Progress on the pitching front for LSU

Published 7:00 pm Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Maybe there’s hope for LSU’s pitching staff after all.

There’s the standard disclaimer depending on how many grains of salt you want to apply considering the lukewarm competition in the weekend round robin the Tigers hosted.

But head coach Paul Mainieri was excited after his struggling staff dominated in wins over Toledo, Sacred Heart and Southeastern Louisiana.

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“I think the most significant thing to come out of this week was the way our pitching improved,” he said.

{{tncms-inline content=”<p><strong>Overall Pitching</strong></p> <table border="0"> <tbody> <tr> <td> </td> <td> IP </td> <td> R </td> <td> ER </td> <td> ERA </td> <td> W-L </td> <td> SO  </td> <td> BB  </td> <td> HP </td> <td> OBA </td> </tr> <tr> <td>First 9 games   </td> <td><span class="s1"> 80 </span></td> <td><span> 61 </span></td> <td> 5<span>8  </span></td> <td><span> 6.53 </span></td> <td><span> 5-4 </span></td> <td><span> 81 </span></td> <td><span> 45 </span></td> <td><span> 14 </span></td> <td>  <span>.298 </span></td> </tr> <tr> <td>Last 3 games  </td> <td> 27</td> <td>. 3 </td> <td> 3</td> <td> 1.00 </td> <td> 3-0 </td> <td> 30 </td> <td>  3 </td> <td>  2 </td> <td>  .143 </td> </tr> </tbody> </table> <p class="p1"> </p> <p class="p1"><strong>Starting Pitching</strong></p> <table border="0"> <tbody> <tr> <td> </td> <td> IP  </td> <td>  R </td> <td>  ER </td> <td> ERA </td> <td> W-L  </td> <td> SO </td> <td> BB </td> <td> HP </td> <td> OBA </td> </tr> <tr> <td>First 9 games  </td> <td> 30.2 </td> <td> 35 </td> <td>  33 </td> <td> 9.68 </td> <td> 1-3 </td> <td>  29 </td> <td>  21 </td> <td> 3 </td> <td> .378 </td> </tr> <tr> <td>Last 3 games  </td> <td> 16.2  </td> <td>  <span>1  </span></td> <td><span>  1 </span><span><br /></span></td> <td>  <span>0.54 </span></td> <td>  <span>2-0  </span></td> <td>  <span>30  </span></td> <td>  3 <span><br /></span></td> <td><span> 2 </span></td> <td><span> .190 </span> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table>” id=”50400525-a166-4fb8-9d5f-7cdeed0b29ca” style-type=”refer” title=”LSU pitching turnaround” type=”relcontent”}}

“I think we’re getting better as a team. Can’t help but be tremendously pleased with our pitching, especially the last three games over the weekend.”

Zach Hess, the only weekend starting pitcher to allow a run — and only one — also had 13 strike outs in his seven innings against Toledo to earn national player of the week honors from Collegiate Baseball magazine.

His 13 strikeouts were the most by an LSU pitcher since March of 2015 when Alex Lange had 13 against Kentucky.

He had only one walk — a sore spot with most of the LSU pitchers until this weekend when the staff as a whole gave up only three in 27 innings.

It was Hess’ second straight dominant outing, but until the weekend he was the only Tiger that had posted a “quality start” over LSU’s first nine games.

This time he had company.

Caleb Gilbert regained the form that made him a postseason star a year ago while pitching the first 7.2 innings of the Tigers’ 7-0 victory over Sacred Heart on Saturday.

“Starting pitchers are the most important players on your team,” Mainieri said. “They set the tone for the whole game, and in our league, if you don’t have at least two good starting pitchers, you’re going to have a tough time competing for anything significant.”

Both Gilbert and Hess came into the weekend with ERAs of 10.80, yet allowed one run between them in their combined 14.2 innings.

AJ Labas pitched only two innings in Sunday’s start against SLU, but that was predetermined as the freshman was making his college debut after recovering from December back surgery.

“We got just what we wanted out of AJ,” Mainieri said. “He induced a lot of weak contact and worked quickly through two shutout innings.”

But Mainieri thought freshman reliever Ma’Khail Hilliard was the real story of Sunday’s game.

He has yet to give up a run this season, but Sunday’s four innings against the Lions was by far his longest outing. He allowed only one hit while striking out four with on walk.

“Ma’Khail had to rely mostly on his fastball and can actually be better than he was with his curveball,” Mainieri said.

There could more help on the way.

