With the regular season in the books, the Milwaukee baseball team prepares to make the drive to Ohio to participate in the 2018 Horizon League Tournament. Overall, the action gets underway at Nischwitz Stadium Wednesday, with the Panthers set to play their first game at 3 p.m. CST that day.
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The 2018 Horizon League Baseball Championship will run from Wednesday, May 23, through Saturday, May 26. Wright State (22-6 Horizon League) is the host and No. 1 seed. Please see the full bracket on page 12 of this release.
The modified double-elimination format features a pair of opening round elimination contests, with game one featuring No. 4 seed Oakland and No. 5 seed Youngstown State (11 a.m. CST) and game two pitting No. 3 seed Milwaukee and No. 6 seed Northern Kentucky (3 p.m. CST). The lowest remaining seed from the opening round will face No. 1 WSU Thursday morning, while the highest remaining seed will square off against the tournament's defending champion, No. 2 UIC, Thursday afternoon.
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To follow all the action of this year's league championship, log on to www.horizonleague.com and click on the Championship Central page. Included will be links to statistics for games in progress, along with complete summaries and box scores as contests are completed. All contests will also be shown on ESPN+.
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Ticket prices include the following options:
Day Passes: $8 Adult
$5 Child (10 and under) & Senior (65 and older)
$5/person Groups (15 or more)
FREE - Horizon League students with a valid student ID
All-Tournament Pass: $20 Adult ... $12 Child/Senior/Military
**No pets (non-service) permitted into Nischwitz Stadium
The 2018 campaign marks the 54th season of baseball at UWM. It is also the 48th season of varsity play (the program was played at the club level from 1982-1986) and the 28th in the Panthers NCAA Division I era.
TOURNAMENT HISTORY
The Panthers have had great success in the Horizon League Tournament, winning league titles in 1999, 2001, 2002 and 2010 to go along with runner-up finishes in 2005, 2008 and 2015. A season ago, they were knocked off in the first round by Northern Kentucky for the rare early exit.
The team went 4-1 to win it all in 2010, topping Wright State twice in the championship and Valparaiso twice on the way to the title to head to the NCAA Tournament. In 1999, MKE bounced back from a game-one loss to win four-straight contests and advance to the NCAA Regional. For the back-to-back titles in 2001 and 2002, Milwaukee went a perfect 4-0 in the tournament each season. The first and last of the four crowns came as a No. 2 seed, while the middle pair were as the No. 1.
LOOKING AT THE OPPONENT
Todd Asalon closes out year No. 18 with NKU (518-457-1 overall), with the Norse starting the postseason at 14-38. Included in that mark was a 9-21 ledger in league play, most recently dropping their final six games of the season - three at the hands of Wright State. Will Haueter is enjoying an impressive campaign, batting a team-high .357 to go along with 40 runs scored, 9 home runs and 36 runs batted in. Chad Roberts sits second, checking in at .290 with 12 home runs and 50 RBI (third in league). The team ERA is 7.99.
SERIES HISTORY
The Panthers lead the Norse by a slim 10-7 edge, with all 17 games coming over the past two seasons since NKU joined the Horizon League. The locations of the 2018 series were flip-flopped due to weather, with Milwaukee taking two of three on the road earlier this spring and two of three in Wisconsin as well. A year ago the Panthers went 2-4 against the Norse and had their season come to a close with an 11-5 loss in the Horizon League Tournament.
LAST WEEK
Milwaukee put together a spectacular week, going 4-1 in the final games to be played at Henry Aaron Field. The offense pounded the ball at .337 for the team, led by
Mike Ferri (.500/6-for-12),
Colin Kreiter (.444/8-for-18),
Trevor Schwecke (.409/9-for-22) and
Devin Rybacki (.400/8-for-20). The staff limited opponents to a .250 average.
SOME WOULD CALL IT EPIC
The Panthers accomplished two impressive feats in their come-from-behind, 15-9 victory over Oakland May 18. First off, let's talk comeback. The team fell behind 5-0 before they even had the chance to bat and the deficit moved to 6-0 in the top of the second inning. Winning the contest gave
Scott Doffek's team it's second-largest comeback under his watch.
