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2012 Nebraska Cornhuskers baseball team

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2012 Nebraska Cornhuskers baseball
ConferenceBig Ten
Record35–23 (14–10 Big Ten)
Head coach
Hitting coachWill Bolt (4th season)
Pitching coachTed Silva (1st season)
Home stadiumHawks Field
Seasons
← 2011
2013 →
2012 Big Ten Conference baseball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 15 Purdue  ‍y 17 7   .708 45 14   .763
Indiana  ‍‍‍ 16 8   .667 32 28   .533
Penn State  ‍‍‍ 15 9   .625 29 27   .518
Nebraska  ‍‍‍ 14 10   .583 35 23   .603
Michigan State  ‍‍‍y 13 11   .542 37 23   .617
Ohio State  ‍‍‍ 11 13   .458 33 27   .550
Illinois  ‍‍‍ 11 13   .458 28 25   .528
Minnesota  ‍‍‍ 11 13   .458 29 27   .518
Iowa  ‍‍‍ 10 14   .417 23 27   .460
Michigan  ‍‍‍ 8 16   .333 22 34   .393
Northwestern  ‍‍‍ 6 18   .250 18 36   .333
† – Conference champion
‡ – Tournament champion
y – Invited to the NCAA tournament
As of June 30, 2012[1]
Rankings from Coaches' Poll

The 2012 Nebraska Cornhuskers baseball team was the first season of the program's new head coach Darin Erstad and featured a new coaching staff and a roster that included 12 new players. The Huskers entered their first season of Big Ten baseball after 15 seasons in the Big 12 Conference that included three regular-season titles and four tournament crowns.

2011

In their last season in the Big 12 Conference, the Huskers went 30–25 overall and had a ninth-place 9–17 record in conference play, missing out in the Big 12 tournament for the third consecutive season. Cody Asche became a second-team all-American and a first-team all-conference player while Casey Hauptman won second-team all conference honors. They were both drafted in the 2011 Major League Baseball draft. At the conclusion of the season, Mike Anderson and the entire coaching staff were terminated on May 22, 2011, and the University of Nebraska hired former Husker and Major League All-Star Darin Erstad on June 2, 2011, as head coach after one season as a volunteer assistant coach. A few days later, Ted Silva was hired as well as former Cornhuskers Will Bolt and Jeff Christy.

Preview

Key losses

  • Cody Asche – Drafted in the fourth round by Philadelphia Phillies in 2011 MLB Draft
  • Khiry Cooper – Would be senior out with a foot injury
  • Logan Ehlers – Quit team in fall 2011 and transferred to Howard Junior College in Big Spring, Texas
  • Matt Freeman – Senior in 2011
  • Casey Hauptman – Senior in 2011, drafted in 26th round by N.Y. Mets
  • Patric Tolentino – Senior in 2011
  • Sean Yost – Would-be senior with injury

Preseason picks

The Big Ten coaches picked Nebraska to finish fourth out of the league's 11 teams in 2012. Three Husker juniors were also named to the ‘Players to Watch List’, including right-handed pitcher Travis Huber, right-handed pitcher Tom Lemke and first baseman-designated hitter Kash Kalkowski.

Schedule summary

The Huskers played 31 home games at Hawks Field and had 13 contests against 2011 NCAA Tournament teams, including a four-game home stand against 2011 College World Series qualifier California. The 56-game schedule started with 10 games on the road before the Huskers hosted their home opener against former Big 12 foe Kansas State on Tuesday, March 6. The Huskers played eight Big Ten Conference series, with three conference schools not on the schedule, including Penn State and Michigan State, as well as Wisconsin, which doesn't have a baseball program.[2]

Coaching staff

A 14-year MLB veteran and World Series champion, Erstad took over at his alma mater, where he was one of the most successful players in program history. Prior to becoming the No. 1 overall pick in the 1995 amateur draft, Erstad was a first-team All-American and the Big Eight Co-Player of the Year as a junior in 1995.

"It is a great honor to be the head coach of the Nebraska baseball program", Erstad said. "My family and I believe strongly in what the University stands for, and I am excited to have this opportunity to help influence kids’ lives in a positive way and help them turn into young men. I am committed to helping them grow as people."[citation needed]

2012 Nebraska Cornhuskers baseball coaching staff
Head Coach Darin Erstad
Associate Head Coach Will Bolt
Assistant Coach Ted Silva
Volunteer Assistant Coach Jeff Christy
Director of Operations Curtis Ledbetter
Graduate Assistant Brad Smith

Erstad is not the only former Husker on his coaching staff, as he brought on Will Bolt as his associate head coach and Jeff Christy as the team's volunteer assistant. A four-year starter and team captain on Nebraska's 2001 and 2002 College World Series teams, Bolt was a volunteer assistant on the Huskers’ 2005 squad that set a school record with 57 wins and produced the program's first win at the College World Series. Christy was a junior on the 2005 team and caught a school-record 64 games that season.

