LSU bats come alive against VMI in Game 3

The Tigers set the school record for most singles in a game (20) and tied for most hits in a game (27). 

LSU scored early and often in Game 3 against VMI. It all started in the bottom of the first inning as the Tigers put up five runs in the first inning. [autotag]Brady Neal[/autotag] got it started with a two-RBI double down the right field line, [autotag]Jared Jones[/autotag] had an RBI triple, [autotag]Mac Bingham[/autotag] had an RBI single, and [autotag]Jake Brown[/autotag] singled and a run scored on an error to make it 5-0 LSU after one inning.

Over the next two innings, Neal would put on a clinic from behind the dish as he reminded everyone why you should not run on him.

In the bottom of the third inning, LSU would add even more runs to their big lead as the Tigers scored seven more runs. [autotag]Michael Braswell III[/autotag] hit a two-RBI double, [autotag]Stephen Milam[/autotag] hit an RBI double, and Neal hit a grand slam to right field to make it 12-0 Tigers after three innings.

In the top of the fourth inning, we got our first look at [autotag]Cam Johnson[/autotag] as he made his pitching debut. He got a groundout before walking the next three hitters. VMI would then get their first run of the game on a sacrifice fly to make it 12-1. Johnson then struck out the next hitter he faced to escape the jam.

LSU scored three more runs in the bottom of the fourth inning as Milam and [autotag]Hayden Travinski[/autotag] both had RBI singles and [autotag]Alex Milazzo[/autotag] walked in a run to make it 15-1.

Johnson remained in the game for the top of the fifth inning and he continued to struggle finding the strike zone. He walked three more runners before Will Hellmers was called in out of the bullpen. VMI scored three more runs to cut the game to 15-4 but that is all they could manage.

LSU scored nine more runs in the bottom of the fifth inning to extend their lead to 24-4.

In the top of the sixth inning, [autotag]Kade Woods[/autotag] made his LSU debut. He allowed one run on two walks and one strikeout. In the bottom of the inning, LSU tacked on three more runs to extend the lead to 27-5. The Tigers also set the school record for most singles in a game (20) and tied for most hits in a game (27).

[autotag]Aiden Moffett[/autotag] made his first appearance on the mound in the top of the seventh as he sat down the VMI batters in order and LSU won 27-5.

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Three LSU Freshmen make Perfect Game’s Top-75 Freshmen list

There are three LSU Tigers on that list and one of them is No. 1.

[autotag]Perfect Game[/autotag] recently released a list of who they view as the top-75 college baseball freshmen as we head into the 2024 season. There are three LSU Tigers on that list and one of them is No. 1.

[autotag]Cam Johnson[/autotag], [autotag]Jake Brown[/autotag], and [autotag]Steven Milam[/autotag] are the three Tigers that made the list and all of them have a chance to play a big role for LSU this spring.

Johnson was the prize of the 2023 recruiting class. He is a left-handed pitcher who was rated as the No. 42 overall prospect in the 2023 MLB draft. Instead of starting his MLB journey with the St. Louis Cardinals, he chose to go to Baton Rouge. He was ranked as the No. 1 incoming freshman by Perfect Game.

Brown was the No. 1 high school baseball player in the state of Louisiana and he brings multiple skills to the table. In high school, he played in the outfield and was a pitcher. He was selected by the Texas Rangers in the MLB Draft but chose to go to LSU instead.

Milam was the No. 1 overall player from the state of New Mexico. He won the 2023 Gatorade Player of the Year in New Mexico after batting .627 with 52 hits, 50 RBI and 65 runs. All three of these guys are names you should learn as we get ready for the 2024 season.

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D1Baseball editor gives an inside scoop on LSU Baseball

LSU will start its title defense on Feb. 16 against VMI.

Kendall Rogers, the managing editor for D1Baseball, took a trip to Baton Rouge to check out the defending national champions to see how they are looking going into 2024. After leaving the bayou, Rogers gave his thoughts on what he saw.

A few interesting thoughts on this. Talk about a strong starting rotation. [autotag]Thatcher Hurd[/autotag], [autotag]Luke Holman[/autotag] and [autotag]Gage Jump[/autotag] are about as good of a three-man rotation as you will find anywhere in the NCAA. Don’t sleep on [autotag]Cam Johnson[/autotag] either. He is just a freshman but he has the talent to be a Friday night starter already. [autotag]Justin Loer[/autotag], the transfer from Xavier is also a top-tier pitcher. What a rotation.

