Former Clemson head coach joins Gamecocks

Lee returns to the Gamecock program where he coached for six seasons prior to his time at College of Charleston and Clemson.

A former Clemson head coach has made the move to Columbia.

Seven-year Clemson baseball head coach Monte Lee, who was fired back in May, announced his next coaching destination via Twitter on Wednesday.

Lee shared that he will be joining the South Carolina Gamecocks program under head coach Mark Kingston as the team’s associate head coach and recruiting coordinator, replacing first-year assistant coach Chad Caillet.

Lee, who was apart of the Gamecock’s coaching staff back in 2003-08 prior to his time at Clemson, joins three of his former Tigers in catcher Jonathan French, outfielder/first baseman Dylan Brewer and right-handed pitcher Ricky Williams, who all announced their intentions to transfer to their former program’s in-state rival earlier this summer.

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Wagner selected in second round of MLB Draft

Congrats to this former Tiger on being drafted by the Baltimore Orioles.

Clemson had its first player selected on day one of the MLB Draft on Sunday.

Sophomore infielder Max Wagner was selected in the second round by the Baltimore Orioles as the No. 42 pick in the 2022 MLB Draft on Sunday. Wagner is the first Tiger to be selected by the Orioles since Steve Wilkerson was drafted by the club in 2014.

In his two seasons at Clemson, the Green Bay, Wisconsin native garnered quite the resumé including ACC Player of the year and first-team All-American honors, having a breakout sophomore season this past spring.

Following the 2022 season, Wagner sported a .369 batting average with 66 runs, 75 hits, 15 doubles, one triple, 76 RBIs, 27 home runs, and a .852 slugging percentage. The second baseman tied the school record with his 27 homers (Khalil Greene in 2002), which is good for third most in ACC history.

This spring, Wagner was third in the nation for home runs (27) and was second in the nation for slugging percentage (.852).

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Clemson baseball is losing another player to South Carolina

Another Clemson player is transferring to South Carolina.

You know the saying when it rains, it pours? That seems to be the case for Clemson baseball right now, as yet another player has announced they are transferring to the Tigers’ in-state rival in the wake of the firing of Monte Lee.

Sophomore pitcher Ricky Williams announced on Twitter Wednesday that he would be transferring to South Carolina to continue his baseball career. Williams joins Dylan Brewer and Jonathan French as the third Tiger to transfer to South Carolina since Lee’s firing.

Williams made nine appearances for Clemson this season, finishing the season with a 2-0 record and a 2.95 earned run average, primarily coming in relief for the Tigers.

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Twitter reacts: Clemson baseball hires Erik Bakich as new head coach

Check out how Twitter reacted to Clemson hiring Michigan’s Erik Bakich as the Tigers’ 28th baseball head coach in program history.

After missing the NCAA Tournament for consecutive seasons for the first time since 1986, Clemson baseball has hired a new head coach in Erik Bakich.

Although the media had broken the news days before it was official, Clemson’s Board of Trustees Compensation Committee officially approved a six-year contract with Bakich on Thursday that will pay Bakich $850,000 in the first year and will progressively increase by $50,000 until the salary reaches $1.1 million in year six.

Spending the last 10 seasons as Michigan’s head coach Bakich was the runner-up in the 2019 College World Series and led the Wolverines to five of the last seven NCAA Tournaments. Although he had success at Michigan, his coaching career began in Clemson in 2002 when he was a volunteer assistant for Jack Leggett.

Athletic director Graham Neff said during the hiring process that he viewed Clemson baseball as a top-15 job in the nation. Still, despite Neff’s expectations and the program’s past successes, Bakich isn’t shying away from what he expects from himself and his new team.

“I see that as a great challenge,” Bakich said. “I look at 2010; that program was in Omaha. Coach Lee’s first three years, we were hosting regionals. I just don’t see any reason why Clemson baseball can’t compete for national championships, trips to Omaha, ACC Championships and host the postseason right here at Doug Kingsmore Stadium.”

With Clemson letting go of Monte Lee in May, Bakich will serve as the Tigers’ 28th baseball head coach with the hope of winning the program’s first national championship.

Here’s how Twitter reacted to the hire.

Clemson loses top 2022 position player

Clemson baseball has suffered another casualty as the program currently awaits the hiring of its next head coach. The Clemson Insider has learned that the Tigers’ top position player in the class of 2022, who was set to enroll at Clemson later this …

Clemson baseball has suffered another casualty as the program currently awaits the hiring of its next head coach.

The Clemson Insider has learned that the Tigers’ top position player in the class of 2022, who was set to enroll at Clemson later this month, has asked and been granted his release.

After pledging to now-former head coach Montee Lee and Clemson in August of 2019, Short Hills (N.J.) Seton Hall Prep High School middle infielder Chris Maldonado will no longer be attending Clemson, following Lee’s dismissal last month.

Maldonado comes from a good baseball family. One of his brothers played at Pittsburgh, and his other brother, Nick, is a junior right-handed pitcher at Vanderbilt.

