Tag Archives: Kyle Overstreet

Two key hits open things up for Alabama baseball, clinched series win

Georgie Salem comes down with a fly ball in the Saturday win over Texas A&M (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Georgie Salem comes down with a fly ball in the Saturday win over Texas A&M (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

The Saturday game of the Alabama-Texas A&M baseball series was looking like a pitcher’s duel from days away. Texas A&M pitcher Parker Ray had allowed just 20 hits and five walks in 26 innings while Alabama’s Justin Kamplain had given up 11 hits in his 11.1 innings of work as a starter.

Through two innings of baseball, it was living up to the billing: the Aggies scored a hit in the top of the first and that was it.

Youthful exuberance took over, as freshman shortstop Mikey White belted a stand-up double to start the bottom of the third and fellow freshman Kyle Overstreet followed suit with a hit to open the bottom of the fourth, propelling the offense to a 3-2 win over the Aggies.

“Mikey’s hit was really big because we hadn’t really had too many good swings to that point, and then he splits the gap and really puts us in a spot to score a run,” Alabama head coach Mitch Gaspard said. “(Third baseman) Kenny (Roberts) gets the big two-out hit there to get us on the board, and really from there we started putting better swings on pitches.”

Right fielder Ben Moore added, “You’re always waiting on that first hit, and when you get it, it’s like the floodgates are open. It definitely makes it easier to hit after that first one.”

Even on a day where it looked impossible.

“It was one of those bad days to hit with the wind blowing in,” Gaspard said. “Kenny hits one on the nose, Ben, (center fielder Georgie Salem), there were a lot of guys that hit balls hard and didn’t get anything to show for it.”

The Aggies had similar struggles as Kamplain pitched a career-best start in many accords. Kamplain pitched a career-high 7.1 innings and 112 pitches and a season-best walks and hits per inning of 0.845 against the Aggies.

“Kamplain gave us a really good start,” Gaspard said. “He was locating his fastball and everything was in the bottom of the strike zone. I thought there were three to four innings where he was throwing that slider in a good spot, backdoor. He was shoving that fastball in, so really it was command on both sides of the plate.”

Kamplain added, “I had a little bit of everything going today. I was able, towards, the end of the game, to get that feel for the changeup. This week, we worked on a new pitch, my cutter, and showing the right-handed hitters something in. Everything was going today.”

And the numbers could be more gaudy had he not tried to start the top of the eighth. Kamplain had a three-hit shutout before his high pitch count, crossing over into triple digits, slowed him down in the eighth.

“We liked the match-up with the pinch hitter,” Gaspard said. “In hindsight, we probably should’ve (taken him out) a hitter or two earlier because of his pitch count, but Haack comes in and bails us out and gets a hold in the eighth.”

After winning its fourth game in-a-row, including the first two of this weekend series to secure the series win for the first time in the last four series, the Tide may not need ot be bailed out like that much longer. The team confidence is rising with the level of play and the win margin could come along with it.

“The more you can win those close ballgames like that, the more that confidence starts to elevate,” Gaspard said. “I think some guys are getting started and starting to understand what that is to let that barrell fly a little bit and get it out there.

“We’ve probably squared the ball up more in the last three games. You haven’t seen as many flares or where the ball is beating the bat up as much. I think we’re on the right path right now.”

Star Series: Walk-on pitcher breaks out in no-hit start

Senior outfielder Kayla Braud laying down a bunt in the three-game series against Missouri last weekend. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Senior outfielder Kayla Braud laying down a bunt in the three-game series against Missouri last weekend. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Each week for the duration of the Alabama baseball and softball seasons, Daily Bama Blog contributor Brett Hudson will track outstanding individual performances with the Star Series. Three players from each team will get 1-star, 2-stars and 3-stars with a running season tally.