Another thing, it seems that true freshman [autotag]Jake Brown[/autotag] has earned his spot on the roster as a starter in the outfield. To complement that, it seems [autotag]Jay Johnson[/autotag] will slide [autotag]Josh Pearson[/autotag] down to second base. Pearson has spent the last two years as a corner outfielder for the Tigers but now he will take the place of [autotag]Gavin Dugas[/autotag] and [autotag]Jordan Thompson[/autotag].

Rogers was even kind enough to give us a possible starting nine for the Tigers. It looks like the outfield will consist of [autotag]Mac Bingham[/autotag] (Arizona transfer), [autotag]Paxton Kling[/autotag] and Jake Brown. In the infield, it will be [autotag]Tommy White[/autotag] at third base, [autotag]Michael Braswell III[/autotag] (South Carolina transfer) at shortstop, Pearson/[autotag]Brady Neal[/autotag] at second base, [autotag]Jared Jones[/autotag] at first base, [autotag]Alex Millazo[/autotag]/[autotag]Hayden Travinski[/autotag] at catcher, and Travinski/[autotag]Ethan Frey[/autotag] as the designated hitter.

LSU will start its title defense on Feb. 16 against VMI.

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LSU Baseball recruiting class ranked No. 3 by Baseball America

LSU added 20 newcomers to its 2024 squad in the latest recruiting class.

LSU added 20 newcomers to its 2024 squad in the latest recruiting class. Thirteen of those guys are coming from high school and seven of them are coming via the transfer portal. After the dust settled, Jay Johnson’s recruiting class finished as the No. 3 team in the country according to Baseball America.

LSU picked up two of the best pitchers in the transfer portal in Alabama ace, [autotag]Luke Holman[/autotag] and a UCLA starter who did not play last year, [autotag]Gage Jump[/autotag]. Adding to that, Johnson put on a clinic as far as recruiting in the state of Louisiana. The Tigers signed the top two players in the state, left-handed pitchers [autotag]Jake Brown[/autotag] and [autotag]Kade Anderson[/autotag].

This is shaping up to be another incredible spring at Alex Box Stadium. The Tigers will start their title defense on Friday, February 16, 2024 against VMI. For all of your LSU baseball coverage, LSU Wire has you covered.

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Top Louisiana baseball recruit Jake Brown officially coming to LSU

One of LSU’s top 2023 signees will not sign after being drafted in the 16th round by the Texas Rangers.

Despite being selected by the Texas Rangers in the 16th round of the 2023 MLB draft, one of LSU’s top recruiting signees will ultimately come to campus in [autotag]Jake Brown[/autotag].

The left-handed pitcher from Sulphur, Louisiana, is the No. 1 recruit in the state, and he ranks as the No. 116 overall high school recruit nationally, according to Perfect Game.

Brown reaching campus was largely expected. After he wasn’t selected in the first 10 rounds of the draft, he tweeted tiger emojis. However, that tweet was deleted when he was ultimately taken by Texas the next day.

Still, it was reported that Brown would likely still enroll at LSU, and though he took a week to mull it over, that’s what he chose to do in the end.

Brown is a big addition to a pitching staff that’s expected to also add [autotag]Cameron Johnson[/autotag], a 20th-round pick. Johnson is the No. 11 player in the 2023 class and would be the highest-ranked recruit to ever reach campus for the Tigers.

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LSU pitcher commit Jake Brown reportedly won’t sign with Rangers, plans to enroll in Baton Rouge

The top player in the state of Louisiana is coming to LSU.

The Tigers have already set a program record for players taken in the 2023 MLB draft, but arguably their biggest win has to do with the current signing class.

Of that group, only No. 8 pick [autotag]Blake Mitchell[/autotag] was taken in the first two rounds. Left-handed pitcher [autotag]Jake Brown[/autotag] became the second on Tuesday afternoon when the Texas Rangers selected him in the 16th round with 471st pick.

However, Brown does not plan to sign with Texas and will instead honor his commitment to LSU, according to multiple reports. The left-handed pitcher tweeted a Tiger emoji on Monday night when he wasn’t selected, though he deleted that Tweet after he was drafted.

