Tag Archives: Right-handed pitcher

Driven right-hander Olejnik helping Miami U. RedHawks win ball games

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Peyton Oljenik has gotten better as his college baseball career has progressed.

A junior right-handed pitcher in his first year at the Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, is driven to put away hitters and add to the RedHawks’ win column.

Miami is 25-23 overall and 17-13 in the Mid-American Conference in no small part to the contribution of 6-foot-10 3/4, 210-pound Olejnik, who has made 17 mound appearances (14 in relief) is 7-1 (seven straight victories) with one save, a 5.29 earned run average, 71 strikeouts and 23 walks in 56 1/3 innings. He has faced 249 batters and opponents are hitting .250 against him.

In his last two trips to the bump, Olejnik worked 1 1/3 hitless innings Friday, May 10 against Ohio and picked up the win then came in for four frames the next day, giving up four hits and three runs against the Bobcats.

“I’m a competitor,” says Olejnik, a 2021 graduate of Hanover Central High School in Cedar Lake, Ind. “I hate to lose and I love to win. The love-hate relationship makes me try even harder for the team. At the end of the day, it’s about how many victories we get as a team. It’s been like that since Day 1.

“(Miami head coach Brian Smiley) tells us all the time that you make your bed, you lay in it. He’s told me that I just need to produce. I have that hard-working, blue-collar grit mentality. You don’t give up. You get knocked down and you get back up.”

Polish-American Olejnik (pronounced Oh-len-ick) has also seen that kind of spirit from his team.

“We may get down and we may get punched early in the game, but we don’t ever give up,” says Olejnik, 21. “We’re going to fight all the way to the end. For myself, there’s a few pitches I wish I could get back. But I still need to do my job and minimize the damage. I go out there with that grit and give my team the best chance to win the game.”

Larry Scully is the RedHawks pitching coach. 

“Coach Scully’s been around the game for many, many years and has top draft picks year in and year out,” says Olejnik. “I’m picking his brain as much as I possibly can, learning about myself, hitters and things I could do right.”

Olejnik is often called on to take the baseball in latter innings or be a bulk guy out of the bullpen.

“It’s about a trust thing,” says Olejnik. “(Smiley and Scully) trust me late in the game. That’s a huge role to have. I’ll close the game on Friday and if they want to bring me back on Saturday or Sunday for long relief and let somebody else close in the ninth, that’s what we’ve been doing.

“We’ve seen a lot of success with it.”

Miami’s regular season is winding down. The team has a three-game home series May 16-18 against East Tennessee State before heading to the MAC tournament after an extended absence from the postseason. The 2024 six-team event is slated for May 22-26 in Avon, Ohio.

Throwing from a high three-quarter arm slot and whip-like release, Olejnik mixes a four-seam fastball that hits 96 mph, a slider that goes 84 to 86 when adrenaline takes over and a “circle” change-up. He did not have a slider in high school or the beginning of his college days and used an 11-to-5 curveball and can still show that pitch to batters when needed.

Olejnik was at the University of Oklahoma in 2023, making five appearances with a 4.15 ERA. Opponents his .154 against him. 

“Mentally, I grew stronger,” says Olejnik of his time with the Sooners. “It was a learning experience for me and I just needed to get better, put on weight and get stronger.”

He entered the NCAA Transfer Portal after the season and wound in Oxford.

“I really didn’t know what to expect coming to Miami. Now that I’ve been here for almost a year now, I love it. There are guys here I will be friends with for life. There are great relationships with coaches and teammates.

“It’s crazy to see how we’re changing the culture here. This is where I belong.”

Triton College in River Grove, Ill. was Olenik’s baseball home in 2022. At 6-9 and 175, the righty pitched in 11 games (eight starts) and was 2-1 with a 2.14 ERA, 73 strikeouts and 26 walks in 46 1/3 innings.

“Going through that grind has helped me,” says Olejnik of his time in junior college baseball. “For me, a JUCO Bandit is a guy who gets down and dirty and plays hard. It takes a different character to play JUCO ball. 

“You’ve got to be there to experience it.”

Olejnik spent the summer of 2022 with the MLB Draft League’s West Virginia Black Bears and the summer of 2023 with the New England Collegiate League’s Martha’s Vineyard Sharks.

He has options this summer. Depending on his work load at Miami, he could pitch in the Cape Cod League or train in preparation for the July 14-16 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft.

The Sport Management major has one year of remaining college eligibility.

Born in La Porte, Ind., to Tom and Toni Olejnik, Peyton moved with his family to Lake County by 4. 

Peyton played until 14 for the St. John Tomahawks (now part of the Indiana Bulls) and was coached by his father.

Tom Olejnik pitched at Thornton Fractional South High School in Lansing, Ill., and then Michigan State University in the mid-1990’s and now gives pitching lessons at “The Armory” in Cedar Lake.

Peyton’s mother was a cheerleader at Monmouth (Ill.) College. Sister Brooke Olejnik (Hanover Central Class of 2024) is a dancer bound for the University of Alabama.

From 15U to 18U, Peyton experienced his travel ball with Top Tier

Along the way, he was headed toward being at the top of his teams on the height chart thanks to quite a growth spurt.

As a Hanover Central freshman in 2018, Olejnik was 5-foot-10. That means he has grown more than a foot in the past six years. 

In his senior prep season, Peyton was part of a IHSAA Class 3A state runner-up team and earned Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association honorable mention all-state honors. The Wildcats were coached by Ryan Bridges.

“My senior class is still close to him today,” says Olejnik. “We’re grateful for the spot he got us to. He’s one of the best thought-out coaches I’ve had.”

Peyton Olejnik video by @Nick_Feigl7.
Peyton Olejnik. (Miami University Photo)
Peyton Olejnik. (Miami University Photo)
Peyton Olejnik. (Miami University Photo)

Cardenas carries confidence to the bump for U. of Indianapolis

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

NCAA Division II University of Indianapolisranked No. 2 in the Midwest/No. 20 in the nation by National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association — close the 2024 regular season in Romeoville, Ill., with a four-game Great Lakes Valley Conference series May 2-4 against Lewis University (one game Thursday, two games Friday, one game Saturday).

Greyhounds head coach Al Ready and pitching coach Adam Cornwell have decided to hand the ball to junior right-hander Diego Cardenas to start today (May 2). First pitch is slated for 2 p.m. Central Time.

Cardenas, a 21-year-old South Bend, Ind., native and Environmental Sustainability major, brings up the same word when describing Ready and Cornwell.

“It’s amazing,” says Cardenas of playing for Ready. “It’s a great experience. It’s a unique way of coaching and a lot of the players get along with it. He’s very brave and confident in his guys.

“He trusts all of his players and that’s pretty sweet.”

Cardenas says Ready, who played at UIndy and is in his 17th season coaching in the program (sixth as head coach), does not go by the book.

“He’s very unorthodox,” says Cardenas of the man who has the Greyhounds at 32-14 overall and 27-5 at the top of the GLVC standings. The team has won 11 straight.

Says Cardenas, “(Cornwell) gives me a lot of confidence by giving me my own space and making corrections when they’re due.

“He lets us be our own person which is great.”

Cardenas has gone from a reliever going into the season to a mid-week starter and then a weekend arm for conference games.

