

“Really proud of our guys, the way that we fought and the way that we swung the bats (Sunday),” Clemson coach Monte Lee said. 

Those bats nearly carried the Tigers to a sweep. Clemson combined to score 19 runs over the final two games of the series with Max Wagner and Caden Grice providing most of the fireworks in the series finale.

Tabbed as a preseason All-American by some publications, Grice (.245 average, six HR, 21 RBIs) has struggled to find a rhythm at the plate for much of the season. But the Tigers’ power-hitting sophomore launched two home runs Saturday and drove in three runs. Meanwhile, Wagner continued his power surge with another homer – his 11th of the season – and four RBIs in Clemson’s 10-8 win.

“That one felt really good all around,” Grice said of the offense’s performance Sunday. “We had 13 hits and scored 10 runs. On offense, you really couldn’t ask for a better day than that.”

Yet the Tigers had one less than 24 hours earlier when the lineup pounded out 15 hits to rally from a 9-2 deficit in Saturday’s game. Clemson plated five runs in the seven and eighth innings to send it to extras before Wake Forest notched a 12-9 victory in 10 innings.

The Tigers could have used a win there, too, since there’s still plenty of work to do if Clemson hopes to not only avoid missing an NCAA regional for the second straight season but also being left out of the ACC Tournament, which is limited to 12 teams (highest conference winning percentages regardless of division). Since that 14-0 start, Clemson is just 8-13 in its last 21 games with series losses to Miami, Pittsburgh, North Carolina State and Notre Dame. Clemson has the second-worst record of any ACC team in league play and is just one game in the win column above Boston College – a team that’s lost 15 of its first 18 ACC games – at the bottom of the Atlantic Division standings.

In other words, Clemson, which sits at No. 46 in the latest RPI rankings, needs to start racking up wins in a hurry if it wants to be part of any postseason, which means the Tigers need to get something figured out on the mound Saturday and Sunday.

Mack Anglin (3.18 earned run average) helped Clemson get off on the right foot against Wake Forest in Friday’s series opener with another strong outing. The sophomore right-hander hurled six scoreless innings to combine with Geoffrey Gilbert for a 1-0 shutout, but it’s the remainder of the weekend that’s been problematic for the Tigers’ rotation.

Nick Hoffman and Nick Clayton, the Tigers’ usual Saturday and Sunday starters, both have ERAs north of 5 on the season. And neither has been working deep into games, putting plenty of stress on the Tigers’ bullpen.

The relievers answered the bell Sunday after Clayton lasted just one inning, his third straight start working fewer than four frames. Clemson faced a 3-0 deficit once Clayton’s day was done, but five Tiger relievers held Wake Forest’s offense at bay long enough for the offense to help out. Lee called Jackson Lindley the “MVP” of the day after the right-hander held the Demon Deacons scoreless over the final 2 ⅓ innings to preserve the win.

“I just tried to go out there and be the biggest competitor on the field,” said Lindley, who didn’t allow a hit and struck out three. “Go out there and be aggressive, throw strikes and put myself in a good place to win.”

Lee didn’t stick with the same two starters for the series’ final two games. After hinting that a change to the rotation could be coming earlier in the week, Lee gave freshman Jay Dill his first career start in place of Hoffman on Saturday. But the bullpen was taxed for nine innings after the young right-hander gave up seven earned runs in Wake Forest’s first-at bat. The Demon Deacons combined to score 13 runs in the first four innings of the series’ last two games.

Clemson’s team ERA now sits at 4.45 on the season, though that’s tame compared to how the Tigers’ arms have collectively performed against ACC competition. Clemson has a 6.31 ERA in league play, fourth-highest in the conference.

It won’t get any easier for the Tigers either. Next up is a road trip Tuesday to take on No. 14 Georgia followed by another midweek game Wednesday against East Tennessee State. Then Clemson will host Florida State, winners of four straight, beginning Friday.

