2016 PAC-12 BASEBALL STANDINGS UPCOMING SCHEDULE

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For Immediate Release \\ Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2016 Contact \\ Sean Collins ([email protected])

2016 PAC-12 BASEBALL STANDINGS Arizona Arizona State California Oregon Oregon State Stanford UCLA USC Utah Washington Washington State

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UPCOMING SCHEDULE Friday, February 19 Oregon State vs. Ball State................................12 p.m. MT Surprise Tournament, Surprise, Ariz. Texas State at Washington State...........................4 p.m. PT California at Duke................................................5 p.m. ET Utah vs. Minnesota.............................................5 p.m. MT Surprise Tournament, Surprise, Ariz. North Dakota at USC...........................................6 p.m. PT Oregon at San Diego State...................................6 p.m. PT Cal State Fullerton at Stanford..............................6 p.m. PT North Carolina at UCLA.......................................6 p.m. PT Arizona at Rice....................................................6 p.m. CT Washington at Baylor..................................... 6:30 p.m. CT Xavier at Arizona State...................................6:30 p.m. MT

Sunday, February 21 Utah vs. Minnesota.............................................9 a.m. MT Surprise Tournament, Surprise, Ariz. Washington at Baylor.........................................11 a.m. CT Texas State at Washington State.........................11 a.m. PT Oregon State vs. Minnesota..............................12 p.m. MT Surprise Tournament, Surprise, Ariz. Xavier at Arizona State......................................12 p.m. MT North Dakota at USC...........................................1 p.m. PT Oregon at San Diego State...................................1 p.m. PT Cal State Fullerton at Stanford..............................1 p.m. PT North Carolina at UCLA.......................................1 p.m. PT Arizona at Rice....................................................1 p.m. CT California at Duke................................................1 p.m. ET

Saturday, February 20 Washington at Baylor...........................................1 p.m. CT California at Duke................................................1 p.m. ET Oregon State vs. Utah Valley...............................1 p.m. MT Surprise Tournament, Surprise, Ariz. Xavier at Arizona State........................................1 p.m. MT Texas State at Washington State...........................1 p.m. PT Oregon at San Diego State...................................1 p.m. PT North Dakota at USC...........................................2 p.m. PT Cal State Fullerton at Stanford..............................2 p.m. PT North Carolina at UCLA.......................................2 p.m. PT Arizona at Rice....................................................3 p.m. CT Utah vs. Ball State..............................................6 p.m. MT Surprise Tournament, Surprise, Ariz.

Monday, February 22 Oregon State vs. Utah.......................................12 p.m. MT Surprise Tournament, Surprise, Ariz. Texas State at Washington State...........................3 p.m. PT Arizona at Lamar.................................................6 p.m. CT Tuesday, February 23 California at San Francisco..................................2 p.m. PT Long Beach State at UCLA...................................6 p.m. PT USC at Loyola Marymount...................................6 p.m. PT Nevada at Arizona State.................................6:30 p.m. MT

PAC-12 CENTENNIAL CELEBARTION The Pac-12 Conference is celebrating 100 years of excellence. The yearlong celebration of the Conference centennial, including marking the date of the official formation 100 years ago on December 2, kicked off with the start of the football season and continues throughout the 201516 academic year. The Conference’s storied history dates back 100 years to Dec. 2, 1915 when four schools - the University of California, Oregon Agricultural College (now Oregon State University), the University of Oregon and the University of Washington - gathered at the historic Imperial Hotel in Portland, Ore., to form the Pacific Coast Conference. Since that day, the Conference has been known for its widespread excellence – on the field, in the classroom, and with the contributions its graduates make in the world. No other Conference can match the collective achievements and distinctions accomplished over the last century. The Conference has been home to some of sports’ legendary athletes and coaches. Dubbed the “Conference of Champions,” Pac-12 schools have won 480 NCAA titles, by far more than any other conference, as well as over 2,000 individual national championships. The Pac-12 Network will commemorate the Centennial with special programming that will recognize the  greatest athletes in the storied history of the Conference on linear and digital platforms throughout the year.