In eight mound appearances (all starts) in 2024, Cardenas is 5-0 with a 2.70 earned run average, 37 strikeouts and 25 walks in 46 2/3 innings. Opponents are hitting .195 against him.

The 5-foot-11, 200-pounder throws from a three-quarter arm angle and uses a two-seam fastball, change-up and slider to get hitters out.

“I get a ton of arm-side run,” says Cardenas of his two seamer which has hit 91 mph and sets at 86 to 89. “Not a lot of vertical (movement), more horizontal.”

A combination of splitter and change-up, he calls that pitch a “splange” and it goes 80 to 83 mph.

“I choke the daylights out of it,” says Cardenas of the grip.

Wedging the ball deep in his hands in a traditional slider grip, the righty makes deliveries at 77 to 80 mph.

Born and raised in South Bend with Larry and Kelly Cardenas as parents and former John Adams High School ballplayers Esai Cardenas and Benicio Cardenas (who also on the team at Marian University’s Ancilla College) as older brothers, Diego played at South Bend East Side Little League as a youngster and travel ball as a teen with the Indiana Nitro.

At Adams, 2021 graduate Diego Cardenas was a middle infielder when not on the mound.

Mike Cass was and still is the Eagles head coach.

“He kept it simple,” says Cardenas of Cass.

Cardenas underwent Ulnar Collateral Ligament reconstruction (Tommy John surgery) and redshirted for the 2022 UIndy season. That summer he played in the College Summer League at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind., for the Turf Monsters.

In his debut season with Indianapolis in 2023, Cardenas got into nine games (all in relief) and went 0-0 with a 9.00 ERA, eight strikeouts and 11 walks in eight innings. 

He split his summers between contracts with the Prospect League’s Terre Haute (Ind.) Rex and Northwoods League’s Waterloo (Ind.) Bucks. He has signed to play this summer with the Cal Ripken Sr. Collegiate Baseball League’s Olney (Md.) Cropdusters.

But before that there’s business to attend at UIndy. The eight-team GLVC tournament is May 8-11 in Marion, Ill. After that comes an NCAA D-II Midwest Regional May 16-19 at a campus site and a chance to advance to a Midwest Super Regional May 24-25 at a campus site and then the D-II World Series June 1-8 in Cary, N.C.

“We’re playing loose and confident,” says Cardenas. “We’re playing in a very fun way.”

While he has no real allegiance to an MLB team, Cardenas does have a favorite player.

“I’ve always been a big fan of Marcus Stroman,” says Cardenas of the New York Yankees right-hander. “I love his confidence and his flash.”

Cardenas has two years of remaining eligibility. He expects to take one in 2025 while finishing his undergraduate degree then a graduate year. He says if he had to decide on his concentration now it would be in Management Sciences.

After baseball, he foresees a career in renewable energies, performing research and analytics and hands-in field work.

“I love the outdoors,” says Cardenas. “It’s pretty awesome.”

Diego Cardenas. (University of Indianapolis Photo)
Diego Cardenas. (University of Indianapolis Photo)
Diego Cardenas. (University of Indianapolis Photo)
Diego Cardenas. (University of Indianapolis Image)
Diego Cardenas. (University of Indianapolis Photo)
Diego Cardenas. (University of Indianapolis Photo)

Diego Cardenas. (University of Indianapolis Photo)

Seebold’s arm helping Southern Indiana Screaming Eagles in various ways

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Versatility, camaraderie and max effort is part of the value Gavin Seebold brings to the University of Southern Indiana baseball team.

The right-handed pitcher has started and come out of the bullpen for the Evansville-based Screaming Eagles.

The 21-year-old is always there to back his teammates.

Jeffersonville (Ind.) High School graduate Seebold knows that grit has its rewards.

“Any role, I’m prepared to do it,” says Seebold. “At the beginning of the year we were looking at me as more of a closer. The coaches asked me to start a game, I did pretty well in it and they asked me to start again. The just left me in that role.

“At tournament time, I may come out of the pen.”

Seebold lists some of his best athletic qualities.

“It’s probably my determination,” says Seebold. “I feel like I support all the guys on my team. I’m hard-working. You have to work hard to be in a successful position.”

In a dozen 2024 mound appearances (six starts), Seebold is 6-2 with a 4.13 earned run average, 41 strikeouts and 11 walks in 48 innings. He is scheduled to take the ball again Saturday as part of a three-game Ohio Valley Conference series May 3-5 for USI (19-26, 8-10) vs. Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville. 

Seebold has made improvements since the 2023 season when he was in 13 games (eight starts) and went 2-4 with an 8.27 ERA, 26 strikeouts and 23 walks in 37 innings.

“I attribute that to confidence — confidence that teammates have in me, coaches have in me and that I have in myself,” says Seebold. “Also, last year I didn’t have a feel for a breaking pitch.”

The 6-foot-1, 200-pound hurler now combines a slider with a four-seam fastball and change-up. 

“(The ) opens up my fastball, who has been my go-to pitch all my life,” says Seebold. “I spot my fastball pretty well.”

Throwing from a three-quarter arm slot, Seebold has topped out at 93 mph while setting at 88 to 91 with his four-seamer.

“I get a little arm-side run,” says Seebold. “Some days more than others.”

He sometimes refers to the slider as a “slurve.”

“Some days it looks more like a curveball, some days it looks like a slider,” says Seebold. 

He began to work on the pitch at the end of last spring, during the summer with the Ohio Valley League’s Louisville Jockeys and in the fall at USI.

“I like my change-up a lot,” says Seebold. “It’s pretty traditional with my middle and ring finger over the two seams.

“I have a tremendous amount of confidence in it.”

He is able to throw it over both sides of the plate, making it pair well with his fastball. He’s had chases and occasionally throws it back-door to right-handed batters.

Both the slider and curve are thrown as hard as he can — the slider at 77 to 81 mph and the change at 83 to 87 (that’s up from 77 to 81 in 2023). 

During catch play, Seebold focuses on releasing the ball over-the-top which helps with his mechanics once he steps on the mound.

Seebold was born in the Jeffersonville area and played a Jeff/GRC Little League from machine pitch to 12-year-old all-stars. Travel teams included the Ironmen, Indiana Showcasers and Canes Midwest 17U among a few others.

At Jeffersonville High School, Seebold was an honorable mention all-Hoosier Hills Conference performer. In his best season, he went 9-2 with a 2.46 ERA and 60 strikeouts in 57 innings for the Derek Ellis-coached Red Devils.

“Derek helped me gain confidence in myself,” says Seebold of Ellis. “He also helped my team and I building a winning culture of brotherhood and playing for one another.

“I’m thankful for the time the coaches spent with us and for all the time I spent in Jeffersonville baseball.”

The 2020 graduate saw his senior season taken by the COVID-19 pandemic.

From Jeff, Seebold went to Eastern Kentucky University. 

Battling elbow pain and taking PRP injections, Seebold did not pitch for the Colonels and was a medical redshirt in 2021 and red-shirted again after transferring to Southern Indiana and missed the 2022 season. His Tommy John surgery was in May 2021 and he was able to pitch again in July 2022. That’s when he played for the Bag Bandits of the College summer League at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind.

