April 20, 2006
Complete Release in PDF Format
THE MATCHUP PITCHING MATCHUP Game-2, Saturday (1 p.m.) Game-3, Sunday (1 p.m.) LIVE GAME COVERAGE SERIES HISTORY 2005 Results: Wake Forest took two of three from Maryland in the regular season (4-5, 7-6, 11-5) in College Park before routing the Terrapins, 20-13, in the ACC Tournament. Series Notes: Wake Forest has won each of the last three meetings with the Terps and 13 of the past 17. The Demon Deacons have not dropped a series to Maryland since 2000. IN THE BATTERS BOX -- Wake Forest returns to the diamond this weekend with a three-game ACC series against Maryland. The Demon Deacons (28-13, 12-6 ACC) enter the series in third place in the Atlantic Division -- 1.0 game behind NC State and Florida State. Game times are 3:00 pm (Friday), 1:00 pm (Saturday) and 1:00 pm (Sunday). The entire series will be broadcast live on 98.1 WBRF and WakeForestSports.com. MARYLAND INSIDER -- The Terrapins, led by 6th-year head coach Terry Rupp, enter the series with a record of 17-23 overall and 6-15 in the ACC. Maryland sits in fifth place in the Atlantic Division. The Terps got swept by NC State last weekend in College Park, but rebounded with a non-conference victory over West Virginia on Wednesday. Maryland ranks 12th in the ACC in both team batting average (.260) and runs scored (184). The Terps are 10th in team ERA (5.31) and have struck out 230 against 103 walks (the 103 walks are the second fewest in the ACC). Dan Melvin leads the Terps in batting average (.343), runs (27), hits (49) and is tied for the team-high in home runs (3). Melvin is the only Maryland everyday player hitting over .300. Nick Jowers is batting .292 with three home runs and a team-high 18 RBI. The Terrapins' Friday and Saturday starter, Casey Baron and Ben Pfinsgraff, are a combined 3-8 with a 5.79 ERA in 98.0 innings of work. The duo has struck out 62 and walked 18. Maryland's defense has a league worst .956 fielding percentage, committing 69 errors in 40 games. INJURY UPDATE -- Freshman starting pitcher Garrett Bullock returned from his bout with pneumonia against Virginia Tech on April 2, but injured his left tricep in the outing and remains questionable this week... junior starting pitcher Charlie Mellies underwent Tommy John surgery on April 14 and will miss the season... sophomore pitcher Matt Hammond is out for the year after breaking his right hand... freshman Cory Hindel will redshirt the season following elbow surgery last fall. ON DECK -- After this weekend's ACC series with Maryland, Wake Forest travels to UNCG on Wednesday, April 26. First pitch with the Spartans is scheduled for 6 p.m. The Deacons will not play again until the weekend of May 5-7 against Florida State. RANKINGS -- Wake Forest climbed back into the Rosenblatt Report and Collegiate Baseball polls this week at No. 24 in both. The Deacons are still receiving votes in the ESPN/Sports Weekly and NCBWA polls. Following the loss to Davidson, Wake Forest slipped to 20th in the Warren Nolan and Boyd's World RPI. Maryland is unranked. DEACON TIDBITS -- THE DEACONS 1-2 PUNCH IN THE ACC RANKINGS --
Allan Dykstra Matt Antonelli
Slugging % .801, 1st .667, 4th
On-Base % .510, 1st --
Runs Scored -- 56, 1st
RBI 51, t-2nd --
Doubles 15, t-2nd 14, t-4th
Home Runs 14, 1st 11, t-3rd
Total Bases 109, 1st 106, t-2nd
Walks 41, 1st 33, 5th
Sacrifice Flies 8, 1st --
Stolen Bases -- 13, 8th
A NUMBER OF DEMON DEACONS PICK UP CAREER FIRSTS AGAINST UNCG -- Freshman Tyler Smith did not allow an earned run en route to his first career victory on April 12 against the Spartans. He also added a pair of singles and a sacrifice fly. He was the first Wake Forest pitcher to start and play both ways since Cory Sullivan on May 26, 2001. Sullivan, the starting center fielder for the Colorado Rockies, started on the mound against Middle Tennessee State. The one hit allowed was a season-low for the Demon Deacon pitching staff -- surpassing the three hits allowed in the 3-2 victory over Virginia on March 25. Ironically, it is the fewest hits by a Wake Forest opponent since Ben Clayton no-hit the Spartans on March 22, 2000. Sophomore Nathan Frazier registered his first hit, double and RBI all on the same swing with his two-run double. DYKSTRA NAMED NATIONAL PLAYER OF THE WEEK -- Freshman Allan Dykstra was named Collegiate Baseball National Player of the Week on April 3. The first baseman batted .786 (11-for-14) with five home runs and 11 RBI the previous week. He also added three doubles, eight runs scored and drew five walks. Dykstra recorded