Decision to be a Tiger was ‘pretty easy’ for former FSU commit

Chance Fitzgerald became the first former Florida State commit to follow Jimmy Belanger to Clemson. The right-handed pitcher and class of 2023 prospect out of Sanford’s (Fla.) Lake Howell High School announced his verbal commitment to the Tigers via …

Chance Fitzgerald became the first former Florida State commit to follow Jimmy Belanger to Clemson.

The right-handed pitcher and class of 2023 prospect out of Sanford’s (Fla.) Lake Howell High School announced his verbal commitment to the Tigers via social media last Saturday .

“With all the coaching staff stuff happening at Florida State, I’ve had a relationship with Coach Belanger for going on almost two and a half years now,” Fitzgerald told The Clemson Insider in a phone interview Friday. “It’s kind of hard to throw that out the window and try to build a new one with the new coaching staff in only a certain amount of time.”

Fitzgerald walked around Clemson and absolutely fell in love with the program as soon as he got there.

“With all that kind of piling into one, it made the decision pretty easy,” he added.

Fitzgerald heard from Belanger almost instantly. 

Belanger called Fitzgerald to let him know — before it was in the press — that he wasn’t going to be kept at Florida State. Belanger had the idea right there and then that he was going to be Clemson’s next pitching coach. 

This was Fitzgerald’s second time committing to Belanger as a prospect, so there are a lot of values that intersect, as well as their philosophies on the mound.

“It coincides to a T,” Fitzgerald said regarding his relationship with Belanger. “We both believe in the same stuff. He has some things that he wants me to work on that I also want to work on. All of his beliefs and teachings go along with everything that I’ve known as a pitcher growing up. I fell in love with him super fast, just hearing him talk about how he coaches…it’s hard not to bite on that.”

With the relationship already there, it was just a matter of Fitzgerald getting a chance to visit campus before he decided to follow Belanger to Tiger Town.

“Oh man, it’s crazy,” Fitzgerald said when asked about his unofficial visit to Clemson’s campus. “Everything’s brand new. It’s beautiful. Getting around campus isn’t this mind-numbing, confusing thing — it’s really nice. And then the baseball facilities, I mean I couldn’t ask for much more regarding those.”

He also couldn’t ask for much more out of a head coach either.

“He’s a great guy,” Fitzgerald said of Erik Bakich. “He’s the same way. He was on the phone with me for probably 45-minutes, just talking about beliefs, and expectations and they all lined up with everything I believed in. Bakich, he made it very easy to feel comfortable with being a part of the Clemson family.”

While Florida State’s new staff made an effort to keep in contact with Fitzgerald, he quietly decommitted from Link Jarrett’s program a little over two weeks ago. He didn’t publically announce his decision to do so, but he didn’t want there to be any false premises that his recruitment was now reopened.

Fitzgerald was going to Clemson.

“I was pretty set on where I wanted to go,” he said.

Fitzgerald isn’t the only prospect that was previously committed elsewhere that Bakich and Co. have been able to flip to Clemson. He feels like that says a lot about not only the coaching staff’s ability to recruit but the direction of the program.

“Clemson might be a sleeper program here in the next couple of years,” Fitzgerald added. “I personally love being the underdog and surprising people. I think we’re 100% going to do with some of the guys that we’ve recruited there recently. I think we might be a powerhouse program and nobody’s gonna know it.”

As far as his pitching repertoire is concerned, Fitzgerald has four working in his arsenal — fastball, slurve, changeup and cutter. Fitzgerald says that his fastball, which sits around 91-92 mph, will forever be his go-to pitch because it’s probably the easiest one to locate and it’s the hardest pitch to hit in baseball if you can locate it well.

Fitzgerald admitted that his breaker is his put-away pitch, but if he wants to go with a fastball up in the zone to try and get a bad swing off, he’ll do that if he needs to.

“I believe in pitching not throwing,” he said. “I want to be able to put a ball where I want it with strategy behind it, rather than just throw the hell out of it and hope it gets by him. I’m a big pitcher.”

What can Clemson fans expect out of Fitzgerald when he arrives on campus a little under a year from now?

“I’m a dawg,” he said. “I’m gonna do everything I can to help the program win because I want it as much as the fans want it, and as much as my teammates and coaches want it. I think everybody there wants to win. That’s gonna be my goal, to freakin’ work my butt off and do everything I can to win some baseball games.”

— Photo courtesy of  Chance Fitzgerald.

Former Florida State commit flips to Clemson

Clemson and Erik Bakich have picked up a verbal commitment from a prospect out of the Sunshine State in the class of 2023. Sanford (Fla.) Lake Howell High School right-handed pitcher Chance Fitzgerald announced his commitment to the Tigers via …

Clemson and Erik Bakich have picked up a verbal commitment from a prospect out of the Sunshine State in the class of 2023.

Sanford (Fla.) Lake Howell High School right-handed pitcher Chance Fitzgerald announced his commitment to the Tigers via social media on Saturday evening.

Fitzgerald was previously committed to the Florida State baseball program but has since flipped his commitment to Clemson, following pitching coach Jimmy Belanger in the process.

“After long hours of talking and thinking, I am more than excited and blessed to announce that I’ll be furthering my academic and baseball career at Clemson University!” Fitzgerald wrote in a Twitter post.