#100Pac12

RANKINGS

PAC-12 NOTES

USA Today/ESPN Top 25 Coaches Preseason Poll (Jan. 28) 1. Florida 2. Louisville 3. Vanderbilt 4. Texas A&M 5. LSU 6. Miami (Fla.) 7. Virginia 8. OREGON STATE 9. UCLA 10. Oklahoma State 11. TCU 12. CALIFORNIA 13. Louisiana-Lafayette 14. Florida State 15. OREGON 16. Cal State Fullerton 17. Mississippi State 18. Houston 19. North Carolona State T20. USC T20. North Carolina 22. Arkansas 23. South Carolina 24. Rice 25. Missouri State

IN THE RANKINGS: With the season beginning on Friday, the USA Today/ESPN Top 25 Coaches Preseason Poll has five Pac-12 teams ranked. Oregon State leads the way at No. 8, followed by UCLA at No. 9, California at the No. 12 spot, Oregon is No. 15 and USC is tied for No. 20.

NCBWA Preseason Top 30 (Feb. 1) 1. Florida 2. Louisville 3. Vanderbilt 4. Texas A&M 5. OREGON STATE 6. Miami (Fla.) 7. LSU 8. Virginia 9. UCLA 10. CALIFORNIA 11. Oklahoma State 12. TCU 13. Louisiana-Lafayette 14. FLORIDA STATE 15. Houston 16. Cal State Fullerton 17. OREGON 18. USC 19. Mississsippi State 20. North Carolina State 21. North Carolina 22. Arkansas 23. Coastal Carolina 24. South Carolina 25. Michigan 26. Rice 27. Maryland 28. Missouri State 29. Texas 30. Oklahoma

2016 PAC-12 VS.:

American............................................. 0-0 Atlantic Coast....................................... 0-0 Big Sky................................................ 0-0 Big Ten................................................ 0-0 Big 12.................................................. 0-0 Conference USA.................................. 0-0 Mid-American...................................... 0-0 Mountain West..................................... 0-0 Southeastern........................................ 0-0 Southland............................................ 0-0 Southwestern....................................... 0-0 Sun Belt............................................... 0-0 Independent........................................ 0-0 Total-All.....................................0-0 (.000)

STAR POWER: The Pac-12 had 10 different student-athletes from nine schools garner preseason All-America honors. Oregon and Stanford each two different players honored to lead the way while the rest of the teams just had one honoree. GOLDEN SPIKES: The USA Baseball Golden Spikes Award Preseason Watch List features 50 amateurs, six of which are student-athletes from six different Pac-12 teams. With six, the Pac-12 has the third-most representatives among all conferences. Now in its 39th year recognizing the top amateur baseball player in the country, seven former Pac-12 baseball players have won the award, most recently pitcher Trevor Bauer of UCLA in 2011. STOPPER OF THE YEAR: The Pac-12 has eight student-athletes on the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Preseason Watch List, tied for the second-most among all conferences. Washington is the only lone Pac-12 team with more than one student-athlete on the list. The National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association will be presenting the Stopper of the Year Award to the top relief pitcher in Division I baseball for the 12th straight year in 2016. UCLA’s David Berg won the honor two of the last three years. DRAFT: The league is coming off a 2015 season that saw six teams earn berths to the NCAA Tournament and saw 53 players selected in the Major League Baseball Draft. Arizona State led the way with nine draftees while UCLA and USC each had 8. Twenty-four players were selected in the first 10 rounds and 29 were selected on the final day. Since 1997, the Pac-12 has had at least one player drafted in the first round each season. During that time, the league has garnered 62 first-round picks. NEW FACES IN THE DUGOUT: On June 8, 2015, Jay Johnson was named head coach at Arizona. In his second and final year at Nevada, Johnson was named the 2015 Mountain West Coach of the Year. He led the team to its first-ever Mountain West Conference championship. They tallied 41 wins on the year, secondmost in program history. Johnson replaced Andy Lopez, who retired at the end of the 2015 season after 14 years at the helm. The three-time National Coach of the Year led the Wildcats to two College World Series Appearances and won the title in 2012. Washington State’s Marty Lees became the 15th head coach in program history. Lees spent the last three seasons as the assistant coach/recruiting coordinator at Oklahoma State and the previous 11 at Oregon State. Lees thrived as Oklahoma State’s recruiting coordinator. The Cowboys’ first class with Lees on board was ranked No. 4 nationally by Baseball America and No. 5 by Collegiate Baseball, and followed that with a 2014 class that was ranked No. 5 by Collegiate Baseball for the second-consecutive year.