The glaring issue Clemson baseball has to fix to become an ACC contender again

Clemson is searching for a new baseball coach, who will have plenty of work to do in one specific area in order to get the program back to a level athletic director Graham Neff expects going forward. That’s competing for championships, an …

Clemson is searching for a new baseball coach, who will have plenty of work to do in one specific area in order to get the program back to a level athletic director Graham Neff expects going forward.

That’s competing for championships, an expectation Neff made clear following his decision to part ways with Monte Lee. An ACC tournament crown in Year 1 and an Atlantic Division title in 2018 were the only outright championships Clemson claimed during Lee’s seven-year tenure, which ended with the Tigers missing out on consecutive NCAA Tournaments.

As the old adage goes, defense wins championships. For those who subscribe wholeheartedly to that theory, it’s easy if not critical to take it one step further in baseball, a sport in which pitching sets the tone.

There’s been one constant in Clemson’s dropoff the last couple of seasons: a lack of quality depth on the mound, particularly against ACC bats. It’s something Lee knew had to change after last season when the Tigers posted a 5.00 earned run average – the highest of his tenure – en route to their first losing season since the 1950s.

“When you look at the teams that, at least that I’ve coached, have been successful, successful teams are consistent,” Lee told The Clemson Insider during the preseason. “And consistency starts on the pitching side.”

Yet there again was little to be found among the Tigers’ arms this season. Mack Anglin, Nick Hoffman and Nick Clayton started the season in Clemson’s weekend rotation, but Anglin, who posted a team-best 4.48 ERA over 15 starts in what may have been the final collegiate season for the draft-eligible sophomore, was the only one who finished there.

At one point, fellow sophomore Geoffrey Gilbert, one of the Tigers’ top relievers, was moved into the rotation. Lee even gave true freshman Billy Barlow, who began the season as a midweek starter, a handful of weekend starts. But the Tigers spent most of the season looking for answers on the bump instead of finding them.

That was particularly true against ACC lineups, nine of which will be participating in this year’s NCAA Tournament. Even with ACC Player of the Year Max Wagner powering an offense that averaged more than seven runs a game, Clemson finished the year 13-18 against league competition after starting the season 14-0.

The Tigers scored at least seven runs in 14 league games but lost more than one-third of those (five) since they had trouble containing opposing offenses. Seven times, Clemson yielded double-digit runs to ACC opponents. The Tigers lost all of those games, including an 18-15 series finale at Louisville and a season-ending 18-6 setback to Virginia Tech in the ACC Tournament.

“You score seven runs and put together a big inning, you should win the game,” Lee said following Clemson’s 9-7 loss to North Carolina State in early April. “It’s really that simple.”

Clemson didn’t do itself any favors by issuing a whopping 295 walks this season. That’s more than five free baserunners per game. It contributed to a 4.86 ERA, which again ranked in the bottom half of the ACC.

All but two of the league’s NCAA Tournament teams this year have ERAs lower than that, and one of the outliers, Georgia Tech, made up for it by leading the league in hitting (.323 team average). Notre Dame, Virginia and Virginia Tech – teams that finished in the top 3 of their respective divisions – are all taking sub-4.2 ERAs into this weekend’s regionals. Meanwhile, Clemson hasn’t posted a team ERA lower than 4.47 in a full season since 2018, which is also the last time the Tigers won their division and hosted a regional.

It all begs a couple of key questions: Is the talent level within the program where it needs to be for Clemson to compete in the top half of the ACC again? And, if not, are candidates with a proven knack for developing players and recruiting top-end talent a prerequisite for Neff during this coaching search?

Asked both by TCI earlier this week, Neff opined that “we have great ball players here and always have at Clemson.” But he acknowledged the Tigers’ on-field results the last couple of seasons prove there is a disconnect somewhere.

“When we finish 11th and 12th in the ACC, those are clearly big drivers toward this change,” Neff said, referring to Lee’s dismissal. “I talked about that with Monte very candidly and directly.

“Do we need more talent? Absolutely. Does it lead itself to someone that’s really well-versed and has chops in recruiting, relationships, travel ball, high schools and those types of things? Those are really compelling attributes for coaches, absolutely.”

Those criteria may be more important than ever given the scholarship restrictions in the sport that put Clemson and other programs at a natural recruiting disadvantage. The NCAA limits baseball teams to 11.7 annual scholarships to be divvied up among a maximum of 27 players, a financial shortcoming that some schools use the kind of massive endowment Clemson doesn’t have to circumvent.

Recruiting could further be impacted by name, image and likeness deals for student-athletes, though the NCAA recently classified NIL collectives as boosters and thus illegal to entice prospective athletes with money. Neff said Clemson’s administration has taken measures to try to level the playing field, including the recent implementation of the Clemson Athletic Performance award, which will allow current athletes the opportunity to receive up to an extra $5,980 per academic year for academic progress.

