New commit can’t thank Clemson enough for ‘amazing opportunity’

Samuel Stafura has long been on the recruiting radar of Clemson’s baseball program and assistant coach Bradley LeCroy. It didn’t take long for the infielder out of Mohegan Lake (NY.) to fall in love with Clemson. “Coach LeCroy first saw me down at …

Samuel Stafura has long been on the recruiting radar of Clemson’s baseball program and assistant coach Bradley LeCroy. It didn’t take long for the infielder out of Mohegan Lake (NY.) to fall in love with Clemson.

“Coach LeCroy first saw me down at the PG Jr National Showcase at East Cobb,” Stafura told The Clemson Insider. “I had a really good performance and had some great at-bats against some of the top pitchers in-country, including a home run.”

It was from there that LeCroy reached out after the event, impressed with what he saw out of Stafura.

He then visited Clemson’s campus a couple of weeks later.

“I visited campus and immediately knew that I wanted to go to Clemson,” Stafura added. “[Coach LeCroy] then saw me play against at 16u WWBA and offered me afterward.”

That offer was the one Stafura was waiting for.

So, what was it about Clemson that made him want to be a Tiger?

“Everything about it,” Stafura said. “I knew I wanted to be a Clemson Tiger once I visited campus. I love the campus, they’re an amazing baseball program with amazing coaches, and it just felt like a great fit academically and athletically.”

LeCroy has been Stafura’s main point of contact, but he’s also gotten to know head coach Monte Lee over the past couple of weeks.

“Through the recruiting process, I mostly spoke to Coach LeCroy, but I’ve spoken to Coach Lee a handful of times recently and they’re both very nice people,” he said. I can’t wait for them to be my coaches and I can’t thank them enough for believing in me and giving me this amazing opportunity.”

Stafura would characterize himself as a team player and someone who loves the game of baseball. With that, comes fiery competitiveness and the willingness to do whatever it takes to help his team win.

The Walter Panas high school product is a talented infielder, who has the ability to hit for average and power. He’ll also play anywhere Clemson needs him to, once he arrives on campus.

Additionally, Stafura outlined his strengths on the diamond in his conversation with TCI.

“I have a really strong ability to make plays on the run and I think my arm strength is also very beneficial,” he said. “I have lots of range and I have very fast hands.”

As he prepares for his junior season, the goal he has in mind is to compete for a State Championship. Stafura would like to take the offseason to develop in the weight room and further develop his strength/speed.

He has the defense part down though, which he attributes to his New York Mets fandom and his affinity for the team’s all-star shortstop.

“Being from New York, I watch a lot of Mets games, so I like to model my defensive game a little bit after Francisco Lindor. I like to study his fielding mechanics and learn from them to see what I could improve.”

Time to get the latest Clemson apparel to show your Tiger pride. Order your officially licensed Clemson gear right here!

 

Lee shares with TCI plan for Will Taylor

Clemson football and baseball received a huge boost when projected first round MLB Draft pick Will Taylor decided to turn down a lot of money to be a college athlete. Baseball head coach Monte Lee sat down with The Clemson Insider on Friday and …

Clemson football and baseball received a huge boost when projected first round MLB Draft pick Will Taylor decided to turn down a lot of money to be a college athlete.

Baseball head coach Monte Lee sat down with The Clemson Insider on Friday and spoke highly of the incoming two-sport star.

First and foremost, Lee credited head football coach Dabo Swinney for making sure Taylor had an opportunity to succeed in both sports as a Tiger and working with the baseball program in the recruiting process.

“We have a football coach who wants to give young men an opportunity to maximize their career,” Lee said. “Dabo is great about it when it’s baseball season if he’s actively in the mix for baseball let him do baseball. He is great in that regard.”

Taylor excelled as a three-sport talent at Dutch Fork High School in Irmo, S.C. winning a state championship in wrestling and football and won South Carolina’s Gatorade baseball player of the year award. Some publications listed him as a projected top 10 pick in the 2021 MLB Draft.

But Taylor wanted to play football and baseball for the Tigers and turned down big money to join the college ranks. Ultimately the Texas Rangers selected him in the 19th round on the off chance he would change his mind, but Lee confirmed Taylor would be in orange and white this year.

Before he turns his focus to baseball next spring Taylor will devote his time to the football program where he is expected to help as a backup quarterback and slot receiver. Lee and his staff will have limited time with Taylor during fall ball because of the football season and the NCAA’s 20-hour practice rule but the facilities will be open for him to refine his skills.

