Up next for the Milwaukee baseball team in week four of the season is a road trip to yet another different state, heading to Ohio to take on Miami in a four-game series. Following treks to North Carolina, California and Oregon, the Panthers look to get back on track when they battle the Redhawks starting Friday. Following a single game that day, the two teams will battle in a doubleheader Saturday, followed by another single game Sunday to close out the weekend.
Each matchup in the series will feature live statistics. All links are posted to the MKE website. First pitch is scheduled for 4 p.m. CST Friday, 12 p.m. CST Saturday and 12 p.m. CST Sunday.
The 2020 campaign marks the 56th season of baseball at MKE. It is also the 50th season of varsity play (the program was played at the club level from 1982-1986) and the 30th in the Panthers NCAA Division I era.
LOOKING AT THE OPPONENTS
Miami was ranked in the preseason (No. 33), the only Mid-American Conference team to receive votes in the National Collegiate Baseball Writers' Association poll. The RedHawks are coming off a season where they went 37-19 overall and 15-11 in the MAC. They return 22 letterwinners, including eight out of nine position starters in 2020.
So far in 2020, the team is 4-6, dropping three of its past four, including to league-foe Wright State on Tuesday by a final score of 8-6. Charlie Hannigan leads the offense with a .400 average (14-for-35), with Will Vogelsang close behind at .371 (13-for-35). Vogelsang has added team-leading totals of 12 RBI and 12 runs scored. The team ERA checks in at 5.80 through the first 10 games.
SERIES HISTORY
The two teams have not played since the 2000 campaign, with that doubleheader in March of that season still the only two games played in the all-time series. It was a split that day, with MKE claiming a 7-1 win and the Redhawks getting an 8-2 decision.
USING YOUR NOG-GIN
Following a strong close to the 2019 campaign that included a two-HR game in the postseason,
Zach Nogalski looked to take that momentum into 2020. He has done just that so far, leading the offense with a .372 average and topping the Horizon League after three weekends with 16 hits. He had a great time in sunny California two weekends ago, adding three multi-hit outings in the four games at Sacramento State. He batted .438 in the series, going 7-for-16 with four doubles.
TAKING ON THE BIG TIME
Milwaukee has played numerous ranked foes over the years and added Wake Forest to the list already this season, which came in ranked as high as #17 in the national polls. Prior to the big 8-6 victory over the Demon Deacons Feb. 15, Milwaukee had last knocked off a ranked squad when it topped #25 Texas Tech in February of 2016. It was during the 1999 postseason that the team made the biggest splash against a ranked opponent, defeating then-No. 1 Rice at the NCAA Regionals for the program's first-ever victory over a ranked team. Since that time, the Panthers have recorded seven victories against ranked opponents.
Milwaukee Wins vs. Ranked Opponents Since 1999
2020: Feb. 15: W, 8-6 at #17/18 Wake Forest
2016: Feb. 19-21: L, 3-12; W, 10-3; L, 1-9; L, 0-12 at #25 Texas Tech
2015: April 8: W, 4-3 at #15 Iowa
2009: Feb. 27: W, 19-11 vs. #25 Michigan
2006: March 3-5: L 14-3; L 9-5; W 7-2 at #20 Missouri
2000: April 24-25: L 11-0; L 8-5; W 9-7 at #15 Nebraska
2000: March 29: W 14-3 at #21 Notre Dame
1999: May 28: W 8-4 vs. #1 Rice
CLASSIC COMEBACK
Milwaukee did not make that victory over #17/18 Wake Forest an easy one, falling behind by a score of 6-2 after plating the first two runs of the contest. With innings running late,
Zach Nogalski started a two-out rally with an RBI-single in the seventh inning.
Mitchell Buban made it 6-4 with a run-scoring triple and
Joe Vyskocil followed with an opposite-field home run to make it a new game at 6-6.
Matt Vanek played a huge role out of the bullpen, coming on in relief with the Panthers trailing, 6-2, in the fifth. He proceeded to throw three scoreless frames, getting out of a huge jam in the bottom of the seventh when Wake Forest had runners on first and third with one out. It was Nogalski and Buban again in the ninth, each singling in runs to push MKE ahead, 8-6.
Patrick Tomfohrde then worked around some trouble, but closed it out in the ninth.
THE STRONG-ARM DEBUT
The Panthers got an impressive debut out of newcomer
Jake Armstrong in the season opener against Illinois Feb. 14. The sophomore transfer from Heartland Community College was called upon in a pressure-filled situation: coming out of the bullpen facing the bases loaded with no outs. No problem for Armstrong, who recorded a strikeout and a double play to end the rally. He went on to pitch the final four innings without allowing a run, retiring the final nine batters of the contest. He fanned a pair and did not walk a batter. He followed that up with a second straight scoreless outing against Sacramento State Feb. 23, adding another 1.1 scoreless frames to his resume (5.1 IP total after those contests).