TOP COMEBACKS IN SCOTT DOFFEK ERA
1. Trailed Chicago State, 10-1, fourth inning. Won 15-11 (4/15/15)
2. Trailed Oakland, 6-0, second inning, Won 15-9 (5/19/18)
2. Trailed Cleveland State, 6-0, third inning. Won 7-6 (4/11/08)
3. Trailed Youngstown State, 5-0, second inning. Won 6-5 (3/14/15)
4. Trailed Butler, 5-0, second inning. Won 13-5 (5/13/12)
Now let's talk offense. Milwaukee sent 15 batters to the plate in a fun-filled 11-run seventh inning, recording 5 hits while walking 3 times and getting hit by a pitch four times. In fact, the team put up 5 consecutive runs with the bases loaded without swinging the bat when they went walk/HBP/HBP/HBP/walk.
Trevor Schwecke had a pair of doubles in the frame with the highlight being the power display from
Colin Kreiter.
The 11 runs marked the first inning of 10-or-more since plating 10 against Edgewood in a 23-2 win April 28, 2015. The last time MKE got to 11? That was the ninth inning against Wright State in a 20-3 Horizon League Tournament victory over Wright State May 22, 2008.
The school record for those wondering?
That would be the 14 runs in the fifth against WSU on April 15, 2000 (a 17-2 win).
BACK-TO-BACK JACKS
Colin Kreiter had quite the day against Oakland May 18. More specifically, he had quite the inning. In finishing 4-for-5 with 5 RBI and 3 runs scored, Kreiter accomplished something NEVER done before in school history. In the 11-run seventh inning, Kreiter became the first player to hit two home runs in the SAME inning in school history, recording the 60th multi-home run game all-time in the process.
His 5 RBI in one inning were just one off the school record. Jesse Hart had 6 RBI in that 9th-inning outburst against Wright State in 2008, driving in two with a double before piling it on with a grand slam.
KING OF THE "K"
Austin Schulfer earned Collegiate Baseball National Player of the Week and Horizon League Pitcher of the Week honors after his dominant 7-inning effort against Northern Kentucky April 6, striking out a school record 15 batters while not walking a single one. He was back at it again April 23, earning league honors for a second time after throwing a complete-game shutout against YSU April 21, striking out 9 while allowing just two hits. That big game wasn't Schulfer's first crack at the K record, as he was one of six different pitchers to be tied with the former standard of 13, which he accomplished on April 30 of last season (at Miller Park). It also marked his third career game of 10-plus K's.
He will have the chance Wednesday to add the career strikeout record to his resume. He starts this week at 239 punchouts, currently tied for the top spot.
T1. Brian Keller (2013-16): 239 K's
T1. Schulfer (2015-present): 239
3. Quintin Oldenburg (1998-2002): 238
4. Chad Sadowski (1997-2000): 213
Schulfer's 85 strikeouts on the season are also currently fourth in the record books. Keller has that record too, at 103, set in 2016.
THANKS SENIORS!
The Milwaukee baseball program recognized the seniors on the roster with a special pregame ceremony May 19. Congratulations and best wishes to the following seniors: No. 4
Ben Chally, No. 11
Brandon Parr, No. 39
John Moynihan and No. 55
Austin Schulfer.
FOR KREI-YING OUT LOUD
Newcomer
Colin Kreiter has put together an impressive MKE debut season, currently second on the team in batting (.318) while knocking in 27 runs. He has put together the longest hitting streak of any Panther this season (11 games from March 4-23 where he raised his average from .263 to .313). He also had a recant 10-game hitting streak come to an end May 17 that saw him bat a sizzling .441 (15-for-34) that took him up to seventh in the Horizon League in batting.
ROCKET RYBACKI
Devin Rybacki has been a man on a mission since March 14, essentially doubling-up his batting average on the season in the past 27 contests (he has missed some to injury). He has hit safely in 23 of those, going 39-for-102 (.382) to raise his average almost 200 points to its current team-leading .338 - also good for fifth in the conference. He also added his first MKE home run against NKU May 4.
HOW MANY?!?