"It is an incredible opportunity to come back to a place where I had so many fond memories as a player and coach", Bolt said. "I am humbled and excited to work at my alma mater, and looking forward to making an impact in a coaching role and helping this program reach its goals. It is an honor to be included on a staff put together by a Husker legend and long-time big leaguer in Coach Erstad."[citation needed]

For his pitching coach, Erstad plucked Ted Silva away from California where he had coached at UC Irvine and Loyola Marymount over the previous four seasons. As a player, Silva was a first-team All-American at Cal State Fullerton and earned the win in the Titans’ 1995 national championship game against USC in the College World Series.[3]

Schedule

2012 Nebraska Cornhuskers Baseball Game Log[4]
Regular Season
Date Location NU rank Opponent Winning pitcher Losing pitcher Save by Result Record (Big Ten)
Feb. 17 Peoria, Arizona NR Gonzaga Peterson, D. (1–0) Vogt, D. (0–1) Abbruzza, Z. (1) 4–7 0–1
Feb. 18 Peoria, Arizona NR Gonzaga Bigelow, D. (1–0) Niederklein (0–1) Abbruzza, Z. (2) 8–10 0–2
Feb. 19 Peoria, Arizona NR Gonzaga Pterson, D. (2–0) Pierce, B. (0–1) 4–5 0–3
Feb. 24 Corpus Christi, Texas NR Utah Hirsch, Z. (1–0) Adams, Zach (0–2) Huber, T. (1) 5–2 1–3
Feb. 25 Corpus Christi, Texas NR Utah Keller, J. (1–0) Mordini (0–2) 15–0 2–3
Feb. 25 Corpus Christi, Texas NR Texas A&M–Corpus Christi Niederklein (1–1) Keller, T. (0–1) 7–1 3–3
Feb. 26 Corpus Christi, Texas NR UNLV Pierce, B. (1–1) Shannon, M. (0–1) Huber, T. (2) 8–7 4–3
March 2 Minneapolis, Minnesota NR West Virginia Walter, C. (1–1) Hirsch, Z. (1–1) Dierdorff, D (1) 1–4 4–4
March 3 Minneapolis, Minnesota NR New Mexico State Pierce, B. (2–1) Coffman, S. (0–1) 6–4 5–4
March 4 Minneapolis, Minnesota NR Minnesota Lemke, T. (1–0) Lubinsky (0–2) 10–3 6–4
March 6 Hawks Field RV Kansas State Vogt, D. (1–1) Conlon, S. (1–1) Huber, T. (3) 9–6 7–4
March 7 Hawks Field RV Nebraska–Kearney Hander, R. (1–0) Ridenour (1–3) Bublitz, L. (1) 4–1 8–4
March 9 Hawks Field RV #21 California Scott (3–0) Huber, T. (0–1) 8–11 (11 inn.) 8–5
March 10 Hawks Field RV #21 California Keller, J. (2–0) Flemer (2–1) 12–5 9–5
March 11 Hawks Field RV #21 California Porter (2–0) Lemke, T. (1–1) 0–4 9–6
March 12 Hawks Field NR #18 California Niederklein (2–1) Theofanopoul (0–2) 9–5 10–6
March 13 Hawks Field NR South Dakota State Bummer, A. (1–0) Fiedelman (0–1) 12–3 11–6
March 15 Hawks Field NR Louisiana Tech Hirsch, Z. (2–1) Maton (3–1) Pierce, B. (1) 9–2 12–6
March 16 Hawks Field NR Louisiana Tech Keller, J. (3–0) Petersen (1–2) 22–3 13–6
March 17 Hawks Field NR Louisiana Tech Lemke, T. (2–1) Gilley (1–2) 11–4 14–6
March 18 Hawks Field NR Louisiana Tech Dudley (2–0) Bublitz, L. (0–1) Stefan (1) 5–6 14–7
March 20 Hawks Field NR Northern Colorado Kubat, K. (1–0) Willman, J. (1–3) 12–3 15–7
March 21 Hawks Field NR Northern Colorado Hammer, C. (1–0) Huber, T. (0–2) 7–11 15–8
March 23 Hawks Field NR Illinois Johnson, K. (4–1) Lemke, T. (2–2) 3–11 15–9 (0–1)
March 24 Hawks Field NR Illinois Kubat, K. (2–0) Kravetz, J. (3–1) 18–5 16–9 (1–1)
