pacific-10 conference

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The Players

PACIFIC-10 CONFERENCE

Pac-10 opponents hit just .179 against Kraig Sitton in 2008

2006 • National Champions • 2007

2009 Oregon State Baseball

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The Pac-10 Pacific-10 Conference Thomas Hansen Commissioner

Gina Verlengiere Baseball Contact

Pac-10 Media Relations Associate Commissioner........... Jim Muldoon Assistant Commissioner.............David Hirsch Assistant Commissioner.......Natalia Ciccone Intern....................................... Maggie Emmons Baseball Contact................. Gina Verlengiere Office...................................... (925) 932-4411 [email protected] Pac-10 Address..........1350 Treat Boulevard Walnut Creek, CA 94597 Pac-10 Web site.................. www.pac-10.org

Pac-10 Commissioners Commissioner: Thomas C. Hansen Associate Commissioner, Administration and Women’s Basketball Administration: Christine Hoyles Associate Commissioner, Communications and Football Administration: Jim Muldoon Associate Commissioner, Electronic Communications: Duane Lindberg Associate Commissioner, Compliance: Mike Matthews Associate Commissioner, Business and Finance: Scott Sabatino Associate Commissioner, Governance and Enforcement: Ron Barker Associate Commissioner, Olympic Sports and Student-Athlete Programs: Chris Dawson Assistant Commissioner, Communications and Men’s Basketball Administration: Dave Hirsch Assistant Commissioner, Communications: Natalia Ciccone Assistant Commissioner, Governance and Enforcement: Tammy Newman Assistant Commissioner, Compliance: Erik Price Assistant Commissioner, Championships: Heather Perry Assistant Commissioner, Business and Finance: Kathy Lynch Assistant Commissioner, Office Management: Pat Cesnik

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Entering the 2008-09 season, the Pacific10 Conference continues to uphold its tradition as the “Conference of Champions.”® Pac10 members have claimed an incredible 159 NCAA team titles over the past 18 seasons, for an average of more than eight championships per academic year. Even more impressive is the breadth of the Pac-10’s success, as those 159 team titles have come in 26 different men’s and women’s sports. The Pac10 has led the nation in NCAA Championships 42 of the last 48 years and finished second five times. Spanning nearly a century of outstanding athletics achievement, the Pac-10 has captured 372 NCAA titles (259 men’s, 113 women’s), far outdistancing the runner-up Big Ten Conference’s 217 titles. The Conference’s reputation is further proven in the annual United States Sports Academy Directors’ Cup competition, the prestigious award that honors the best overall collegiate athletics programs in the country. STANFORD continued its remarkable run in the 2007-08 season, winning its 14th consecutive Directors’ Cup. In the 2007-08 competition, eight of the Top-30 Division I programs were Pac-10 members: No. 1 STANFORD, No. 2 UCLA, No. 4 ARIZONA STATE, No. 7 CALIFORNIA, No. 13 USC, No. 22 WASHINGTON, No. 26 OREGON and No. 27 ARIZONA. The Pac-10 landed four programs in the Top-10, one more than the second-place SEC (3). The Pac-10 captured 13 NCAA titles in 2007-08 to lead the nation, finishing just one shy of the all-time Division I record of 14 titles, set by the Pac-10 in 1996-97. It should be noted that the Pac-10 total does not include CALIFORNIA’s national championship in men’s rugby or STANFORD’s national championship in women’s synchronized swimming, as they are not counted as NCAA titles. The Pac-10 led the nation with the most NCAA titles in women’s sports with eight. NCAA team champions from the Pac-10 in 2007-08 came from ARIZONA (men’s and women’s swimming and diving), ARIZONA STATE (men’s and women’s indoor track & field and softball), CALIFORNIA (men’s water polo), OREGON (men’s cross country), STANFORD (women’s cross country), UCLA (women’s water polo, women’s tennis and men’s golf) and USC (women’s soccer and women’s golf).