Baseball

Alabama compiled a 2-3 week, sweeping two midweek games with Alcorn State on Tuesday and Wednesday, 3-2 and 7-3. Alabama was then swept in a three-game series against the Ole Miss Rebels in Oxford, Miss., and Swazye Field: 6-0, 5-2 and 4-3 (11 innings).

3-Star Player: Second baseman Kyle Overstreet. Overstreet led the team in most hitting categories, including the following: hits (six), doubles (one), RBI (four), total bases (seven) and slugging percentage (.368 on a .316 batting average). Overstreet also had 16 putouts and 15 assists without an assist.

2-Star Player: Pitcher Mike Oczypok. Oczypok, a walk-on, had one apperance in the week: a five-inning start on Wednesday where he walked just one batter and did not giev up a hit. Oczypok struck out one batter and mproved his record on the year to 2-0 with an opposing batting average of .205 on the season.

1-Star Player: Third baseman Kenny Roberts. Roberts went 4-18 from the plate (.222) and led the team with three runs scored. Roberts also added two RBI and sported an on-base percentage of .364 while not committing an error in the five games.

Season Tally:

Ben Moore: 6 stars

Spencer Turnbull: 6 stars

Kyle Overstreet: 6 stars

Austen Smith: 5 stars

Brett Booth: 4 stars

Charley Sullivan: 4 stars

Georgie Salem: 4 stars

Kenny Roberts: 4 stars

Cary Baxter: 3 stars

Ray Castillo: 3 stars

Mikey White: 2 stars

Jon Keller: 2 stars

Mike Oczypok: 2 stars

Andrew Miller: 2 stars

Jake Hubbard: 1 star

Softball

The Crimson Tide had a rare weekend off, only playing two games this week and winning both of them. Alabama had to battle hard with Mississippi Valley State in a 8-5 win on Tuesday before rebounding to beat UAB 11-0 in six innings the next day.

3-Star Player: Catcher Molly Fichtner. Fichtner wins the three stars for the second week in-a-row after leading the team in the week’s two games with five hits. Fichtner batted in three runs and finished the two-game stretch with a batting average of .833.

2-Star Player: Left fielder Kayla Braud. Braud went 4-8 from the plate while scoring two runs in the two games. Braud also had a double.

1-Star Player: Center fielder Haylie McCleney. McCleney, in addition to stealing two bases without being caught, reached base in all but one of her plate appearances in two games, with three hits and four walks.

Season Tally:

Jackie Traina: 12 stars

Haylie McCleney: 12 stars

Kayla Braud: 10 stars

Kaila Hunt: 8 stars

Molly Fichtner: 6 stars

Danielle Richard: 4 stars

Andrea Hawkins: 3 stars

Jadyn Spencer: 2 stars

Keima Davis: 1 star

Danae Hays: 1 star

Leslie Jury: 1 star

Baseball set for revenge series with Auburn

Who: Alabama (16-10, 5-1 SEC) vs. Auburn (15-10, 0-6 SEC)

When: Thursday at 6:00 p.m., Friday at 6:00 p.m., Saturday at 3 p.m. Saturday game televised by CSS)

Where: Plainsman Park in Auburn, Ala.

Series Record: Alabama leads, 146-122. The two teams have split the last 14 meetings 7-7, including a 1-0 mark for Alabama in the SEC Tournament and a 0-4 mark in the last four Capital City Classics.

Starting Pitchers:
Friday: Alabama’s Charley Sullivan (Sr. RHP, 2-1, 2.92 ERA) vs. Auburn’s Conner Kendrick (Jr. LHP, 2-0, 1.46 ERA).
Saturday: Alabama’s Jon Keller (Soph. LHP, 3-2, 2.78 ERA) vs. Auburn’s Michael O’Neal (Jr. LHP, 4-2, 2.78 ERA).
Sunday: Alabama’s Spencer Turnbull (Soph. RHP, 2-1, 3.31 ERA) vs. Auburn’s TBA.