March 25 Hawks Field NR Illinois Hirsch, Z. (3–1) Ferry, J. (1–1) 13–3 17–9 (2–1)
March 27 Hawks Field Kansas State Pierce, B. (3–1) Wivinis, M. (1–1) Huber, T. (4) 6–3 18–9 (2–1)
March 30 Evanston, Illinois Northwestern Lemke, T. (3–2) Brooke, F. (1–2) Huber, T. (5) 7–4 19–9 (3–1)
March 31 Evanston, Illinois Northwestern Magallones (5–0) Keller, J. (3–1) 4–8 19–10 (3–2)
April 1 Evanston, Illinois Northwestern Morton (1–5) Hirsch, Z. (3–2) 1–6 19–11 (3–3)
April 3 Manhattan, Kansas Kansas State King, T. (1–0) Moore, J (2–2) 6–0 20–11 (3–3)
April 6 Hawks Field Iowa Hippen (3–3) Lemke, T. (3–3) Brown (5) 3–4 20–12 (3–4)
April 7 Hawks Field Iowa Pierce, B. (4–1) Dermody (1–4) Niederklein (1) 9–4 21–12 (4–4)
April 8 Hawks Field Iowa Huber, T. (1–2) Brown (1–1) 9–8 22–12 (5–4)
April 10 Hawks Field Creighton Keller, J. (4–1) Musec (3–2) 5–3 23–12 (5–4)
April 13 Columbus, Ohio Ohio State Long (3–1) King, T. (1–1) 2–10 23–13 (5–5)
April 14 Columbus, Ohio Ohio State Vogt, D. (2–1) McKinney (4–4) Huber, T. (6) 5–4 24–13 (6–5)
April 15 Columbus, Ohio Ohio State Hirsch, Z. (4–2) Kuchno (5–2) 17–9 25–13 (7–5)
April 20 Hawks Field Purdue Mascarello (7–1) Niederklein (2–2) 5–8 25–14 (7–6)
April 21 Hawks Field Purdue Pierce, B. (5–1) Breedlove (6–3) 8–3 26–14 (8–6)
April 22 Hawks Field Purdue Podkul (2–0) Hirsch, Z. (4–3) Wittgren (8) 3–8 26–15 (8–7)
April 24 TD Ameritrade Park Creighton Hander, R. (2–0) Musec (3–3) Huber, T. (7) 4–1 27–15 (8–7)
April 27 Hawks Field Cal State Bakersfield Bublitz, L. (1–1) Carter (1–2) 3–2 (11 inn.) 28–15 (8–7)
April 28 Hawks Field Cal State Bakersfield McKenzie (4–4) Pierce, B. (5–2) 2–10 28–16 (8–7)
April 29 Hawks Field Cal State Bakersfield Cancelled (Rain)
May 5 Bloomington, Indiana Indiana Kubat, K. (3–0) DeNato (7–2) 13–2 29–16 (9–7)
May 6 Bloomington, Indiana Indiana Hart (4–4) Pierce, B. (5–3) Hoffman (4) 5–7 29–17 (9–8)
May 7 Bloomington, Indiana Indiana Martin (1–3) Hirsch, Z. (4–4) Hoffman (5) 6–9 29–18 (9–9)
May 8 TD Ameritrade Park Creighton Blach (4–5) Lemke, T. (3–4) 1–8 29–19 (9–9)
May 11 Hawks Field Minnesota Kubat, K. (4–0) Oakes (7–3) Vogt, D. (1) 4–3 30–19 (10–9)
May 12 Hawks Field Minnesota King, T. (2–1) Snelten (4–4) Pierce, B. (2) 8–7 31–19 (11–9)
May 13 Hawks Field Minnesota Bublitz, L. (2–1) Lubinsky (3–4) Vogt, D. (2) 6–5 32–19 (12–9)
May 15 Hawks Field Wichita State Mateychick (4–1) Hirsch, Z. (4–5) 2–13 32–20 (12–9)
May 17 Ann Arbor, Michigan Michigan Kubat, K. (5–0) Ogden (3–4) 15–2 33–20 (13–9)
May 18 Ann Arbor, Michigan Michigan Sinnery (5–5) Pierce, B. (5–4) 5–6 33–21 (13–10)
May 19 Ann Arbor, Michigan Michigan Lemke, T. (4–4) Brosnahan (3–4) 7–3 34–21 (14–10)
Postseason
Big Ten Tournament
Date Location NU rank Opponent Winning pitcher Losing pitcher Save by Result Record (Big Ten)
May 23 Columbus, Ohio Michigan State Bucciferro (6–3) Kubat, K. (5–1) Wieber, T (9) 9–10 34–22 (14–10)
May 24 Columbus, Ohio Penn State Hander, R. (3–0) Hill (5–4) 12–3 35–22 (14–10)
May 25 Columbus, Ohio Ohio State King (5–5) Spitsnogle (0–1) 2–6 36–23 (14–10)

