Story Links

April 22, 1999

Virginia vs. Maryland
UVa Baseball Field – Charlottesville, Va.
April 23-25, 1999

Cavaliers, Terps tangle in crucial ACC series: Virginia and Maryland will do battle this weekend at the UVa Baseball Field in a watershed three-game Atlantic Coast Conference series. The Cavaliers and Terrapins enter the weekend seventh and eighth, respectively, in the conference. Both teams have five conference victories, but Maryland is three games up in the loss column having played only five ACC series compared to Virginia’s six. UVa enters at 15-29 on the season with a 5-12 mark in the conference. The Cavaliers are currently on a season-long nine-game losing streak and have dropped six consecutive ACC contests since Ryan Kalamaya’s game-winning home run against Georgia Tech two Sundays ago. Maryland took one of three games at North Carolina State last weekend, shuting out the Wolfpack in Sunday’s series finale.

The Series: Virginia and Maryland will meet for the 141st, 142nd and 143rd times this weekend in a series which dates back to the 1899 campaign. Maryland holds a slim 70-69-1 advantage in the series. The Cavaliers won that first meeting 10-2 and went on to win the first seven meetings. The two northern-most ACC schools have met every season since 1923, save the 1941, 1942, 1943 and 1946 seasons. The Cavaliers have won seven of the last 10 meetings, including the last two. After salvaging the final game of a three-game set in College Park last April, Virginia defeated the Terps 9-4 in the play-in game of the ACC Tournament. UVa swept the last series played in Charlottesville, taking three games in early May of 1997. The Wahoos have won six of the last meetings at Mr. Jefferson’s University and have not lost a series to Maryland at home since the Red and Black took two of three in 1991.

Maryland Terrapins

1999 Record: 17-18-1
1999 Rankings: none
Head Coach (Record at Maryland): Tom Bradley (213-258-5)
UNC-UVa Series: Maryland leads 70-69-1
Last Meeting: UVa, 9-4 at ACC Tournament in Durham, N.C. (1998)

Tech sends Virginia to ninth consecutive loss: Virginia Tech plated seven runs in the seventh inning Wednesday at UVa Baseball Field to defeat the Cavaliers 11-7. It was the ninth consecutive loss for UVa the longest losing streak by the Orange and Blue since a nine-game skid during March of the 1990 season. It was the first Tech victory in Charlottesville since an 11-8 decision April 20, 1988. The game was knotted 3-3 when the Hokies exploded in the seventh, sending 12 men to the plate and scoring five runs with two outs.

This weekend’s starters: Pitching coach Steve Whitmyer will utilize the same rotation this weekend he used last weekend in Chapel Hill with his Friday and Sunday pitchers switching places. Casey Kennedy will start his second straight Saturday contest and will be flanked by Southpaw sophomores Jon Metzger and Brandon Creswell, respectively. Here is a look at how each has faired in starts this season:

20 Jon Metzger, LHP, So., Fairfax Station, Va. Date  Opponent           W/L  IP H R ER BB  K 3-17  at UNC Greensboro   ND 4.2 4 5  0  6 10 3-24  George Mason        ND 2.0 1 1  1  2  2 3-27  N.C. State          ND 5.1 6 3  1  2  4 4-2   Georgia Tech        ND 6.0 8 3  3  5  8 4-11  at Wake Forest      ND 4.2 4 2  2  5  4 4-18  at North Carolina   ND 7.2 6 5  4  6  6

25 Casey Kennedy, RHP, Jr., Boca Raton, Fla. Date Opponent W/L IP H R ER BB K 1-29 vs. Jacksonville L, 2-13 4.2 4 3 2 1 2 2-14 vs. VCU L, 2-7 7.0 10 7 5 2 4 2-24 at Old Dominion L, 0-1 7.0 3 1 1 0 5 3-4 Radford W, 5-2 7.0 9 1 1 3 3 3-12 at Florida State L, 3-10 6.0 10 6 6 1 3 3-17 at North Carolina L, 2-3 6.1 10 3 3 2 4