SHOES TO FILL
The Panthers are turning over a big chunk of the lineup from 2019 due to losses to graduation and the MLB Draft. Milwaukee will look to replace 57.2 percent (1,174-2,053) of at-bats, 60.8 percent (255-419) of runs scored, 59.1 percent of hits (358-606) and over half of its home run total (25-48) from a year ago. There will be plenty of opportunities for newcomers to shine, a group that consists of 17 players who have never worn a Milwaukee uniform in game action. Included in that list is a large freshmen class, numbering 14 (11 true freshmen/3 redshirt).
CLOSING IN ON A GRAND MILESTONE
The Panthers start the season with 981 all-time victories in program history and will join a small list of teams in the department once they cross the 1,000 win plateau. MKE men's basketball was the first and opened the 2019-20 school year with 1,364 wins. Women's volleyball was next and upped its total to 1,092 after a successful fall campaign.
HOW MANY?!?
Last spring, Milwaukee played 21 straight away from home to begin the year and the number is set at 20 this season. The record was set back in 2018 when the Panthers played 34 consecutive road games to open the slate (the home-opening date was 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). The team will travel over 12,000 miles over the course of the first five-plus weeks of this season via plane or bus, visiting five different states (North Carolina, California, Oregon, Ohio and Indiana) before playing its scheduled home opener March 20 against Youngstown State.
2018: 34 regular-season games on road prior to first home game
2016: 31
2008: 30
2017: 29
2013: 29
2018: April 26 marked latest home opener
2013: April 24
2016: April 20
2008: April 15
2017: April 13
As a northern team that cannot practice outdoors before the start of the season, it is no surprise that Milwaukee does not have a great record in season openers. It is now 6-24 in such contests at the Division I level after dropping a tight 3-2 decision to Illinois to open 2020. But, the team did post an impressive 10-0 victory over Maine to open the slate in 2015 and also topped Marshall, 5-3, to open the 2019 campaign. The Illinois contest was
Scott Doffek's 14th opener as head coach.
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 in the Horizon League and lists
Joe Vyskocil as the No. 8 entry on BA's "Top Prospect List" in the conference.
The D1Baseball website also lists Milwaukee No. 3, and spotlights a handful of Panthers on various lists. For "Top Prospects, 2020 Draft", the entries include
Jack Mahoney at No. 2 and
Jack Thelen at No. 11.
Nate DeYoung checks in at No. 5 for the "Top Prospects, 2021 Draft". Lastly, three players are on the "Impact Freshmen" list, with
Ty Olejnik (#3),
Dylan Szajkovics (#7) and
Quinton Morris (#9) all making the cut.
The Perfect Game Horizon League preview ranks MKE third and selected three players for its preseason all-league squad:
Joe Vyskocil (1B),
Adam LaRock (OF) and
Mike Edwards (P).
PRESEASON POLL
Milwaukee was picked to finish third in the 2020 Horizon League preseason baseball poll. UIC, the 2019 tournament champions, squeaked out a one point advantage to come out on top with three first-place votes and 33 points. Regular season champ Wright State got the other three and was second with 32. Milwaukee (24), Northern Kentucky (16), Youngstown State (14) and Oakland (7) rounded things out.
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2020 Horizon League Baseball Preseason Poll
1. UIC (3 first-place votes) 33
2. Wright State (3 first-place votes) 32
3. Milwaukee 24
4. Northern Kentucky 16
5. Youngstown State 14
6. Oakland 7
FAMILIAR NAMES ON AN IMPRESSIVE LIST
The NCAA.com website put out a press release at the end of January with a list of "The top 150 hitters in college baseball, according to D1Baseball analytics". The list was compiled using statistical analysis, focused on three major areas: Plate Discipline, Hit Ability, and Game Power. The players were then graded from 1-100.
A pair of Panthers appeared on the list, with
Jack Thelen leading the way at No. 123 (overall grade of 81.1). He was joined by
Joe Vyskocil, who checked in a few spots later at No. 129 (81.0). Milwaukee and Wright State (2 players) were the only Horizon League schools on the list.
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 posted a record of 18-11 in games at the major league park, following a convincing 13-1 victory over Oakland May 11. This spring, the team hosts Oakland once again at the MLB Park, scheduled for April 17.
REK-N-EFFECTS
Jared Reklaitis made his name as a strikeout pitcher throughout his senior campaign last spring, tying the school record with 15 in a game as a junior before putting up the first 14-K game in program history in 2019. He ended up leading the Horizon League in strikeouts and also inched past the school record, finishing with 104 K's to edge Brian Keller's former mark.
