Tag Archives: Josh Newman

Purdue right-hander Hayden embraces job of out collector

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

With three collegiate seasons in the books and in his third summer wood bat slate in-progress, Enas (N-us — say it fast) Hayden is finding his stride as a pitcher.

In his debut campaign with the Purdue University Boilermakers in 2024, right-hander Hayden came out of the bullpen five times for head coach Greg Goff and pitching coach Josh Newman and went 1-0 with a 2.25 earned run average, six strikeouts and four walks in four innings.

He was coming off a summer stint with the Danville (Ind.) Dans where he went 3-1 with one save, a 3.34 ERA, 1.28 WHIP (walks and hits per innings pitched) struck out 45 in 29 2/3 innings over 14 games and was named a 2023 Prospect League All-Star.

Hayden whiffed nine over five innings in a July start and also fanned eight over three innings in a June relief appearance.

The hurler has no preference of role — starting, long relief or short relief.

“I’m the type of guy that you give the ball and I go get outs until I can’t get more,” says Hayden, 21. 

Throwing from a mid-three-quarter arm slot, 6-foot-3, 215-pound Hayden uses a four-seam fastball, slider, change-up and — occasionally — a cutter.

The four-seamer traveled at 96 mph in the summer of 2023 and usually lives at 89 to 93.

The speed of slider depends on his hard the ball is coming out of Hayden’s hand that day, ranging from 81 to 87 mph.

“If it’s not as hard and 80 to 82, it’s more like a true slider with more depth,” says Hayden. “On days when it’s firmer, there’s still some depth to it but it runs more.”

He uses a “box” change.

“I rest all four fingers on the bottom horseshoe and let the grip do the work,” says Hayden.

As for the cutter — when it’s right — moves a little to the left.

The Indianapolis native began his college career at Purdue Fort Wayne.

In two seasons with the Mastodons (2022 and 2023), he made 24 mound appearances (20 in relief) with 21 strikeouts and 18 walks in 26 2/3 innings.

He was with the Local Legends of the College Summer League at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind., in 2022.

This summer, Hayden is pitching for the Northwoods League’s Bismarck (N.D.) Larks. In his first eight contests, he is 0-0 with one save, a 2.51 ERA, 11 strikeouts and five walks in 14 1/3 innings.

Hayden is a 2021 graduate of Lawrence North High School in Indianapolis. The Wildcats’ head coach was former college and professional pitcher Richard Winzenread.

“He’s a tough guy but he taught the game right,” says Hayden of Winzenread. “He really pushed us to be better ballplayers. 

“He helped me to really succeed in this game. You’ve got to work to get where you want to get.”

Hayden was all-Marion County first team as a Lawrence North outfielder in 2021. His first fall at PFW he was a two-way player then concentrated on the mound.

Growing up, he played baseball and basketball and ran cross country and track. In high school, he was also on the wrestling team.

“I like winning, that’s what it boils down to,” says Hayden of his affinity for the mat sport. “It’s mano a mano — you and the other guy.”

The only child of Purdue alums Daryl and Nirupama Hayden, Enas started his baseball at Oaklandon Youth Organization. In high school, he traveled with the Indiana Nitro through 17U (2020) and competed his 18U summer with the PRP Mambas (2021).

Since middle school, he has been going to PRP Baseball in Noblesville, Ind., for instruction.

“That was the spot that made me into a pitcher,” says Hayden. “I’ve worked with (PRP founder) Greg Vogt and cleaned some things up. 

“I’ve been doing their stuff for awhile.”

His favorite MLB team is the Miami Marlins. The pro athlete he admires most is basketball’s Steph Curry. In baseball, it’s Juan Soto.

The Selling & Sales Management major and Business Management minor is taking online summer classes with the aim of graduating in May 2025.

His goal is to play baseball beyond college.