Noteworthy: The three-game series concludes a seven-game road trip for the Tide, on which Alabama is currently 3-1, 3-0 against SEC teams …. Auburn enters the series on a four-game losing streak, including being swept in both of their SEC series, one at home against Vanderbilt and the other on the road at LSU …. Alabama has more stolen bases (35) than Auburn has stolen base attempts (25) …. Alabama is batting .312 in its last 10 games, led by Kyle Overstreet’s .400 over that stretch …. Alabama coach Mitch Gaspard is 7-6 against Auburn entering the series, now coaching the Tide for his fourth season.

Star Series: Pitchers and power bats push baseball and softball to 8-1 record

Jackie Traina wins the highest honor for the Alabama softball team. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Jackie Traina wins the highest honor for the Alabama softball team. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Each week for the duration of the Alabama baseball and softball seasons, Daily Bama Blog contributor Brett Hudson will track outstanding individual performances with the Star Series. Three players from each team will get 1-star, 2-stars and 3-stars with a running season tally.

Baseball

Click here to read about Alabama’s perfect 5-0 week, including success on the road in Southeastern Conference play for the first time in quite a while.

3-Star Player: Second baseman Kyle Oversteet. Oversteet, a serious contender for SEC Player of the Week, batted .688 (11-16) in the five games of the week, leading the team in that category to go along with total bases (15), slugging percentage (.938), walks (six) and on-base percentage (.773). Overstreet has one triple and scored five runs while batting in two more.

2-Star Player: Relief pitcher Ray Castillo. Castillo appeared three times over the course of the week, earning the save in all three of them. Castillo’s three appearances had him pitch 4.1 innings and give up just three hits with no walks while striking out five batters. Castillo held opposing batters to a .176 batting average in his three appearances on the week.

1-Star Player: First baseman Austen Smith. Smith held the power bat in the lineup for the Tide this week, hitting Alabama’s only homerun and slugging .700. Smith’s four extra-base hits tied for the team-lead for the week. Smith led the team with six RBI in the five games and in fielding percentage, amongst those with mor than 20 fielding opportunities, with a .974.

Season Tally:

Ben Moore: 6 stars

Brett Booth: 4 stars

Austen Smith: 4 stars

Georgie Salem: 3 stars

Cary Baxter: 3 stars

Kenny Roberts: 3 stars

Ray Castillo: 3 stars

Kyle Overstreet: 3 stars

Mikey White: 2 stars

Jon Keller: 2 stars

Charley Sullivan: 2 stars

Jake Hubbard: 1 star

Softball

Click here to read about Alabama’s series win over Auburn, including tweets from a huge accomplishment by Alabama coach Patrick Murphy.

3-Star Player: Pitcher Jackie Traina. Traina pitched 12.1 innings over the course of three appearances in four games, allowing five hits and two runs, both earned, while striking out 14 batters. At the plate, Traina was 5-9 with three runs scored and two RBI.

2-Star Player: First baseman Jadyn Spencer Spencer had one of the hottest bats in the Auburn series, combining to hit 6-10 with three runs and five RBI.

1-Star Player: Second baseman Kaila Hunt. Hunt went 5-12 from the plate in the three games, including 2-2 with two RBI and two runs scored in the Sunday blowout win.

Season Tally:

Haylie McCleney: 9 stars

Jackie Traina: 9 stars

Kaila Hunt: 8 stars

Kayla Braud: 5 stars

Danielle Richard: 4 stars

Andrea Hawkins: 3 stars

Jadyn Spencer: 2 stars

Keima Davis: 1 star

Danae Hays: 1 star

Alabama bats stay hot in SEC opener

Alabama starting pitcher Charley Sullivan threw a complete game three-hitter in the Crimson Tide's SEC opener against Tennessee. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Alabama starting pitcher Charley Sullivan threw a complete game three-hitter in the Crimson Tide’s SEC opener against Tennessee. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Morgan Upton, covering the Alabama-Tennessee baseball series from the Volunteer side of things, was nice enough to contribute a report from Alabama’s 12-1 victory in its SEC debut. The usual Daily Bama Blog staff will return to The Joe on Saturday and Sunday for the conclusion of the series.