At USI, Seebold plays for head coach Tracy Archuleta.

“It’s a great opportunity,” says Seebold of playing for a man in his 18th season leading the program with 711 total wins as a college head coach. “He’s been around the game for a long time. He’s got a lot of knowledge. 

“He wants us to succeed.”

Nick Gobert is the Screaming Eagles pitching coach and has aided Seebold with tweaks and fixes to his delivery.

“He tells me a lot to just trust my stuff,” says Seebold of Gobert. “A lot of times I swing open with my front side. He tells me stay closed as long as possible and get down the mound. A lot of times I can I get stuck in my back leg. He gives me some pointers on getting everything flowing.

“I’m thankful that we have him.”

The USI staff also features assistants Vinny Tornincasa and Gordon Cardenas and director of operations Aaron Furman.

Seebold is scheduled to graduate this month with an Individual Studies degree and has two more years of eligibility. He says he will likely begin work in 2024-25 on a Masters of Business Administration with a concentration on Data Analytics.

This summer, he intends to train at Tread Athletics in Pineville, N.C.

Gavin is the oldest of John and Corinne Seebold’s two sons. Grant Seebold (Our Lady of Providence High School Class of 2023) is now a 6-foot-5 freshman right-handed pitcher at Oakland City (Ind.) University. Their mother played volleyball at Tennessee Tech. Their father grew up a Cincinnati Reds fan and that’s Gavin’s favorite team.

A recreational basketball player growing up, Gavin also follows the fortunes of the men’s hoops team at the University of Kentucky.

Gavin Seebold. (University of Southern Indiana Photo)
Gavin Seebold. (University of Southern Indiana Photo)
Gavin Seebold. (University of Southern Indiana Photo)

Iwinski relishes role as Purdue starting pitcher

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Kyle Iwinski has been pitching a baseball since about the time he started school.

The youngest son of former Mount Carmel High School (Chicago) and South Suburban College (South Holland, Ill.) player Kevin Iwinski was on a mound at 5 or 6. 

“He had some professional tryouts,” says Iwinski of his father, who has a shortstop and pitcher. “He knows what it takes for you to successful in a game and mentally how to approach the game.”

Kyle, who is now a weekend starter at Purdue University, began in town ball, went to the Dave Griffin-coached Indiana Playmakers and then the Dave Sutkowski-coached Morris Chiefs (now 5Star Great Lakes). He also played for Brian Jennings at Griffith (Ind.) High School.

Iwinski was 8-2 with a 1.83 ERA as a senior and was chosen for the Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association North/South All-Star Series in Madison.

“It’s just a winning mentality,” says Iwinski of Jennings’ approach. “We won all those sectional championships in a row and he was always striving for his players to be great and doing what it takes to get to the next level.”

Like older siblings Chris Iwinski (who played football at Griffith) and Samantha Iwinski (who played volleyball at Crete-Monee High School in Illinois, Prairie State College and Brown Mackie College), Kyle was born in Blue Island, Ill. His father is from Dolton, Ill., and mother Gail Albrecht is from Riverdale, Ill.

Chris Iwinski, who is familiar with the rigors of the gridiron and also studies nutrition and performance, is another mentor for his brother.

“If I ever have a question about that I’ll go straight to him,” says Iwinski.

Now 23, Kyle Iwinski relishes the role of starting pitcher.

“It means coaches have faith in me,” says Iwinski, who is on a team with Greg Goff as head coach and Kyle Newman as pitching coach. “They trust me to start the game and get the win for the team.”

His goals?

“Getting easy outs, rollovers, fly balls,” says Iwinski. “I’m not worried about the strikeouts. 

“I’m just trying to put my team in a position to win.”

The 2024 season is the last as a collegian for the 6-foot-2, 220-pound right-hander. In three mound starts (vs. Stony Brook, George Mason and Cal State Fullerton), he is 1-0 with a 6.75 earned run average, six strikeouts and two walks in 13 1/3 innings. He is expected to start again Saturday, March 9 against Albany at Purdue.

In 2023, Iwinski made 15 appearances (11 starts) for the Boilermakers and went 3-5 with a 4.54 earned run average, 39 strikeouts and 19 walks in 69 1/3 innings. He induced seven ground ball double plays — second on the team.

On March 6, Iwinski was named both the Collegiate Baseball National Pitcher of the Week and Big Ten Conference Pitcher of the Week after tossing a seven-inning one-hitter with eight strikeouts and no walks March 4 against Akron in Holly Springs, N.C.

He was Purdue’s most effective weekend starter at home since 2016, posting a 2.06 ERA and .215 batting average against in 35 innings at Alexander Field.

Prior to Purdue, Iwinski spent three seasons at Kankakee (Ill.) Community College — the 2020 COVID-19 season plus 2021 and 2022. In 22 starts, he went 13-4 with a 3.45 ERA, 152 strikeouts and 40 walks in 138 1/3 innings. His pitching coach with the Cavaliers was Bryce Shafer (who is now KCC head coach).

Iwinski was second-team National Junior College Athletic Association all-region in 2022 as the staff ace averaging 10.48 strikeouts per nine innings.

It’s the unity of baseball that appeals to Iwinski.

“It’s the camaraderie with teammates, building a family and sticking together even when times go bad,” says Iwinski. “The team we have here at Purdue I believe is a true family. No matter what goes on we’re going to stick together and fight through it.”

In summer collegiate ball, Iwinski pitched for the Northwest Indiana Oilmen in Whiting in 2019, the Beecher (Ill.) Muskies in 2020 and 2021. He was bound for the Northwoods League’s Traverse City (Mich.) Pit Spitters in 2022, but with such a large work load at Kankakee in the spring he spent the summer working out and focusing on strength and mobility. He did the same in the summer of 2023 after his first season at Purdue.

Delivering the ball from a three-quarter arm slot, Iwinski uses a four-seam fastball, sinker, change-up and slider. The four-seamer and sinker both travel around 91 to 93 mph. The sinker runs into right-handed batters. A “circle” change goes 84 to 86 mph. A slider, which is more horizontal than vertical, is generally clocked at 82 to 84 mph.

Iwinski lists endurance, physical frame and the ability to go deep into games as his best athletic qualities.

He has a routine between starts. The day after, he is running to get out the lactic acid and does a heavy lift with strength coach Tony “Ty” Webb.

“He was with (University of Southern California) football,” says Iwinski. “He knows what it takes to get a strong lower half and keep it throughout the season.

“I just stay with whatever he has to say just try to push through it.”

The next day, there’s no throwing and some tempo runs to flush out more fluids.

The third day after a start typically features a moderate lift and lateral squats to activate the legs and hips.

The fourth day is a bullpen to tune up for the next start.

The fifth day features a light lift to get the nerves working.

“I was not a big weight lifter in high school or junior college,” says Iwinski, who was around 175 pounds at Griffith. He credits his genetics for the size he is now.

Interested in knowing “why people think they way they think,” Iwinski is a Sociology major. One his courses this semester is Criminology.

I’m big into Criminal Minds, The First 48 and those kinds of shows,” says Iwinski. “Maybe one day I’ll be a detective myself.”

