Here’s a look at all six teams, first-round matchups and predictions:
Arkansas Tech (42-10, 25-5 GAC); No. 1 seed in Central Regional Tournament
The only team to win a regular season or conference tournament title other than SAU in the three-year history of the GAC, the Wonder Boys finished in the nation’s elite in all four final polls ranking D2 baseball teams: They were No. 3 in the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Top 30; No. 6 in the Collegiate Baseball Newspaper Top 30; No. 10 in the D2BaseballNews.com Top 30; and No. 12 in the Perfect Game Division II Top 25 (formerly the College Baseball Lineup).
Arkansas Tech is in the midst of perhaps the best season in school history. The Wonder Boys have set new program standards in wins, shattered the previous school record with a 22-game winning streak and achieved the program’s highest-ever national and regional rankings en route to the first outright conference championship since the 1992 season.
Arkansas Tech Head coach Dave Dawson earned GAC Coach of the Year honors, while nine Wonder Boys players earned all-conference honors. Ryan Taylor,
Vallejo leads all of Division II in saves with 17. Kattula is second in the conference batting race with a .371 average and Boehner is sixth at .356; as a team, Tech is second in the GAC in team batting at .295. Reynolds has turned in a 3.41 earned run average to rank ninth among GAC pitchers, leading the Wonder Boys to a team ERA of 3.82, which ranks fourth.
Individually, Boehner leads Tech in runs batted in (68); Kattula, Castleberry and Zac Johnson are tied for the team lead in home runs (6 each); Castleberry leads in doubles (17); and Boehner and Sharp lead in triples (3 each) and stolen bases (12 each). Pitching wise, Reynolds leads in victories (8); Trent Armstrong leads in ERA among those who have started games (2.47); and Taylor leads the team in strikeouts (79) and innings pitched (80.2). Another thing that bodes well for Tech is that the Wonder Boys are 23-5 at Tech Field, where the Central Regional will be held.
Southern Arkansas (38-17, 18-12 GAC); No. 2 seed in Central Regional Tournament
One of two GAC schools to earn at-large bids to the NCAA postseason, the Muleriders are without a doubt the most experienced of the three Arkansas schools in postseason action.
SAU has won all three GAC tournament championships and, until Tech and UAM both bested the Muleriders this season, had won the league’s regular-season titles as well.
Phillips ranks eighth in the GAC in batting and Lynn’s 2.94 ERA ranks seventh among GAC pitchers with a minimum of one inning pitched per team game. Cameron (.339), Trevor Rucker (.331), William Townsend (.317), Josh Rodriguez (.316) and Carver Rademacher (.308) join Phillips as the six starters hitting above .300. Rademacher’s 18 doubles leads SAU and currently ranks second on GAC statistical charts; Townsend has hit four triples to lead the team; and Rucker’s 32 stolen bases leads the Muleriders and ranks second in the GAC.
Lynn, Phillips and Cameron represented the Muleriders on the All-GAC first team, while Rucker, Townsend and Timothy Buchanan were on the second team. Carr, Rademacher and Jackson McCurdy received honorable mention.
SAU finished 2014 ranked No. 8 in the CBN Top 30; No. 17 in the Perfect Game Division II Top 25 and No. 19 in the D2BaseballNews.com Top 30. The Muleriders also received votes in the NCBWA poll.
Minnesota State-Mankato (41-9, 28-4 Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference); No. 3 seed in Central Regional Tournament
Last year’s national runner-up in the NCAA Division II College World Series to Tampa University, MSU-Mankato entered the NSIC postseason tournament as the
Emporia State (40-17, 26-14 Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association); No. 4 seed in Central Regional Tournament
Arkansas-Monticello (36-15, 22-8 GAC); No. 5 seed in Central Regional Tournament
Making their first postseason appearance since the school joined the NCAA Division II in 1996, the Boll Weevils have seen a year of firsts. The 36 wins recorded by UAM so far during the 2014 season has set a new single-season record for the program, which was previously held by the 2005 squad that finished 34-25 overall. The 2013 squad finished two wins shy of that record at 32-20. The 2013 and 2014 teams have become the first in program history to reach the 30-win plateau in back-to-back seasons. The 2014 Boll Weevils broke last year’s record for conference wins in a single season.
