Anglin signs with Royals

Clemson pitcher Mack Anglin heard his name called in the seventh round of the MLB draft when the Kansas City Royals took the sophomore right-hander with 205th overall pick. Anglin has signed with the Royals for a reported $231,100. 7th-rder Mack …

Clemson pitcher Mack Anglin heard his name called in the seventh round of the MLB draft when the Kansas City Royals took the sophomore right-hander with 205th overall pick.

Anglin has signed with the Royals for a reported $231,100.

Anglin was the Tigers’ most consistent starter this past season, posting a 4.11 earned run average in 14 starts. He struck out 74 batters in 72 ⅓ innings while yielding 56 hits and 48 walks. He has an 8-12 record and 4.44 ERA in 25 career starts for the Tigers.

Having just completed his third collegiate season, Anglin has now been drafted twice. He improved his draft stock this time around after being selected in the 13th round by the Washington Nationals last year.

Recapping Clemson baseball’s activity through first half of MLB Draft

The first half of the Major League Baseball Draft is in the books, and the number of Clemson’s players and recruits that have heard their names called has been minimal. To what extent those selections will impact the Tigers’ roster for next season, …

The first half of the Major League Baseball Draft is in the books, and the number of Clemson’s players and recruits that have heard their names called has been minimal.

To what extent those selections will impact the Tigers’ roster for next season, though, remains to be seen.

Three players either on or signed to join Clemson’s roster have been drafted through the first two days of the draft. That number could increase when the draft concludes with the final 10 rounds Tuesday, but things have gone about as expected when it comes to the Tigers’ current players.

Max Wagner and Mack Anglin, Clemson’s highest-ranked prospects entering the draft, have each been drafted. Wagner was first to come off the board, going to the Baltimore Orioles in the second round with the 42nd overall pick. Anglin went to the Kansas City Royals five rounds later with the 205th overall selection.

Clemson first-year coach Erik Bakich told The Clemson Insider before the draft that he was approaching it as if neither player would be returning to school, and understandably so.

It would be difficult for Wagner to increase his draft stock more than he did this past season when he matched a school record with 27 home runs, and the approximate slotted bonus money associated with the 42nd overall pick ($1.86 million) is likely too good to pass up. Anglin, Clemson’s Friday starter this past season, jumped six rounds after being drafted in the 13th a year ago. A year older than Wagner as a third-year sophomore, Anglin would also be 23 years old by the time next year’s draft rolls around, which would naturally decrease his stock if he returned to school for another season.

Clemson also had two signees ranked among the top 50 prospects going into the draft, but only one of them has been selected to this point. And Brock Porter went later than expected, though that doesn’t necessarily mean he’ll make it to school.

Ranked as the No. 11 overall prospect by MLB.com, Porter slid to the fourth round before the Texas Rangers drafted the hard-throwing right-hander with the 109th overall pick. But the Rangers are reportedly paying under slot value for its first-round pick, Kumar Rock, and didn’t have any second- or third-picks to spend money on, so they may have the extra money needed to pay over slot for Porter’s signature.

While Clemson awaits Porter’s decision, the Tigers have a better chance of getting left-hander Tristan Smith to campus. MLB.com rated the Boiling Springs High standout as the 46th-best prospect, but Smith heads into the final day of the draft still on the board. It’s a good indication teams won’t be able to match Smith’s asking price.

Still, a team could take a flyer on Smith in the later rounds. Who else with Clemson ties could be drafted?

Shortstop Ben Blackwell and pitchers Geoffrey Gilbert, Ryan Ammons and Jackson Lindley are among the Tigers’ other draft-eligible players. Winnacunnet (New Hampshire) High right-hander Joe Allen and Porter’s high school teammate, St. Mary’s Prep (Michigan) School infielder Jack Crighton, MLB.com’s No. 220 prospect, are other recruits who could be selected.

Photo credit: Matthew Dae Smith/Lansing State Journal/USA Today Network

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Second Clemson player taken in MLB Draft

A second Clemson player is off the board in the Major League Baseball Draft. Pitcher Mack Anglin heard his name called in the seventh round Monday when the Kansas City Royals took the sophomore right-hander with 205th overall pick. Anglin joins …

A second Clemson player is off the board in the Major League Baseball Draft.

Pitcher Mack Anglin heard his name called in the seventh round Monday when the Kansas City Royals took the sophomore right-hander with 205th overall pick. Anglin joins second-round pick Max Wagner as Clemson’s draft selections so far.