“It’s important on us administratively, and we’ve taken steps and will continue to take those to have great opportunities for our coaches and our baseball coach to recruit and raise that talent level to the point that we expect to compete nationally,” Neff said.

Whether that’s developing the pitchers that choose to stick around, bringing in new arms or a combination of the two, the goal of getting Clemson back to a regional and beyond for whoever ends up getting the job has a simple starting point.

Another pair of Clemson baseball players enter transfer portal

Clemson baseball continues to experience plenty of turnover as the transition period is in full swing.

Two days after Clemson Athletics parted ways with Monte Lee, two more baseball players have entered the transfer portal.

According to The Clemson Insider, outfielders Camden Troyer and Spencer Rich are in the portal. The news comes one day after catcher Jonathan French and outfielder Dylan Brewer entered the portal, bringing the total of Tigers in the portal to four.

As a freshman in 2022, Troyer appeared in 18 games this season, batting 7-for-38 with two home runs. As for Rich, he finished with two hits on 12 at-bats while playing in 12 games. Prior to Clemson, Troyer was an All-State selection for South Carolina. Rich, on the other hand, was a first-year junior transfer from Daytona State College.

Although Thursday’s transfers didn’t receive much playing time in 2022, French and Brewer played in 44 and 46 games, respectively, this past season.

With the likely loss of four players to the portal, Clemson will need to fill their shoes as it searches for a new head coach.

Why search for next baseball coach could require Clemson to ‘hurry up and wait’

In meeting with Monte Lee this week and evaluating the state of Clemson’s baseball program, athletic director Graham Neff said the process of making a change in the program’s leadership all happened relatively fast. That’s because Neff’s goal is to …

In meeting with Monte Lee this week and evaluating the state of Clemson’s baseball program, athletic director Graham Neff said the process of making a change in the program’s leadership all happened relatively fast. That’s because Neff’s goal is to move as quickly as possible in finding the Tigers’ next coach.

“We moved expeditiously through those and want to continue it in the search,” Neff said.

But, at least to some extent, there may be a limit to just how fast Neff can work to do that.

Lee’s dismissal came a day after Clemson found out it won’t be participating in this year’s NCAA Tournament, the second straight year the Tigers will watch the postseason from home. The 64 teams that are part of the tournament will begin regional play Friday, which could make it tricky for Neff if he wants to have conversations about Clemson’s vacancy with coaches of teams whose seasons are still going on.

Neff made it clear the athletic department doesn’t intend to spare any expense when it comes to filling a job for which he has laid out lofty postseason expectations. While he’s not ruling out the possibility of hiring a top assistant or someone in the professional ranks, Neff said his search will start with “high-profile, accomplished coaches,” some of which might still be coaching their current teams.

“That’s where baseball is maybe a little more unique than maybe some other sports in that there’s probably some aspect of hurry up and wait if that’s a phrase that applies,” Neff said. “There are certainly going to be coaches that we’d want to talk to that we want to respect their current roles and current teams and go about the process in a first-class manner.”

Neff said his search will begin in earnest today.

“(Wednesday) will be proverbially rolling up the sleeves and doing the due diligence on the search, but we’ll need to balance that with the time of year, regionals this weekend, etc. It’s one of those where we’ll start to dive into it, see who’s available, who’s willing to talk or who maybe has some interest in how we go about balancing that.”

Still, Neff said he wants to move as quickly as he can this time of year to fill the job, one where previous coaches have proven it’s possible to win big. Clemson has played in 32 of the last 35 NCAA Tournaments and has made 12 trips to the College World Series, most recently in 2010.

Neff believes the attractiveness of the job speaks for itself.

“We’re incredibly bullish on our job and the profile of our job as a top-15 job and the interest that it would have,” Neff said. “Our desire to win and win big and the requisite investment and resources that would entail, we’re ready to present a great package to get into those conversations with the timeline TBD.”

National writer weighs in on quality of Clemson baseball job

News of Monte Lee’s firing as Clemson’s baseball coach naturally led to a pressing question: Who is going to replace him? One national college baseball writer believes the job is highly attractive for any candidate. Kendall Rogers, writer and editor …

News of Monte Lee’s firing as Clemson’s baseball coach naturally led to a pressing question: Who is going to replace him?

One national college baseball writer believes the job is highly attractive for any candidate. Kendall Rogers, writer and editor for D1Baseball.com, tweeted that Clemson is “a great job” because of its tradition, facilities and recruiting proximity to the metro-Atlanta area among other reasons.

Responding to a question he was asked on how he would rank the job nationally and within the ACC, Rogers also said “it checks every box.” He had just one concern about Clemson’s commitment to the sport.

“Clemson needs to play like it is a premier job,” Rogers said at the end of his tweet.

Clemson is in the process of hiring its third baseball coach since the end of the 2015 season when Jack Leggett was let go after 23 seasons at the helm. Lee spent seven seasons as the coach of the Tigers, who never advanced beyond the regional round of the NCAA Tournament during his tenure.

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.