2009 Oregon State Baseball

The Pac-10 also had runners-up in 10 NCAA Championship events: women’s cross country (OREGON), women’s volleyball (STANFORD), men’s water polo (USC), women’s basketball (STANFORD), men’s gymnastics (STANFORD), men’s golf (STANFORD), women’s golf (UCLA), women’s tennis (CALIFORNIA), women’s track & field (ARIZONA STATE) and women’s water polo (USC) . Overall, the Conference had 32 teams finish in the top four at NCAA Championship events. Participation in the postseason was a common occurrence for the Conference in 2007-08. Of the 22 sports sponsored by the Pac-10, 20 witnessed at least half its teams participating in NCAA or other postseason action. The men sent 73 of a possible 90 teams into the postseason (81.1 percent), while the women sent 74 of a possible 100 teams (74.0 percent). The Pac-10 experienced continued success in football as the league sent six teams to bowl games. USC and ARIZONA STATE were named co-champions with identical 7-2 league records. The Trojans capped their season with a 49-17 win over Illinois in the Rose Bowl. Overall, the Pac-10 went 4-2 in postseason bowl games with ARIZONA STATE, CALIFORNIA, OREGON, OREGON STATE and UCLA also earning bowl appearances. USC, ARIZONA STATE, OREGON and OREGON STATE found themselves ranked in the Top-25 in the nation at the conclusion of the season, finishing third, 16th, 23rd and 25th, respectively (Associated Press). The Pac-10 was the premier basketball conference this season, as it sent a record nine teams to postseason play. The UCLA Bruins, the Pac-10 regular season champion and Pacific Life Pac-10 Tournament champion, advanced to the Final Four for the third consecutive season. On the women’s side, three teams competed in the NCAA Tournament, as STANFORD advanced to the national championship for the first time since 1992. The Cardinal also claimed the 2007-08 regular season title and the State Farm Pac-10 Tournament trophy. The Conference continued its dominance in softball as seven of eight teams earned trips to NCAA regional play, the most out of any conference in the nation. ARIZONA STATE claimed its first national title, outscoring Texas A&M by a margin of 14-0 in the best-of-three championship series. It marked the 20th national

2005 • Pac-10 Champions • 2006

The The Players Pac-10 championship by a Pac-10 team since 1982. With an 18-3 Conference record, ARIZONA STATE picked up its first-ever Pac-10 crown, while earning a No. 6 seed in the NCAA Division I Softball Championship. The ARIZONA STATE baseball team claimed the 2008 Pac10 championship with a 16-8 record in league play. The Conference sent five teams to postseason play, including STANFORD, which made its 16th appearance at the College World Series, and first in five seasons. The Conference swept five NCAA men’s and women’s titles, including cross country, indoor track & field, golf, water polo and swimming and diving. CALIFORNIA captured the men’s water polo title for the second year in a row, while UCLA garnered the women’s hardware for the fourth consecutive year. The OREGON men took home the cross country title, while the STANFORD women claimed their third-straight crown. The NCAA golf championship trophies were taken home by LA counterparts, as UCLA won the men’s title and USC won the women’s. Two Conference schools swept on their own, including ARIZONA STATE (men’s and women’s indoor track & field) and ARIZONA (men’s and women’s swimming and diving). On the men’s side, Pac10 members have won 259 NCAA team championships, far ahead of the the 199 claimed by the runner-up Big Ten. Men’s NCAA crowns have come at a phenomenal rate for the Pac-10 - 15 basketball titles by five schools (more than any other conference), 49 tennis titles, 45 outdoor track and field crowns, and 26 baseball titles. Pac-10 members have won 24 of the last 39 NCAA titles in volleyball, 34 of the last 49 in water polo, and 21 total swimming and diving national championships. Individually, the Conference has produced an impressive number of NCAA men’s individual champions as well, claiming 1,162 NCAA individual crowns. On the women’s side, the story is much the same. Since the NCAA began conducting women’s championships 27 years ago, Pac-10 members have claimed at least four national titles in a single season on 19 occasions. Overall, the Pac-10 has captured 113 NCAA women’s crowns, easily outdistancing the SEC, which is second with 72. Pac-10 members have dominated a number of sports, winning 20 softball titles, 18 tennis crowns, 13 of the last 18 volleyball titles, 12 of the last 19 trophies in golf and 10 in swimming and diving. Pac-10 women athletes shine nationally on an individual basis as well, having captured an unmatched 511 NCAA individual titles, an av-