Brown, a product of Sulphur, Louisiana, ranks as the No. 116 overall prospect in the 2023 class and the No. 1 player in the state, according to Perfect Game.

Update: The Advocate’s Leah Vann updated her report on Tuesday to say that Brown’s number was not met by the Rangers and he plans to head to Baton Rouge, though that is not 100% confirmed. He has 14 days to make a decision

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How some Winter Olympians, like aerial and cross-country skiers, train in summer

What do you do when you need snow to train but it’s summer? We found out.

When your sport features snow or ice and you have to train all throughout the year to be an elite athlete with hopes of making the Olympics, what do you do in the summer?

For some sports with indoor venues, it’s a fairly simple solution. However, it’s a little different if athletes need snow-covered mountains or trails to train. But as freestyle skier Winter Vinecki and biathlete Jake Brown, both first-time Olympians, explained recently to For The Win, they have relatively easy options too.

In aerial skiing, athletes launch themselves off massive jumps and execute precise maneuvers, like flips of twists, in the air before trying to stick the landing on an incline. Vinecki said when doing a double, she’s going around 55 kilometers per hour before takeoff, which is about 34 miles per hour.

To practice her moves in the summer — and to learn new ones in a safer environment — Vinecki said she and the U.S. Freestyle Ski Team rely on an aerials pool at the Utah Olympic Park, training there from about May to October.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CUTP1WrJTf2/

“All summer long, the train on water ramps into a pool,” Vinecki, a 23 year old from Gaylord, Michigan, said. “So it has our jumps that go into a pool that we land it, and it has a bubble system so it softens the landing and makes it so he can see where we’re going to land easier. So [it] helps us see while we’re flipping through the air.

“And we do hundreds and hundreds on water, climbing up to the top of the metal stairs after every jump in all of our wet gear. And so this is how we practice in a little bit safer environment so that we can do new tricks.”

Climbing up stairs in wet skiing gear over and over sounds almost as challenging as the aerials these skiers attempt. But they’re not actually wearing all the same equipment compared with skiing on snow, Vinecki explained.

They’re not wearing their snow pants or jackets; they’re wearing wetsuits “and even dry suits when it’s very early season in May when the water’s still 48 degrees and then in October, sometimes, we’ve had snow when we’re so water ramping,” she said. But the rest is fairly similar to what you get on snow.

“We have our normal boots, we have our helmets, mouthguard and our skis are very similar,” Vinecki continued. “The main difference is that it has holes cut into our skis, so that softens the impact. And so, obviously, the skis we use are different, but they’re the same brand and everything and give us the same feel.”

Winter Vinecki at Utah Olympic Park (@usskiteam // Christian Raguse)

Although practicing aerials in a pool is safer, especially when learning new tricks, messing up doesn’t exactly feel like falling on a bed of clouds.

“It doesn’t feel good if you still land on your stomach or back, but it’s at least more safe then learning on snow,” Vinecki added laughing.

For other types of skiers, like cross-country skiers, biathletes (cross-country skiing plus target shooting with rifles) or nordic combined athletes (cross-country skiing plus ski jumping), the summer training solution comes with wheels.

Specifically, roller skis. Like rollerblades but with the feel of cross-country skis.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CTLOLMaMGNO/

“They’re essentially a kind of built up shaft of ski,” Brown, a 29-year-old biathlete from St. Paul, Minnesota, said.

“Different companies make them out of different things. The most common ones are aluminum. The ones that we use are made by a Finnish company called Marwe that has a patented version that’s actually a honeycomb core — just like a cross country ski is made out of — that’s wrapped in fiberglass.”

This is the primary method for cross-country skiers training in the summer, from about May to November, Brown said. He lives in an athlete house at Craftsbury Outdoor Center in Vermont, and the property includes a biathlon range and a roller ski loop with a paved path through the woods like in cross-country skiing trails.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B2e4mQmJ-Iy/?hl=en

And while roller skiing is not exactly the same as training on snow, it gets the job done.

“It’s hard to learn to ski on roller skis and then translate that to snow,” he continued. “But if you’re used to skiing on snow, the roller skis are a great training tool. And we can ski with pretty much identical technique to snow on roller skis, so we’re training all the same muscle groups. …

“We do all our intervals and everything on roller skis [and] distance train just like we would on snow.”

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