1. Reklaitis, 104, 2019
2. Brian Keller: 103, 2016
3. Ben Stanczyk: 95, 2004
4. Chad Sadowski: 91, 1999
5.
Austin Schulfer: 87, 2018
NINTH-INNING DRAMATICS
Falling behind by three runs in the top of the eighth inning is never a good situation, but the Panthers gave everyone something to smile about in game two of a doubleheader against Wright State April 20 of last season. The rally started in the ninth with a sac fly from
Nate DeYoung and ended one batter later when
Matt Quartel sent an 0-1 pitch deep over the right field fence for a three-run home run to make Milwaukee a winner at 7-6 after being down to its final out of the day.
The last time MKE even approached such a late comeback victory was May 9, 2015, coincidentally also against the Raiders. Down 4-2 in the ninth, Daulton Varsho hit a walkoff three-run shot with the Panthers down to their final out, cracking a 3-1 pitch off the scoreboard to complete the 5-4 thriller.
FORTY IS THE NEW TWENTY
The Panthers put on an offensive showcase against Youngstown State April 13 of last season, finishing game one of the doubleheader with an impressive 22 runs and 23 hits. That marked the 23rd time in school history that the team recorded 20-or-more runs in a single game and the first since tagging these same Penguins for 22 in March of 2016. The total of 22 also officially ties for the 10th-most in a single contest. When paired with the 18 runs scored the day prior (in an 18-6 win), the 40 runs in back-to-back games is the most since a 44-run windfall against Concordia Wisconsin (W, 25-2) and Wisconsin Lutheran (W, 19-0) back in early April of 2000, which is also the school record. The only other time MKE has plated 40-plus runs in back-to-back games is the 43 tallied against CUW (W, 17-6/W, 26-7) in a twinbill in April of 1999.
CONGRATS ON THE NEW TOP SPOT
With a 6-3 victory over Illinois State in March of last season,
Scott Doffek moved atop the Milwaukee baseball career victory list. He passed Jerry Augustine, who held the record of 347 wins in his time at Milwaukee from 1995-2006 (347-297-1/.539). Doffek entered the 2019 season at 335 victories after joining some rare company in 2017 when the Panthers topped Youngstown State in late April, giving Doffek career victory No. 300 as the Milwaukee head coach. He was just the second coach in program history - dating all the way back to 1957 - to reach that level.
1. Doffek (2007-present): 370 and counting
2. Augustine (1996-2006): 347
3. Jim Burian (1982-1990): 143
4. Bill Ritter (1957-1970): 122
LONG BALL GETS CONTAGIOUS
Milwaukee found its power stroke against Oakland April 6 last spring, clubbing seven home runs in the 15-1 victory. Amazingly enough, the team spread the wealth, with seven different players taking a slow stroll around the basepaths - including
Jack Thelen's first collegiate round-tripper. That established a new mark for a Horizon League contest, topping the six shared by two prior teams. It also marked the first time Milwaukee smashed that many long balls since recording seven against Concordia back in April of 1999. The school record remains the nine the team powered out against IPFW on April 6, 2005.
AN OPENING STATEMENT
The Panthers made the trip to the D9 Sunshine State Classic an impressive one in 2019, topping Marshall, Big East foe Villanova and ACC opponent Pittsburgh. It marked just the second 3-0 start in program history since becoming an NCAA Division I program in the 1990 season. The other came against Maine (all three games) to open the 2015 campaign. The only other time MKE even began 2-0 was in 1995 when the Panthers topped Youngstown State (16-6) and Bowling Green (6-5). Despite dropping the series at Arizona, the 6-3 start through nine games was also the best since the same mark in 1995.
THE BOYS OF (NOT QUITE) SUMMER
The department announced that it will broadcast 11 home baseball games this spring on ESPN+. Additionally, all 20 of the Panthers home games will feature live audio for the first time. Milwaukee has never had the ability to broadcast baseball games on ESPN+, but with a move to Milkmen Stadium for the 2020 season, that is now possible.
Matt Menzl and
Scott Warras will split all broadcasts for the Panthers.
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ESPN+, which will host the Horizon League baseball championships, offers fans thousands of live events, on-demand content, and original programing not available on ESPN's linear TV or digital networks. For just $4.99 a month (or $49.99 per year), fans can subscribe to ESPN+ with the ability to cancel at any time. The Panthers' first broadcast this spring will take place on their home opener on Friday, March 20. Milwaukee hosts Youngstown State for a three-game series at Milkmen Stadium.
ON TAP
Horizon League play is up next, with the Panthers returning to Ohio for a series at Wright State. First pitch Friday is set for 2 p.m. CST.
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