Anglin was the Tigers’ most consistent starter this past season, posting a 4.11 earned run average in 14 starts. He struck out 74 batters in 72 ⅓ innings while yielding 56 hits and 48 walks. He has an 8-12 record and 4.44 ERA in 25 career starts for the Tigers.

Having just completed his third collegiate season, Anglin has now been drafted twice. He improved his draft stock this time around after being selected in the 13th round by the Washington Nationals last year.

Should Anglin sign this time, the slot value for the 205th pick is roughly $203,000, according to MLB.com. He also has two years of eligibility left should he decide to return to Clemson again.

How the MLB Draft could impact Clemson’s baseball roster

Max Wagner and Mack Anglin still have eligibility left at Clemson, but Erik Bakich isn’t sure if he’ll get to coach either one. Theoretically, Wagner and Anglin would be cornerstone pieces for Bakich’s first baseball team at Clemson next spring. …

Max Wagner and Mack Anglin still have eligibility left at Clemson, but Erik Bakich isn’t sure if he’ll get to coach either one.

Theoretically, Wagner and Anglin would be cornerstone pieces for Bakich’s first baseball team at Clemson next spring. Problem is, they’re widely considered the program’s top prospects for next week’s Major League Baseball Draft. Wagner, who took home ACC Player of the Year honors this past season after tying the school record for home runs, is ranked by D1Baseball as college baseball’s No. 35 overall prospect while Anglin, Clemson’s right-handed ace, comes in at No. 78 on the list.

Bakich said he’s talked to both about their futures since being hired as the Tigers’ head coach last month. Neither gave him an indication of which way they’re leaning, Bakich said, but he’s approaching it as if neither player will return to Clemson next season.

“I think I’ve framed it in my mind that they’re both going to sign,” Bakich said. “And if they didn’t, it would be a huge boost. But I’m not going into it with an expectation that they’re 100% coming back, but that’s just more me personally and our staff personally making sure we’re making preparations for their departures. Not banking on them coming back and then all of a sudden we’re reacting to that. So I think we have to look at it that way from a roster management standpoint.”

Like every coach in the sport this time of year, Bakich is in wait-and-see mode to find out exactly how much the three-day draft will alter his personnel plans for next season. Generally, the higher a player is selected, the more the amount slotted for a signing bonus. Draft-eligible underclassmen (either three collegiate seasons completed or at least 21 years old) have the option to return to college if they’re selected and don’t sign, but for first- and second-rounders in particular, those amounts are seven-figure types that are hard to pass up.

It’s why Clemson could lose two of its best players early to professional baseball, but Bakich has given up trying to predict what will happen once the draft begins Sunday with the first two rounds. Rounds 3-10 will be held Monday before the draft wraps up Tuesday with rounds 11-20.

“I’ve been paying close attention to it for the last 21 years and seen a lot of guys go lower than I thought they were going to go or go higher than I thought they were going to go,” Bakich said. “I’ve just come to the conclusion that sometimes it’s an inexact science and you can’t control it. The decision-makers that make those decisions know what they’re doing and have their reasons, but you certainly can’t predict it.”

Other players with eligibility remaining could also have decisions to make once it’s over. Shortstop Ben Blackwell and pitchers Geoffrey Gilbert, Jackson Lindley and Ryan Ammons are among the players that Bakich believes could hear their names called next week, too.

But it’s not just current players that he will be monitoring.

Clemson has more than 10 high school players signed or committed to its 2022 recruiting class. Three of those – Winnacunnet (New Hampshire) pitcher Joe Allen, Chaminade (New York) shortstop Nolan Nawrocki and St. Mary’s Prep (Michigan) infielder Jack Crighton – were former Michigan commits who intend to follow Bakich to Clemson, but most eyes are focused on a couple of pitching signees, St. Mary’s Prep’s Brock Porter and Boiling Springs standout Tristan Smith.

There’s a chance neither makes it to campus depending on how high they’re picked. Porter, a 6-foot-4 right-hander, is ranked the draft’s No. 11 overall prospect by MLB Draft Pipeline while Smith, a 6-2 southpaw, checks in at No. 46. Each of the first 68 picks has a slot value of at least $1 million, according to MLB.com draft expert Jim Callis.

“It’ll be interesting over the course of the next week just to kind of see what happens,” Bakich said.