NATIONAL HONORS Baseball America Preseason All-Americans First Team KJ Harrison, OSU, 1B Bobby Dalbec, ARIZ, 3B/RHP Second Team Daulton Jefferies, CAL, RHP Third Team Tommy Edman, STAN, 2B Colby Woodmansee, ASU, SS Cal Quantrill, STAN, RHP NCBWA Preseason All-Americans First Team Bobby Dalbec, ARIZ, 3B/SP Second Team KJ Harrison, OSU, 1B Stephen Nogosek, ORE, RP Third Team Daulton Jefferies, CAL, SP Griffin Canning, UCLA, SP Matt Krook, ORE, SP

Louisville Slugger Preseason All-Americans Second Team Daulton Jefferies, CAL, RHP Ian Hamilton, WSU, RHP KJ Harrison, OSU, 1B Bobby Dalbec, ARIZ, 3B Colby Woodmansee, ASU, SS Third Team Matt Krook, ORE, LHP Cal Quantrill, STAN, RHP NCBWA Stopper of the Year Watch List Tucker Forbes, UCLA Ian Hamilton, WSU Mitch Hickey, OSU Marc Huberman, USC Spencer Jones, WASH Erik Martinez, CAL Stephen Nogosek, ORE Troy Rallings, WASH USA Baseball Golden Spikes Watch List Bobby Dalbec, ARIZ KJ Harrison, OSU Daulton Jefferies, CAL Matt Krook, ORE Cal Quantrill, STAN Colby Woodmansee, ASU

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RANKINGS Baseball America Preseason Top 25 (Jan. 25) 1. Florida 2. Louisville 3. Texas A&M 4. Virginia 5. OREGON STATE 6. Miami (Fla.) 7. Vanderbilt 8. CALIFORNIA 9. Oklahoma State 10. UCLA 11. LSU 12. Houston 13. Louisiana-Lafayette 14. OREGON 15. Michigan 16. USC 17. Florida State 18. TCU 19. North Carolona State 20. Mississippi State 21. Oklahoma 22. Cal State Fullerton 23. Coastal Carolina 24. Mississippi 25. Kentucky Collegiate Baseball Preseason Top 40 (Dec. 21) 1. Florida 2. Louisville 3. Vanderbilt 4. Miami (Fla.) 5. Texas A&M 6. Louisiana-Lafayette 7. LSU 8. OREGON STATE 9. Virginia 10. UCLA 11. Mississippi State 12. Cal State Fullerton 13. CALIFORNIA 14. OREGON 15. TCU 16. Florida State 17. Missouri State 18. Houston 19. Tulane 20. Rice 21. Georgia Tech 22. North Carolina 23. Michigan 24. Arkansas 25. Oklahoma State 26. Stony Brook 27. Notre Dame 28. Maryland 29. Kentucky 30. Pepperdine 31. Dallas Baptist 32. College of Charleston 33. Coastal Carolina 34. Missouri 35. South Carolina 36. San Diego State 37. South Alabama 38. Winthrop 39. Texas Tech 40. Texas

