Tag Archives: Vinny Tornincasa

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)

Coaching career takes Tornincasa to Southern Indiana

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

New University of Southern Indiana assistant/hitting coach/recruiting coordinator Vinny Tornincasa got his first taste of baseball coaching right after high school.

Tornincasa, who grew up in Chesterton, Ind., had just wrapped his playing career, having helped Andrean High School in Merrillville, Ind., to IHSAA Class 3A state championships his junior and senior years (2009 and 2010). He went 2-for-4 with a run scored as a lead-off hitter/center fielder in the 2010 title game.

“I wanted to stay involved in the game,” says Tornincasa, 32. “I kept growing and one thing led to another.”

Tornincasa gave players guidance with the Hammond (Ind.) Chiefs travel organization then headed to Purdue University Northwest in Hammond as a student (he holds a History degree from the school). He would later be a PNW assistant coach 2015-20 and help with the summer collegiate Carroll (Iowa) Merchants.

He was also a teacher at Scott Middle School in Hammond, Ind., and Valparaiso (Ind.) Alternative School.

After the pandemic, Tornincasa joined the Andrean staff and coached the 59ers in 2021 and 2022. The 59ers won the program’s eighth state crown — all under Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Famer Dave Pishkur — in 2022.

At this point, Tornicasa decided he would be a full-time coach.

The summer of 2022 he was hitting coach and interim manager for the Northwoods League’s Rockford (Ill.) Rivets (37-35) and then became a assistant at the University of Illinois Springfield.

The NCAA Division II Prairie Stars head coach was Ryan Copeland (now head coach at Northern Illinois University).

“He was just awesome,” says Tornincasa of Copeland. “He taught me so much.

“I wanted to learn and he was willing to teach me.

“I’ve learned from a lot of great coaches.”

Among those are Pishkur at Andrean, Dave Sutkowski with the Hammond Chiefs, Dave Griffin at Purdue Northwest, Copeland at IUS and Tracy Archuleta at USI.

“I also want to give a shoutout to Torny (uncle Tom Tornincasa, who coached in pro ball including stints with the Fort Wayne Wizards and Fort Wayne TinCaps) for helping me with everything and getting me to where I’m at. Also, Mauer (Aaron Maurer who Vinny knows from Andrean) and K.J. (K.J. Zelelnika whom he coached with) for always having my back through the tough times.”

Illinois Springfield finished second in the Great Lakes Valley Conference in 2023, batting .313 as a team with 70 home runs and a .414 on-base percentage. 

Tornincasa managed Rockford to a 45-27 mark in the summer of 2023.

He was planning to head back to Springfield, but with Copeland changing jobs and Southern Indiana’s Archuleta asking about his interest in joining the NCAA D-I Screaming Eagles that’s the choice he made and was hired as an assistant/hitting coach/recruiting coordinator for the Evansville-based program. 

Nick Gobert and Gordon Cardenas are the other assistants. Alex Archuleta is a student assistant coach and Aaron Furman director of baseball operations.

“The lion’s share of it is serving as hitting coach,” says Tornincasa of his duties. “We all do our part with the recruiting side.”

Tornincasa, who attended the 2024 American Baseball Coaches Association Convention in Dallas, emphasizes the importance of batsmen being “on-time.”

“Being on-time you’re in hitting position and that’s half the battle,” says Tornincasa. “Everybody has a certain level of natural ability and talent.

“They’re only going to be able to take that and reach their natural ability by getting them in good positions and reinforcing fundamentals.”

As a hitter himself, being on-time meant tracking the baseball as early as possible and having good hand position and pitch selection. 

“Where I see guys struggle the most is movement prior to getting in that hitting position,” says Tornincasa. “So you clean it up and simplify a couple of things without taking away from the individual’s full capabilities.

“I want to see what guys can do and help them maximize that potential.”

Tornincasa says swing path is one of the biggest debates in hitting now. 

“The swing path doesn’t matter if you’re on-time,” says Tornincasa. “It always comes back to the fundamentals — be short to the baseball and be explosive with the lower half. If you do that, your swing naturally stays tight and through the zone.”

Hitters can see live pitching and deliveries from a machine to work on their cut. But dry swings with no ball are also beneficial.

“I like dry swings because it gives guys a feel for their movements without having to focus at something coming at them,” says Tornincasa. “It reinforces betting in good hitting position, firing the lower half and making sure they’re not opening up too soon.

“Guys typically get good feedback from dry swings.”

All that being said, Tornincasa notes that it’s his duty to help his team score runs.

“You’re not a swing coach, you’ve got to understand how to run an offense,” says Tornincasa. “That’s where I struggled a little (in the fall). (Archuleta) gave me the direction I needed. I feel pretty confident that I’m going to be able to do a good job what (the head coach) wants and that’s the goal of any good assistant, right?”

Something Tornincasa appreciates about Copeland and Archuleta — men he did not know prior to being hired by them — is that they both embrace practice.

“If you can make practice harder than the game the game should slow down and become easier for guys,” says Tornincasa. “If you can make practice more challenging they’re going to have more success in the game.”

Tornincasa says Southern Indiana tends to recruit players from a 250-mile radius of Evansville with attention to players closer to the Pocket City.

“The more you get to see them the more you’re reinforced with the decision to invest in them,” says Tornincasa. “You’ve got to find out the character of that kid. His values and character has to align with your head coach and program.”

Character does not often show up on video, especially it’s produced by the player. Flaws won’t be included.

“(Seeing players in-person) gives you a chance to see them fail and go against the right competition,” says Tornincasa. “In a video you don’t know if (the opposing pitcher) is throwing 92 mph or 72.

“You can learn a lot just by watching four at-bats. You can see how he is with teammates, how he is before the game and how he is with his parents after the game. Those things do matter.”

Southern Indiana is slated to open the 2024 baseball season Feb. 16 in Mobile, Ala., against the University of South Alabama.

Vinny Tornincasa. (University of Southern Indiana 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).