erage of more than 18 champions per season. The roots of the Pacific-10 Conference date back over 90 years to December 2, 1915, when the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC) was founded at a meeting at the Oregon Hotel in Portland, Ore. Original membership consisted of four schools - the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Washington, the University of Oregon, and Oregon State College (now Oregon State University). All still are charter members of the Conference. Pacific Coast Conference play began in 1916. One year later, Washington State College (now Washington State University), was accepted into the Conference, and Stanford University joined in 1918. In 1922, the PCC expanded to eight teams with the admission of the University of Southern California and the University of Idaho. Montana joined the Conference in 1924, and in 1928, the PCC grew to 10 members with the addition of UCLA. The Pacific Coast Conference competed as a 10-team league until 1950, with the exception of 1943-45, when World War II curtailed intercollegiate athletic competition to a minimum. In 1950, Montana resigned from the Conference and joined the Mountain States Conference. The PCC continued as a nine-team Conference through 1958. In 1959, the PCC was dissolved and a new Conference was formed - the Athletic Association of Western Universities. Original AAWU membership consisted of California, Stanford, Southern California, UCLA, and Washington. Washington State became a member in 1962, while Oregon and Oregon State joined in 1964. In 1968, the name Pacific-8 Conference was adopted. Ten years later, on July 1, 1978, the University of Arizona and Arizona State University were admitted and the Pacific-10 Conference became a reality. In 1986-87, the league took on a new look, expanding to include 10 women’s sports. Currently, the Pac-10 sponsors 11 men’s sports and 11 women’s sports. Additionally, the Conference is a member of the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) in four other men’s sports and two other women’s sports. Edwin N. Atherton was named the Conference’s first Commissioner in 1940. He has been succeeded by Victor O. Schmidt (1944), Thomas J. Hamilton (1959), Wiles Hallock (1971), and current Commissioner Thomas C. Hansen in 1983. The Pacific-10 Conference offices are located 25 miles east of San Francisco in Walnut Creek, Calif.

2006 • National Champions • 2007

Pac-10 Yearly Winners Pac-10 2008 ASU 2007 ASU 2006 OSU 2005 OSU 2004 STAN 2003 STAN 2002 USC 2001 USC 2000 ASU STAN UCLA 1999 STAN North South 1998 WASH* STAN 1997 WASH* STAN 1996 WASH USC* 1995 WSU USC* 1994 OSU STAN 1993 WASH ASU 1992 WASH ARIZ 1991 WSU USC 1990 WSU STAN 1989 WSU ARIZ 1988 WSU ASU 1987 WSU STAN 1986 OSU UCLA 1985 WSU STAN 1984 WSU ASU PSU 1983 OSU STAN 1982 OSU ASU WSU 1981 WASH ASU 1980 WSU ARIZ CAL 1979 WSU UCLA 1978 WSU USC** 1977 WSU USC** North CIBA 1976 WSU** UCLA 1975 WSU USC** 1974 ORE USC** WSU 1973 WSU USC** 1972 WSU USC** ORE 1971 WSU USC** 1970 WSU USC** Pac-10 1969 UCLA 1968 USC 1967 STAN North CIBA 1966 WSU USC 1965 WSU STAN 1964 ORE USC 1963 OSU USC 1962 OSU USC 1961 WSU USC 1960 WSU CAL USC 1959 WASH USC*** 1958 OSU USC*** 1957 ORE CAL*** USC 1956 WSU*** USC

North CIBA 1955 ORE USC*** 1954 ORE*** USC 1953 ORE STAN*** 1952 OSU*** USC 1951 OSU USC*** 1950 WSU*** STAN 1949 WSU USC*** 1948 WSU USC*** 1947 WSU CAL USC 1946 ORE USC 1945 WSU CAL 1944 WSU UCLA 1943 ORE CAL USC 1942 ORE USC 1941 ORE CAL STM 1940 OSU STM 1939 ORE USC STM 1938 OSU CAL WSU 1937 ORE CAL 1936 WSU USC 1935 ORE CAL USC 1934 ORE CAL 1933 WSU CAL 1932 WASH USC 1931 WASH STAN 1930 WASH USC 1929 WASH CAL 1928 ORE STM WSU 1927 WSU STM North South 1926 WASH CAL 1925 WASH STAN Pac-10 1924 CAL North South 1923 WASH CAL Pac-10 1922 WASH 1921 CAL 1920 CAL 1919 WASH 1918 ORE 1917 CAL 1916 CAL *denotes North-South champion **denotes Pac-8 champion ***denotes Pacific Coast champion Legend PSU=Portland State SC= Santa Clara STM= St. Mary’s

