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Congratulations to 2008 Big 12 Champions and Super Regional Participant

Texas A&M Ranked #10 by Collegiate Baseball
Click here to help "Strike out Parkinson's Disease" and honor Former Aggie Coach Tom Chandler

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 Big 12 Coach of the Year Rob Childress

Rob Childress continues to improve the Aggie baseball team and his three years in Aggieland have the program firmly established as one of the top teams in the Big 12. Despite disappointing losses to Rice in both the 2007 and 2008 Super Regional round of the NCAA playoffs, Childress has won more games than any other team in the Big 12 and is the only team to advance to super regional play out of the Big 12 the past two seasons.

By year two Rob Childress has the Aggies on the right track compared to the coaching starts at of Steve Smith at Baylor and Aggie Garrido at Texas and had completely surpassed them this last season. We are comparing "apple to apples" as it had been one season since Baylor was in NCAA play when Smith took over at Baylor in 1994 and Texas had won the SWC and had been in the tournament the year before Garrido became coach of the 'Horns in 1997. Texas A&M was also one year removed from tournament play when Childress was named head coach. Year three again shows how the Aggie coaches and players have Texas A&M poised for even higher expectations in 2009 and beyond.

Rob Childress has an overall record of 119-68-1 (.636 winning percentage) and his record in year two and three is 94-38 (.712 winning percentage)
Steve Smith had an overall record of 89-78 (.527 winning percentage) and his record in years two and three was 64-50 (.561 winning percentage)
Augie Garrido an overall record of 88-80-1 (.524 winning percentage) and his record in years two and three was 59-58-1 (.504 winning percentage)
A&M Set the Big 12 record of 16 straight conference victories and swept five conference series in 2008 (it took Texas ten years to sweep five series and Baylor has never done it)
Won the Big 12 Regular Season Championship (it took Texas and Baylor both six years to win their first championship)
Childress was named Coach of the Year in year three (it took Garrido and Smith both six years to earn that honor)
In year two, A&M won the Big 12 Tournament Championship (it took Texas five years and Baylor never has won it)
In year two, A&M went to Super Regionals (it took Texas four years and took Baylor five years)
Went to Super Regionals in back to back seasons (it took Texas five years and Baylor has never done it)
In year two, A&M won 48 Games (it took Texas six years to win at least 48 games and Baylor has only done it in 1999)
Won 46 or more games in back to back seasons (it took Texas seven seasons and Baylor never has done it)
A&M improved record by 23 wins last year (21 games is Texas' largest improvement in year six and 17 is Baylor's in year 11)
In Year two, A&M had four players drafted in the first 10 rounds (it took Texas seven years and Baylor six years)
In Year two, A&M finished the season ranked as high as 11th (it took Texas four years and took Baylor five years)
A&M finished in the Top 11 in back-to-back seasons (it took Texas seven years and Baylor has never done it)
In Year two, A&M had three All-Americans (it took Texas five years and Baylor four years)
In Year two, A&M had a freshman All-American (it took both Texas and Baylor three years)
A&M has back to back newcomers of the year (it took Texas five years and Baylor had never had a Newcomer of the Year)

He has accomplished this despite having significant losses in his two previous recruiting classes. In 2006, LHP Clayton Kershaw (first high school player taken), LHP Zach Britton and OF Matt Sulentic signed after being drafted in the first three rounds and LHP Kevin Angelle and SS Nick Papasan, who signed in August, forgoing their scholarships at A&M as well. In 2007 it happened again, SS Kevin Ahrens (ninth high school player drafted), OF Eric Eiland, SS/P Will Middlebrooks and LHP Drake Britton all took the pro dollars and never enrolled. This year the Aggies have finally caught a break with the MLB draft with their four prime time prospects expected to arrive on campus next fall instead of playing pro baseball. SS Adam Smith and LHP Ross Hales are considered the top prospects at their position in the State of Texas by professional baseball. Randall Thorpe was considered to be the third best outfielder in the state and Nathan Eovaldi was in the top 10 RHP in the state this year. Having the top four high school prospects of this years recruiting class come to school instead of signing pro contracts has the Aggies poised to "kick the door in" next season and advance to the College World Series.