Next season, college baseball rosters will be going back to a limit of 35 players with a caveat: a maximum of 40 will be allowed if the extra five players lost their 2020 season to the coronavirus pandemic. Still, with a plethora of incoming players – Michigan transfers Riley Bertram and Willie Weiss are also following Bakich to Clemson – and without knowing exactly how many current players are on the way out, the numbers are tight for the Tigers’ 2023 roster.

Bakich said Clemson could sign two more transfers for next season but only if a pair of underclassmen end up leaving early to play professionally. Of course, that number could grow if there are some surprises next week.

“I thought it was a quick adjustment back to the 35-man (roster) with the exception of only five additional COVID super seniors. That’s going to be tough,” Bakich said. “The draft, the roster, it’s something every coach, not just myself and Clemson, but every coach will have to figure out. We won’t know really what it’s going to look like until after the draft.”

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Clemson players, fans react to Monte Lee firing

Clemson’s decision to fire baseball head coach Monte Lee was met with mixed reactions on Twitter among fans and a couple of players.

Coming off back-to-back seasons of missing the NCAA Tournament, Clemson baseball head coach Monte Lee was let go by Clemson Athletics on Tuesday.

Lee completed his seventh season as head coach finishing 11th in the ACC with a 35-23 record in 2022. Last season, Lee led the Tigers to their first losing record (25-27) since 1957. With the lack of postseason success over the past two seasons, Clemson athletic director Graham Neff decided it was time for a change.

“The expectations for Clemson Baseball are very high, and the team’s recent on-field performance has not met those of our administration, our coaching staff, our student-athletes or our loyal fanbase,” said Neff in Tuesday’s press release.

Overall, Lee went 242-136 in his seven seasons as head coach, leading Clemson to an ACC Championship title in 2016 and four NCAA Tournament appearances from 2016 to 2019.

“It’s certainly a time of grieving,” Lee told WCIV’s Scott Eisberg. “Certainly sad that my time here at Clemson is over. You know, I feel like I failed.”

As for the program’s future, Neff and his team will immediately begin the head coaching search for what he considers to be a top-15 job.

With the change in leadership, however, some other changes will occur for Clemson’s roster next season. According to The Clemson Insider, catcher Jonathan French and outfielder Dylan Brewer have entered the transfer portal.

With the abundance of change within the program, here are the mixed reactions on Twitter from a couple of current players and many fans.

UNC handles Clemson as Tigers postseason hopes hang by a thread

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – In need of a win to keep its postseason hopes alive, Clemson dropped its first matchup of the ACC Tournament. With Tuesday night’s 9-1 loss to North Carolina, Clemson has been eliminated from playing in the conference tournament …

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — In need of a win to keep its postseason hopes alive, Clemson dropped its first matchup of the ACC Tournament.

With Tuesday night’s 9-1 loss to North Carolina, Clemson has been eliminated from playing in the conference tournament semifinals. Thursday’s matchup against Virginia Tech will ultimately decide Clemson’s postseason fate, which is on life support after Tuesday’s loss.

UNC never trailed in Tuesday’s game, as the Tar Heels jumped out to an early 1-0 lead in the home half of the first. From there, they scored in five straight innings and pounded out 11 hits.

Max Carlson held Clemson at bay, as the Tigers managed just one run on six hits against UNC’s sophomore right-hander.

Mack Anglin, who pitched seven scoreless innings against Boston College last Thursday, was back on the bump Tuesday. Clemson’s ace surrendered seven runs (five earned) on seven hits with four hits and four strikeouts in four innings pitched.

Pitching on short rest, Anglin labored through four innings. He didn’t have his best stuff Tuesday and perhaps the outing might have gone differently, if not for a crucial error made by Tyler Corbitt.

Nothing came easy for Corbitt out in left field Tuesday.

With two out in the bottom of the second, the redshirt junior outfielder was tracking a flyball on the warning track and misjudged it. Corbitt dropped the ball, allowing two runs to score. The West Columbia native was charged with an error and a crucial one at that.

North Carolina infielder Mikey Madej took Anglin deep in the bottom of the third inning, extending UNC’s lead to 4-1.

Returning out to the bump in the bottom half of the fourth inning, Anglin ran out of gas. He issued a bases-loaded walk with one out and later gave up a two-run single. Even though Anglin’s velocity was down, Jay Dill wasn’t warming in the bullpen until the Tigers had recorded their second out in the fourth inning.

Anglin was able to get out of the inning without surrendering any more runs, but the damage was done.