Milwaukee played 34 games in a row on the road to open the 2018 season (prior to its home opener April 26), becoming the final NCAA Division I team to accomplish the "feat" (North Dakota State was also in the running for the title, but did play April 25). Needless to say, it was a rough spring and all bets are off, as the 2018 campaign can now officially go down as the "toughest" in regards to both the total amount of road games played prior and the latest date for a home opener in program history.
2018: 34 regular-season games on road prior to first home game
2016: 31
2008: 30
2017: 29
2013: 29
2001: 26
2018: April 26 marks latest home opener
2013: April 24
2016: April 20
2008: April 15
2017: April 13
DANDY DEBUT
Mike Edwards certainly didn't show his youth against Chicago State April 10, pitching well in picking up the victory in his first collegiate start. He shook off the three hits and two runs he allowed to the Cougars in the first inning with five more impressive frames, not allowing another base hit the rest of the way - retiring 14 of the final 15 batters he faced (one drew a walk). He ended the day with the "W", 6.0 innings of work, that one walk allowed and three K's.
MOWING THEM DOWN
Paced by the 15K-effort of starter
Austin Schulfer, the Milwaukee pitching staff tied another school record against Northern Kentucky April 6.
Patrick Tomfohrde added a pair in his relief appearance to up the total to 17 whiffs - tying the school mark set last season against Oakland April 30.
SOPHOMORE SURGE
A season after earning Second-Team All-Horizon League honors and a selection to the All-Freshman Team,
Trevor Schwecke has picked up right where he left off in 2018 - and then some. His numbers are moving past the bar he set as a freshman, starting the week at .317 while topping last season in runs with 41 (was 19), hits with 63 (33), home runs with 3 (0) and RBI with 37 (13).
Classmate
Mike Ferri has played his way into being a regular starter in 2018 and has also topped most marks from his freshman season. In 43 appearances, Ferri has already set collegiate-bests in hits with 47 (was 20), doubles with 11 (3), runs with 19 (10), home runs with 3 (0), RBI with 14 (10) and stolen bases with 8 (4). His .307 average sits fourth for the Panthers.
PUTTING THE "K" IN RE'K'LAITIS
Jared Reklaitis made his first start of the 2018 season a memorable one, allowing just one hit and no runs in 5.0 innings against Sacramento State March 4. Although he had to work around six walks, he also recorded a then career-high eight strikeouts (prior UWM high was five), including the fourth inning where he struck out the side following a leadoff triple.
Just after earning a spot in the weekend rotation, Reklaitis picked up victories in back-to-back starts against YSU March 18 (8 K's) and Wright State March 25 (season-high 7.0 IP) before tallying a career-best 10 strikeouts against Oakland March 31. It marked the first 10+ K game for a Panther this season and just the 33rd in program history. He claimed his third win of the season at Northern Kentucky April 8.
FIRST IMPRESSIONS
Scott Doffek brought a roster into the 2018 season that included 14 newcomers as well as a pair of redshirts who did not appear in a game for the Panthers, meaning that essentially half of the roster never played a game for the program. The breakdown of the new student-athletes is as follows:
Freshman (11):
Mitch Buban,
Bryce Cross,
Mike Edwards,
Conner Goodman,
Jack Kraus,
Jack Mahoney,
Nick Moeser,
Zach Nogalski,
Joey Scaffidi,
Jack Thelen,
Patrick Tomfohrde
Redshirt Freshman (1):
Matt DeYoung
Transfers (4):
Tyler Bordner (JR),
Colin Kreiter (JR), Oakland Scanlon (JR),
Joshua Serio (SR)
In addition, redshirt freshman
Nick Winter made just one appearance last season before being lost to injury.
That makes the squad young as well, consisting of 20 total underclassmen, made up of 14 freshmen and six sophomores on the roster.
BIG SHOES TO FILL
With a big senior class departing last season as well as players lost early to the Major League Baseball Draft, a look at the numbers shows the Panthers lost a large percentage of production in numerous categories.
GAMES STARTED (field players only): 352/486: 72.4 percent of starts will not return to the field in 2018.