Enas Hayden. (Purdue University Photo)
Enas Hayden. (Purdue University Photo)
Enas Hayden (Danville Dans Image)
Enas Hayden. (Purdue Fort Wayne Photo)

Newman’s job bringing Purdue pitcher strengths to the forefront

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Former major league pitcher and veteran pitching coach Josh Newman is now leading hurlers at Purdue University.

Newman, a graduate of Wheelersburg (Ohio) High School, pitched for Ohio State University (2001-04) — where he earned all-Big Ten Conference honors athletically and academically three times while playing for Buckeyes head coach Bob Todd.

The left-hander spent six seasons in pro baseball, including 14 regular-season games in the majors with the Colorado Rockies (2007 and 2008) and Kansas City Royals (2008). He was on Colorado’s active roster for the 2007 World Series.

Newman has coached at Ohio State (2011-13) for head coach Greg Beals, Marshall (2014-17) for Jeff Waggoner and Penn State (2018-23) for Rob Cooper.

Seven pitchers were selected in the Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft during Newman’s time in Happy Valley, including lefty Dante Biasi in the sixth round in 2019. He competed at Double-A in the Royals organization in 2022 and 2023.

Penn State pitchers produced a program-record 503 strikeouts in 2022, the third time in the last four full seasons the Nittany Lions whiffed 400 or more.

Newman, who attended the 2024 American Baseball Coaches Association Convention in Dallas, took over as Purdue pitching coach on the staff of Boilermakers head coach Greg Goff in July 2023.

He joins a leadership group that also includes assistant coach/recruiting coordinator Chris Marx and assistant/hitting coach Seth LaRue plus director of player development John Madia and supervisor of operations Hunter Roberts. Terry Rooney was on the previous pitching coach and is now recruiting coordinator at Louisiana State University.

“I’m walking into an opportunity that has so many positive things going,” says Newman, 41. “I so fortunate that I walked into that environment. By no means am I going to sit here and take all the credit.”

Karly Siegler oversees the student-led analytics team.

“She is a brilliant mind,” says Newman of Siegler. “She is a young lady that is going to go on and do extraordinary things. There’s no doubt about it.

“I’m very fortunate to have her and others on that staff constantly looking at different things and different ways to take data and integrate it, making it functional for our guys.”

Since arriving in West Lafayette with wife Sarah and three children (daughter Ayda and sons Kash and Miller), Newman has been familiarizing himself with his pitchers and getting them to identify and own their strengths and maximize their mobility.

“We can’t teach mechanics until we understand how the body moves,” says Newman. “Then you look at the pitch profile. What do we throw? Do we have any outliers as far as pitch types?”

Newman says that a combination of analytics, data drawn from available technology like TrackMan, Rapsodo and other sources, the baseball staff including Goff, Marx, LaRue and Madia and development team working together can help each pitcher know their strengths and benefit from them.

As pitching coach, Newman helps put the pieces of that puzzle together.

“It is important for you to understand who you’re dealing with what each guy brings to the table from a mentality standpoint,” says Newman. “Every kid’s different. For some, bombarding them with technology and data just doesn’t make sense when I’m trying to get them to understand commanding (their pitches) to certain tools or slowing the game down.”

Purdue’s fall roster includes 18 players listed as pitchers. Among returnees who logged the most mound time for Purdue in 2023 are seniors Jonathan Blackwell (72 1/3 innings), Kyle Iwinski (69 1/3), Aaron Suval (44 2/3), Davis Pratt (42 1/3), Jackson Dannelley (39 1/3), C.J. Backer (37) and Cal Lambert (22 2/3) and junior Carter Doorn (27 1/3). Blackwell and Lambert are left-handers. The others are right-handers.

“Having been at the highest level I understand how hard it is,” says Newman. “I know what goes into chasing a dream.

“But kids today are different than when I played and the game is different. It’s our job to understand what we can take and how we can connect with the guys. 

“What we do is something that I cherish. Everything I have has come from the game.”

Purdue is scheduled to open the 2024 season Feb. 16 against Stony Brook in Sugar Land, Texas.

Josh Newman. (Purdue University Image)