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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – It was a cool Friday night in Tuscaloosa, but the Alabama baseball team’s offense was unaware. The Crimson Tide strung together 11 hits in its first Southeastern Conference matchup, defeating Tennessee 12-1.

The Volunteers plated one run in the first, but after that it was all Alabama.

Tennessee had a sloppy second inning and the Tide took full advantage. Kyle Overstreet reached on a fielding error. Cameron Carlisle had a blooper single and Andrew Miller was hit by a pitch. The Vols couldn’t get out of the jam, and Tennessee pitcher Zack Godley walked Georgie Salem to tie the game at one.

The Tide tacked on three more runs on a base-clearing, standup double by Ben Moore. Moore went 2-for-4 on the night.

Alabama added two more runs in the fifth. After singling to start the inning, Kenny Roberts eventually scored on a wild pitch. Brett Booth also hit a single after Roberts and would later score on a groundout by Overstreet to push the lead 6-1. Booth went 3-for-5 in the game.

After hitting Ben Moore and another single by Booth in the seventh, the Vols pulled Godley and was relied by Eric Martin. The Tide then completed a double-steal with Moore and Booth advancing to third and second, respectively. A single by Austen Smith and a balk by Martin would plate both players to give the Tide a 8-1 lead.

Alabama added four runs in the eighth, with the help of three errors by Tennessee. Wade Wass made his debut, reaching on one of the errors. Salem had his one hit of the game, a double. Salem, Booth, Overstreet and Mikey White each had RBIs in the inning.

Strong defense and an outstanding performance by pitcher Charley Sullivan also contributed to the Tide’s win. Sullivan pitched a complete game, allowing only one run, three hits and a walk. He threw 106 pitches and recorded seven strikeouts.

The second of a three game series continues Saturday with first pitched scheduled for 6:05 p.m.

“Spirited” players-only meeting sparks Tide off of five-game losing streak

Last season, former Alabama centerfielder Taylor Dugas tried to inject energy into the team by forcing them all to drink Red Bull before the next game.

Since that did not work, the senior leader for the 2013 team, Brett Booth, took his own method and helped call a players-only meeting after the coaches left Alabama’s 6-0 loss to Memphis on Tuesday night.

The Crimson Tide came back Wednesday with a large increase in energy, and an even larger increase in volume from the dugout, in the 4-2 win to split the midweek series 1-1.

“We had a pretty spirited meeting last night,” Alabama coach Mitch Gaspard said. “It started with the coaches and the players had a little get-together.

“I think we know, and they relayed, what we saw (Tuesday) night was unacceptable. Youi’re going to win some games, you’re going to lose some games, but it’s unacceptable to not go out there and play with great effort every night. That’s what is expected.”

The players noticed the same issues that the coaching staff noticed.

“The last five games, there has been no energy, everyone has been

Alabama second baseman Kyle Overstreet. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Alabama second baseman Kyle Overstreet. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

down,” freshman second baseman Kyle Overstreet said. “We wanted to come out, play with some energy and hit them in the mouth, and we did it.”

It all started with Overstreet, who came to the plate in the bottom of the first with the bases loaded and hit a three-RBI double, scoring more runs in one swing of the bat than Memphis scored all night.

Overstreet finished the game 2-for-2 with 3 RBI and one run scored. right fielder Ben Moore also had a multi-hit game, going 2-for-4 from the plate with one run scored.

While the influx in offense was nice to see, Gaspard is simply glad to break the five-game losing streak with the next opponent being the first one of the Southeastern Conference schedule.

“It was good to win,” Gaspard said. “We’ve been scuffling here for about a week and a half and it was just good to win and get that good vibe as you move into the SEC opener.”