AT BATS: 1,334/1,890: 70.5 percent of at bats do not return
RUNS: 200/282: 70.9 percent of runs
HITS: 363/516: 70.3 percent of hits
HOME RUNS: 28/30: 93.3 percent of home runs do not return
LEAGUE PREMIERES
Milwaukee is now 14-11 all-time in affiliated conference openers since becoming an NCAA Division I team. Head coach
Scott Doffek has posted a 7-5 ledger in his 12 openers, including a 12-4 victory over Youngstown State March 17. A year ago, the Panthers fell to Northern Kentucky in a slugfest, 13-9.
THOSE PESKY PANTHERS
The Panthers have held their own against nationally-ranked opponents over the years, with a victory over No. 1 Rice in the 1999 NCAA Tournament at the top of the list. In their most recent attempt, Milwaukee led No. 24 Illinois by a score of 4-0 in the fourth inning March 14 and were still dead-even at 6-6 heading into the last of the eighth before falling, 9-6. The squad did not play any ranked teams in 2017, but started 2016 by knocking off #25 Texas Tech in the opener of a doubleheader Feb. 20, claiming a 10-3 victory to mark the second season in a row where the team beat a nationally-ranked opponent. The victory was the programs sixth against a ranked foe all-time, with a win over No. 15 Iowa (4/8/15) the most recent one prior.
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IF THEY BUILD IT ...
After more than two decades calling Henry Aaron Field home, the Milwaukee baseball program is moving to a new stadium starting in the 2019 season. Milwaukee baseball head coach
Scott Doffek and Milwaukee Athletic Director
Amanda Braun were part of the press conference unveiling the "Ballpark Commons" project at City Hall in Franklin on Feb. 28, highlighted by the 4,000-seat stadium.
Doffek and Braun were present to announce the department's partnership with ROC Ventures, one in which the Milwaukee baseball team will play all of its home games at the new stadium. Ground has been broken and the new facility is scheduled to be ready for the 2019 campaign. The Panthers have spent the past 24 seasons with Henry Aaron Field as their home park, putting together an impressive 266-112 (.704) winning percentage in home games in that span. The ballpark in Franklin will also host a new professional baseball team, one set to join the American Association of Independent Professional Baseball.
STOPPING AT THREE
Matt Quartel knocked in three runs against Bethune-Cookman Feb. 25, doing so on a pair of triples. Is a pair of three-baggers in the same game unique? Why yes, Quartel does tie the school record with it, set five other times. The most recent addition was Mike Porcaro, who collected a pair of three-base hits against Wright State on March 16, 2013.
GET CRACKING
The transition from an indoor gym the first few weeks of practice in the middle of a Wisconsin winter to an 80-degree season opener can get tricky. The Panthers made the adjustment a seamless one this season, with the offense cranking out 16 hits against Big Ten pitching versus Ohio State. That marks the most hits in an opener since
Scott Doffek took over as head coach. The most prior was 13 safeties against Maine in the 2015 opener (a 10-0 win). Just two other times have the Panthers collected as many as 10 base hits in game one of a new campaign in that span (since 2007).
BACK IN ACTION
Alex McIntosh made his season debut out of the bullpen for the Panthers Feb. 16, getting back on the field for the first time since the end of the 2015 season due to injury. His inspiring journey back to the field hit exactly 1,000 days in between appearances, joining a small group of student-athletes across the country in similar situations. McIntosh's span in between sits close to the top of the list.
*McIntosh (P): 1,000 days (5/23/15 & 2/16/18) between appearances
*Alec Daily, CSU Bakersfield: 1,008 days (5/15/15 & 2/16/18). Formerly a pitcher; came back at 1B.
*Mike Concato, Dartmouth (P): 1,021 days (5/9/15 & 2/23/18)
*Clay Conaway, Delaware (P): 1,041 days (4/14/15 & 2/18/18) between appearances on the mound
*Matt Geiger, Georgia Southern (P): 1,000-plus days (5/8/15; yet to appear in 2018)
KEEP 'EM COMING
Scott Doffek joined some rare company on April 22 last season when the Panthers topped Youngstown State, giving Doffek career victory No. 300 as the Milwaukee head coach. He is just the second coach in program history - dating all the way back to 1957 - to reach that level. The only coach ahead of him? Jerry Augustine, who holds the record of 347 wins in his time at Milwaukee from 1995-2006 (347-297-1 /.539). Doffek entered the 2018 season at 309 victories.
