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Topic: SEC baseball 2025

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utee94

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #14 on: March 03, 2025, 05:41:18 PM »
Rough start for the Ags but the season is still quite Earley.  There's too much talent on that roster to stay down for long.

MikeDeTiger

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #15 on: March 04, 2025, 10:00:42 AM »
You should come to Austin for the LSU-Texas series in a couple of weeks.  I have other commitments Saturday evening but am currently planning on going to the Friday and Sunday games.

So can I show up to Disch-Falk with a "We're Texas and y'all ain't" t-shirt?  Or would that just be confusing?

utee94

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #16 on: March 04, 2025, 10:22:13 AM »
Ha!

jgvol

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #17 on: March 04, 2025, 01:45:49 PM »
Just checking in........



utee94

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #18 on: March 04, 2025, 02:30:12 PM »
Look at the Volunteer fans who all of a sudden discovered the existence of college baseball in 2024! :)



jgvol

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #19 on: March 04, 2025, 04:17:52 PM »
Look at the Volunteer fans who all of a sudden discovered the existence of college baseball in 2024! :)




Well, more like 2021, but point taken --- and valid.

MikeDeTiger

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #20 on: March 04, 2025, 04:35:58 PM »
Just checking in........




What ranking is that?  Last thing I saw had A&M #1.  

jgvol

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #21 on: March 04, 2025, 04:40:42 PM »
What ranking is that?  Last thing I saw had A&M #1. 

The latest and greatest.  I think it is 2 days old.

utee94

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #22 on: March 04, 2025, 05:02:24 PM »
Oh I think MDT is aware... :)

For reference Baseball America currently has Tennessee ranked #1 and LSU #2.  Historically I've always found their rankings to be more credible.






MikeDeTiger

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #23 on: March 05, 2025, 11:01:46 AM »
I don't keep up with it.  The only source I read daily is an LSU site that uses D1Baseball, when he talks about rankings.  Which he hasn't, since the start of season, or before.  I thought he mentioned A&M being #1 last time he said anything. 

Nobody in their right mind cares about or believes a ranking like that at this point, with this many new pieces.  Only thing I take from it is I keep in the back of my mind who is likely to be our toughest outs in a season.  i.e., if A&M was ranked #1 at any point, it's probably going to be a tough series. 

And of course, there's always the years where we think we have a good team, but don't, and those Top 25 opponents go from "tough outs" to "we're going to lose another series." 

Ugh.  Baseball stresses me out.  It's so much more obvious to me, so much quicker, what kind of football team we have.  After 1 or 2 games I pretty well know how the season will go even though I can't predict exactly where the L's are coming from.  Baseball is a different animal.  Weeks drag on, and I still wonder how they'll be able to do.  Actually, it never ends, because baseball is so much more individual-dependent whereas football is more team-dependent.  In baseball, we may have the best hitter in the country and the best college pitcher I've ever seen, as with a couple seasons ago, but if they have an off night, or if another team has a stud who's just better that day, or the pitcher isn't pitching that game, etc., the outcomes can swing more wildly.  In football, often a guy having a bad day is usually mitigated by the others around them.  

Mr Tulip

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #24 on: March 05, 2025, 11:13:10 AM »
I'm learning to develop a more keen eye for baseball. My son in law is a big fan. Since the Mavs are obviously trashing their organization, he's working on learning hockey.
Much like soccer, there's a chess match going on in baseball that I'm trying to see. As the only (relatively) un-timed sport (as long as you've got an out left, you're still in it), the strategies are myriad.
When the college season is new, no one really knows what the other team does well. It takes a few weeks to learn what your opponent can hit, and what they can't. Conversely, you gotta figure out who you can count on and who might just need time to work it all out.

I'd say that last night's game between Texas and TAMU-CC is one of those pesky mid-week contests that Texas was so adept at tanking last season. So far, that's a big improvement.

utee94

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #25 on: March 05, 2025, 11:14:38 AM »
I'm pretty much the opposite with baseball, compared to MDT above.  There are so many more games, and the weekend-series structure means you can lose a game but still "win" against an opponent.  Each individual game is less stressful so they're each just so much more enjoyable to me.

Sure, the team can tank, lose a series, lose a bunch of series, or whatever.  But Texas has won NCs under numerous head coaches in numerous eras, and I just don't worry that we'll never get back to the promised land, in the same way I do with football.

To me there's almost nothing more pleasant than an afternoon or evening in the spring out at Disch-Falk, watching the Horns play baseball.  Or, just sitting at the tailgate outside the gates, with the radio on,  and just listening to the sounds of the game.  It's so relaxing.

utee94

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #26 on: March 05, 2025, 11:17:04 AM »
I'd say that last night's game between Texas and TAMU-CC is one of those pesky mid-week contests that Texas was so adept at tanking last season. So far, that's a big improvement.

Yup.  I have no idea how Texas will perform once SEC play begins, but there's zero doubt that this year's team is much improved over last year's, and a huge part of it is mental.

Augie always stressed the mental aspect of the sport over the technical or physical, and I guess he might have known what he was talking about.

MikeDeTiger

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Re: SEC baseball 2025
« Reply #27 on: March 06, 2025, 09:28:24 AM »
What I didn't mention above, which plays a big role in how I find it hard to gauge the team, is how it seems there's more variance in how baseball players play from game to game compared to football players.  At least for us.  After a couple games in football, I pretty well see what the team is and the individuals perform pretty consistently.  In baseball, it's common for all but a couple of our best players to have ups and downs, and you never know when they're coming.  And even the best players have slumps.  Slumps are not common on our football team.  

Trying to think through it, from a single-game perspective, it probably has to do with a guy playing so many more plays in a football game than a baseball game.  A RT might have some bad plays, but over the course of 40-50 plays, he is what he is.  An outfielder might get 4-5 at-bats and a handful of chances to field a ball.  If he has bad plays, it hurts way worse.  

 

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