Kyle Iwinski. (Purdue University Photo)
Kyle Iwinski. (Purdue University Image)
Kyle Iwinski. (Big Ten Conference Image)

Indiana-raised right-hander Gray closing the door in Mexico

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Peyton Gray has been mowing down batters on either side of the border.

Following a spring and summer season in which he was a 2023 American Association All-Star with the Franklin, Wis.-based Milwaukee Milkmen the right-handed pitcher finds himself back in the Mexican Pacific Winter League — this time with Algodoneros de Guasave (Guasave Cottoneers) — and he just recorded his circuit-leading 13th save for a first-place team at 26-14 through Nov. 29.

“Baseball’s very huge in Mexico,” says Gray. “There are a ton of fans. I enjoy it down here. It’s very winning-focused. They value wins and playing hard.”

The lifestyle, including the food, are different in Mexico than the U.S. but Gray sees the common denominaters.

“The way you have to look at it is that you’re still playing a kids’ game for a living,” says Gray. “You’ve got to just have fun with it. You may not speak the same language as the umpires or the fans, but it’s still baseball. I’m still pitching, the strike zone’s the same, the hitters are the same.

“It’s nice to play in a different country. I know it’s going to be great memories.”

Gray, a 6-foot-4, 235-pound right-hander, has made 21 mound appearances so far in 2023-24 and is 0-0 with a 0.00 earned run average (he’s allowed two unearned runs). In 21 innings, he has 33 strikeouts and seven walks. He averages 14.1 strikeouts per nine innings.

After a dozen days of summer training, the season opened in mid-October and runs until late December. The playoffs in January are three best-of-seven rounds. The league winner moves on to the 2024 Caribbean World Series Feb. 1-9 in Miami.

On Nov. 28, Gray locked up a job for the 2024 season by signing with Saraperos de Saltillo of the Mexican Baseball League.

“I’m technically still a free agent,” says Gray. “I can still sign with a (Major League Baseball) club or Japan or Taiwan team.”

In Milwaukee in 2023, the 2014 graduate of Columbus (Ind.) East High School pitched in 37 games (all in relief) and went 1-2 with nine saves, a 1.38 ERA, 64 strikeouts and eight walks in 39 innings. His K/9 rate was 14.8. Gray turned 28 on June 2 and earned the save for the East in the American Assocation All-Star Game at Franklin Field on July 18. 

“I gave that league all I had and posted some pretty good stats,” says Gray of the American Association. “I wasn’t really getting signed out of that league.”

He had also hurled for the Milkmen in 2020 and 2022 with stints in the Colorado Rockies (2018 and 2019) and Kansas City Royals (2021) systems.

Tommy John reconstructive elbow surgery came for Gray in August 2021. Cleared to play again in July 2022, he was released by the Royals and went back to independent ball with Milwaukee.

Gray pitched in seven games for the MPWL’s Yaquis de Obregon in 2022-23 and went 0-0 with a 7.11 ERA, six strikeouts and four walks in 6 1/3 innings.

“I wasn’t quite 100 percent again from my surgery but I wanted to get my foot in the door and the opportunity to play in Mexico,” says Gray. “(Guasuave) liked what they saw this summer and gave me a shot to come down and be the closer. I took it and ran with it.”

Flash forward to the present day and Gray is a tick up in velocity since the surgery and recovery.

“I’m a little better than I was,” says Gray. “I did tear my (Ulnar Collateral Ligament) on a single pitch. I don’t know if my elbow was messed up for awhile. I throw a little harder (with the four-seam fastball going from about 90 to 93 mph to 92 to 94 while almost touching 96) and my slider and change-up velocity has gone up.”

A relief pitcher throughput his pro career, Gray has noticed more resiliency since surgery which replaced his UCL with Palmaris Longus tendon taken from his right wrist.

“I’ve noticed that I’m able to bounce back a lot faster,” says Gray. “My recovery’s a lot shorter. I can throw more days a week.

“At first it’s hard to get conformable and really let it rip. Once you realize that — man — I’m 100 percent and mentally I’m super-confident in my arm. It’s healthy and I’m not going re-tear my UCL.”

Gray threw five times last week, including ends of a Nov. 20 doubleheader.

Rehab has shown Gray how to stay healthy with shoulder and mobility work between trips to the mound.

There’s another important part of his routine.

“I try to drink a lot of water,” says Gray. “That’s definitely going to help me recover, stay hydrated and have energy.”

After reporting the to field, he stretches, runs and plays catch. Around the third inning he ramps up his focus and begins getting his body ready. He walks out to the bullpen in the fifth inning and does his band and plyo ball work — things he has done while visiting PRP Baseball at Mojo Up Fieldhouse in Noblesville, Ind.

“It’s one of my favorite places to train,” says Gray. “I’m thankful for everything (PRP founder) Greg (Vogt) did for me (when I made my first velo jump in 2019).

“I still message those guys and ask them questions. They’re always there for me.”

Peyton and wife Samantha Gray — the Columbus East alum answers to Sam and her maiden name is Watters — were married in 2021. The couple resides in Fort Myers, Fla. Sam’s family has a vacation home in nearby Cape Coral. 

This winter, she has been going back and forth to Mexico about two weeks at a time. 

Gray pitched one season at Western Michigan University in Kalamazoo (2015), one at Gulf Coast Community College in Panama City, Fla. (2016) and two at Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers (2017 and 2018). 

“I still have a lot of college buddies down there which is nice,” says Gray. “It’s great weather and it’s nice to throw outside year-round.”

Peyton Gray. (Algodoneros de Guasave Image).
Peyton Gray. (Mexican Pacific Winter League Image).
Peyton Gray. (Algodoneros de Guasuave Photo).
Peyton Gray. (Algodoneros de Guasave Photo).
Peyton Gray. (Algodoneros de Guasuave Photo).
Peyton Gray. (Algodoneros de Guasuave Photo).
Peyton Gray. (Milwaukee Milkmen Photo).
Peyton Gray. (Saraperos de Saltillo Image).

Fort Wayne native Lebamoff stays at Arizona State as graduate assistant 

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

From the Summit City to the Valley of the Sun, Nolan Lebamoff enjoyed his baseball playing career.

As a right-handed pitcher he competed at what is now Wallen Complex, took to the travel ball circuit with the Summit City Sluggers at 14 and spent his prep diamond days at Carroll High School — all in Fort Wayne, Ind.

He was a varsity player for Chargers head coach Dave Ginder as a sophomore and junior.

After breaking his arm while on the mound in the summer of 2017 playing for the Todd Armstrong-coached Sluggers, the son of Andy and Deb Lebamoff went to live with uncle Tommy and aunt Alexia Lebamoff, rehabbed with Mark Sheehan (who has trained with Dr. Tom House, founder of the National Pitching Association) and graduated from Neuqua Valley High School in Naperville, Ill., in 2018. He did not play for the Wildcats.

After a few games with the Todd Farr-coached 18U Summit City Sluggers that summer, Nolan launched into five collegiate springs and four summers. 

He hurled at Kankaee (Ill.) Community College for then-Cavaliers head coach Todd Post in 2019 and 2020, Beacons head coach Brian Schmack at Valparaiso (Ind.) University in 2021 and 2022 and Sun Devils head coach Willie Bloomquist at Arizona State University in 2023.