Clemson had a chance to tack on some runs and claw its way back into the game in the top of the fifth inning. Caden Grice laced a one-out double into the right-field corner, followed up by a Benjamin Blackwell single through the hole.

Will Taylor came up with runners on the corners and two outs, but Clemson’s two-sport athlete was unable to come through.

That was a relative theme for Clemson’s offense Tuesday, as the Tigers struggled to string together hits. The Tigers took a lot of fly balls for a ride, but most of them died at the warning track, staying within the confines of Truist Field.

Clemson scored just one run, which came on a Bryar Hawkins second-inning sac-fly.

The Tigers would load the bases on three straight walks in the top of the eighth inning, but Camden Troyer flew out to center field to end the threat.

Dill relieved Anglin in the home half of the fifth inning and gave up a run on two hits, as the Tar Heels extended their lead to 8-1. Ty Olenchuk and Jackson Lindley combined to throw two scoreless innings with four strikeouts out of the pen.

Austin Gordon later gave up a run on two hits and was relieved by Ryan Ammons with two outs in the bottom of the eight,

Clemson will look to keep its season alive against Virginia Tech on Thursday at 7 p.m.

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Clemson enters ACC Tournament with season hanging in the balance

Now that it’s in the ACC Tournament, Clemson has the same goal as the conference’s other 11 baseball teams making the trip to Charlotte this week. “We want to go in there and win this thing,” Clemson coach Monte Lee said. But there may not be a team …

Now that it’s in the ACC Tournament, Clemson has the same goal as the conference’s other 11 baseball teams making the trip to Charlotte this week.

“We want to go in there and win this thing,” Clemson coach Monte Lee said.

But there may not be a team that actually needs to pull that off – or at least come close – more than the Tigers.

Clemson (35-21) begins another important week during a recent stretch that’s been full of them today when the Tigers open tournament play as the 12th and final seed. Clemson will take on No. 8 North Carolina at 7 p.m. before playing top-seeded Virginia Tech on Thursday at Truist Field fully aware of what’s at stake.

“We all know what we’re facing, and the guys will be ready to go,” Lee said. “Let’s go win Game 1 and get some momentum going into Game 2.”

The Tigers are trying to avoid missing out on the NCAA Tournament for the second straight season, though they have given themselves a fighting chance with a strong finish to the regular season. Clemson was in danger of missing out on the conference tournament just a few weeks ago before winning seven of its last nine ACC games, including a sweep of Boston College over the weekend that clinched its spot in Charlotte.

Yet the Tigers’ postseason resume remains bubbly, and predictions of whether or not Clemson would be part of the NCAA Tournament field if the 64-team tournament started today reflect that. Clemson begins the week ranked 30th in the NCAA’s latest RPI rankings thanks in part to 11 top-30 RPI wins, including nine against teams in the top 20. The Tigers went 5-0 against the SEC in the non-conference portion of the schedule with two of those wins coming against No. 12 Georgia.

But Clemson needed that strong close to conference play just to finish three games below .500 against ACC competition. For the moment, D1Baseball.com projects the Tigers as the final team into the NCAA Tournament as the 11th team from the ACC, which would be a record for the league. The conference has never had more than 10 teams make the NCAA Tournament in a single year.

Of course, Clemson could assure itself of a spot in a regional by winning the ACC Tournament to earn the conference’s automatic bid. But with other potential bid stealers lurking around the country, too, the Tigers need at least one win and likely more than that this week in order to feel better about their at-large chances.

Otherwise, the Tigers will be sweating profusely when the NCAA Tournament field is announced Monday. The ACC splits its teams into four pods of three with the winner of each pod advancing to Saturday’s tournament semifinals. Clemson needs to beat UNC and Virginia Tech in order to get there. A loss to the Tar Heels tonight, though, and Thursday’s game becomes a virtual must-win for the Tigers and their NCAA hopes, though Lee doesn’t want his team putting any additional pressure on itself.

“I think if you start using words like have to, desperation and must win, you’re only showing mental weakness within your ballclub if you do that. That’s the bottom line,” Lee said. “We’ve played a lot of baseball. The hay is in the barn. Let’s go play baseball. We knew what we’re doing. We know what our strengths are.

“We don’t need to approach the UNC game any differently than we have any other game. It’s pretty simple. If we get a good start on the mound and we swing the bats the way we can swing the bats, we can compete with anybody in the country. That’s the message.”

