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Baseball team travels to S.C. for tourney

By Aaron Suttles Sports Writer
Published: Tuesday, May 27, 2008 at 6:01 a.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, May 27, 2008 at 12:46 a.m.

TUSCALOOSA | Before the season began, the University of Alabama baseball team was picked to finish last in the Southeastern Conference Western Division by a poll of SEC coaches. Through the first two months of the season the Crimson Tide (20-18 on April 19) played like a last-place team.

SEC Baseball Tournament Alabama Georgia
SEC Baseball Tournament Alabama Georgia
Tuscaloosa News | Jason Harliss
Alabama's Josh Rutledge slides safely into second base avoiding the tag of Georgia shortstop Gordon Beckham after doubling to right field during the third inning of SEC Baseball Tournament action last week at Regions Park in Hoover.

However, after establishing an identity as a potent offensive club and winning five consecutive SEC series to close the regular season, Alabama (34-26) was rewarded Monday with an at-large bid into the NCAA Tournament.

Alabama will play as the No. 3 seed in the Conway Regional hosted by Coastal Carolina in Conway, S.C., against second-seeded East Carolina (40-19) on Friday at 6 p.m. Host Coastal Carolina (47-12) will face No. 4 seed Columbia (22-28), who won the Ivy League title, at noon.

The double-elimination event concludes Sunday with the champion advancing to a super regional.

Many projected the Tide to be placed in the Tallahassee Regional where it would have had to beat No. 3 ranked (USA Today/ESPN) Florida State to advance to the super regionals. To the Alabama players, it didn’t matter where they were sent.

“The projections had us in Tallahassee, but in my experience, this is my third regional, the projections are always wrong,” senior first baseman Matt Bentley said. “We’ve never went to the place they’ve projected us so you know we just sat here waiting for our name to be called. When it was called we were happy no matter where it was.”

Alabama, which won seven of 10 SEC series, is making its 11th NCAA appearance in the last 14 years.

The Crimson Tide went 16-14 in league play and finished second in the Western Division behind LSU. Alabama went 2-2 in the SEC Tournament at Hoover, posting wins over Kentucky and Georgia and losing to Kentucky and eventual champion LSU.

Crimson Tide coach Jim Wells said the team is confident heading into postseason play.

“We’ve been playing well offensively, been playing better defensively,” Wells said. “We need to get our pitching in order. I think we can do that. Pretty much do what we did for that last five weeks.”

Austin Hyatt (4-4, 4.64 ERA) is penciled in as the probable starter for Friday. In his last outing he held the regular season SEC Champion Georgia Bulldogs to four hits and pitched a complete game in the Tide’s 5-2 win. He retired 20 consecutive batters during one stretch.

Alabama hopes to get junior left-hander Miers Quigley back for this weekend to help bolster a struggling pitching staff. He last pitched in the opening game of the Georgia series in Athens, Ga., missing the SEC Tournament with a back injury.

Wells said Del Howell’s pitching performance in the Tide’s 13-4 against Kentucky in the SEC Tournament gives him more confidence to use the sophomore left-hander in the regional.

“I certainly, even if Quigley is healthy, feel alright bringing him in now,” Wells said. “He’s not a complete game guy. But he does throw hard. He is left handed. Maybe we play a team that is left-handed dominant. He basically threw fast balls right down the middle and a breaking ball down the middle to Kentucky, which is a really good club. They had a hard time catching up to him.”

Regardless of who pitches for the Tide, Alabama players remain steadfast in the momentum the team has created the second half of the season.

“Our team, we’re not afraid of challenges,” junior catcher Alex Avila said. “We’ve been challenged all season. We’ve battled back from pretty much being one of the worst teams in the SEC to being pretty good the last half of the season. The team has taken on a relentless approach every time we play.”

Tickets prices will be $70 for an all-tournament pass in the reserved section; $65 for an all-tournament pass in the Bronze general admission area (left-field line); and $60 for an all-tournament pass in the White section (right-field line). Single-game tickets are $15 in reserved and $10 in general admission.

Sales to the public begin today at 7 a.m. Tickets can be purchased by calling the Coastal Carolina Ticket office at 1-877-424-2687 or 843-3478499.

Reach Aaron Suttles at aaron.suttles@tuscaloosanews.com or at 205-722-0229.


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