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Saturday, August 23, 2008

Minute Maid Classic News

It appears that USC has dropped out of the Minute Maid Classic and has been replaced by West Coast power UC-Irvine. The Anteaters went to the College World Series in 2006 and was just two outs away from defeating LSU in Super Regional play last season and making back to back trips to Omaha.

USC, while the all time leader in College World Series championships, has been surpased as a west coast power and has only been to the NCAA tournament once in the last six years.

Texas A&M will face Houston and Rice and could face either UC-Irvine or UCLA in the other game of the tourament. UCLA has been in Regional play the past three years and two years ago they were in Super Regionals. They are coached by former Irvine coach John Savage.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Kyle Nicholson is back and mowing them down

I inadvertently left Kyle Nicholson off my stat update yesterday (click here for professional stats). Kyle has returned to the mound after surgery and is dominating his level. He is pitching for the Giants rookie league team and has pitched in six games.

W L ERA G GS IP H R ER HR BB SO

4 1 1.54 9 9 46.2 27 10 8 1 2 40

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Major and Minor League Statistics 8-20-08

I have updated the major and minor league statistics on the Minor League stats page you can find it down the left hand side of the page or (click here for link). Texas A&M has Cliff Pennington, Zach Jackson, Justin Ruggiano, Casey Fossum and Logan Kensing in the big leagues right now.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Former Aggie Davey Johnson...

Has coached Team USA into the medal round at the Olympics. Team USA defeated Japan 4-2 in eleven innings to earn a semifinal match-up against defending Olympic champion Cuba. Team USA lost to Cuba 5-4 in eleven innings in pool play but the game on Friday morning will be much more important.

Davey Johnson played at Texas A&M in 1962 before spending 13 seasons in the Major Leagues with Baltimore, Atlanta, Philadelphia and the Chicago Cubs. Johnson made his Major League debut on April 13, 1965, and went on to become a four time MLB All-Star (1968-70, 1973) while playing in four World Series with Baltimore, winning two (1966, 1970).

(Click here for game Wrap-up)

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Aggie Newcomers in Baseball America's Pre Draft Rankings

Texas A&M Baseball continues to sign top Texas talent but unlike the previous two seasons, this year after the draft prospects have signed, your Aggies have nearly all of their recruiting class coming to school.

Baseball America previews each state before the draft and when you take out the college prospects and just look at the newcomers (freshmen, transfers and redshirts), Texas A&M brought in many of the elite players that will go to school.

Out of the top 13 Texas newcomers this year, Texas A&M had five players listed. They were INF Adam Smith, INF Brett Parsons, OF Randall Thorpe, LHP Ross Hales and RHP Alex Wilson. Texas had RHPs Taylor Jungmann and Austin Dicharry, Rice had INF Anthony Rendon and OF Jeremy Rathjen, TCU had RHP Kyle Winkler and INF Taylor Featherstone and Arkansas (RHP Jarrod McKinney) and Arizona State (RHP Jordan Swagerty) had one player each.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Area Code Sleeper

Aggie commitment OF Todd Glaesmann was one of the top "sleeper" prospects at the Area Code games according to Baseball America. Here is what they had to say about the senior outfielder. (click to read entire story)

"At the Area Code games, one player from each squad caught my eye as a "sleeper"–imperfect players with some qualities that caught my eye. They are:

Todd Glaesmann, of, Midway HS, Waco, Texas, 2009:

Just like their big league counterparts, the Rangers ball club had the best offense in Long Beach. Overshadowed by the other big bats on his team, Glaesman nonetheless impressed with his projectable and athletic frame, good speed (6.90) and decent arm. He possesses a fine swing but may want to ditch his gimmicky stance, which begins from an unusually open position."