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2008 Pac-10 In Review 2008 Pacific-10 Conference Standings Arizona State%*^ Stanford*^# UCLA* Arizona*^ California* Washington Oregon State USC Washington State

CONFERENCE W L PCT H 16 8 .667 10-2 14 10 .583 7-5 13 11 .542 6-6 12 12 .500 8-4 12 12 .500 7-5 11 13 .458 6-6 11 13 .458 7-5 11 13 .458 7-5 8 16 .333 6-6

A 6-6 7-5 7-5 4-8 5-7 5-7 4-8 4-8 2-10

OVERALL W L PCT H A 49 13 .790 38-4 8-8 41 24 .631 21-11 15-11-2 33 27 .550 18-13 12-14 42 19 .689 25-5 12-12 33 21 .607 21-8-2 7-11 33 22 .600 23-10 10-12 28 24 .538 16-8 8-12 28 28 .500 13-12 14-16 30 26 .536 20-12 10-14

N 3-1 5-2 3-0 5-2 5-2 0-0 4-4 1-0 0-0

STREAKS STREAK LAST 5 Lost 2 3-2 Won 6 3-2 Lost 2 2-3 Lost 2 3-2 Lost 2 1-4 Won 1 2-3 Won 3 3-2 Won 1 3-2 Lost 1 2-3

LAST 10 6-4 8-2 6-4 7-3 3-7 4-7 5-5 7-3 4-6

% - Pac-10 Champion * - NCAA Regional selection ^ - NCAA Super Regional participant # - NCAA College World Series participant

2008 Pac-10 Weekly Honors

2008 All-Pac-10 Team Name Alden Carrithers Jason Castro Kyle Conley David Cooper (2) Erik Davis Ike Davis (3) Jon Gaston Paul Gran Grant Green Preston Guilmet (2) Jason Kipnis Mike Leake (2) Jorden Merry Randy Molina Ryan Ortiz Petey Paramore (3) Cord Phelps Sean Ratliff (2) Tyson Ross (2) Josh Satin Daniel Schlereth T.J. Steele Jason Stoffel Drew Storen Brett Wallace (2)

School UCLA STAN WASH CAL STAN ASU ARIZ WSU USC ARIZ ASU ASU WASH STAN OSU ASU STAN STAN CAL CAL ARIZ ARIZ ARIZ STAN ASU

Pos INF C OF OF/1B RHP UT/LHP OF IF SS RHP OF RHP/UT RHP 1B C C IF OF/LHP RHP IF LHP OF RHP RHP/3B 3B

Yr Sr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. So. So. So. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. Jr. Jr. Jr. Sr. So. So. So. Fr. Jr.

Ht 5-10 6-3 6-3 6-1 6-4 6-4 6-0 5-11 6-3 6-2 5-10 6-0 6-1 6-4 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-3 6-6 6-2 6-1 6-3 6-1 6-2 6-1

Wt Hometown 165 Portland, Ore. 210 Castro Valley, Calif. 220 Richland, Wash. 210 Stockton, Calif. 200 Mountain View, Calif. 205 Scottsdale, Ariz. 210 Boise, Idaho 192 Bothell, Wash. 180 Anaheim Hills, Calif. 190 Citrus Heights, Calif. 175 Northbrook, Ill. 175 Fallbrook, Calif. 187 Pasco, Wash. 220 South Gate, Calif. 185 San Diego, Calif. 215 Allen, Texas 200 Santa Barbara, Calif. 225 Longmont, Colo. 225 Oakland, Calif. 200 Calabasas, Calif. 210 Lone Tree, Colo. 200 Tucson, Ariz. 217 Agoura, Calif. 175 Browsburg, Ind. 245 Sonoma, Calif.