AROUND THE PAC-12 • Arizona (31-24, 12-18) finished eighth in the Conference last season, but brings back third baseman/pitcher Bobby Dalbec, a Baseball America second-team All-American and the Pac-12 home run leader in 2015. Andy Lopez, the UA head coach for the last 14 years, retired after the 2015 seasonand he was replaced by Jay Johnson. Johnson was named the 2015 Mountain West Coach of the Year while leading the Nevada Wolf Pack. • Arizona State’s (35-23, 18-12) core is its infield, returning three starters and two other veterans, including preseason All-American Colby Woodmansee, and 2015 first team All-Pac-12 and Johnny Bench semifinalist Brian Serven. The team lost four pitchers that combined for 270 appearances, 109 starts, 834 innings pitched, 62 wins, and 40 saves since 2012. • California (36-21, 18-12) finished fourth in the Conference last season and earned a trip to the NCAA Regionals for the first time since 2011. The Golden Bears return all three weekend starters: junior RHP Daulton Jefferies (preseason All-American from multiple publications), senior RHP Ryan Mason and sophomore LHP Matt Ladrech, a Louisville Slugger Freshman AllAmerican. • Oregon (38-25, 16-14) took sixth place in the Pac-12 last year and competed in the NCAA Regional for the fifth time in the last six years. Head coach George Horton needs just 23 wins to reach 1,000 career wins and 39 wins for 300 at Oregon. Former first round supplemental draft pick Matt Krook and junior Cole Irvin, a 2014 Preseason All-American, return to Oregon’s weekend rotation after dealing with previous injuries. • Oregon State (39-18-1, 19-10-1) could not win its third-straight Pac-12 title in 2015 but did earn a runner-up finish. The Beavers competed at the NCAA Regional and welcomes back from that team the Pac-12 Freshman of the Year catcher K.J. Harrison and fellow first-team AllConference honoree starting pitcher Drew Rasmussen. • Stanford (24-32, 9-21) finished in 10th place in the league last year but it returns nearly 80 percent of its starting lineup and rotation. Cal Quantrill, a preseason All-American, is back for 2016 after suffering an injury last season. Mark Marquess’ 40th season as Stanford head coach will be a challenging one as more than half of Stanford’s home games are against NCAA Tournament teams from last year (18-of-30 games), including national runner-up Vanderbilt. • 2015 Pac-12 Champion UCLA (45-16, 22-8) looks to win back-to-back league titles for the first time since 2011 and 2012. UCLA returns nine contributors from a school-record 2.17 staff ERA last season. Those contributors include Griffin Canning, a Baseball America Second-team All-American and now starting pitcher Grant Dyer, who was a first-team All-Pac-12 honoree in 2015 in the set-up role. • USC (39-21, 18-12) took third place in the Pac-12 last year and returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 10 seasons, advancing to the Lake Elsinore Regional Final. The Trojans return their top RBI man from last season, senior OF Timmy Robinson, who tallied 53. USC also returns two-thirds of their weekend rotation, including senior ace Kyle Davis. • Utah (16-36-1, 7-22-1) is a squad that returns the primary starter at every field position from the 2015 squad. On the mound, the Utes return nearly 77 percent of last year’s innings pitched, led by three-year starter Dalton Carroll and 2015 honorable mention All-Pac-12 honoree Jayson Rose. • Washington (29-25, 14-6) took seventh in the Pac-12 in 2015 and welcomes in a group of 17 newcomers that are ranked 15th nationally by Baseball America. Senior pitcher Troy Rallings ranks fifth all-time in UW history with 15 saves and eighth with 66 appearances. • Washington State (29-27, 11-19) finished ninth in the Pac-12 last year. It starts a new era under Marty Lees, the 15th head coach in program history. Two-time All-Pac-12 RHP Ian Hamilton returns for his junior season as a Collegiate Baseball preseason All-American. The Cougars also welcome back the left side of their infield in Jack Strunc at SS and Shane Matheny at 3B, both of whom have made over 53 starts, respectively.