Sunday, August 17, 2008

NBC All-American Team Announced

Here is the 2008 NBC World Series the All-American Team.
1st Base: Clint McKeever of the Havasu Heat
2nd Base: Steve Cook of the Santa Barbara Foresters
3rd Base: Chris Kersten of the Liberal BeeJays
Short Stop: Derek Jennings of the Seattle Studs
Outfielders: Tim Rotola of the Wichita Sluggers, Jordan Danks of the Beatrice Bruins, and Brandon Kuykendall of the Seattle Studs
Designated Hitter: Kevin Keyes of the Santa Barbara Foresters
Catchers: Beau Geren of the Liberal BeeJays and Eric Roof of the Hays Larks
Utility Players: Andre Miller of the Santa Barbara Foresters and Cody Lassley of the Havasu Heat
Pitchers: Shane Minks of the Beatrice Bruins, Don Lisi of the Liberal BeeJays, Taylor Thompson of the Seattle Studs, Joe Zeller of the Havasu Heat, and Mike Ford of the Santa Barbara Foresters
We'd like to send out a congratulations to all of the players who've earned the right to be a part of the 2008 NBC All-American Team.

Mink's stats for the NBC World Series were five appearences, three saves, 12 innings pitched, 0.00 era, 20K's, three hits allowed, .079 opponent batting avg and no runs allowed. This summer, he went 3-1 with 10 saves, pitched 56 innings with a 1.28 era and had 64 K's.

Farmers win 2008 Fall World Series 

(click for complete SID release)

Senior Luke Anders hit a go-ahead, two-run home run in the top of the eighth inning and the Farmers added a seven-run ninth to win the decisive fifth game of the Aggie Baseball Fall World Series, 10-2, over the Plowboys and claim the coveted Omaha Cup Wednesday evening at Olsen Field.

With the Plowboys up 2-1 entering the eighth, Dylan Petrich lined a single to left center field with one out to bring Anders to the plate. The senior delivered, lining a pitch just to the right of the batter's eye in center field for his fourth round-tripper of the fall.

Anders' heroics and the late run surge complemented a tremendous pitching outing by Brooks Raley. The sophomore allowed both Plowboy runs and all of their three hits on the night in the first inning, before retiring 20 of the next 22 batters he faced.

"Both teams poured their guts out all fall and laid it all out on the line," Anders said. "I haven't been part of a fall like this before. It was amazing."

"When you start talking about the competition these two teams brought day in and day out, from August 25 until the last pitch tonight, it's very impressive," A&M coach Rob Childress said. "There was extreme disappointment on the Plowboys' part, and extreme joy for the Farmers, and that tells you it meant something to them."

"It was a grind in everything they did, and it will continue to be," Childress said. "There's a lot of competition going on this fall, and the more you sweat and invest in the program, the more it hurts when you lose and the more it means to you when you win. Now that we can come together as one team, we've got a chance to do some great things."

2008 Fall World Series Boxscore with box score notes)

2008 Fall World Series Game Four Boxscore with  box score notes)

2008 Fall World Series Game 3 Box Score with Inside the Box Score Comments

2008 Fall World Series Game 2 Box Score, including the "Inside the Boxscore" in game updates

2008 Fall World Series Game 1 Box Score and Play by Play

2009 Previous Story Archives (click to read 2008 Previous Stories)

Jashon Sykes

Aggie All-American Cliff Pennington

Practice reports, short Q&A's, and other baseball updates
2008 Prospect Report
11.16.08
Lion's Ace Miller Signs with Texas A&M

Major League Baseball draft could also come into play for Brownwood senior in June
By Derrick Stuckly - Brownwood Bulletin
Published: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 8:54 AM CST

It should surprise no one who has witnessed Shelby Miller play baseball for the Brownwood Lions that his career will continue.

Miller officially signed a national letter of intent to play baseball for the Texas A&M Aggies on Monday, but the June 9 Major League Baseball amateur draft could alter those plans.

Competing at various MLB combines and camps across the nation over the last few months, Miller's stock has skyrocketed. That could lead to a tough decision for Miller if he is selected in the early rounds of the draft, but he isn't planning to cross that bridge until he gets there.