Lebamoff credits words from Post for taking him through his college pitching career: “You don’t have to be great, you just can’t be bad. You just need to be level.”

Says Lebamoff, “You’ve rather be the guy who stays steady and consistent. I learned the mental part of baseball my freshman year and that carried me all the way through.”

Post and assistant Bryce Shafer (who is now head coach at KCC) decided to make Lebamoff their closer and his 11 saves ranked third in the National Junior College Athletic Association Division II in 2019.

“I wasn’t throwing very hard, maybe touching 83 (mph),” says Lebamoff. “But I had a really good year.”

Many conversations with Schmack involved making a mark.

“What do you want your legacy to be?,” says Lebamoff. “What do you want to be known for in life?”

The 6-foot-4, 205-pounder made 81 of 82 mound appearances in relief and went 9-3 with 12 saves (including 11 in 2019), a 4.03 earned run average, 127 strikeouts and 64 walks in 116 innings.

Those are the numbers, but they are not what stick out most to Lebamoff.

“I got a lot of friendships, a lot of good experiences, a lot of good memories and incredible stories,” says Lebamoff. “I took a lot of life lessons like how to deal with adversity.”

He is to be in the wedding of former Kankakee teammate Owen Behrens in November. 

“That’s what I live for — meeting people, making friends and seeing where they go in life,” says Lebamoff. 

Summer stops for Lebamoff included the Northwoods League‘s Ronnie Richardson-managed Wisconsin Woodchucks (Wausau, Wis.) in 2019, College Summer League at Grand Park‘s Joe Thatcher-managed Park Rangers (Westfield, Ind.) in 2020, Prospect League‘s Michael Keeran-managed Lafayette (Ind.) Aviators in 2021 and Northwoods’ Marcus Pointer-managed Duluth (Minn.) Huskies in 2022.

Lebamoff follows the careers of many of his summer teammates and coaches.

“It’s fun to root for them and hope they chase their dreams just as much as I did,” says Lebamoff.

That final season of summer ball with Duluth, Lebamoff made 22 bullpen appearances and went 5-1 with three saves, a 1.38 ERA, 38 strikeouts and 12 walks in 32 2/3 innings.

He finished his year at Arizona State with 25 games, a 3-0 record, 4.50 ERA, 21 strikeouts and 18 walks in 26 innings for a squad that went 32-23 overall and 16-13 in the Pac-12 Conference.

Lebamoff, who turned 24 in April, earned a Political Science degree from Valpo U. and exhausted his playing eligibility at ASU in the spring.

“I wanted to be the best college baseball player I could,” says Lebamoff. “I think I achieved that.

“I wasn’t really sure what I wanted to do (next). I said I’ll figure it out and something will come my way.”

After the season, Bloomquist asked Lebamoff about his plans and the former pitcher is a graduate assistant coach for Sun Devils baseball while studying at the school in Tempe, Ariz., to be a Master of Organizational Leadership.

This past summer, he combed through the Transfer Portal and watched their Synergy Sports reels while doing research on players. 

He also called donors and helped get Name Image Likeness (NIL) deals for ASU players and helping them grow their brand on social media.

“When I was playing NIL money didn’t entice me,” says Lebamoff. “I just wanted to play.”

Shirts with his name and Arizona State number (37) were produced and family members purchased them.

Lebamoff is in charge of 14 ASU student managers, serving as their line of contact with the coaching staff and organizing their schedules and practice duties. 

During the season, Lebamoff will help out on the field. Right now, the team is in the individual skills phase of fall practice.

“I enjoy it,” says Lebamoff. “They’re good kids. A lot of them were here last year. I already know a lot of them. 

“It’s a lot of fun.”

Lebamoff has become very close with Bloomquist, who played 14 years in the big leagues and became head coach his alma mater in June of 2021.

“I love him,” says Lebamoff. “In a way, he’s like a second father to me. “As soon as I got here I fell in love with the culture he brings. He’s a fun guy to play for. He expects a lot out of you. 

“He works his butt off every single day. He loves this program more than anybody else. He takes great pride in it and expects that out of every player and every coach.”

Lebamoff says Bloomquist is always willing to learn.

“He’ll always listen to you,” says Lebamoff. “I’ve never been disrespected by him as a coach, staff member or player. 

“He’ll shoot you straight. I have nothing but good things to say about him. He gave me two unbelievable great opportunities. I cannot thank him enough.”

Andy Lebamoff is retired from Cap n’ Cork in Fort Wayne. Deb Lebamoff was a stay-at-home mother since Nolan was young.

Nolan has two older sisters. Olivia (Lebamoff) Miller is married and lives in Park City, Utah. Natalie Lebamoff played soccer at Fort Wayne Bishop Dwenger High School and the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, earned her Master of Business Administration and Master Sports Administration at Ohio University and now works in corporate partnerships with the Chicago Bulls.

Nolan Lebamoff. (Arizona State University Photo)
Nolan Lebamoff. (Arizona State University Photo)
Nolan Lebamoff. (Arizona State University Photo)
Nolan Lebamoff. (Arizona State University Photo)
Nolan Lebamoff. (Arizona State University Photo)
Nolan Lebamoff. (Arizona State University Photo)
Nolan Lebamoff. (Arizona State University Photo)
Nolan Lebamoff. (Arizona State University Photo)

Righty fireballer Moore lands at Oregon

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Indiana-born fireballer Brock Moore is slated to play his last collegiate baseball season in the Pacific Northwest.

Moore, who was born in Greenwood, Ind., and grew up in Carmel, Ind., and graduated from University High School, committed this summer with the University of Oregon for 2023-24.

The first day of online summer classes for the Sports Management major begins for the big right-hander on Monday. He is to move to campus around Sept. 8 with the first baseball event slated for Sept. 14.

A 6-foot-6, 245-pounder, Moore has a four-seam fastball that sat at 94 to 96 mph and touched 98 this past spring while pitching for Menlo College — an NAIA program in Atherton, Calif.

Throwing from a high three-quarter arm slot, Moore also has a sinker, change-up and slider.

“I throw it kind of weird,” says Moore of his sinker. “I throw it with no seams, a reverse slider grip and I just pronate at the top of my arm action. 

“It kills a little bit of the velocity. It’s like 90 to 92 mph and I get some good run.”

It’s a four-seam “circle” change and sweeping slider that Moore throws.

It was when he figured out how to use his height to his advantage that Moore really took off as a pitcher.

Moore, who turned 23 in May, graduated from University in 2019 and watched from the dugout as the Trailblazers claimed an IHSAA Class 1A state championship. 

He was ineligible to play as a senior. He did not play baseball as a freshman and was on the junior varsity squad at Carmel High School as a sophomore. 

Following his mother to Terre Haute, Moore transferred briefly to Terre Haute South Vigo where he did not play and then back to Carmel while missing a full semester of classes and finals. He reached out University and got caught up academically and played there as a junior.

In 2018, Moore went 7-0 with a 2.77 ERA on the mound and hit .347 and 25 RBIs.

Moore spent one season each at National Junior College Athletic Association members Rend College in Ina, Ill. (2020), and Danville Area Community College (2021) and two at Menlo (2022 and 2023).

The COVID-19 pandemic cut short the 2020 season at Rend Lake. Moore relieved in one game and went 1-0 with no strikeouts and one walk in 1 1/3 innings.

