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BASKETBALL |
ECU pulls away at South Florida |
TAMPA, FL — East Carolina made a series of
successful adjustments for a 52-39 American
Athletic Conference win at South Florida on
Wednesday night. Pirates coach Jeff Lebo
used a deeper rotation than in the previous
game with Cincinnati
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More... |
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Next: Memphis at
ECU |
Sunday, 4 pm | CBSSN |
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BASEBALL |
Elon tops Pirates in 10 innings |
GREENVILLE — Three walks and a
run-scoring single through the right side by
Kyle Jackson in the top of the 10th inning
lifted Elon to an 8-7 win over No. 16 East
Carolina at Clark-LeClair Stadium on
Wednesday.
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More... |
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Next: Keith
LeClair Classic |
ECU vs. SE
Louisiana: Friday, 4:30 pm |
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BASEBALL |
Cavs avoid sweep
with 4-2 win |
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA
— Virginia got
off to a good start
Sunday and avoided
being swept in a
three-game series
with East Carolina
by dealing the
Pirates their first
loss of the season,
4-2. Adam Haseley
led off the bottom
of the first inning
with a double for
the Cavaliers.
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More... |
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BASEBALL |
Pirates take series |
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA
— Luke Bolka
had a 3-run homer
and finished with
four RBIs to lead
East Carolina to a
6-1 victory at
Virginia on Saturday
for a series win
over the defending
College World Series
champions. The
Pirates improved to
6-0 and go for the
series sweep at 1
p.m. today.
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More... |
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BASKETBALL |
Cincinnati holds off Pirates |
GREENVILLE
— East Carolina trimmed a
16-point Cincinnati lead to
56-54 with five minutes
remaining before absorbing a
65-56 American Athletic
Conference loss from the
Bearcats before 4,841 in
Williams Arena at Minges
Coliseum on Saturday afternoon.
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Story & pictures... |
Pictured: ECU's
Kentrell Barkley
drives against
Cincinnati on
Saturday. The
freshman swingman
played all 40
minutes and had 14
points, 13 rebounds
and six assists.
(Photo by Al Myatt.) |
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BASEBALL |
Pirates rally to defeat 2015 champs |
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA
— East
Carolina ended a
nine-game losing
streak to Virginia
with an 8-5 win in
10 innings over the
defending College
World Series
champions on Friday.
The Pirates pushed
across a tying run
in the top of the
ninth on a sacrifice
fly by Charlie
Yorgen before
scoring three runs
in the 10th.
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By
Al Myatt
©2016 Bonesville.net
All rights reserved.
VIEW MOBILE VERSION OF THIS PAGE
Even before former East
Carolina baseball coach Keith LeClair
succumbed to Lou Gehrig's disease in 2006,
a means of honoring the memory of the man who envisioned the Pirates
playing in the College World Series was sought.
Clark-LeClair Stadium,
capable of hosting NCAA Tournament play — which its predecessor,
Harrington Field, was not — was completed over a year before
LeClair's passing. A baseball event of national significance was
also a means of paying homage.
The 13th annual Keith
LeClair Classic will start on ECU's baseball grounds today. The
Pirates meet Southeastern Louisiana at 4:30 p.m.
ECU coach Cliff Godwin
played for LeClair. Godwin was a senior on the 2001 team that played
Tennessee in a Super Regional at Grainger Stadium in Kinston. The
Volunteers won by scores of 13-10 and 6-3.
Godwin wears LeClair's
No. 23 now. When the Pirates make it to the CWS in Omaha, NE, Godwin
plans for the jersey to be retired as another tribute.
LeClair was a believer
in the value of hard work.
"The thing that made
Coach special was he got a group of guys who weren't necessarily the
most talented to be blue collar, to feel like they had worked harder
than everybody else in the country and really expected to win every
time they stepped foot on the field," Godwin said. "We had some good
players, the Chad Tracys and (Lee) Delfinos and the (John)
Williamsons, but you also had the blue collar guys who probably
weren't highly touted, the Brad Simons.
"I was one of those
guys. I wasn't highly recruited out of high school and others who
weren't just bought into a system and bought into competing every
single day — really bought into taking East Carolina baseball to
Omaha. That was coach's vision from day one when he stepped foot on
campus here at East Carolina. It still is his vision. I know he's
looking down on us right now and that's his vision for East Carolina
baseball."
LeClair coached ECU from
1998 to 2002, compiling a 212-96-1 record during that span.
First impression
Godwin recalled the
first time he met Coach LeClair.
"It was at Strickland
and Dail's, which was a restaurant kind of in between Snow Hill and
Farmville with Coach LeClair, Howard McCullough and Coach James
'Rabbit' Fulghum (from Greene Central, Godwin's alma mater)," Godwin
recalled. "It was the summer that he was hired. We had lunch there.
That was the first time I met him. ... My first impression was — I
was scared. I was scared that there was a new sheriff in town and I
better get my stuff in order.
"I redshirted my
freshman year and kind of felt my way through it a little bit. I
said, 'Hey, you know what, I better really get after it. If not, I'm
not going to be here.' That was my first impression of Coach LeClair."
2001 Pirates
The 2001 team tied the
school record for wins in a season with 47. The Pirates had to make
the NCAA Tournament as an at-large team because although they went
19-2 in the Colonial Athletic Association they were not allowed to
compete for the league's automatic berth in the NCAA Tournament
because they were making the transition to Conference USA the
following year.