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PAC-12 DIRECTORY Pac-12 Conference (415-580-4200) Sean [email protected] Twitter: @Pac12 Facebook: Pac-12 Arizona (520-621-4163) Adam Gonzales.......... [email protected] Daniel Berk............................. [email protected] Twitter: @ArizonaBaseball Facebook: Arizona Baseball Arizona State (480-965-6592) Thomas Lenneberg.... [email protected] Twitter: @ASU_Baseball Facebook: Sun Devil Baseball California (510-642-5363) Jordan Stepp........................ [email protected] Twitter: @Cal_Baseball Facebook: Cal Baseball Oregon (541-346-5488) Todd Miles............................. [email protected] Twitter: @OregonBaseball Facebook: Oregon Ducks Baseball Oregon State (541-737-3720) Hank Hager............. [email protected] Twitter: @Beaver_Baseball Facebook: Oregon State Baseball Stanford (650-723-4418) Eric Dolan............................ [email protected] Twitter: @StanfordBSB Facebook: Stanford Baseball UCLA (310-206-6831) Evan [email protected] Twitter: @UCLABaseball Facebook: UCLA Baseball USC (213-740-8480) Rachel [email protected] Twitter: @USC_baseball Facebook: USC Trojans- Official Page

PAC-12 COACHES PICK OREGON STATE 2016 FAVORITE SAN FRANCISCO - In a polling of the Pac-12 baseball coaches, OREGON STATE has been selected as the preseason favorite to win the Conference title this season. The Beavers received nine of 10 possible first-place votes and tallied 98 total points. UCLA, the defending Pac-12 Champions, were picked to finish second overall with 89 points and received one first place vote. CALIFORNIA also received one firstplace voted and tallied 84 points in third place. OREGON was picked to finish in fourth place with 71 points. USC totaled 67 points to round out the top five.

2016 Pac-12 Coaches Poll 1. Oregon State (9) 98 2. UCLA (1) 89 3. California (1) 84 4. Oregon 71 5. USC 67 6. Arizona State 50 7. Stanford 49 8. Washington 34 9. Arizona 31 10. Washington State 17 11. Utah 15

ARIZONA STATE finished sixth in the polling, picking up 50 points and right behind them was STANFORD with 49 points in seventh. WASHINGTON took the eighth spot with 34 points and ARIZONA tallied 31 points in ninth place. WASHINGTON STATE was tabbed to finish in 10th place with 17 points while UTAH totaled 15 points in 11th.

PAC-12 MEDIA CENTER Media can obtain weekly press releases, updated statistics, and more at http://pac-12. com/content/media-center. Those media members who would like to receive the weekly Pac-12 baseball release and other pertinent Pac-12 information via e-mail, please provide your e-mail address to Sean Collins ([email protected]) and I will include it on our weekly distribution list. You can follow the Pac-12 throughout the year on Twitter (@Pac12) and Facebook (Pac12)

Utah (801-581-3511) Brooke Frederickson.... [email protected] Twitter: @UtahBaseball Facebook: Utah Baseball

Washington (206-543-2230) Brian Tom................................. [email protected] Twitter: @UW_Baseball Facebook: Washington Husky Baseball

Washington State (509-335-2684) Bobby [email protected] Twitter: @CougBaseball Facebook: Washington State University Baseball

PAC-12 NETWORK: The Pac-12 Networks’ fourth season of

live baseball telecasts kicks off on March 5 with Stanford hosting Vanderbilt. The Networks will televise 101 games in 2016. An additional two games will air live on ESPNU.

SPORTS REPORT: Every Monday night, Sports Report, with hosts Mike Yam and Ashley Adamson, will recap the week of Pac-12 sports.