Mack Anglin (6-5, 4.11 earned run average) will get the ball for Clemson tonight. The sophomore right-hander is coming off one of his longest outings of the season last week when he threw seven innings of one-run ball against Boston College. He will be opposed by UNC right-hander Max Carlson (1-2, 3.72), who will face a Clemson offense that has averaged 8.5 runs in its last 12 games against ACC competition.

“We need to focus on Game 1 like we have all along,” Lee said. “We know where we’re at. We’re right on that bubble, but why not go up there and try to win the thing?”

Lee, Anglin, Grice talk 15-1 win over Boston College

Clemson left no doubt in a much needed 15-1 win over Boston College Thursday night at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. Following the win Lee, Anglin and Grice discussed the win and what the Tigers need to do the rest of the way.

Clemson left no doubt in a much needed 15-1 win over Boston College Thursday night at Doug Kingsmore Stadium.

Following the win Lee, Anglin and Grice discussed the win and what the Tigers need to do the rest of the way.

Taylor talks about his first baseball game as a Tiger

Clemson’s two-sport star Will Taylor played his first baseball for the Tigers Friday night. Following the 9-3 win over Georgia Tech Taylor and Anglin discuss the victory. Taylor talks about what it felt like to finally hit the field at Doug …

Clemson’s two-sport star Will Taylor played his first baseball for the Tigers Friday night.

Following the 9-3 win over Georgia Tech Taylor and Anglin discuss the victory.  Taylor talks about what it felt like to finally hit the field at Doug Kingsmore Stadium.

Lee addresses Clemson’s pitching situation after latest shakeup

Who will fill in as the midweek starters for Clemson’s baseball team this week? And will the Tigers stick with the same rotation in yet another pivotal ACC series at Louisville this weekend? Those are questions Clemson coach Monte Lee and his staff …

Who will fill in as the midweek starters for Clemson’s baseball team this week? And will the Tigers stick with the same rotation in yet another pivotal ACC series at Louisville this weekend?

Those are questions Clemson coach Monte Lee and his staff find themselves needing to answer after their latest alteration on the mound. A day after changing his Saturday starter for the second straight week, Lee started freshman Billy Barlow in place of Nick Clayton for the Tigers’ series finale Sunday.

With the help of six relievers, Clemson rallied to beat the Seminoles to win its second straight ACC series after dropping the first four. But the decision to start Barlow, the Tigers’ usual midweek starter, means Clemson will have to turn elsewhere for their next game Tuesday against Presbyterian at Doug Kingsmore Stadium.

Clemson has another game at home Wednesday against No. 25 Wofford, so the Tigers will need a couple of fresh arms to help them get through the midweek. Clayton, who last pitched an inning of relief Wednesday in Clemson’s win over East Tennessee State, is a candidate to start. So is Nick Hoffman, who began the season in the weekend rotation but has made his last four appearances in relief.

But they’re not the only ones. While most of their appearances have come out of the bullpen, freshman Casey Tallent and sophomore Ricky Williams have each started a game this season. Williams (0.87 earned run average) has allowed just one earned run in 10 ⅓ innings while Tallent (2.37), who got his first career start against ETSU last week, has held opposing batters to a .224 average in 19 innings.

Lee said following Sunday’s game he and his staff will talk it over before making a decision at some point today.

“We have options between Ricky Williams, Clayton, Tallent,” Lee said. “So we’ll talk it over as a staff and try to figure out how to piece 18 innings there together in the middle of the week.”

As for the weekend, Lee said he will take the same approach when deciding whether or not he’ll keep the back end of the rotation the same against Louisville, which begins the week tied with Notre Dame atop the ACC’s Atlantic Division standings.

Sophomore right-hander Mack Anglin (3.24) has been the constant for Clemson all season in the Friday night spot, but the rest of the weekend has been a bugaboo for most of the season. Clemson had not had a Saturday or Sunday starter work past the fourth inning since its ACC-opening series against Miami until Gilbert did so this past Saturday. In his first start of the season, Gilbert limited FSU to three runs on four hits in 4 1/3 innings.

On Sunday, Barlow yielded three runs in the first inning before settling in to get through the first 3 ⅔ frames on 82 pitches. Asked if Barlow has earned another weekend start against the Cardinals, Lee was non-committal.

“He’s not going to be available in the middle of the week, so it certainly makes sense to potentially start him again next weekend,” Lee said. “But obviously we’ll discuss that as a staff before we make any sort of decision on what we’re going to do there.”

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