In the regional at
Fleming Stadium in Wilson, the Pirates dispatched Maryland-Baltimore
County, 7-0, beat South Florida, 12-8, and advanced to meet
Tennessee by turning back Winthrop, 7-3.
The Pirates play
Tennessee again on Saturday at 4:30 p.m.
A lot has changed since
the Super Regional 15 years ago.
"I was part of that team
in 2001," Godwin said. "Obviously so close but yet so far away, that
Super Regional. There's different coaching staffs on both sides now
so it's just different. Dave Serrano (current Tennessee coach) was
the head coach at Cal State-Fullerton at the time. There's different
coaching staffs on both sides now so I don't know if that will have
a ton of relevance to this weekend."
Negligible momentum
ECU moved into the
national rankings this week on the strength of wins in the first two
games of a three-game set last weekend at Virginia, the defending
College World Series champions.
The euphoria Pirate
Nation was enjoying took a hit with five errors in
a 4-2 loss to the Cavaliers on Sunday
and
an 8-7 setback from Elon in 10 innings
on Wednesday.
"Short-lived after last
night," Godwin said Thursday. "I'm happy for East Carolina
University. I'm happy for the alums. I'm happy for our guys because
they earned it but it doesn't mean anything right now.
"We weren't ready to
play (Wednesday) early. Elon wanted it more than us and they beat
us. You've got to show up every day and that's probably the toughest
thing to get 18- to 21-year-olds to do every single day is be ready
to play at your highest level. If you're not, you have an
opportunity to get beat like we did."
ECU seemed to be its own
worst enemy at times in the series finale at UVa.
"You're not going to win
any game if you make five errors," Godwin said. "We did hang in
there and Jimmy Boyd was really the reason because he just hung in
there. He was just really composed and didn't let an error rattle
him. He just stayed in there and kept fighting. He pitched seven
innings. It's tough to pitch seven innings behind five errors. He
really just kept them at bay. He gave us an opportunity to at least
bring the tying run to the plate in the ninth."
Sterling reliever Joe
Ingle had three walks that preceded Elon's winning run in the top of
the 10th on Wednesday.
"Joe didn't lose the
game for us," Godwin said. "The game was lost much earlier. We
extended Joe and I'm not making excuses for him. Joe Ingle went out
for three innings. We should have won the game in the bottom of the
ninth and he would have only had to pitch two.
"The game was lost early
in the game. In the fifth and sixth innings, walks and errors, hit
batters in the same inning — you can't do that. You can't have a
walk, an error and a hit batter in the same inning. You're going to
give up crooked numbers and that's what we did. We had some
opportunities to score more runs, which we didn't. Just didn't play
well. Early in the game there wasn't enough sense of urgency.
"They woke us up when
they scored two runs. Then we scored two. It was kind of too late
there in my opinion but it was a good learning experience for us
that if you don't come ready to play then you can lose."
Rotation may be
adjusted
The Pirates have used a
starting rotation of Evan Kruczynski, Jacob Wolfe and Boyd the first
two weekends of the season.
How many innings the
bullpen must fill Friday and Saturday will determine if Boyd starts
on the mound Sunday.
"Definitely Kruczynski
and Wolfe (Friday and Saturday)," Godwin said. "We stretched our
bullpen pretty thin (Wednesday) so Boyd might have to pitch in
relief. We're going to see how he feels. ... We've just got to feel
it out. Our focus is to win on Friday, whatever it takes to win on
Friday. Then win on Saturday. Then we'll figure Sunday out. But if
Boyd doesn't pitch (in relief Friday or Saturday), he'll start on
Sunday."
The Pirates take on
Maryland on Sunday at 3:30 p.m.
Recruiting against
the Reds
ECU freshman Dwanya
Williams-Sutton was a 26th round draft choice by the Cincinnati Reds
last year. He's hitting .481 with nine RBIs in ECU's 6-2 start.
Williams-Sutton and
Isaiah White led Greenfield School of Wilson to the NCISAA 1-A
championship as high school seniors. The ECU coach met the duo
shortly after returning to his alma mater as baseball coach.
"He was already
committed to East Carolina before we got the job here," Godwin said
of Williams-Sutton. "I got the job on a Thursday and Saturday,
Dwanya, Isaiah White and Earl Taylor were sitting in my office. Earl
had coached them in travel baseball.
"Earl looked at me and
said, 'Hey, you still want these boys?' I said, 'Yes, I still want
these boys.' I really had never seen them play at the time but I had
heard they were both super athletes. That was the first time that I
met him was on that Saturday after I got the job. I think that was
about June 27th of 2014."
White was taken in the
third round by the Miami Marlins and opted to sign a pro contract.
"The recruiting thing is
different in baseball," Godwin said. "You have to continue to
recruit kids because of the draft. I sat with them the second day of
the draft. It wasn't to put pressure on them. It was for me to be
there to support them. If they got the amount of money they were
looking for to sign a professional contract and if they didn't —
then come to school at East Carolina University."
Godwin ended up batting
.500 on the Greenfield tandem.
Family will toss
first pitches
LeClair's family will be
on hand for the event honoring the memory of their esteemed husband
and father.
"Lynn (LeClair's wife)
is coming and J.D., his son, and Audrey, his daughter," Godwin said.
"They will be here and they're going to throw out the first pitch on
Saturday."