“There are things that will have to be off limits in terms of Will in the fall and we don’t want to focus on Will in the fall he needs to focus on the task at hand which is helping the football team win a national championship,” Lee said. “He’s such a God-given talent athletically that I don’t think it will take a lot of reps to get him ready for baseball.”

Lee estimates that after the College Football Playoff Taylor should be able to participate in two weeks of individual skill instruction and 10 to 12 inter-squad scrimmages before the baseball season starts. This will give him over 30 at bats in the preseason.

But for a talent like Taylor, Lee is ready to throw him on the field and see what he can do.

Will Taylor is a guy that this is what you do with him, you put in the field and let him play. He is so athletic and so talented, will he need to knock the rust off? Of course, baseball is not a game or sport where you can roll out and just play it,” Lee said. “It may take Will a little bit of time just to get re-acclimated to baseball, but he’s done it his whole life.”

Photo courtesy of Clemson Athletic Communications

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Clemson ‘the opportunity of a lifetime’ for new commit

Clemson welcomed a new addition to its 2022 class on Monday. The Tigers secured the verbal commitment of Rock Hill (S.C.) Northwestern High School’s Ethan Darden. Darden (5-11, 145) is a left-handed pitcher and outfielder. He considers himself to be …

Clemson welcomed a new addition to its 2022 class on Monday.

The Tigers secured the verbal commitment of Rock Hill (S.C.) Northwestern High School’s Ethan Darden. 

Darden (5-11, 145) is a left-handed pitcher and outfielder. He considers himself to be an adaptive and strategic ballplayer.

He recently caught up with The Clemson Insider regarding his decision to verbally commit to Clemson.

“Clemson has blessed me with the opportunity of a lifetime,” Darden told TCI. “They have believed in me when no one else has. They see me as a great competitor and a highly regarded prospect on the field. I’m just extremely thankful to call myself a Tiger.”

It’s been hard for Darden to control his emotions throughout this process.

“When Coach (Monte) Lee first contacted me, I was full of emotions and at a loss of words,” Darden said. “I really wanted to do the commitment process during the tour, but the coaching staff gave me an amazing offer that I could not refuse.”

Darden went down to Clemson anyways, but he arrived on campus as a future member of the baseball team. 

What was it that separated Clemson from the other schools that Darden considered?

“Just the atmosphere on the campus is amazing, there’s really no better feeling,” he said. “The support that I have received from all of the Clemson alumni and students on social media has made me feel very loved and wanted.”

Darden’s fastball sits 87-89 MPH, but he tops out around the low 90s. 

Clemson likes how Darden is a competitor and that he’s willing to do anything it takes to win, he added.

Time to get the latest Clemson apparel to show your Tiger pride. Order your officially licensed Clemson gear right here!

Countdown to Texas Football: Best to wear No. 86

The countdown to Texas football marches on as Longhorns Wire remembers number 86 Monte Lee. Lee played from 1957-1960.

The countdown to college football kickoff rolls on as we approach 86 days. Less than three months away from football returning to our lives Longhorns Wire remembers the greatest players in Texas history. Check out the entire series.

Related: Countdown to Texas Football: Best to wear No. 87

Next in line is number 86 for the Longhorns. There isn’t a current Longhorn who currently wears the number. As for the best? Well we have to go back to 1959-60 to find him. Monte Lee wore number 86 and was a two-way end for the Texas Longhorns. He was All-SWC in both seasons.

Lee was a two-way end who rose from obscure reserve to starter in the 1957 Oklahoma game after a Monday scrimmage. He was noted mainly for blocking and defense, but caught short TD passes against OU. He missed the 1958 season, but was all-Southwest Conference twice, as an end in 1957 and an offensive guard/linebacker in 1960. He caught only three passes in 1959, one of which was a 51-yard catch to set-up a TD against SMU. He made many tackles in an era were defensive stats were not kept. He played in the NFL with the St. Louis Cardinals (1961), Detroit Lions (1963-64) and the Baltimore Colts (1965). He coached two six-man state runner-up teams at Cotton Center while principal and superintendent. Lee is currently retired and farming in Calvert. – via TexasSports.com 

According to his sports-reference page, Lee was listed as a wide receiver for the 1957 and 1959 seasons. He caught six passes for 119 yards and one touchdown in 12 combined games. Of course this was long before the evolution of the passing game.

He was inducted into the Texas Longhorns Hall of Honor in 2005.