Alabama starting pitcher Tucker Hawley had a phenomenal performance in his first start after Tommy John surgery took him out for the entire 2012 season. Click here to read more about Hawley’s comeback.

Baseball now 7-1 with Tuesday night win over Samford

Last season, Alabama resorted to a five-run bottom of the ninth inning to beat Samford 6-5 that had two hits, two walks, one hit-by-pitch and an error.

On Tueday night, Alabama created its own luck, scoring four runs in the bottom of the fifth inning, all with two outs, on three hits and beating the Bulldogs 5-4.

Alabama’s bottom of the fifth included a two-RBI single turned into a double for freshman second baseman Kyle Overstreet. Overstreet’s double play partner, freshman shortstop Mikey White, led the Crimson Tide offensively with a 3-for-5 performance at the plate, scoring two runs.

Alabama’s winnig pitcher was reliever Mitch Greer, who releived starting pitcher Taylor Gilbeau with two innings of relief, giving up only one hit and one walk while striking out four batters. Gilbeau threw 4.1 innings for the Tide in his second start of the season, allowing seven hits and three runs, all of them earned.

Alabama will be back in action on Friday to start a three-game series with Tulane.

Comeback win caps Opening Day for Alabama baseball

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Freshman shortstop Mikey White made a major impact in his first action as a collegiate baseball player. (Photo courtesy of UA Athletics)

Coming into a season where more experience in the pitching staff from the year prior was a big plus, it was the freshman shortstop Mikey White the stole the show on Opening Day. White was 4-5 from the plate with two RBI and was part of two double plays as Alabama came back from a 3-0 deficit to beat the Virginia Military Institute Keydets 8-3.

Batting behind White was second baseman and fellow true freshman Kyle Overstreet, who went 1-4 in his collegiate baseball debut. A freshman relief pitcher got the win for the night, as Ray Castillo came in and pitched 3.1 shutout innings, surrendering only one hit and striking out five batters. Castillo relieved starter Spencer Turnbull, who gave up four hits and three runs, one earned, in 3.2 innings.

Alabama was able to capitalize on VMI’s bullpen for the comeback victory. Starting pitcher Reed Garrett held the Crimson Tide scoreless in four innings, then scored all eight runs in the next four, in which Garrett pitched only one.

Alabama will continue the series with VMI on Saturday at 2:05 p.m. before concluding the series with a Sunday tilt at 1:05 p.m., both games in Sewell-Thomas Stadium in Tuscaloosa.

Alabama baseball opening series information

This is the third of three posts introducing the Alabama baseball season, starting Friday night against VMI. The first post can be seen by clicking here, and the second by clicking here. Come back to the Daily Bama Blog tonight for coverage of Opening Day.

Who: VMI vs. Alabama in Tuscaloosa at Sewell-Thomas Stadium.

When: 6:05 p.m. Friday, 2:05 p.m. Saturday, 1:05 p.m. Sunday

Radio: Crimson Tide Sports Network

Starting Pitchers: UA’s Spencer Turnbull, Soph., vs. VMI’s Reed Garrett, Soph., on Friday; UA’s Jon Keller, Soph., vs. Campbell Henkel, Jr., on Saturday; UA’s Charley Sullivan, Sr., vs. Connor Bach, Fr. on Sunday.

Noteworthy: Alabama coach Mitch Gaspard said three true freshmen could start for the Crimson Tide on Opening Day: shortstop Mikey White, second baseman Kyle Overstreet and center fielder Georgie Salem …. Alabama’s three pitchers slated to start the opening series pitched a combined 183.3 innings pitched in 2012, while VMI’s three starters pitched 129.2 in 2012 …. In 2012, Alabama had four players hit over .300, and only one returns for 2013. Catcher/right fielder Ben Moore returns for his sophomore season, but Taylor Dugas, Jared Reaves and James Tullidge.