11 Brandon Creswell, LHP, So., Newport News, Va. Date Opponent W/L IP H R ER BB K 2-12 at The Citadel W, 5-1 9.0 6 1 1 1 11 2-20 Penn State W, 4-3 5.2 6 1 1 3 6 2-27 Seton Hall L, 2-10 7.0 10 5 5 2 7 3-6 Rhode Island W, 10-3 5.0 5 1 1 0 6 3-13 at Florida State L, 1-2 6.0 7 2 2 4 9 3-19 Duke W, 15-5 7.2 8 5 4 3 7 3-25 N.C. State L, 1-2 9.0 6 2 2 1 6 4-4 Georgia Tech ND 8.2 9 5 1 2 4 4-10 at Wake Forest L, 8-14 5.2 9 5 5 1 1 4-16 at North Carolina ND 2.1 8 8 5 4 2

Road woes continue at VCU: The Cavaliers 4-2 loss to VCU at the Diamond kept the Wahoos road luck in the bad category. The loss extended UVa’s school-record losing streak in away games to 18 games and its losing streak on opponents’ fields to 16 games, which eclipsed the previous school record of 15. Virginia’s last win in either situation was a Feb. 12, 5-1 victory at The Citadel. The Wahoos are 2-12 away from home this season, 1-8 on opponents’ fields. This is shaping up to be one of the worst road seasons in school history. Only the 1908 team, which went 0-6-1 (.071) away from home had a lower winning percentage away from home. At 2-20 on the road (.091), the 1999 Cavs rank as the second-worst road team in recorded school history. With six games away from home remaining, the Cavaliers must win at least five to keep from reaching the all-time school record for losses away from home in a season. The 1987 team lost 22 such games, 19 in away games and three at neutral sites. Five of the remaining road games are on opponents’ home fields. The 19 such losses by the 1987 team is also the school record and is three more than this season’s total.

Losing skid hits nine games: Virginia’s current nine-game losing streak is its longest since an equal run of misfortune during the 1990 season. The 1983 club lost 10 straight during March of that season – the longest single-season losing streak by a Virginia ever. UVa dropped a school-record 13 straight games during the 1930 and 1931 seasons, losing the final seven games of the former campaign and the first six games of the latter. The 1990 and 1992 teams own the school record for most losses in a month with 16 in March of the respective seasons. The Cavaliers have lost 11 games this month with five games left to play in April.

Injury update: Jon Benick continues to play through a severely pulled left hamstring. Trainer Ed Kane said it is at about 85 percent. Southpaw pitcher Greg Withelder is scheduled to have an MRI on his shoulder and elbow next Thursday. Kevin Shrout continues to work through shoulder stiffness and is expected to be back to 100 percent by the ACC Tournament.

Cavs struggle at 8-ball: Virginia has scored just seven runs in 41 eighth innings this season. The Cavaliers have scored more than one run in eighth only once this year, plating two runs in a March 14 game at Florida State. The Wahoos have been outscored 35-7 in the preplenary frame. Jacksonville put five runs on the board in the eighth inning of the first game of the season, as did Seton Hall in the second game of a Feb. 27 doubleheader. The Cavaliers have scored a run in the eighth inning only twice in their last 24 games. On top of that, Brandon Creswell lost a shutout with two outs in the eighth inning Feb. 12 at The Citadel.

Close, but no Vegas Robaina: The Cavaliers have dropped nine one-run games this season, tied with the 1994 squad for the second-most in recorded school history. The 1986 team lost 10 one-run games and had a school-record four consecutive one-run losses. Last weekend, the Cavaliers dropped all three games at North Carolina by one run, marking just the third time in recorded UVa history that a Virginia team had lost three consecutive games by one run each. Along with the 1986 four-game stretch, the 1906 club also lost three straight by a single run. The Orange and Blue have also tied the school record with seven one-run losses in ACC play. The 1994 team also had seven such losses.

Stone closing in on freshman swipes mark: Stone is now just one steal away from Bill Narleski’s school record for stolen bases by a freshman (1984). He has 14 thefts on the season after notching two against Virginia Tech. His second against the Hokies moved him out of a second-place tie with Chris Kughn, who swiped 13 in 1988.

Gonzalez doubling up: Julian Gonzalez hit his 14th double of the year Wednesday against Virginia Tech. The senior out fielder had just 12 doubles in three seasons entering the 1999 campaign. His 14 two-baggers ties for 20th all-time at Virginia for a single season and is one shy of an 11-way, 10-player tie for ninth.