Another freshman whose start was delayed by injuries, Nick Storz, was to throw a simulated game Monday and his status will be reevaluated afterwards.

LSU will have another busy week, starting tonight when the Tigers host Southern. They travel to UL-Lafayette for a Wednesday night game and return home for a weekend series against Hawaii.

Mainieri will start Cam Sanders (0-0, 11.25) against Southern tonight but has not decided on his pitching plans for the trip to UL-Lafayette.

In the polls released Monday, the Tigers stayed the same in Baseball America

(16), D1 Baseball (22) and Perfect Game (14).

Collegiate Baseball magazine moved LSU up one spot to No. 13

6:30 p.m.

Overall Pitching

   IP   R   ER   ERA   W-L   SO    BB    HP   OBA 
First 9 games     80   61   58    6.53   5-4   81   45   14    .298 
Last 3 games    27 . 3   3  1.00   3-0   30    3    2    .143 

 

Starting Pitching

   IP     R    ER   ERA   W-L    SO   BB   HP   OBA 
First 9 games    30.2   35    33   9.68   1-3    29    21   3   .378 
Last 3 games    16.2     1     1 
  0.54    2-0     30     3 
 2   .190  

      4dcf461e-2083-11e8-99a9-7f1b3ce20fa32018-03-05T14:41:00Znews/national,newsBill Cosby goes to court to stop accusers from testifying

      AssociatedPresshttps://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/847f947e4dcdd64d23ee1a5459357331?s=100&d=mm&r=gNORRISTOWN, Pa. — A day after Hollywood’s first Oscars of the #MeToo era, Bill Cosby is going to court on Monday to stop some of his dozens of accusers from testifying at his April 2 sexual assault retrial.

      Cosby’s retooled defense team, led by former Michael Jackson lawyer Tom Mesereau, is due to clash with prosecutors over the potential witnesses at a pretrial hearing.

      Cosby walked into the courthouse in suburban Philadelphia Monday morning on the arm of his spokesman.

      Prosecutors raised the prospect of calling as many as 19 women to the witness stand, including model Janice Dickinson, in an attempt to show that an alleged 2004 assault that led to Cosby’s only criminal charges was actually part of a five-decade pattern of him drugging and harming women.

      Jurors did not have that context when they ended Cosby’s first trial last year in a deadlock. A judge allowed just one other accuser’s testimony but barred any mention of about 60 others who have come forward to accuse Cosby in recent years.

      The only other hints jurors got of Cosby’s past came from deposition excerpts from 2005 and 2006 in which he admitted getting quaaludes to give to women he wanted to have sex with.

      Cosby’s lawyers are urging the same judge, Steven O’Neill, to again limit the number of accusers allowed to testify. They argue that some of the women’s allegations date to the 1960s and are “virtually impossible to defend against.”

      Cosby’s lawyers argue that the other accusers’ accusations are largely unsubstantiated and are not enough to meet the strict legal standard for allowing prosecutors to present evidence of a defendant’s prior bad conduct.

      They said they would seek to delay the retrial if any of the women were allowed to testify so they could have more time to investigate their claims.

      Jury selection is slated to begin March 29.

      Monday’s hearing comes just 10 days after Cosby’s 44-year-old daughter, Ensa, died of kidney disease. His lawyers have given no indication they would seek to delay the hearing or his retrial.

      In January, the 80-year-old Cosby emerged from a long period of near-seclusion to have dinner with friends at a restaurant and give his first comedy performance in more than two years. Legal experts said the nights on the town appeared to be an effort to rebuild his good-guy image.

      Prosecutors are counting on other accusers testifying to show there was a sinister flip side to Cosby’s public persona as “America’s Dad,” cultivated through his role as an affable Jell-O pitchman and the star of the top-rated 1980s family sitcom “The Cosby Show.”

      Cosby has pleaded not guilty to charges he drugged and molested former Temple University women’s basketball official Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia home. He remains free on bail.

      Prosecutors wanted as many as 13 women to testify at the first trial, but O’Neill allowed only Kelly Johnson, who worked for Cosby’s agent, to take the stand.

      Johnson testified that Cosby knocked her out with a pill during a 1996 meeting at the Bel-Air Hotel. She said she woke up to find her dress disheveled, her breasts exposed and Cosby forcing her to touch his genitals.

      The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand, Johnson and Dickinson have done.””

      Bill Cosby arrives for a pretrial hearing in his sexual assault case at the Montgomery County Courthouse, Monday, March 5, 2018, in Norristown, Pa. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)