The 2013 squad posted 17 Great American Conference victories, broken this year with a finish of 22-8 throughout the season. UAM won eight of its 10 GAC series
UAM has broken its own record for all-conference selections in each of the past two seasons. The 2013 squad earned a total of six honorees, before the 2014 picked up seven selections. The 2014 roster features nine players who have earned at least one all-conference honor over the past two seasons, including seniors Ben Agredano, D’Marco Poindexter and Alex Lang, who have all earned back-to-back All-GAC selections. And for 14 consecutive weeks during the 2014 season, UAM has been included in at least one of the four Division II national rankings outlets, reaching as high as No. 11 by D2BaseballNews.com on March 2. The Weevils are currently ranked No. 18 by Perfect Game, No. 23 by the NCBWA and No. 29 by D2BaseballNews.com. Also, UAM received votes in the final CBN poll of the 2014 season.
From a regional perspective, the Weevils were in the top four of each of the first three NCAA Division II Central Region Rankings, including spending two weeks at the No. 3 spot. UAM reached new program highs in both national and regional rankings this season. Offensively, the Weevils are led by Agredano, the GAC leader in hitting (.377 average) and hits (77). Ray Johnson leads UAM in home runs (eight), and Agredano in both doubles (15) and triples (two—the only triples recorded by any UAM batter in 2014). On the mound, the Weevils are led by Karde Garlington’s nine wins and 81.2 innings pitched, Zach McKnight’s 53 strikeouts and Jeff Harvil’s UAM single-season and career record 10 saves. Among pitchers who have started at least once, McKnight’s 2.75 ERA is tops. As a team, UAM currently ranks second in ERA in the GAC (3.54) and third in batting (.286).
Augustana, S.D. (40-14, 25-8 NSIC); No. 6 seed in Central Regional Tournament
Its 590 hits as a team lead the NSIC, as well as its 133 doubles. In terms of the long ball, Augustana ranks first in the NSIC in homers with 41, which is good for 14th in the NCAA. Individually, Tony Viger’s .721 slugging percentage ranks second in the NSIC; Viger is also third in batting at .423–both Augustana highs. Viger leads the NSIC and the NCAA with 28 doubles, and is first in the NSIC in runs scored with 63. The senior infielder also leads the NSIC in hits with 88, third most in the NCAA, and the trio of Viger (61 RBI, first), Alex Fink (54 RBI, third, and Jack Goihl (53 RBI, fourth) are among the top five in the NSIC in runs batted in. Pitching wise, Kyle Winter has been the top Augustana pitcher so far this year, going 8-0 with a 3.75 ERA. Michael Letkewicz is second in the league with 84 strikeouts on the season and the right-handed sophomore is eighth in the NSIC in opposing batting average with a .219 mark.
The first-round matchups have MSU-Mankato and Emporia State starting things off at noon, SAU and UAM going at it at 3:30 p.m. and Tech taking on Augustana at 7 p.m. There will be at least one Arkansas school to advance to Saturday’s winners’ bracket, and the prediction is two schools. The host Wonder Boys should handle Augustana and UAM should even the season series against SAU, if the Muleriders’ Yumezo Densaki isn’t on the mound for SAU. Densaki improved to 3-0 with a 0.78 ERA in three starts against the Weevils in the GAC tournament championship game. After surrendering runs in the first and fourth innings, he retired 16 of the last 19 innings, including a strikeout of Agredano to clinch the victory for the Muleriders. In the other game, MSU-Mankato should forge its first-ever win against Emporia State. The tournament continues with three games on Friday and concludes with Sunday’s championship.