LaVigne working on saves mark: Junior closer Tim LaVigne is creeping toward the school record for saves. After notching three as a freshman in 1997, LaVigne led the squad for a second consecutive season with six last year. He has added two more saves this season after recording one March 31 against Richmond. His 11 saves ranks second all-time at UVa, just two shy of Todd Ruyak’s 13 amassed from 1989 through 1992.

    Player       Sv  Seasons 1. Todd Ruyak   13  1989-92 2. Tim LaVigne  11  1997-99 3. Greg Haden    8  1976-79

Should LaVigne lead the team in saves again this season, he would be the first Cavalier to top the team in that category for three consecutive seasons since Ruyak in 1990, 1991 and 1992. No other UVa player has ever accomplished that feat.

LaVigne climbing appearances chart: Junior closer Tim LaVigne appeared in his 14th game of the season Wednesday against Virginia Tech. That gives him 62 on his career, tying him with three former ‘Hoo hurlers for sixth all-time at UVa.

LaVigne establishes school record: Junior shortstop Tim LaVigne was plunked on the left arm in the seventh inning March 2 against William & Mary. That gave him 21 on his career, breaking the previous school mark of 20 set by Justin Counts from 1993 to 1996. LaVigne established the single-season school record for times being hit by a pitch with 17 last season. He now has 29 in his career with 12 this season.

Withelder, Metzger combine for first shutout of 1999: Greg Withelder and Jon Metzger struck out 15 batters as the Cavaliers downed Rhode Island 7-0 in the final game of a three-game series last weekend. It was the first shutout for Virginia since March 14 last season when the Cavs defeated Coppin State 14-0. It was also the first time either pitcher had been involved in a shutout here at Virginia. Casey Kennedy remains the only current Wahoo winger with a complete-game shutout. Along the way, Withelder struck out a career high 11 Ram batters.

Creswell named ACC Co-Pitcher of the Week: Sophomore lefty Brandon Creswell was named co-pitcher of the week in the Atlantic Coast Conference for the week ending Feb. 14. The Southpaw struck out a career-high 11 batters in UVa’s 5-1 victory over The Citadel on its home field Friday night in first-day action of the Winn-Dixie Shootout. Creswell tossed the second complete game of his career and scattered six hits with only one walk. He held the Bulldogs scoreless for seven innings before giving up a scratch run in the eighth. Creswell struck out five batters in the final three innings to nail down his career high and the victory.

Benick named to all-Shootout Team: Creswell’s chances at all-Shootout honors were squelched when East Carolina’s Foye Minton hurled a no-hitter against North Carolina State in Game 8 Feb. 14. However, sophomore Jonathan Benick did display enough gusto on the weekend tobe named to the team. After blasting an RBI double off the right-center wall against The Citadel, Benick went on to hit .545 (6-for-11) on the weekend. With a hit in all three games, the first baseman/catcher has hit safely in every game this season. Benick is in his first season at Virginia after transferring from Auburn.

Withelder named all-tournament: For his two-run, two-hit performance over five innings of work against then-No. 32 Oklahoma, sophomore lefty Greg Withelder was named to the all-tournament team at the ACC/Disney Blast. The only Cavalier on the 11-man team, Withelder surrendered both runs and both hits in the first inning of Sunday’s game. He then pitched four innings of no-hit, scoreless baseball and picked up the first win of the season for the Cavaliers. Auburn’s Chris Bootcheck joined Withelder as the only pitchers on the team.

Season-opener streak snapped: All good things must come to an end, and for the Virginia baseball team last weekend was the time. For the first time in a decade, the Cavaliers lost their season-opener when the Jacksonville Dolphins downed the Wahoos 13-2 in first-day action of the ACC/Disney Blast. UVa is 8-1-1 in its last 10 season openers, which included a quaint seven-game winning streak and a nine-game non-losing streak prior to this season. In 1991, Virginia and Liberty battled to a 5-5 tie before darkness suspended the game. Ironically, the Cavs also tied their second game that season, again 5-5, this time to Radford. The Wahoos’ last loss in a season opener was a 6-2 defeat by VCU in 1989.