Dear Old Clemson’s first event is July 24. Now there is a new way to support Clemson student-athletes. Come out and meet the freshmen football players at this meet and greet autograph session. If you sign up for certain club levels you get free access to all Dear Old Clemson events. Purchase your tickets today at Dear Old Clemson.

‘It was like nothing I’ve ever seen’: Former Michigan commit talks decision to flip to Clemson

Drew Titsworth became the latest former University of Michigan commit to follow Erik Bakich and Nick Schnabel to Clemson. The dominant right-handed pitcher and class of 2023 prospect out of Michigan’s Frankenmuth High School, announced his verbal …

Drew Titsworth became the latest former University of Michigan commit to follow Erik Bakich and Nick Schnabel to Clemson.

The dominant right-handed pitcher and class of 2023 prospect out of Michigan’s Frankenmuth High School, announced his verbal commitment to Clemson on Monday evening via social media.

Once Titsworth got on campus, he knew he wanted to be a Tiger. It was pretty automatic.

“When Bakich and Schnabel announced that they were leaving Michigan to come to Clemson,  one of the first thoughts in my head was that I wanted to follow those guys,” Titsworth told The Clemson Insider Monday night in a phone interview. “I just got the opportunity to come down here and stop at Clemson on the way to Atlanta. Once I saw the campus, the field and all the facilities, it was a pretty easy decision for me.”

Titsworth’s hometown is only an hour and a half outside Ann Arbor, so the distance was something he considered, but after talking with his family, it just seemed like the right thing for him to do.

“Those guys have always believed in me since Day 1,” Titsowrth said. “They were kind of the first coaches to truly recruit me. We built a tight relationship and I kind of like the way they go about things. They’re always going to compete no matter what, no matter the score or the inning…obviously, they’ve had success, so I like that too.”

Titsworth decommitted from Michigan on July 3. Bakich and Schnaebel got in contact with him that same day. They wanted him to follow them down to Tiger Town, but first they needed to get him on campus. That happened on Monday.

“It was ridiculous, there’s nothing like that up north,” he said. “It was like nothing I’ve ever seen.”

Monday marked the first time that Titsworth got to meet his future pitching coach, Jimmy Belanger.

“Right off the bat I could just tell that he was a good guy,” Titsworth said. “Talking with him and what he’s done at other programs and the stuff he’s done, I could just tell that he’s gonna be a good fit.”

As far as his pitching repertoire is concerned, Titsworth has four working pitches in his arsenal — fastball, slider, changeup, and a sinker, a pitch he’s still mastering. His velocity sits between 89-94 mph.

What can Clemson fans expect from him once he arrives on campus around this time next year?

“I’m gonna compete,” he said. “I’m gonna do whatever I can as a pitcher to get outs and then, as a teammate, I’m gonna try to encourage everybody to be the best they can and I’m just gonna try to win.”

— Photo for this article courtesy of Drew Titsworth.

Dear Old Clemson’s first event is July 24. Now there is a new way to support Clemson student-athletes. Come out and meet the freshmen football players at this meet and greet autograph session. If you sign up for certain club levels you get free access to all Dear Old Clemson events. Purchase your tickets today at Dear Old Clemson.

Belanger hire official as next pitching coach, former Tiger will also return to staff

Erik Bakich was officially named Clemson’s head coach on June 16 and has been working hard to put together an elite coaching staff. Monday night The Clemson Insider reported that Florida State pitching coach Jimmy Belanger had been offered the …

Erik Bakich was officially named Clemson’s head coach on June 16 and has been working hard to put together an elite coaching staff.  Monday night The Clemson Insider reported that Florida State pitching coach Jimmy Belanger had been offered the position of pitching coach.  Belanger has now officially accepted the position.  TCI has also confirmed that Ben Paulsen will remain on the staff under Bakich.

While TCI was told nothing was official as of late Monday night, Bakich has offered the job to Florida State pitching coach Jimmy Belanger, according to a source with knowledge of the situation.

Belanger has been on FSU’s staff for the last three seasons, but his future with the Seminoles is in limbo following the school’s firing of head coach Mike Martin Jr. earlier this month. FSU has yet to hire a replacement.

FSU ranked fourth in the ACC this season in earned run average (4.26) while the Seminoles’ pitching staff led the league in strikeouts (702). It helped FSU earn an NCAA Tournament invite as the 3 seed in the Auburn Regional, where the Seminoles went 1-2 before firing Martin.

Last year, Belanger’s staff ranked in the top 10 nationally in ERA (3.45), strikeout-to-walk ratio (3.19) and strikeouts per nine innings (11.4). During his first season on the job, the COVID-shortened year of 2020, FSU’s pitchers ranked fifth nationally in strikeouts per nine innings (12.1).

Prior to his stint in Tallahassee, Belanger spent three seasons as Kentucky’s pitching coach. He’s also had stops as an assistant at Maryland and Monmouth.

Ben Paulsen has coached for Clemson for four years, recently serving as director of player development in 2022. Paulsen spent the 2018 season as a student assistant coach at Clemson.

Paulsen is the son of former Clemson assistant coach (2003-10) and current Winthrop Head Coach Tom Riginos.  He was a career .318 hitter with 45 doubles, five triples, 31 homers, 130 RBIs and four steals in 182 games over three seasons (2007-09) at Clemson.

Paulsen was drafted in the third round by the Colorado Rockies in 2009.  He  played three years in the majors with the Rockies, hitting .271 with 16 homers and 70 RBIs in 186 games.