"When the draft comes around I'll take it as it comes," Miller said. "As far as I know right now I'll be going to college. If (the draft) is there, it's there and it will be my decision when it gets here. It's a win-win situation. There's not a bad route, and whatever I pick is obviously going to be what's best for me and my family. Hopefully it all works out perfect."

Miller, a senior, has put up staggering numbers for the Lions in his first two years on the varsity roster.

As a sophomore, Miller was 10-5 on the mound with a 2.36 ERA and 127 strikeouts and 38 walks in 86 innings. At the plate, Miller batted .446 with four home runs, 31 RBIs, 12 doubles and 28 runs scored as the Lions reached the regional semifinals.

Last season, Miller earned Class 4A second-team all-state status by the Texas Sportswriters Association.

He tossed two no-hitters and a perfect game in succession en route to finishing with an 8-2 record and a 1.11 ERA with 119 strikeouts and 30 walks in 57 innings. With the stick, Miller hit .413 with nine home runs, 32 RBIs, six doubles and 24 runs scored.

Miller's impressive high school seasons earned him invitations to MLB combines in both California and Florida.

"It's been fun," said Miller of competing against the top competition in the nation. "Going out to Florida and California have been great. I've met a lot of new guys and played with high-level competition. It's definitely not high school baseball. We're out there with future draft picks who are going to be in Major League Baseball."

As for his decision to sign with Texas A&M, Miller stated he was sold on the Aggies after attending a camp this past December.

"I went there last year and I really loved it there," Miller said. "The coaching, the atmosphere, the crowd and the student life there is great. Everything is perfect there for me. I knew what I wanted when I got there."

As for the upcoming high school season, the Lions will be competing in District 2-3A with the defending state champion Snyder Tigers. Miller feels the Lions can not only compete for a playoff spot, but capture the district title.

'Snyder won it all, obviously, but I seriously think we're going to be the best team in district and go deep in the playoffs," Miller said. "We should have a good team and we've set our goal to win district."

As for what Miller would like to personally accomplish this season, he pointed to continuing his development.

"I should be way better this year, maybe throwing in the high 90s hopefully," Miller said. "I'd also like to get a couple more no-hitters."

Hobson lived up to reputation, led Mustangs to title

BY ZACH EWING, Californian staff writer
zewing@bakersfield.com | Saturday, Jun 21 2008 10:05 PM

Last Updated: Saturday, Jun 21 2008 10:07 PM

When K.C. Hobson, son of an everyday Major League Baseball player and manager, moved across the country to Bakersfield and Stockdale High School, his reputation preceded him.

Stockdale's K.C. Hobson led the Mustangs to the Central Section Division I championship. Hobson is The Califorian's All-Area baseball player of the year.

"Greyhound's disease is when a kid gets off the bus and loses about four inches in height and drops about 30 pounds (from an exaggerated description)," Stockdale coach Dan Lemon said.

"K.C. definitely didn't have Greyhound's disease."

And Hobson, who came from Nashua, N.H., was good as a sophomore. Good enough for a .463 batting average, a 2.33 earned run average on the mound and a Californian All-Area selection.

But, Lemon said, he also led the team in "butt-chewings" because of some swing problems and never really got his feet completely on the ground.

"It was a little bit of an off-year last year," Hobson said. "... I was pressing too much, doing too much, trying to show everybody what I can do. So this year I said, 'Forget everyone; I'm just going to do what I know I can do.' And it worked out for me."

Indeed it did. After a junior season in which Hobson hit .505, more than doubled his home run total to seven, was 10-0 with a 3.03 ERA and had the game-winning hit in the Central Section Division I championship game, he is The Californian's Baseball Player of the Year.

"One thing I have learned from being around the game such a long time is, if you're not having fun, it's not worth playing," Hobson said. "The night before the championship game, I was thinking to myself, 'It's just another game.'"

