Beavs rebuild in no time

Published 12:00 am Thursday, May 28, 2015

CORVALLIS — Think just for a moment about the players drafted last June off the Oregon State baseball roster.

Michael Conforto. Dylan Davis. Jace Fry. Ben Wetzler.

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That’s just to name a few.

It left the Beavers with big holes to fill heading into the 2015 season.

Then think about this: The Beavers this season typically have started a lineup that consists of junior center fielder Jeff Hendrix as the lone upperclassman.

Yep, one junior and the rest sophomores and freshmen.

Talk about a rebuilding project, right?

Most would think this season was one with low expectations. That was pretty much the thinking everywhere outside the Beavers’ clubhouse.

Sure, OSU had plenty of ups and downs throughout the season.

And, sure, they let some games slip away.

But a 13-3-1 closing stretch put the Beavers in contention to possibly host a regional.

While the regional bid did not materialize, the Beavers still finished second in the Pac-12 Conference — six of whose 11 members were selected to the NCAA tournament — and earned a No. 2 seed.

OSU is headed to Dallas to take on Texas in the regional opener at 11:30 a.m. Friday. Dallas Baptist is the host and No. 1 seed. Virginia Commonwealth rounds out up the regional field.

It has been a special season for coach Pat Casey, who now has guided the Beavers to the postseason 10 of the past 11 seasons.

“As many kids as we lost and bringing in the new guys, there was certainly a lot of uncertainty in how the things would turn out,” Casey said Monday. “They have just been fantastic.

“They have been a fun group to coach. They show up to play and they’ve won some big games. And boy they had a heck of a run down the stretch. Very happy and proud of them.”

Freshman K.J. Harrison, who has had a sensational rookie campaign with 10 homers and a Pac-12-leading 58 RBIs, said it just took some time to mesh.

“As a team we just matured at the right time, that’s for sure,” he said. “It took us a while to get going, but as a young team we all started to fill our roles and I feel like just as we got on that win streak we built up our confidence. We are playing loose and having fun.”

This young team is going into uncharted waters in the postseason, but that has been the case since the team’s first game back in February.

So Casey does not plan to make any changes to the Beavers’ approach.

He points to the big games they have won on the road — at UCLA and at Arizona State, for example — as experiences that should give them confidence.

“It’s the game of baseball and we’ve got to play the game of baseball and we’ve got to do it at a high level,” Casey said. “Now it’s just a little more exciting, hopefully.”

Junior Andrew Moore has been through it before as a starting pitcher his first two years when the Beavers hosted regionals.

He has a simple message for the newcomers.

“The freshmen need to realize it’s the same, it’s baseball,” Moore said. “You don’t need to outperform anyone. It’s the same thing we’ve been doing all season. I’m excited for them to finally get their first taste of it.”

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