(2) - Two-time All-Conference selection (3) - Three-time All-Conference selection

Pac-10 Players Of The Week Feb. 26 Brett Wallace, Jr., 3B, ASU Mar. 4 Josh Satin, Sr., 2B, CAL; Mar. 11 Ike Davis, Jr., 1B/LHP, ASU Mar. 18 Ike Davis, Jr., 1B/LHP, ASU Mar. 25 Ryan Ortiz, So., C, OSU April 1 David Cooper, Jr., 1B, CAL April 8 Sean Ratliff, Jr., OF/LHP, STAN April 15 Grant Green, So., SS, USC April 22 Lonnie Lechelt, Sr., IF, OSU April 29 Kiel Roling, Jr., DH, ASU May 6 Kyle Conley, So.,OF, WASH May 13 Kyle Conley, So., OF, WASH May 20 Kiel Roling, Jr., 1B, ASU Pac-10 Pitchers Of The Week Feb. 26 Tyson Ross, Jr., RHP, CAL Mar. 4 Tim Murphy, Jr., LHP, UCLA Mar. 11 David Coulon, Sr., LHP, ARIZ Mar. 18 Ross Humes, Jr., P, WSU Mar. 25 Ryan Cook, Jr., RHP, USC April 1 Tyson Ross, Jr., RHP, CAL April 8 Nick Haughian, Jr., LHP, WASH April 15 Ryan Perry, Jr., RHP, ARIZ April 22 Erik Davis, Sr., RHP, STAN April 29 Preston Guilmet, Jr., RHP, ARIZ May 6 Jason Novak, Jr., RHP, UCLA May 13 Matt Gorgen, Jr., P, CAL May 20 Tim Murphy, Jr., LHP, UCLA

Honorable Mention: Charles Brewer, So., UCLA; Gavin Brooks, So., UCLA; Nick Buss, Jr., USC; Ryan Cook, Jr., USC; Travis Coulter, Jr., WSU; Kevin Couture, So., USC; Brandon Crawford, Jr., UCLA; Jermaine Curtis, Jr., UCLA; Charlie Cutler, Jr., CAL; Joey Dunn, Sr., WASH; Matt Gorgen, Jr., CAL; Casey Haerther, So., UCLA; Nick Haughian, Jr., WASH; Brett Jackson, So., CAL; Brendan Lafferty, Jr., UCLA; Andy Lentz, Sr., WASH; Roberto Lopez, Sr., USC; Jayson Miller, Sr., WSU; Kevin Miller, Fr., CAL; Brent Milleville, Jr., STAN; Tommy Milone, Jr., USC; Jim Murphy, Sr., WSU; Tim Murphy, Jr., UCLA; Matt Newman, Fr., ASU; Bryce Ortega, Fr., ARIZ; Derek Perren, Sr., USC; Tommy Rafferty, Sr., ASU; Daniel Robertson, Sr., OSU; Kevin Rhoderick, Fr., OSU; Kiel Roling, Jr., ASU; Josh Satow, Sr., ASU; Troy Scott, Fr., WASH; Ryan Sontag, Sr., ASU; Robert Stock, So., USC; Scott Suttmeier, Sr., WSU; Raoul Torrez, So., ASU; Anthony Vasquez, Jr., USC; Shea Vucinich, Fr., WSU; John Wallace, Jr., OSU; Matt Way, Jr., WSU; Austin Yount, Jr., STAN; C.J. Ziegler, Sr., ARIZ. Lonnie Lechelt

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2009 Oregon State Baseball

2005 • Pac-10 Champions • 2006

Players 2008The Pac-10 In Review Overall Offense

Team Avg. GP AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI TB Arizona State .342 62 2133 601 729 122 24 88 541 1163 California .302 56 1935 371 585 88 13 75 341 924 Washington St. .302 56 1986 376 599 109 22 47 350 893 Arizona .301 61 2106 432 633 110 26 77 395 1026 Stanford .299 67 2392 504 715 139 22 81 470 1141 USC .293 56 1920 333 562 102 13 50 307 840 Oregon State .292 52 1828 352 534 103 15 37 320 778 Washington .282 55 1863 338 525 108 10 63 317 842 UCLA .279 60 2074 374 578 117 16 50 345 877

Overall Pitching Team ERA Arizona 4.04 Washington 4.15 Stanford 4.45 UCLA 4.45 Arizona State 4.64 California 4.88 Oregon State 5.29 Washington St. 5.61 USC 5.64

W-L APP 42-19 61 33-22 55 41-24 67 33-27 60 49-13 62 33-21 56 28-24 52 30-26 56 28-28 56

Offensive Leaders Batting Average 1. Wallace, Brett, ASU 2. Sontag, Ryan, ASU 3. Green, Grant, USC Slugging Percentage 1. Wallace, Brett, ASU 2. Conley, Kyle, WASH 3. Davis, Ike, ASU On-Base Percentage 1. Wallace, Brett, ASU 2. Satin, Josh, CAL 3. Paramore, Petey, ASU