LaVigne, Creswell preseason picks by Collegiate Baseball: Junior shortstop Tim LaVigne and sophomore left hander Brandon Creswell were named Preseason Players to Watch in the ACC by Collegiate Baseball. LaVigne hit .262 with five home runs and 20 RBI last season to go along with seven steals in seven attempts. He was also 2-4 on the mound with a 5.76 ERA and a team-leading six saves. Creswell was 2-0 with a 3.72 ERA last season as a freshman with a couple of saves. He also struck out 49 batters with only 18 walks in 58 innings of work.

UVa baseball on the air waves: 1070 AM WINA, the Home of the Hoos, will carry 15 games this season. Former UVa Southpaw Robby Robinson and baseball media relations director Larry Little will be on the call. Games can also be heard on the internet at www.wina.com.

Probable Starters

 34  David Stone      LF .284, 1 HR, 16 RBI, 5 2B, .368 OBP, 14-18 SB 10  Hunter Wyant     DH .266, 3 HR, 18 RBI, 6 2B, 2-4 SB  9  Jon Benick       1B .365, 8 HR, 40 RBI, 12 2B, .579 SLG, 3-7 SB 21  Julian Gonzalez  RF .331, 5 HR, 25 RBI, 14 2B, .593 SLG, 7-10 SB 13  Mark Rueffert     C .307, 1 HR, 24 RBI, 7 2B, .382 OBP, 3-4 SB 16  Tim LaVigne      SS .289, 2 HR, 15 RBI, 6 2B, .395 OBP, 7-10 SB 22  Ryan Kalamaya    LF .243, 1 HR, 7 RBI, 5 2B, 5-9 SB  6  Dan Street       3B .200, 1 HR, 5 RBI, 3-4 SB  1  Robbie Marvin    2B .186, 0 HR, 7 RBI, 3 2B, 2 3B, 5-7 SB

Friday

 20 Jon Metzger      LHP 0-0, 3.46 ERA, 41.2 IP, 40 H, 31 BB, 53 K

Saturday

 25 Casey Kennedy    RHP 2-5, 4.19 ERA, 43.0 IP, 52 H, 10 BB, 23 K

Sunday

 11 Brandon Creswell LHP 5-5, 4.42 ERA, 77.1 IP, 92 H, 26 BB, 71 K 

HEAD COACH DENNIS WOMACK: UVa head coach Dennis Womack enters his 19th season with the Cavaliers and has posted a career record of 483-480-6. In 1996, he led Virginia to a school-record 44 victories, its first-ever Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament Championship and its third appearance in the NCAA Tournament. The Cavaliers also finished the 1996 season ranked No. 14 in the nation by Baseball America, their highest national ranking ever. Womack picked up the 450th victory of his career on March 4, 1998, when the Cavaliers captured an 18-4 win over William & Mary.

Double-Digit Whiffs

 No. Pitcher           Ks  Date  Opponent (game)  1  Brandon Creswell  11  2-12  at The Citadel  2  Kevin Shrout      12  2-20  Penn State (1)  3  Greg Withelder    11   3-7  Rhode Island  4  Jon Metzger       10  3-17  at UNC Greensboro 

1999 Cavalier Firsts

Batting

At bat: Robbie Marvin - Jan. 29 vs. JacksonvilleHit: Jon Benick - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 1)Run: Luis Giraldo - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 2)RBI: Michael Floyd - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 2)Extra-basehit: Julian Gonzalez (2b) - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 7)Double: Julian Gonzalez - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 7)Triple: Robbie Marvin - Feb. 14 vs. VCU (top 1)Home run: Jon Benick - March 2 vs. William & Mary (bottom 5)Base runner: David Stone (walk) - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 1)Walk: David Stone - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 1)Strike out: David Stone - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 3)Hit batsman: Luis Giraldo - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 2)Sacrifice bunt: Tim LaVigne - Jan. 14 vs. VCU (top1)Sacrifice fly: Jon Benick - March 2 vs. William & Mary (bottom 7)Stolen base attempt: Luis Giraldo - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 2)Stolen base: Luis Giraldo - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (bottom 2)Caught stealing: Robbie Marvin - Jan. 31 vs. Oklahoma (bottom 1)