That's using experience to fulfill expectations. Hobson has both because he grew up at Fenway Park in Boston. His dad, Butch Hobson, played for the Red Sox from 1975-80, for the California Angels in 1981 and for the New York Yankees in 1982, then managed the Red Sox from 1992-94 before moving on to minor-league ball in Scranton, Pa., and independent-league ball in Nashua.

"Living in New Hampshire, my dad's team was right there -- five, 10 minutes from my house," K.C. Hobson said. "So I was there every day. I got to hit (batting practice), I was in the locker room, in the dugout. And the atmosphere does help a lot."

Problem was, winters last long enough in New Hampshire to cut into baseball season. High school teams typically play no more than 15 games, and being on the field year-round is impossible.

Enter Bakersfield. Hobson's mother, Christine, and Butch moved the family to Kern County to be closer to her parents, who moved here for real-estate business, and for baseball.

"I don't want to say baseball in New Hampshire is not what it is in California, but that's how it is," said Butch Hobson, who helps out on Stockdale's coaching staff and now coaches the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs in the independent Atlantic League during the summer. "These young players need to learn by playing games."

K.C. Hobson said he's better for the decision. After a short transition period in the summer, Hobson quickly met some friends at Stockdale during football season and is now completely at ease.

"K.C. just absolutely loves Bakersfield," Butch Hobson said. "He's found himself a home."

That's a home he's currently terrorizing on the diamond. Hobson, a left-hander who can throw 90 mph or more pitching, maintains he's a doubles hitter and first baseman by trade.

"He's a doubles hitter, but every now and then, he will just powder one," Stockdale assistant Greg Showers said. "Last year at Clovis, there was a track meet going on. They were getting ready to start an event, and K.C. gets a hold of one and the ball lands on the track and stopped the track meet."

He hit another tape-measure shot in the first inning of the section championship game, a come-from-behind 7-6 victory for Stockdale that Hobson ended in the eighth inning with a single almost to the wall in right field.

"As soon as football ended, I got in the (batting) cage," Hobson said. "The main thing was to be the best hitter I could be and help my team win a lot of games."

Now there are no limits. K.C. Hobson is spending the summer traveling to different showcase events, will return to Stockdale next year and then anticipate a high MLB Draft selection.

"He's much better than me," Butch Hobson said. "He's much stronger, and as he matures, he learns to be more patient. But he's way ahead of where I was (at his age)."

This, no doubt, is one reputation you can consider well-earned.

more in our archives>>

Recruit profiles, rankings, season updates, leanings, visits, and commitments
2009 Baseball Commitments
11.17.08
2008-09 TEXAS A&M BASEBALL SIGNING CLASS

Name Pos. Yr-Exp. Ht. Wt. B/T Hometown (High School/College)
Jake Feckley RHP Fr-HS 5-10 180 R/R Wylie, Texas (Wylie)
Todd Glaesmann OF Fr-HS 6-4 200 R/R Waco, Texas (Midway)
K.C. Hobson 1B/LHP Fr-HS 6-3 210 L/L Bakersfield, Calif. (Stockdale)
Mason Leavitt LHP Fr-HS 6-0 160 L/L Frisco, Texas (Legacy Christian Academy)
Kyle Martin RHP Fr-HS 6-7 185 R/R Austin, Texas (St. Michael's Academy)
Dylan Mendoza LHP/OF Fr-HS 5-10 170 L/L Austin, Texas (Lake Travis)
Shelby Miller INF/RHP Fr-HS 6-1 180 R/R Brownwood, Texas (Brownwood)
Cody Rogers OF Jr-TR 6-2 175 L/R Hallsville, Texas (Hallsville/Panola College)
Michael Wacha RHP Fr-HS 6-5 195 R/R Texarkana, Texas (Pleasant Grove)
Brandon Wood OF/RHP Fr-HS 6-4 190 R/R Fort Bend, Texas (Clements)

Texas A&M Press Release on Aggie Fall Signees

Click the link below to read the stories about these recruits.
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Dallas Morning News
Houston Chronicle
San Antonio Express-News
Austin American Statesman
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