Matt Cotcher
Under Contract
- Joined
- Jan 29, 2014
- Messages
- 4,968
This is a fascinating matchup from any & every angle...Texas and Houston play the same style of baseball and are unbelievably evenly matched. This Super Regional series is going to be close and could conceivably be decided by a manufactured run, a baserunning error, an assist from the outfield, etc. Whichever of these two teams plays cleaner games over the weekend will win – most casual baseball fans don’t enjoy low scoring, defensive games, but that’s what I’m expecting this weekend.
Execution
As I said above, these games should be decided by the subtleties of baseball…two-strike hitting, baserunning, error-free defense, passed balls, two-out offense…Branch Rickey famously said, “Baseball is a game of inches.â€, get ready to understand that over the weekend.
- In the last 7 postseason games, UofH has only committed one error.
- Catcher Caleb Barker has thrown out 11 of the last 16 attempts at stolen bases
Pitching Duels
You could drive yourself crazy trying to dissect the pitching matchups between these two teams – they’re that even. Without Peters, I err towards giving Houston a slight edge. Yes, I know Hollingsworth was incredible last weekend but after not seeing a start or innings like that all year, there is no way to confidently predict that he could replicate that performance.
- In 72 postseason innings, the Texas pitching staff has only allowed 17 earned runs.
- In the Houston Regional, Longhorn pitchers limited the opposition to a .180 batting average
- Texas ranks ninth nationally in ERA – that’s impressive…until you note that Houston is sixth at 2.30
If it’s close
- Texas is 11-5 in one run games
- Houston is 13-7 in one run games
Magic numbers
- Texas is 41-10 when they score two or more runs
- Texas is 37-8 when allowing three or fewer runs
- Texas is 20-2 when they score in the 1st inning
The game within the game
The Longhorns rely on plate discipline and walks to help manufacture runs. Payton, Marlow & Clemens all finished in the top 10 of the conference in walks. Houston is 2nd in the country in walks allowed per 9 innings (1.79).
Shifting pressure to the other dugout
Head Coach Augie Garrido was asked if his team was the underdog in this series. His answer, “I think based on the way they came out of LSU, scored a lot of runs, and pulled off a couple miracles back-to-back means [Houston is] hot and confident.â€
Execution
As I said above, these games should be decided by the subtleties of baseball…two-strike hitting, baserunning, error-free defense, passed balls, two-out offense…Branch Rickey famously said, “Baseball is a game of inches.â€, get ready to understand that over the weekend.
- In the last 7 postseason games, UofH has only committed one error.
- Catcher Caleb Barker has thrown out 11 of the last 16 attempts at stolen bases
Pitching Duels
You could drive yourself crazy trying to dissect the pitching matchups between these two teams – they’re that even. Without Peters, I err towards giving Houston a slight edge. Yes, I know Hollingsworth was incredible last weekend but after not seeing a start or innings like that all year, there is no way to confidently predict that he could replicate that performance.
- In 72 postseason innings, the Texas pitching staff has only allowed 17 earned runs.
- In the Houston Regional, Longhorn pitchers limited the opposition to a .180 batting average
- Texas ranks ninth nationally in ERA – that’s impressive…until you note that Houston is sixth at 2.30
If it’s close
- Texas is 11-5 in one run games
- Houston is 13-7 in one run games
Magic numbers
- Texas is 41-10 when they score two or more runs
- Texas is 37-8 when allowing three or fewer runs
- Texas is 20-2 when they score in the 1st inning
The game within the game
The Longhorns rely on plate discipline and walks to help manufacture runs. Payton, Marlow & Clemens all finished in the top 10 of the conference in walks. Houston is 2nd in the country in walks allowed per 9 innings (1.79).
Shifting pressure to the other dugout
Head Coach Augie Garrido was asked if his team was the underdog in this series. His answer, “I think based on the way they came out of LSU, scored a lot of runs, and pulled off a couple miracles back-to-back means [Houston is] hot and confident.â€