Pitching

Win: Greg Withelder - Jan. 31 vs. OklahomaLoss: Casey Kennedy - Jan. 29 vs. JacksonvilleSave: Tim LaVigne - Feb. 20 vs. Penn State (game 1)Complete game: Brandon Creswell - Feb. 12 at The CitadelShutout:Strike out: Casey Kennedy - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (top 1)Walk: Casey Kennedy - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (top 4)Wild pitch: John Metzger - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (top 8)Hit batsman: Casey Kennedy - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (top 3)Balk: Mark Hurrie - March 6 vs. Rhode Island (top 7; game 1)

Fielding

Putout: Jon Benick - Jan. 29 vs. JacksonvilleAssist: Robbie Marvin - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (top 1)Fielding error: David Stone - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (top 9)Throwing error: Luis Giraldo - Jan. 29 vs. Jacksonville (top 4)

1999 Big Innings

Virginia

First: 6 March 7 vs. Rhode IslandSecond: 7 - March 20 vs. DukeThird: 6 - Jan. 31 vs. OklahomaFourth: 8 - March 19 vs. DukeFifth: 6 April 7 vs. VCUSixth: 7 - March 19 vs. DukeSeventh: 4 - March 20 vs. Duke; April 3 vs. Georgia TechEighth: 2 - March 14 at Florida StateNinth: 3 - April 10 at Wake Forest; April 14 at Virginia Tech

Opponent

First: 3 - on three occasionsSecond: 3 - Seton Hall, Feb. 27 (game 1); at North Carolina, April 16Third: 4 - William & Mary, March 2; at Wake Forest, April 9Fourth: 7 - at Virginia Tech, April 14Fifth: 4 - at Wake Forest, April 10Sixth: 7 - vs. Auburn, Jan. 30Seventh: 7 - Virginia Tech, April 21Eighth: 5 - vs. Jacksonville, Jan. 29; Seton Hall, Feb. 27 (game 2)Ninth: 2 - vs. Jacksonville, Jan. 29; Georgia Tech, April 4

Collegiate Baseball Top 30
April 19, 1999

     School                  Rec.  Pts. LW  1. Miami, Fla.            28-9   485   5  2. Florida State          38-6   483   1  3. Cal State-Full         33-8   474   4  4. Rice                   39-8   465   9  5. Stanford              27-11   464   2  6. Mississippi State      31-8   461   7  7. Texas A&M              35-9   458  12  8. Wichita State          35-8   454  13  9. Pepperdine             32-7   451   3 10. Arkansas              29-13   449  14 11. Florida Atlantic       41-2   448  10 12. Baylor                 35-9   447   8 13. North Carolina         33-8   445  15 14. Auburn                 33-9   444   6 15. Southern California   26-18   442  22 16. Wake Forest           28-11   439   - 17. Texas Tech             34-9   437  17 18. Alabama               30-12   436  18 19. Georgia Tech          28-12   433  11 20. Mississippi           23-17   430   - 21. Nebraska              27-11   429  19 22. South Carolina        27-12   427  27 23. Ohio State             27-7   426  23 24. Texas                 28-17   420  20 25. Tulane                 30-9   419  25 26. Arizona State         32-15   416  16 27. Loyola Marymount      24-16   412   - 28. Oklahoma State        29-10   410  29 29. Arizona               29-16   409   - 30. Notre Dame             28-9   408  28

Callow Cavaliers
Five Cavaliers freshmen are seeing opulent amounts of playing time. Three of these – David Stone, Ryan Kalamaya and Michael Floyd have been regular starters all season save the time the latter was out with a broken hand. Here is a look at how that trio is fairing along with fellow first-years Dan Street and Shawn McCleary :

Name             Avg.   AB  R   H RBI 2B 3B HR BB  K  SB-ADavid Stone      .284  162 32  46  16  5  1  1 22 25 14-18Michael Floyd    .246   57 10  14   8  1  3  0  5 14   3-4Ryan Kalamaya    .243  115 10  28   7  5  1  1  9 32   5-9Dan Street       .200   50  2  10   5  2  0  1  3 13   3-4Shawn McCleary   .147   34  3   5   3  0  0  0  2 10   0-1Totals           .259  418 57 103  39 13  5  3 41 94 25-36