PAC-12 BASEBALL LEGACY NCAA Championships Arizona 1976, 1980, 1986, 2012 Arizona State 1965, 1967, 1969, 1977, 1981 California 1947, 1957 Oregon State 2006, 2007 Stanford 1987, 1988 UCLA 2013 USC 1948, 1958, 1961, 1963, 1968, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1979, 1998

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PAC-12 BASEBALL TELEVISION SCHEDULE The Pac-12 Networks’ fourth season of live baseball telecasts kicks off on March 5 with Stanford hosting Vanderbilt. The Networks will televise 101 games in 2016. An additional two games will air live on ESPNU. All games listed in Pacific Time.

PAC-12 NETWORKS SCHEDULE Sat., March 5...........Vanderbilt at Stanford............................1 p.m. Sun., March 6..........Vanderbilt at Stanford............................1 p.m. Sun., March 6..........USC vs. UCLA (Dodger Stadium)............3 p.m. Tue., March 15........Meiji Univ. (Tokyo) at Arizona State........... 6:30 p.m. Thu., March 17........California at USC....................................7 p.m. Fri., March 18..........Washington State at UCLA.....................4 p.m. Fri., March 18..........Utah at Oregon......................................7 p.m. Fri., March 18..........California at USC....................................7 p.m. Sun., March 20........Washington State at UCLA...................12 p.m. Sun., March 20........Utah at Oregon....................................12 p.m. Mon., March 21.......Cal State Fullerton at USC......................6 p.m. Thu., March 24........Oregon at Washington............................7 p.m. Fri., March 25..........Oregon at Washington............................7 p.m. Sat., March 26.........Oregon at Washington............................3 p.m. Mon., March 28.......Gonzaga at Washington..........................5 p.m. Tue., March 29........Cal State Fullerton at UCLA....................6 p.m. Tue., March 29........San Francisco at California.....................7 p.m. Thu., March 31........Arizona State at Washington State..........7 p.m. Fri., April 1...............Washington at Oregon State...................3 p.m. Fri., April 1...............USC at Stanford.....................................7 p.m. Fri., April 1...............Arizona State at Washington State..........7 p.m. Sat., April 2..............USC at Stanford.....................................1 p.m. Sat., April 2..............Arizona State at Washington State..........1 p.m. Sat., April 2..............Washington at Oregon State...................4 p.m. Sun., April 3.............Washington at Oregon State...................4 p.m. Sun., April 3.............USC at Stanford.....................................4 p.m. Tue., April 5.............Stanford at California..............................7 p.m. Thu., April 7.............Stanford at UCLA...................................7 p.m. Fri., April 8...............Washington at Arizona State..............3:30 p.m. Fri., April 8...............Stanford at UCLA...................................7 p.m. Sat., April 9..............Washington at Arizona State..............3:30 p.m. Sat., April 9..............Stanford at UCLA..............................4:30 p.m. Sun., April 10...........Washington at Arizona State.................12 p.m. Tue., April 12...........Arizona at Arizona State.........................7 p.m. Thu., April 14...........Oregon State at Washington State...........7 p.m. Fri., April 15.............Oregon State at Washington State...........4 p.m. Fri., April 15.............UC Riverside at Utah.............................6 p.m. Fri., April 15.............UCLA at Washington..............................7 p.m. Fri., April 15.............California at Arizona State......................7 p.m. Sat., April 16............California at Arizona State....................12 p.m. Sat., April 16............UCLA at Washington..............................1 p.m. Sat., April 16............UC Riverside at Utah.............................6 p.m. Sat., April 16............Stanford at Arizona................................7 p.m. Sun., April 17...........Stanford at Arizona................................1 p.m. Sun., April 17...........UC Riverside at Utah.............................1 p.m. Mon., April 18..........Oregon State at Oregon..........................6 p.m. Tue., April 19...........Utah Valley at Utah................................5 p.m. Tue., April 19...........Stanford at California..............................7 p.m. Thu., April 21...........Oregon at UCLA.....................................7 p.m. Fri., April 22.............Oregon at UCLA.....................................7 p.m. Sat., April 23............Oregon at UCLA.....................................1 p.m.