an absurd slugging percentage of 2.071 and on-base percentage of .850. Dykstra opened the week with a school-record tying three home runs against Davidson on March 28. DYKSTRA ENTERS THE RECORD BOOKS - Wake Forest freshman Allan Dykstra entered the Demon Deacon all-time record books on March 28 in a 14-6 rout of Davidson. Dykstra became the ninth player in WFU history to hit three homers in a game and finished with a career-high five RBI. The first baseman joined a prestigious list that includes the likes of Jamie D'Antona and Bill Merrifield -- both former ACC Player of the Year winners and All-Americans. D'Antona was the last player to hit three homers in a game on May 26, 2001 versus Tennessee Tech in the NCAA Regional. KINGS OF THE MOUND -- Wake Forest's pitching staff is vastly improved from each of the past two years. The Deacons might have the deepest and most talented staff in recent memory, including any staff of the three ACC Tournament Championship teams (1998, 1999, 2001). Wake Forest has posted a 4.09 ERA to this point of the season, well down from 6.21 in 2005 and 7.12 in 2004. In fact, the team ERA for the 1998, 1999 and 2001 clubs was 4.87 (2001), 4.82 (1999) and 4.26 (1998). The 4.09 ERA would be the lowest single-season ERA since 2000. HOW DO THE 2006 DEMON DEACONS COMPARE TO THE BEST TEAMS OF THE PAST -- At 28-13 overall and 12-6 in the ACC, Wake Forest is off to its best start since 2002. The key to the early success, without question, has been the Deacons pitching. Wake Forest enters this week sporting a 4.09 ERA -- better than the ERA from four of the five Wake Forest teams that reached the NCAA Regionals (1998-02). The team ERA for the 1998, 1999 and 2001 ACC Tournament championship clubs was 4.26 (1998), 4.82 (1999) and 4.87 (2001). The 2000 team posted a 4.03 ERA and the 2002 club had a 4.34 ERA. MAKING AN IMPACT -- The impact of a freshman class normally takes some time to discover, but SS Dustin Hood, 1B Allan Dykstra, OF Evan Ocheltree, OF/RHP Tyler Smith, LHP Garrett Bullock and RHP Brad Kledzik have yielded immediate results. Hood hits second in the lineup and is batting .331 with 19 RBI. Dykstra bats cleanup and leads ACC in home runs (14), slugging percentage (.801), on-base percentage (.510), totals bases (109), sacrifice flies (8) and walks (41). He also ranks tied for second in RBI (51) and doubles (15). Kledzik has not only moved into the ACC weekend rotation, but has served as the Friday night starter each of the past five ACC series. Kledzik is 2-2 with a 3.86 ERA in 35.0 innings in ACC action. He has struck out 23 and walked 12. Ocheltree has exploded the past three weeks. The outfielder is hitting .384 (.28-for-73) with six home runs and 21 RBI in the last 20 games. He was named ACC Player of the Week on April 17 after homering in four straight games. Smith is 1-2 with a 3.45 ERA in 31.1 innings, including 6.0 no-hit innings against UNCG on April 12. He is also batting .310 with a couple RBI. Bullock, who has missed over a month with pneumonia, is 1-0 with a save and a 6.10 ERA. Bullock picked up the victory against Ohio State and struck out seven Buckeyes in the outing. MR. DURABLE -- Junior All-American Matt Antonelli takes the term "everyday player" to another level. Antonelli has started all 149 games in his entire Demon Deacon career. He started 145 consecutive games at the hot corner before starting each of the past four games at second base. TRIO OF GOOSE EGGS -- The Deacons blanked High Point, 7-0, on March 22 for their third shutout of 2006. Wake Forest did not register a single shutout in 2004 or 2005. In fact, the Deacons have not had three shutouts in a single season since 2000. ANTONELLI AND YOUNG MOVING UP ALL-TIME CHARTS -- Junior Matt Antonelli walked a school-record 57 times in 2005 and has recorded 33 already this season. The third baseman has drawn 122 walks over his career, eclipsing Jamie D'Antona's school record of 113. Senior pitcher Kyle Young led Wake Forest with 33 appearances in 2005 and has pitched in 21 more games in 2006. Young has appeared in 79 games over his career which ranks sixth all-time. Young has a decent chance to climb as high as second on the chart (Frank Humber, 86), but Dave Bush's ACC record of 142 games is not in danger. The 142 appearances for Bush is the second most in NCAA history. DEACONS AT THEIR BEST AGAINST THE BEST -- With Wake Forest's 11-8 victory over No. 12 NC State on April 8, the Deacons picked up their fifth against a team in the top 25 this season. Wake Forest had also defeated