‘Hoos’ Homers

 No. Player (Runs)        Date  Opponent (game)  1  Jon Benick (2)        3-2  William & Mary  2  Jon Benick (2)        3-4  Radford  3  Hunter Wyant (2)      3-6  Rhode Island (1)  4  Jon Benick (2)        3-6  Rhode Island (2)  5  David Stone (2)       3-6  Rhode Island (2)  6 * Eric McGrane (1)     3-6  Rhode Island (2)  7  Julian Gonzalez (3)   3-7  Rhode Island  8  Julian Gonzalez (3)  3-12  at Florida State  9  Julian Gonzalez (2)  3-14  at Florida State 10  Luis Giraldo (2)     3-16  at UNC Greensboro 11  Jon Benick (1)       3-17  at UNC Greensboro 12  Jon Benick (2)       3-20  Duke 13  Tim LaVigne (2)      3-20  Duke 14  Josh Bowling (1)     3-23  at Liberty 15  Josh Bowling (1)     3-24  George Mason 16  Julian Gonzalez (3)  3-28  N.C. State 17  Jon Benick (1)       3-28  N.C. State 18  Jon Benick (1)        4-4  Georgia Tech 19  Ryan Kalamaya (1)     4-4  Georgia Tech 20  Jon Metzger (1)       4-6  at Richmond 21  Jon Benick (1)        4-6  at Richmond 22  Hunter Wyant (1)      4-9  at Wake Forest 23  Tim LaVigne (1)      4-10  at Wake Forest 24  * Dan Street (3)     4-10  at Wake Forest 25 Mark Rueffert (2)     4-14  at Virginia Tech 26 Hunter Wyant (2)      4-14  at Virginia Tech 27 Julian Gonzalez (3)   4-18  at North Carolina

Solo HRs: 11 3-Run HRs: 52-Run HRs: 11 Grand Slams: 0

Game-winning home runs in bold; * – pinch-hit home run

Hitting Streaks (five games or more)


Player (games) Dates StatisticsJulian Gonzalez (11) 3/6-3/23 .395 (17-for-43), 4 2B, 3 HR, 14 RBIJon Benick (8) 1/29-2/20 .500 (15-for-30), 3 2B, 9 RBIJon Benick (8) 3/27-4/7 .564 (22-for-39), 4 2B, 3 HR, 12 RBIDavid Stone (8) 3/27-4/7 .469 (15-for-32), 8 R, 3 2B, 5 RBIHunter Wyant (8) 4/3-4/13 .333 (12-for-36), 2 2B, 2 HR, 4 RBIJon Benick (7) 2/27-3/12 .370 (10-for-27), 2B, 3B, 3 HR, 9 RBILuis Giraldo (7) 3/28-4/4 .273 (9-for-33), 5 R, 2 2B, 2 RBITim LaVigne (7) 3/17-3/27 .500 (12-for-24), HR, 7 R, 5 RBIMark Rueffert (7) 2/27-3/7 .391 (9-for-23), 4 2B, 5 R, 3 RBILuis Giraldo (6) 3/14-3/23 .400 (10-for-25), 2B, HR, 7 R, 6 RBIMark Rueffert (6) 3/14-3/23 .500 (12-for-24), 2 2B, 3B, 7 R, 3 RBILuis Giraldo (5) 3/2-3/7 .333 (7-for-21), 5 R, 2 2B, 3B, 9 RBITim LaVigne (5) 4/2-4/7 .350 (7-for-20), 6 R, 2B, RBIRobbie Marvin (5) 4/7-4/14 .353 (6-for-17), 2 R, 2 RBI, 2BMark Rueffert (5) 2/28-4/4 .381 (8-for-21), 4 R, 7 RBI

1999 ‘Hoo Honors

Jonathan BenickWinn-Dixie All-Shootout Team – Feb. 14Brandon CreswellPreseason ACC Player to Watch – Collegiate BaseballACC Co-Pitcher of the Week – Feb. 15Tim LaVignePreseason ACC Player to Watch – Collegiate BaseballGreg WithelderACC/Disney Blast All-Tournament Team – Jan. 31

Print Friendly Version