At Danville Area, the righty came out of the bullpen for all eight of his mound appearances and went 0-1 with 15 strikeouts and 15 walks in 12 1/3 innings.

After pitching for the Park Rangers of the College Summer League at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind., in 2021 — the only summer he has played since becoming a collegian, Moore headed to California.

With the 2022 Menlo Oaks, he got into six games (four starts) and was 0-2 with a 4.00 earned run average, 25 strikeouts and 15 walks in 18 innings.

In 2023, all 11 of his appearances were starts and he went 2-5 with a 3.33 ERA, 70 strikeouts and 20 walks in 51 1/3 innings. That’s over 12 strikeouts per nine innings.

“I definitely learned to get a routine down,” says Moore. Juco was mostly go on your own and figure it out. Menlo was more organized. We had team lifts every week, a set practice schedule.”

Alex Hoover is the head coach at Menlo. Trent Verlin is the pitching coach.

“(Verlin) was the one who helped me master my change-up. I worked on it every bullpen and every pitching session. We worked on change-ups every time. 

“That helped my arm path and working out front. I saw velocity rise and it made the change-up my best secondary pitch.”

Moore also began working with online pitching trainer Ben Baggett (who is with the Toronto Blue Jays organization). 

Roommate Evan Wilcox, an Ontario native who was also at Rend Lake in 2020, found Baggett on Instagram and started training with him and Moore followed suit.

Baggett pitched at Stanford in 2019. Former Oregon player Jack Marder was on the Cardinal coaching staff and is an assistant at his alma mater. 

Marder reached out to Moore and an offer was made and accepted.

At one point Moore was going to play this summer for the Northwoods League’s Rochester (Minn.) Honkers, but plans changed.

Moore attended a pre-draft workout with the Texas Rangers in Cincinnati and later agreed to join former Purdue University head coach Mark Wasikowski at Oregon in 2023-24. “Waz” has led the Ducks since the 2020 season.

Blake Hawksworth was named pitching coach in July.

It has been announced that Oregon will move to the Big Ten Conference, but the Ducks will be in the Pac-12 during Moore’s season in Eugene.

Starting has been Moore’s most-recent role, but says he is also OK with coming out of the bullpen.

Growing up, Moore’s favorite player was Boston Red Sox second baseman Dustin Pedroia.

“He was a small guy,” says Moore. “But I loved Dustin.”

Moore’s favorite pitcher is right-hander Justin Verlander, who recently went back to the Houston Astros.

“I just love the way that he throws,” says Moore. “He brought life to having a very high-spin fastball and living up in the (strike) zone.

“He’s been doing that now for 20 years. He found a way that worked for him and he stuck with it. He’s phenomenal. He’ll go down as one of the greatest of all time.”

Moore played for the Indiana Mustangs — a travel organization led by University head coach Chris Estep — from 8U to 17U.

“I have to give him so much credit,” says Moore of Estep. “He’s helped me so much through my life. I look at him as my godfather almost.”

Brock’s parents are divorced. Jeff Moore is in sales and development with Blue Horseshoe in Carmel. Karen Moore is a dental assistant at Smiles in The Village in Westfield.

Step-sister Rose Lurie is 20 and an Indiana University student. 

Step-brother and welder Ben Lurie is 23 and slightly older than Ben.

Brock Moore. (Menlo College Photo)
Brock Moore. (Danville Area Community College Photo)
Brock Moore. (College Summer League at Grand Park Photo)
Brock Moore. (Menlo College Photo)

Anderson U. right-hander Southern enjoying summer with Rockford Rivets

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Landen Southern is coming to the end of his summer baseball season.

It’s been a rewarding for the right-handed pitcher heading into his third year at Anderson (Ind.) University at the end of this month.

Playing for the summer collegiate wood bat Northwoods League’s Rockford (Ill.) Rivets, Southern made six mound appearances (five starts) between July 4 and Aug. 5 and is 3-0 with a 1.88 earned run average, 32 strikeouts and 14 walks in 28 2/3 innings. The regular season closes Saturday, Aug. 22, but Rockford (22-11 in the second half and 42-25 overall) is still chasing a playoff bid.

“The Northwoods League is fantastic,” says Southern. “They know how to really stick their players out there and get them in front of (professional) scouts.”

Southern, who turned 20 on July 1, got a spot with Rockford through a connection between Anderson head coach Matt Bair and Rivets manager Vinny Tornincasa, a former Andrean High School assistant who was a University of Illinois Springfield assistant in 2022-23.

Jake Lotz was the Rockford pitching coach before taking a job at Lewis University in Romeoville, Ill. 

Tanner Bradley, the pitching coach at recruiting coordinator at Southeastern Illinois University, is now Rivets pitching coach with assistance from recent UIS Master of Business Administration graduate and Truman State University strikeout record-holder Connor McKenna.

Southern appreciates Bair.

“Coach Bair’s awesome,” says Southern. “He grinds his butt off, especially working at the field. It goes to show how much of a coach he is and how much he cares about us.

“From a coaching side, he gets down to detail and makes sure you get better at that practice. Every pitch he takes to heart. He’s probably one of the favorite coaches I’ve ever had.

“He’s a real inspiration.”

Brandon Schnepp is Ravens pitching coach and his words echo with Southern.

“It’s all about your in control on the mound, especially during the game,” says Southern. “He wants us to pound the (strike) zone.”

Southern, a Sports Marketing major, pitched in 15 games (14 starts) for Anderson in 2023 and went 6-5 with one complete game, 4.96 ERA, 91 strikeouts and 48 walks and 74 1/3 innings for a team that went 27-19 overall and 12-10 in the NCAA Division III Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference.

He was named the HCAC Pitcher of the Week on April 3 and was on the all-HCAC second team.

In two AU seasons (2022-23), he has been in 24 contests (22 starts) and is 9-7 with a 5.55 ERA, 138 K’s and 67 walks in 110 1/3 innings.

Born in Lafayette, Ind., Southern grew up in Mulberry, Ind., which is northwest of Frankfort, Ind. He played Little League ball in Mulberry and Frankfort before travel ball stints with the Rossville, Ind.-based Indy Groove, Indiana S.O.S., Westfield, Ind.-based Indy Sharks and Westfield-based Indiana Mustangs (the last season with head coach Chris Holick).

The Kyle Proctor-managed Crawfordsville American Legion Post 72 team featured Southern in the summers of 2021 and 2022. The righty pitched in the state championship game in 2021.

Southern is a 2021 graduate of Clinton Prairie Junior/Senior High School in Frankfort, where he played three varsity seasons (2020 was taken away by the COVID-19 pandemic) for Gophers head coach Matt Scott.

“Coach Scott is probably one of the main reasons I’m at Anderson right now,” says Southern. “He really cares about his players. He takes the game to heart. He teaches a course on the game (Baseball History). You can tell he wants you to be around the game as much as possible.

‘He’s a leader for sure.”

The 6-foot-2, 180-pound Southern launches a four-seam fastball, two-seam fastball, curveball, change-up and slider from a three-quarter arm slot.

The four-seamer has been clocked as high as 92 mph this summer.