1. Augustine (1996-2006): 347
2. Doffek (2007-present): 333
3. Jim Burian (1982-1990): 143
4. Bill Ritter (1957-1970): 122
PRESEASON NATIONAL RECOGNITION
Various publications and websites came out with their annual college baseball previews and players from the Milwaukee roster have earned a handful of mentions.
Baseball America picks the Panthers for third place and lists
Austin Schulfer as the No. 9 entry on BA's "Top Prospect List" in the conference.
The Perfect Game website also lists Milwaukee No. 3, and it's Schulfer again as a member of their Preseason All-Conference Team, where he is called "one of the top returning arms". He is joined on the squad by
Trevor Schwecke, who is listed as having "+ makeup & instincts" by the site.
DAULTON VAR-"SHOW"
Daulton Varsho put together some impressive accomplishments in his three season with the Panthers. He was drafted by the Arizona Diamondbacks with the 68th pick on Day 1 of the 2017 Major League Baseball Draft (selection officially came in the Competitive Balance Round B, which immediately followed the second round). The pick was the highest-ever for a Panther, becoming just the second player in Horizon League history to be selected within the top two rounds of the draft. He enjoyed an impressive junior campaign, named a Second-Team All-American by D1Baseball and Third-Team All-American by Baseball America. Varsho led the Horizon League in batting average (.362), slugging percentage (.643), on-base percentage (.490), triples (6) and walks (46), while also finishing fourth in total bases (128), fifth in hits (72), sixth with a team-high 11 home runs and seventh in runs scored (47). He went on to bat .311 in the 2017 season with Class A Hillsboro Hops, posting a .368 OBP with 7 HR and 39 RBI in 50 games, totaling 26 extra-base hits while scoring 36 runs. He was listed as the Diamondbacks No. 5 Prospect by Baseball America in the offseason, along with the publication projecting him to be the starting catcher for the MLB team by the 2021 campaign.
Varsho became the first UWM baseball player to be named a Preseason All-American (by Collegiate Baseball) and went on to become a semifinalist for the Johnny Bench Award. He was also named to the 2017 Horizon League Baseball All-Academic Team and was a Second-Team All-Horizon League honoree in 2017. Varsho finished his career with 199 hits, coming up just one hit short of becoming the first UWM junior to reach the 200-hit level
LET'S HIT THE ROAD...
As usual, the Panthers were busy waiting for the snow to melt away and Henry Aaron Field to be ready for them to play in Milwaukee. While that happens, they played 34 straight road games to open 2018.
The Panthers traveled just over 15,000 miles over the course of the first eight weeks of this season via plane or bus, visiting eight different states (Florida twice, Washington, Minnesota, Alabama, Illinois, Ohio twice, Kentucky and Michigan) before playing their home opener April 26 against MSOE. To put that in perspective, that would be equivalent to circling the bases 205,333 times.
PRESEASON POLL
Milwaukee was picked to finish third in the 2018 Horizon League preseason baseball poll, released in early February.
Last season's tournament and regular-season runner-up, Wright State, was unanimously selected as the 2018 conference favorite as determined by the annual preseason coaches' poll. Tournament and regular-season champion UIC was tabbed second, followed by Milwaukee, Northern Kentucky, Oakland, and Youngstown State.
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2018 Horizon League Baseball Preseason Poll
1. Wright State (6 first-place votes) 36
2. UIC 29
3. Milwaukee 20
4. Northern Kentucky 19
5. Oakland 14
6. Youngstown State 8
IT'S MILLER TIME
Through a marketing agreement with the Milwaukee Brewers, the Panthers have played at Miller Park every season since 2002. The team has now posted a record of 17-11 in games at the major league park, following a 4-3, 10-inning defeat by Wright State on May 12.
ON TAP
If the Panthers secure the Horizon League Tournament Championship, they will be heading to NCAA Regionals June 1-4, held on 16 different campus sites across the country.
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