two top five and three top 10 teams in the same season for the first time since 2002. INSIDE THE 11-GAME WINNING STREAK -- ENICK NATIONAL PLAYER OF THE WEEK -- Collegiate Baseball named Wake Forest redshirt junior Brendan Enick their National Player of the Week on March 6. Enick finished the previous week with a .786 (11-for-14) batting average, two home runs and 12 RBI in just three games. He led Wake Forest for the week in batting average (.786), slugging percentage (1.429), on-base percentage (.765), hits (11), RBI (12) and doubles (3). ACC PITCHER OF THE WEEK -- Wake Forest junior Charlie Mellies was named ACC Pitcher of the Week on February 27. The junior tossed a five-hit, complete game shutout of No. 1 Florida. Mellies is the first Demon Deacon to receive ACC Pitcher of the Week since Kyle Sleeth earned the award on March 24, 2003. He was also the first Deacon to toss a complete-game shutout since Sleeth. DEACONS RECOGNIZED -- After sweeping through the 2006 Pepsi Baseball Classic, including a 4-0 shutout of top-ranked Florida, Wake Forest was named Team of the Week by Rosenblatt Report.com and CollegeBaseballInsider.com. RECAP FROM THE PEPSI BASEBALL CLASSIC -- HOME OPENERS -- Wake Forest slipped past Charlotte, 4-3, in 10 innings on February 21. The Demon Deacons have won their home opener 19 of the past 20 years. OPENING WEEKENDS -- Wake Forest has now dropped three consecutive season openers. The Deacons lost to Rice to open 2004, Winthrop in 2005 and now Charlotte. Dating back to the 1958 season (the last 50 years), Wake Forest is 30-20 on opening day. The Demon Deacons are 0-2 under Rick Rembielak on opening day and Rembielak is 6-7 all-time in his career. AFTER FURTHER REVIEW -- Wake Forest freshman Dustin Hood had quite a debut for the Demon Deacons against Charlotte. The shortstop had seven hits in the twin bill, including five in the nightcap. Hood, who went 5-for-5 with an RBI double and two runs scored, became the first Deacon rookie to record five hits in a single game since Bill Merrifield went 5-for-8 against Georgia Tech on April 4, 1981. YOUTH SERVING THE DEACONS WELL -- Wake Forest started three true freshman in its season opener against Charlotte on February 12 -- first basemen Allan Dykstra, left fielder Evan Ocheltree and shortstop Dustin Hood. The Deacons also used a pair of rookies out of the bullpen as well in southpaw Garrett Bullock and right-hander Brad Kledzik. IN THE BOOKS -- Wake Forest had a number of players that recorded firsts in the season-opening doubleheader against Charlotte. In addition to the Demon Deacon debuts of five true freshman and two transfers (So., Ben Hunter, So., Austin Jones and R-So., Eric Williams), Allan Dykstra, Dustin Hood, Jones and Williams each picked up their first career hits. Dykstra, Hood and Williams also had RBI. Hunter, who made 13 starts last season for Furman, registered his first career save, while junior Brian Shust smacked his first career home run. NATIONAL FLAVOR -- As is usually the case, the Demon Deacon baseball roster is made up from players across the United States. This year, however, it's even more apparent as 30 of the 32 players on the roster are from outside the state of North Carolina. In fact, 15 different states, including North Carolina, are represented. The only North Carolinians on the team are pitchers Kip Byrum (Sr., Greenville, N.C.) and Garrett Bullock (Fr., Greenville, N.C.) -- both of whom attended J.H. Rose HS. ANTONELLI PRESEASON ALL-AMERICAN -- Wake Forest junior third basemen Matt Antonelli was named second team Preseason All-American by Baseball America. Antonelli, who has already been named to the Wallace Award Watch List, is the first Demon Deacon to garner Preseason All-American status since 2003. A native of Peabody, Mass., Antonelli led Wake Forest in batting average (.332), walks (57), on-base percentage (.475) and runs scored (68) in 2005. The 57 walks set a new single-season school record surpassing the previous mark of 55 held by Billy Masse (1988). Antonelli also tied Dave Lardieri for 10th all-time in single-season school history for runs scored. He was second on the squad in hits (77) and doubles (22). ANTONELLI, DYKSTRA NAMED TO FAB 50 -- Wake Forest junior Matt Antonelli was named to Baseball America's Fab 50: Juniors. Antonelli, a third basemen, was listed as the No. 27 junior prospect in the country. Allan Dykstra was named to the same list for freshman. Dykstra was rated as the No. 41 freshman in the country.
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