Tue., April 26...........Seattle at Washington.............................5 p.m. Tue., April 26...........Arizona at Arizona State.........................7 p.m. Wed., April 27..........Oregon State at Oregon..........................7 p.m. Thu., April 28...........Arizona at USC......................................7 p.m. Fri., April 29.............Arizona at USC......................................7 p.m. Sat., April 30............Arizona at USC......................................2 p.m. Thu., May 5.............California at Stanford..............................7 p.m. Fri., May 6...............Oregon State at Arizona..........................7 p.m. Fri., May 6...............California at Stanford..............................7 p.m. Sat., May 7..............Oregon State at Arizona..........................7 p.m. Sat., May 7..............Utah at Washington State.......................7 p.m. Sat., May 7..............California at Stanford..............................7 p.m. Sun., May 8.............Oregon State at Arizona........................12 p.m. Sun., May 8.............Utah at Washington State.......................4 p.m. Mon., May 9............Utah at Washington Staet.......................7 p.m. Fri., May 13.............Washington State at Washington............7 p.m. Fri., May 13.............USC at UCLA.........................................7 p.m. Sat., May 14............Washington State at Washington............4 p.m. Sat., May 14............USC at UCLA.........................................7 p.m. Sat., May 14............Arizona State at Arizona.........................7 p.m. Sun., May 15...........Washington State at Washington..........12 p.m. Sun., May 15...........Arizona State at Arizona.........................3 p.m. Sun., May 15...........Oregon at Oregon State..........................3 p.m. Sun., May 15...........USC at UCLA.........................................6 p.m. Tue., May 17............BYU at Utah..........................................6 p.m. Fri., May 20.............Arizona at Oregon..................................4 p.m. Fri., May 20.............Oregon State at USC..............................7 p.m. Sat., May 21............Oregon State at USC..............................1 p.m. Sat., May 21............Arizona at Oregon..................................4 p.m. Sat., May 21............Utah at California...................................7 p.m. Sat., May 21............Arizona State at UCLA............................7 p.m. Sun., May 22...........Arizona at Oregon................................12 p.m. Sun., May 22...........Oregon State at USC............................12 p.m. Sun., May 22...........Arizona State at UCLA............................3 p.m. Sun., May 22...........Utah at California...................................6 p.m. Mon., May 23..........Utah at California...................................7 p.m. Thu., May 26...........Oregon at Stanford.................................7 p.m. Fri., May 27.............Washington at Utah............................. 11 a.m. Fri., May 27.............California at Washington State................4 p.m. Fri., May 27.............UCLA at Oregon State............................4 p.m. Fri., May 27.............Oregon at Stanford.................................7 p.m. Fri., May 27.............USC at Arizona State..............................7 p.m. Sat., May 28............Washington at Utah............................. 11 a.m. Sat., May 28............Oregon at Stanford.................................1 p.m. Sat., May 28............California at Washington State................4 p.m. Sat., May 28............UCLA at Oregon State............................4 p.m. Sat., May 28............USC at Arizona State..............................7 p.m. Sun., May 29...........UCLA at Oregon State.......................... 11 a.m. Sun., May 29...........Washington at Utah............................. 11 a.m. Sun., May 29...........USC at Arizona State..............................2 p.m. Sun., May 29...........California at Washington State................2 p.m.

ESPN SCHEDULE Fri., May 13.............Oregon at Oregon State......... 7:30 p.m. (ESPNU) Sat., May 14............Oregon at Oregon State........... 7 p.m. (ESPNU)

PAC-12 BASEBALL WEEKLY RELEASE // February 17, 2016

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