“With the two-seamer you want to get as much movement as you can on that pitch,” says Southern. “With the four-seamer you’re supposed to blow it by them. 

“With a two-seamer throw them off. A two-seamer for me is kind of like a sinker. It’s supposed to go down and in on a (right-handed) hitter.”

While he uses a “circle” change, Southern’s curve can be referred to as a slurve — part curve and part slider. His slider tends to start at the hitter’s belt and cuts to the outside corner on a right-handed batter.

A St. Louis Cardinals fan, Southern’s favorite player is Redbirds first baseman Paul Goldschmidt.

“I’ve always been a big fan of him,” says Southern. “In my opinion he’s one of the best hitters in the recent history of baseball.”

Landen’s parents are Scott and Virginia Southern. His older brother is Cody Pitzer.

Former Clinton Central High School basketball and baseball player Scott Southern works in heavy repair at Suburu in Lafayette.

Virginia Southern is a former Frankfort High School runner and current property manager in Lafayette.

Pitzer played football at Clinton Prairie.

Landen Southern is dating Anderson softball catcher/center fielder Hope Smith.

Landen Southern. (Anderson University Image).
Landen Southern. (Rockford Rivets Image).
Landen Southern. (Rockford Rivets Photo).
Landen Southern. (Rockford Rivets Photo).
Landen Southern. (Rockford Rivets Photo).
Scott, Landen and Virginia Southern.
Landen Southern and Hope Smith.
Landen Southern. (Rockford Rivets Photo).

Gossmann in third season pitching for Evansville Otters

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

The Evansville (Ind.) Otters are in the thick of the 2023 pennant push in the Frontier League and Avon (Ind.) High School, Vincennes (Ind.) University and University of Southern Indiana graduate Austin Gossmann has a key role.

As a starting pitcher, the right-hander has helped Evansville to a 40-31 mark heading into play Aug. 7. 

The Otters are four games behind West Division leader Gateway and two behind second-place Schaumburg. The top three teams in each division make the postseason. The regular season ends Sept. 3.

Evansville last won the Frontier League championship in 2016.

So far in 2023, Gossmann has pitched in 12 games (11 starts) and is 4-2 with a 5.46 ERA, 47 strikeouts and 24 walks in 56 innings. His last appearance was Wednesday, Aug. 2.

Since turning pro in 2021, Gossmann has been in 46 games (26 starts) and is 14-15 with a 4.33 earned run average, 249 strikeouts and 92 walks in 251 1/3 innings.

Gossmann was a Frontier League all-star in 2022. In 18 starts, he went 8-6 with one complete game a 4.85 ERA, 101 strikeouts and 40 walks in 105 2/3 innings.

In his rookie campaign of 2021, he made 16 appearances (15 starts) and was 2-7 with one complete game a 4.92 ERA, 101 strikeouts and 28 walks in 89 2/3 innings.

“The thing I like about starting is the constant competitiveness,” says Gossmann, who turned 27 in April. “It’s your responsibility to bridge to the bullpen and give your team a chance to win.

“It’s a bigger role.”

Pitching every five days also allows Gossmann to develop a standard routine with bullpen, weightlifting and running sessions between starts.

All the time, Andy McCauley has been Evansville’s manager and Max Peterson the pitching coach. The Otters play in historic Bosse Field (opened in 1915).

In three seasons at Southern Indiana (2019-21), Gossmann hurled in 30 games (24 starts) and was 9-8 with one save, a 5.12 ERA, 134 strikeouts and 50 walks in 142 1/3 innings. He made Great Lakes Valley Conference all-academic teams in 2019 and 2020.

Tracy Archuleta is the Screaming Eagles head coach. Jeremy Kuester is the pitching coach.

“I learned what it means to be a ballplayer and a good person from those two,” says Gossmann. “While I was at USI I grew up a lot and he was instrumental. I came in with a lot of cockiness and arrogance.

“I didn’t fully appreciate the lessons and what (Archuleta) was trying to communicate to me until after my senior year.”

With Kuester, it was back to the basics. 

“I was hard-headed and I thought I knew what I was talking about,” says Gossmann. “Kuester let me do my own thing for that first year. When I came back for my next year he was a little bit more on my back about doing things the USI way.”

Gossmann, who earned a History degree with a Secondary Education minor, was a Screaming Eagles volunteer assistant pitching coach in the fall and spring of 2021-22. At the same time, he served as a pitching instructor at Next Level Academy Evansville.

Gossmann delivers his pitches from variations on a three-quarter arm slot.

His mix has included a four-seam fastball, sinker, cutter and change-up as sometimes a two-seamer and slider.

When he has had access to measurements, his four-seamer has been clocked at 89-91 mph while touching 92. With multiple 14-hour road trips that has come down to 87-89 and 91.

The sinker has run and more depth than the fastball and goes 88-90 mph.

The cutter looks like a four-seamer then breaks to the glove side.

“Sometimes it will sweep a decent amount,” says Gossmann. “My slider has evaded me this year.”

While his bullpens are not always the same, they often call for 15 pitches at 75 percent effort.

“I’m throwing all my different pitches where I want to and have a feel,” says Gossmann. (This year) every week tends to be a little bit different in terms of focus. Sometimes I’m just working on fastballs. Other times after I throw a couple fastballs I really want do dial in on the cutter.

“What has been trending negatively the last couple of weeks?”

Gossmann picked up a slider as a high school freshman and that was pretty much his best pitch for years before he added complimentary pitches to the repertoire.

“When I was a (pro) rookie I was pretty much a two-pitch pitcher,” says Gossmann. “I went to the drawing board in the off-season.”

Pitchers that 5-foot-10 and 190-pound Gossmann admires include right-handers Sonny Gray, Tim Linceum and Trevor Bauer.

The 5-10 and 195 Gray (now with the Minnesota Twins) and 5-11, 170 Lincecum (now retired) are similar in build to Gossmann, who has been a social media follower of Bauer (now in Japan) on the Research and Development side of pitching.

In one season at South Alabama (2018) with Mark Calvi as head coach and Bob Keller as pitching coach, Gossmann relieved in eight contests and went 0-0 with an 8.18 ERA, nine strikeouts and four walks in 11 innings.

When Keller was let go, Gossmann was cut from the squad.

“Looking back it probably was for the best,” says Gossmann. “At the time it was crushing.

“I was faced with the decision. I could hang them up or continue playing.”

USA teammates included future pros Travis Swaggerty (drafted 10th overall by the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2018), Brendan Donovan (now with the St. Louis Cardinals) and Dylan Hardy (who played in the Boston Red Sox system and was in the Frontier League in 2021), Zach Greene (now in the New York Yankees organization) and Michael Sandle (now in the Houston Astros system).

“Being at that level really set me up for where I’m at now,” says Gossmann. “It showed me where I needed to be if I wanted to continue playing past college.”

Gossmann was at National Junior College Athletic Association member Vincennes parts of three seasons (2015-17) with the first and last seeing him receiving a medical redshirt.

Playing for Trailblazers head coach Chris Barney, he competed in six games (five in relief) and went 0-0 with a 5.06 ERA, 14 strikeouts and 12 walks in 16 innings as a freshman in 2015.

Gossmann achieved a 4-2 record with one complete game, one save, 46 strikeouts and 18 walks in 42 1/3 innings pitched as a redshirt freshman in 2016.