.410 .393 .390 .753 .746 .742 .526 .500 .496

GS CG SHO/CBO 61 2 7/5 55 3 6/5 67 6 2/2 60 2 5/3 62 2 4/4 56 0 1/1 52 1 2/2 56 3 0/0 56 3 3/2

SV IP 15 546.0 13 485.2 17 603.1 12 540.1 18 550.1 11 498.0 15 460.2 10 496.0 9 490.0

SLG .545 .478 .450 .487 .477 .438 .426 .452 .423

H 530 455 645 526 553 530 467 593 558

Home Runs 1. Ratliff, Sean, STAN Wallace, Brett, ASU 3. Ziegler, C.J., ARIZ

22 22 20

Total Bases 1. Wallace, Brett, ASU 2. Castro, Jason, STAN 3. Ziegler, C.J., ARIZ Ratliff, Sean, STAN

180 171 160 160

R 292 266 354 308 328 329 327 362 360

ER 245 224 298 267 284 270 271 309 307

BB 211 197 252 282 206 283 241 188 187

SO 572 417 440 442 498 435 397 365 407

OBA .456 .393 .380 .385 .376 .369 .391 .369 .377

2B 102 80 113 88 102 93 96 116 105

SF 33 34 24 21 38 25 23 20 27

Pitching Leaders Earned Run Average 1. Perry, Ryan, ARIZ 2. Miller, Kevin, CAL 3. Murphy, Tim, UCLA

2.89 2.90 3.34

Opposing Batting Average 1. Nobles, Cam, WASH .192 2. Miller, Kevin, CAL .196 3. Perry, Ryan, ARIZ .217

60 51 48

Innings Pitched 1. Leake, Mike, ASU 2. Davis, Erik, STAN 3. Murphy, Tim, UCLA

20 17 14 14

Batters Struck Out 1. Murphy, Tim, UCLA 2. Haughian, Nick, WASH 3. Leake, Mike, ASU 7. Stutes, Mike, OSU

111 107 104 81

Wins 1. Rafferty, Tommy, ASU 2. Leake, Mike, ASU 3. Satow, Josh, ASU Brewer, Charles, UCLA

12 11 9 9

87 76 76

Hit By Pitch 1. Murphy, Jim, WSU 2. Tonneson, Dylan, CAL 3. Wallace, Brett, ASU Steele, T.J., ARIZ

Hits 1. Castro, Jason, STAN 2. Wallace, Brett, ASU 3. Phelps, Cord, STAN

105 98 91

Sacrifice Bunts 1. Jones, Zach, STAN Childs, Dwight, ARIZ 3. Wong, Joey, OSU

13 13 11

Runs Batted In 1. Wallace, Brett, ASU 2. Davis, Ike, ASU 3. Kipnis, Jason, ASU Castro, Jason, STAN

83 76 73 73

Stolen Bases 1. Steele, T.J., ARIZ 2. Kipnis, Jason, ASU 3. Carrithers, Alden, UCLA

28 24 17

Doubles 1. Davis, Ike, ASU 2. Haerther, Casey, UCLA 3. Curtis, Jermaine, UCLA Castro, Jason, STAN 9. Ortiz, Ryan, OSU

26 23 18 18 16

At Bats 1. Castro, Jason, STAN 2. Phelps, Cord, STAN 3. Ratliff, Sean, STAN

SH 53 35 24 56 31 32 43 31 37

SB-ATT 93-130 62-88 37-65 91-119 48-64 66-101 46-57 37-61 74-98

PO A 1651 679 1494 633 1488 673 1638 623 1810 688 1470 551 1381 502 1457 527 1621 625

E 73 78 63 84 65 74 52 53 76

FLD .970 .965 .972 .964 .975 .965 .973 .974 .967

3B HR AB Avg. WP HBP BK SFA 25 42 2093 .253 60 45 7 16 7 47 1803 .252 46 76 6 24 7 54 2317 .278 55 79 4 27 14 56 2022 .260 39 66 21 20 15 45 2143 .258 29 73 6 14 12 29 1934 .274 47 38 4 11 13 38 1768 .264 49 54 7 24 13 56 1980 .299 40 57 10 18 20 39 1924 .290 31 93 20 26