With series against No. 11 Virginia, Georgia Tech and Boston College still on the schedule, too, Lee could make more tweaks on the mound. He recently mentioned midweek starter Billy Barlow (4.40 ERA in 10 appearances) and fellow freshman Casey Tallent (2.70 in 16 ⅔ innings of relief) as viable candidates to potentially get a start on the weekend.

Clemson doesn’t have any more time to waste.

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Clemson’s pitching, particularly in relief, off to strong start

Coming into the 2022 season, Clemson coach Monte Lee pinpointed the mound as the primary area the Tigers’ baseball team needed to improve if they are going to successfully rebound from last season’s disappointment. One weekend is a minuscule sample …

Coming into the 2022 season, Clemson coach Monte Lee pinpointed the mound as the primary area the Tigers’ baseball team needed to improve if they are going to successfully rebound from last season’s disappointment.

One weekend is a minuscule sample size, but Clemson is at least off to a strong start in that regard.

Thirteen pitchers combined to hold Indiana to eight earned runs in 28 innings over the weekend, helping the Tigers start the new campaign with a sweep of a fellow Power Six program. In three games, including a 10-inning finale on Sunday, Clemson limited the Hoosiers to 19 hits while piling up 31 strikeouts.

“You look at the weekend with 28 innings of baseball, we really only had one inning where we struggled to throw strikes. I’ll take that,” said Lee, whose team ranked 10th in the ACC last season with a 5.00 earned run average. “We forced the other team to swing the bat to beat us. I’ll take that.”

Sophomore right-hander Mack Anglin befuddled IU’s lineup for five no-hit innings at the start of a 9-0 win for the Tigers on Friday, but Clemson’s bullpen was just as strong in helping lock down the last two victories. The Tigers’ relievers limited IU to just two runs in 17 ⅓ innings on the weekend.

The bullpen having to log that many innings means not everything was perfect on the bump. Anglin was the only starter to get past the third inning. Nick Clayton couldn’t get out of the second in Saturday’s game before yielding four runs, and Nick Hoffman lasted just three innings in Sunday’s start.

“We need to get deeper into the ball game,” Lee said. “I’m not as concerned about getting hit as I am that we’ve got to be able to make some pitches with runners on base and get a little deeper in the game from the starting pitcher side.”

Hoffman walked three batters before his day was done, part of nine free passes issued by the Tigers on Sunday. But 10 relievers picked up the slack over the final two games to keep IU’s offense at bay.

Clemson faced a four-run deficit before the third inning Saturday, but freshman Casey Tallent and sophomore Geoffrey Gilbert kept IU off the board in the middle innings to give the Tigers a chance to rally and then some. Tallent followed Clayton with 2.1 hitless innings in his collegiate debut while Gilbert allowed just one hit and struck out four in two innings of work.

By that time, Clemson had a nine-run lead in what turned into a 19-4 rout. Austin Gordon, Rocco Reid and freshman Jay Dill combined to throw the last three frames, allowing just one hit and one walk among them.

“We have several guys that are built to start,” Lee said. “Those guys can go long. We can stretch those guys out and get them a time through the lineup if needed. That certainly helps when you’re able to go to those guys early in the game if your starter struggles.”

Things were dicier Sunday with the Hoosiers leading 4-3 after six innings. Jackson Lindley allowed one run in 2 ⅔ innings of relief, and IU scored the go-ahead run in the sixth against Ryan Ammons, who couldn’t get out of the inning.

But Alex Edmondson came on to get the final out of the frame and joined Ty Olenchuck and Dill to throw 3 ⅓ scoreless innings of relief to help the Tigers send the game to extras. In the 10th, Lee turned to first baseman/outfielder Caden Grice, who worked out of a bases-loaded jam after allowing a hit and two walks in his first mound appearance of the season.

“I knew I had the stuff to get us through that inning,” Grice said.

It allowed Clemson to walk it off in the home half of the inning on Bryar Hawkins’ sacrifice fly.