He posted a 2.19 ERA with 16 strikeouts and five walks in 12 1/3 innings as a sophomore in 2017. It turns out he had a shoulder impingement and a labrum tear. He left VU with two associate degrees — History and Secondary Educuation/Teaching.

Gossmann played two summers during his college years — 2016 for the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League’s Richmond (Ind.) Jazz and 2018 for the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League’s Alexandria (Va.) Aces.

He worked in 11 games (nine in relief) for Richmond and went 1-1 with a 10.80 ERA, 29 strikeouts and 15 walks in 28 1/3 innings. All 14 of his games with Alexandria were out of the bullpen as he went 1-2 with a 2.61 ERA, 31 strikeouts and eight walks in 20 2/3 innings.

Gossmann was rehabbing from injuries in the summers of 2015 and 2017. In 2019, he was concentrating on paperwork to get more eligibility and 2020 was the COVID-19 pandemic summer.

At Avon High School, Gossmann was a two-year letterwinner. He was on the freshman team throughout his freshman season of 2011. He was on the junior varsity and dressed for a few varsity games as a sophomore in 2012. He split time between varsity and JV as a junior in 2013. He was a full-time varsity player as a senior in 2014. That spring, the Orioles won the Hendricks County title.

Born in Indianapolis, Gossmann grew up in Avon.

He played for rec and all-star games in the Avon Junior Athletic Association then the Avon Attack travel team.

He was with the Indiana Outlaws at 13U and 14U, the Avon High summer team at 15U, Indiana Irish at 16U and 17U and Demand Command at 18U.

Austin is the oldest of Jeff and Karen Gossmann’s three children. 

Nathan Gossmann graduated from Indiana University as a triple major and is now a consultant in Washington D.C.

Kayla Gossmann is heading into her senior year as a Biology major and Indiana University Purdue University-Indianapolis.

Jeff Gossmann is a Department of Defense accountant. Karen Gossmann is a French teacher at Plainfield (Ind.) High School.

Austin Gossmann.
Austin Gossmann. (Evansville Otters Photo)
Austin Gossmann. (Evansville Otters Photo)
Austin Gossmann. (Evansville Otters Photo)
Austin Gossmann. (Evansville Otters Photo)
Austin Gossmann. (Evansville Otters Photo)

Poland puts focus on pitching, turns into professional with Marlins system

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Second-year professional Jared Poland’s path as a baseball player was primarily as an infielder.

Until it wasn’t.

Signed by the University of Louisville out of Cathedral High School in Indianapolis, Poland was a hitter who would also occasionally be called on to take the mound.

A four-year letterwinner at Cathedral, Poland drove in 57 runs his junior and senior years, helping the Fighting Irish to an IHSAA Class 4A state championship in 2017 and 4A state runner-up finish in 2018.

Poland the all-stater was selected in the 34th round of the 2018 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft by the Boston Red Sox but did not go pro at that time and went to college.

In 2019 and 2020 (the COVID-19 pandemic-shortened season), Louisville second baseman Poland played in 47 games and hit .236 (21-of-89) with two home runs, 25 runs batted in and 15 runs scored. On a team with a loaded starting rotation, he was also used as a relief pitcher.

Dan McDonnell is the head coach at Louisville.

“I’ve got nothing but good things to say (about Coach McDonnell),” says Poland. “I was recruited as an infielder and he was responsible for the infielders. I got a lot better and I learned a lot about the infield but also playing the game the right way. 

“In the bigger picture, it was being a man and doing the right things.”

Roger Williams is the Cardinals pitching coach.

“”He played minor league ball and is very knowledgeable,” says Poland of Williams. “He called the pitches for all of our games.

“He knew what was good for us. He’s old school.”

Poland played for the Cape Cod Baseball League’s Bourne Braves in the summer of 2019 and hit .271 (16-of-59) with seven RBIs and six runs in 19 games.

He was in the College Summer League at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind., in 2020 with the Local Legends.

That fall at the U of L Poland was still a two-way player, But opted to give it up and began focusing on the mound.

“I felt like if I gave one up I could excel at the other,” says Poland. “Pitching is what was working in college so I decided to give up on the hitting aspect.”

Poland estimates he saved a 100 throws a day but not also being an infielder.

He started out the 2021 season as the Cardinals’ closer, broke his foot in his first game and later came back to earn a starting role, which continue for his senior year of 2022 (after a CSL stint in 2021 with the Turf Monsters).

Poland wound up with 43 collegiate mound appearances (17 starts), a 7-8 record, 4.04 earned run average, 149 strikeouts and 57 walks in 124 2/3 innings.

After earning second-team all-Atlantic Coast Conference and all-ACC academic honors while finishing a Finance degree, the righty was a 2022 sixth-round draft selection of the Miami Marlins. That summer, he split his time between the Florida Complex League Marlins and Class-A Florida State League‘s Jupiter Hammerheads

Poland pitched in five games (four starts) and was 0-0 with a 1.42 ERA, 11 strikeouts and five walks in 12 2/3 innings.

The 2023 season opened with three starts for Jupiter and Poland went 1-0 with a 1.69, 17 strikeouts and four walks in 16 innings.

With the Beloit (Wis.) Sky Carp of the High Class-A Midwest League since April 29, the 23-year-old Poland has made 14 starts and is 3-5 with a 5.38 ERA, 62 strikeouts and 20 walks in 72 innings. His most recent outing was Aug. 1.

Poland, a 6-foot, 200-pounder, throws a four-seam fastball, change-up, slider and curveball from a high three-quarter arm slot.

The four-seamer sits between 90 and 93 mph and touches 94.

It’s a two-seam “circle” change that Poland uses. The pitch travels 83-85 mph.

The slider goes 83-85 mph. It is mostly a horizontal pitch, but it does have some downward vertical break.

“It’s kind of different every time,” says Poland of his curve. Sometimes it’s like a sweeper. Sometimes it’s 2-to-7.”

Owing to his former two-way status, Poland’s motion is efficient without a lot of extra movement.

“I’m pretty simple for sure,” says Poland. “Growing up and going into college I never really put too much work or effort into pitching. I just rolled with what was comfortable.”

Indianapolis-born Poland grew up a Cincinnati Reds fan and started in travel ball at 8. He played for the Indiana Bandits, Indiana Prospects, Indiana Bulls and Indiana Nitro then the Cincinnati Spikes for his 14U to 18U summers.

He attended Hamilton Southeastern schools through eighth grade and went to Cathedral.

With the Fighting Irish, he was on teams guided by Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Famer Rich Andriole and Ed Freje.

“Rest In Peace Coach Andriole (who died in 2020),” says Poland. “I was friends with both his sons (Nick and Jake) as well. He was also an old-school coach and got the best out of us. We had super-hard practices and grinded. He knew how to win.

“(Coach Freje) tried to keep the program running in a similar way to Coach Andriole and kept the core values.”

Jared’s parents are Christopher and Anna Poland and has a half brother, Christopher Poland (33).

Jared Poland. (Miami Marlins Photo)
Jared Poland. (Jupiter Hammheads Photo)
Jared Poland. (University of Louisville Photo)
Jared Poland. (Beloit Sky Carp Photo)