Walks 1. Paramore, Petey, ASU 2. Kipnis, Jason, ASU 3. Wallace, Brett, ASU

Runs Scored 1. Wallace, Brett, ASU 2. Phelps, Cord, STAN Kipnis, Jason, ASU

Triples 1. Kipnis, Jason, ASU 2. Crawford, Brandon, UCLA Green, Grant, USC 4. Lechelt, Lonnie, OSU

BB HBP SO GDP 400 75 442 55 238 74 399 24 174 90 378 38 230 74 405 38 276 41 481 38 203 44 343 44 257 53 367 27 228 42 422 29 271 72 480 36

121.1 103.1 102.1

Saves 1. Stoffel, Jason, ARIZ 2. Rhoderick, Kevin, OSU 3. Gorgen, Matt, CAL

13 12 9

Appearances 1. Rafferty, Tommy, ASU 2. Stoffel, Jason, ARIZ Schlereth, Daniel, ARIZ

35 34 34

Games Started 1. Satow, Josh, ASU 2. Coulon, David, ARIZ Guilmet, Preston, ARIZ Davis, Erik, STAN Leake, Mike, ASU

18 16 16 16 16

Games Finished 1. Stoffel, Jason, ARIZ 2. Lafferty, Brendan, UCLA Storen, Drew, STAN 5. Rhoderick, Kevin, OSU

34 20 20 18

279 259 248

6 5 5 4 Mike Stutes

2006 • National Champions • 2007

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2008 Pac-10 In Review Conference Only Offense

Team Avg. GP AB R H Arizona State .335 24 829 222 278 Stanford .289 24 835 170 241 USC .283 24 819 134 232 California .278 24 813 133 226 Washington St. .275 24 826 128 227 Oregon State .275 24 819 139 225 Arizona .275 24 816 136 224 UCLA .271 24 818 141 222 Washington .260 24 800 113 208

2B 3B 36 6 45 8 44 2 35 6 44 8 43 6 34 5 49 3 38 5

HR 33 27 26 25 21 12 28 19 21

RBI 200 159 129 120 121 126 128 132 107

TB 425 383 358 348 350 316 352 334 319

SLG .513 .459 .437 .428 .424 .386 .431 .408 .399

Conference Only Pitching Team ERA UCLA 4.29 Stanford 4.47 Washington 4.73 Arizona 4.77 Oregon State 5.47 Washington St. 5.90 Arizona State 6.08 USC 6.40 California 6.58

W-L APP 13-11 24 14-10 24 11-13 24 12-12 24 11-13 24 8-16 24 16-8 24 11-13 24 12-12 24

Offensive Leaders Batting Average 1. Sontag, Ryan, ASU 2. Perren, Derek, USC 3. Paramore, Petey, ASU 7. Ortiz, Ryan, OSU

.468 .444 .404 .379

Slugging Percentage 1. Conley, Kyle, WASH 2. Green, Grant, USC 3. Wallace, Brett, ASU

.776 .700 .691

On-Base Percentage 1. Sontag, Ryan, ASU 2. Wallace, Brett, ASU 3. Paramore, Petey, ASU 7. Ortiz, Ryan, OSU

.564 .521 .518 .478

BB HBP SO GDP 159 35 171 26 91 15 169 11 96 23 160 15 97 31 158 18 82 34 164 19 118 28 187 14 93 27 176 19 100 28 194 17 102 15 188 17

GS CG SHO/CBO SV IP H R ER 24 1 3/2 8 214.0 208 115 102 24 5 1/1 6 215.1 223 124 107 24 3 1/0 6 211.0 203 130 111 24 2 2/0 2 215.0 236 133 114 24 1 0/0 5 210.2 195 142 128 24 2 0/0 1 212.0 255 165 139 24 1 0/0 5 211.2 246 162 143 24 3 2/1 5 208.0 256 166 148 24 0 0/0 4 210.2 259 179 154

Home Runs 1. Glenn, Brad, ARIZ 2. Wallace, Brett, ASU Conley, Kyle, WASH Ratliff, Sean, STAN

9 8 8 8

Total Bases 1. Green, Grant, USC 2. Conley, Kyle, WASH Haerther, Casey, UCLA

70 66 66

Walks 1. Satin, Josh, CAL 2. Carrithers, Alden, UCLA 3. Kipnis, Jason, ASU Paramore, Petey, ASU