“I thought that was the difference in the game,” Lee said. “With the game being tied like that and us having the last at-bat, we had to keep it tied. Our bullpen was going to have to do a great job, Those guys at the end, they were just outstanding.”

Clemson will try to keep the momentum going Tuesday when the Tigers host College of Charleston for their first midweek game. Clemson will then entertain Hartford for a three-game series beginning Friday.

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Clemson working to solidify weekend rotation ahead of season

Clemson’s baseball team is less than a month from playing its first game of the 2022 season, and the Tigers are still looking for an answer to their most pressing question heading into the new campaign. Who will make up the weekend rotation? That’s …

Clemson’s baseball team is less than a month from playing its first game of the 2022 season, and the Tigers are still looking for an answer to their most pressing question heading into the new campaign.

Who will make up the weekend rotation?

That’s what Clemson coach Monte Lee and his staff will be working to nail down once the Tigers begin team practices Friday in preparation for their season opener Feb. 18 against Indiana at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. Lee said he’s still evaluating six primary candidates for those three weekend spots, though a familiar name is leading the pack.

Right-hander Mack Anglin is once again in line to be the Tigers’ Friday night starter after taking over that role last season as a redshirt freshman. Despite his 2-6 record, Anglin was solid in his first season as a weekend starter, posting a 3.99 earned run average while allowing 48 hits and striking out 75 in 56 ⅓ innings. The 6-foot-4, 220-pounder limited opponents to a .227 average.

It was good enough for Anglin to be taken by the Washington Nationals in the 13th round of the Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft over the summer, but Anglin decided to return to school in an effort to improve his stock. Anglin went on to have three strong starts in the Cape Cod League for the Wareham Gatemen, hurling 12 ⅔ innings without allowing an earned run while striking out 16 and walking just three.

“Mack has dominant stuff,” Lee said. “Has a chance to be a top 3 round draft pick type of guy, but he needs to have that Sam Weatherly type of junior year, that transition from bullpen guy to being a dominant Game 1 guy. That’s kind of what we envision with Mack. Mack has a chance to be that guy, but we need him to take that next step in terms of consistency. So Mack definitely, I would say right now, would be the frontrunner to be our No. 1 starter.”

While things get a little more fluid after that, Lee said he feels “pretty confident” that another third-year sophomore, Nick Hoffman, will join Anglin in the weekend rotation. Hoffman went back and forth as a starter (four appearances) and reliever (13) a season ago, recording a 3.83 ERA in 49 ⅓  innings. The right-hander pounded the strike zone with an 8-to-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio.

Perhaps the stiffest competition will be for the third and final spot. Lee mentioned fellow sophomores Geoffrey Gilbert, Ricky Williams and Nick Clayton and junior Jackson Lindley as the other pitchers vying for their place in the rotation.

Should one of them earn it, it would be a shift in roles. Gilbert, Williams and Lindley were primarily relievers last season. Of the trio’s 52 combined appearances, only two were starts (one apiece for Clayton and Williams).

“We need Nick Clayton to be a guy that can be in the mix on the weekends,” Lee said.

As for Lindley, Lee said the 6-4 right-hander is “much, much improved” after yielding 12 earned runs in a small sample size last season (4 ⅓ innings). Lee is also high on the potential of Williams, who was limited to just seven innings in six appearances last season.

“Ricky’s got electric stuff,” Lee said. “He was up to 95 (miles per hour) in the fall. Really good breaking ball. Ricky is going to be in the mix as a weekend guy.”

True freshman Billy Barlow is someone else who could compete to be a midweek starter if not Clemson’s Sunday starter, Lee said. Regardless who ultimately wins those jobs, the group will try to help the Tigers rebound from a subpar season on the mound. Clemson’s pitching staff finished last season with a collective 5.00 ERA.

“When you look at the teams that, at least that I’ve coached, have been successful, successful teams are consistent. And consistency starts on the pitching side,” Lee said. “I think being able to have a weekend rotation that’s consistent and solidified throughout the course of the year is pretty dang important.”

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