26 24 20 20 10 8 8 8 8

Runs Scored 1. Wallace, Brett, ASU 2. Kipnis, Jason, ASU 3. Phelps, Cord, STAN

35 30 28

Hit By Pitch 1. Buss, Nick, USC 2. Murphy, Jim, WSU Wallace, Brett, ASU Tonneson, Dylan, CAL Cutler, Charlie, CAL

Hits 1. Castro, Jason, STAN Green, Grant, USC Perren, Derek, USC 6. Ortiz, Ryan, OSU

40 40 40 36

Sacrifice Bunts 1. Torrez, Raoul, ASU Wong, Joey, OSU 3. Jones, Zach, STAN Childs, Dwight, ARIZ

8 8 7 7

Runs Batted In 1. Wallace, Brett, ASU 2. Kipnis, Jason, ASU 3. Glenn, Brad, ARIZ Haerther, Casey, UCLA

30 28 26 26

Stolen Bases 1. Steele, T.J., ARIZ 2. Kobernus, Jeff, CAL Kipnis, Jason, ASU

11 8 8

Doubles 1. Haerther, Casey, UCLA 2. Davis, Ike, ASU 3. Ortiz, Ryan, OSU

12 10 9

At Bats 1. Castro, Jason, STAN 2. Coulter, Travis, WSU 3. Green, Grant, USC 4. Ogata, Jason, OSU 8. Ortiz, Ryan, OSU

105 101 100 98 95

Triples 1. Lechelt, Lonnie, OSU Coulter, Travis, WSU 3. 10 tied

3 3 2

BB 115 88 93 89 119 95 107 78 154

SO 182 159 169 202 173 163 160 178 180

OBA .456 .363 .371 .373 .361 .382 .365 .365 .352

SF 12 15 7 8 9 7 6 12 6

SH SB-ATT 28 36-51 12 9-18 12 25-37 13 21-30 10 12-25 19 15-17 25 28-40 17 15-20 13 6-17

PO A 635 267 646 235 624 218 632 270 636 282 632 230 645 249 642 246 633 228

2009 Oregon State Baseball

FLD .973 .982 .978 .972 .972 .981 .968 .975 .975

2B 3B HR AB Avg. WP HBP BK SFA 29 3 31 803 .259 7 26 9 5 36 4 26 820 .272 26 31 2 8 38 4 22 777 .261 26 28 2 16 47 11 18 837 .282 23 20 4 6 39 2 22 783 .249 23 23 3 14 44 4 30 846 .301 23 25 3 6 48 5 25 843 .292 10 28 3 9 46 10 24 830 .308 15 36 9 12 39 7 14 838 .309 23 19 3 7

Pitching Leaders Earned Run Average 1. Way, Matt, WSY 2. Murphy, Tim, UCLA 3. Leake, Mike, ASU

2.86 3.58 3.67

Opposing Batting Average 1. Murphy, Tim, UCLA 2. Haughian, Nick, WASH 3. Way, Matt, WSY 8. Reyes, Jorge, OSU 10. Stutes, Mike, OSU

.208 .210 .219 .255 .257

Innings Pitched 1. Davis, Erik, STAN 2. Milone, Tommy, USC Miller, Jayson, WSU 6. Stutes, Mike, OSU

60.0 58.2 58.2 56.0

Batters Struck Out 1. Haughian, Nick, WASH 2. Milone, Tommy, USC 3. Davis, Erik, STAN 5. Stutes, Mike, OSU

61 59 58 49

Wins 1. Rafferty, Tommy, ASU Davis, Erik, STAN Brewer, Charles, UCLA Merry, Jorden, WASH

5 5 5 5

Saves 1. Rhoderick, Kevin, OSU Gorgen, Matt, CAL 2. Drummond, Matt, UCLA Storen, Drew, STAN Novak, Jason, UCLA

4 4 3 3 3

Appearances 1. Rafferty, Tommy, ASU 2. Schlereth, Daniel, ASU 3. 3 Tied Games Started 1. 16 Tied Games Finished 1. Stoffel, Jason, ARIZ 2. Lafferty, Brendan, UCLA Rhoderick, Kevin, OSU

Ryan Ortiz Storen, Drew, STAN

104

E 25 16 19 26 26 17 30 23 22

2005 • Pac-10 Champions • 2006

15 13 12 8 11 9 9

9