Season summary

The Nebraska baseball team met the Gonzaga Bulldogs for the first time on February 17 and dropped its opening game of the 2012 season by a score of 7–4. Playing the first game of a three-game series at the Peoria Sports Complex (the Spring training home of the Seattle Mariners and San Diego Padres in Peoria, Arizona), the Huskers took a 4–3 lead into the seventh inning. Nebraska was unable to hold on though, as a three-run eighth inning from the Zags doomed the Huskers.[5] The first victory of the season fell through their hands on in game 2 as Gonzaga rallied for a 10–8 victory to take game two of the three-game series. The Huskers took an 8–5 lead into the top of the ninth, but the Bulldog bats came alive with five runs to steal the win after committing seven errors in the game.[6] The ninth inning was again unkind to Nebraska in the finale as the Bulldogs erased a 4–2 deficit with three runs in the top of the ninth to steal victory for the second straight game.[7]

The next weekend the Huskers traveled to Corpus Christi, Texas to play in the Kleberg Bank College Classic at Whataburger Field. In game 1, Zach Hirsch picked up his first win as a husker and Head Coach Darin Erstad earned his first win as the Huskers' head coach in a 5–2 win over the Utah Utes.[8] The next day, Nebraska beat Utah again and Texas A&M Chorpus Christi with a combined score of 22–1.[9] The Huskers finished the tournament with a perfect 4–0 record as they came from behind to beat UNLV in the first ever meeting between the 2 teams. The offense scored 35 runs on 54 hits over the three days and 8 Huskers joined the all tournament team – Cory Burleson, Josh Scheffert, Bryan Peters, Kurt Farmer, Chad Christensen (MVP), Rich Sanguinetti, Richard Stock, and Jon Keller.[10]

On March 2, Nebraska went north to play in the Dairy Queen Classic, one of the longest running tournaments in the nation, in Minnesota played at the Metrodome. It was the fifth time they have competed in the event.[11] The Huskers dropped their opening game of the Dairy Queen Classic by a score of 4–1. The Huskers totaled six hits on the day and worked seven walks off the WVU pitching staff, but were doomed by the 10 runners they left on base.[12] New Mexico State was the next team to face as Nebraska entered the ninth down 4–2 when the bats came alive and Rich Sanguinetti ended the game with a two-run walk-off home run with 2 outs capping a dramatic ninth inning for the Huskers with for a 6–4 win over the Aggies.[13] The Huskers won their last game defeating conference foe, Minnesota 10–3 in a non conference game. On offense, after scoring only seven runs through the first two games, the Husker offense exploded for seven runs in the first four frames against the Gophers. Three Huskers earned all-tournament honors, including Richard Stock at first base, Austin Darby in the outfield and Michael Pritchard at designated hitter. Pritchard also earned the tournament's Silver Stick Award as the weekend's most valuable hitter.[14]

After a 6–4 road stint, the huskers headed home for a 17-game homestand starting with Kansas state. A pair of four-run innings carried Nebraska to a 9–6 win over the Kansas State Wildcats at Hawks Field in front of 4,169 fans. It is their 34th straight home opener win dating back to 1979 and moved to 11–0 in home openers at Hawks Field.[15] The next day, Kale Kiser hit a home run for the second straight day and junior Ryan Hander picked his first win of the year as the team moved to 8–4 with a 4–1 win over Division II Nebraska-Kearney.[16]

The Huskers celebrating a home run by Chad Christensen against the California Bears

That weekend, 2011 College World Series qualifier California Bears came to town for a four-game series. In game one, the Huskers found themselves in a hole, falling behind 0–7, but a pair of runs in both the eighth and ninth innings capped an 8–8 comeback, extending the game into extra innings, but the Huskers were unable to pull out a win after the Bears plated three runs in the top of the 11th inning to win 11–8.[17] In game 2, Nebraska had an offensive show in front of 5,298 fans with a 12–5 win over the Bears blasting three home runs on the day, including a grand slam by Rich Sanguinetti.[18] The Bears responded and Nebraska was unable to find a rhythm in game 3 in a 4–0 loss with only 3 hits on the game[19] but rebounded in the series finale breaking through with eight runs in the bottom of the fifth inning evening the series with a 9–5 victory for a 2–2 series split.[20]

Nebraska wearing camo hats against La. Tech

The Huskers played for the 5th day in a row and 1st of 5 games in week 5 against South Dakota State by a score of 12–3 hammering out 15 hits before Louisiana tech came for a 4-game series.[21] Nebraska won game 1 9–2 as Cory Burleson hit an inside-the-park home run, the first one by a Husker since Jake Mullinax hit one against West Virginia at the 2004 Dairy Queen Classic at the Metrodome in Minneapolis, Minn.[22] The next day there was plenty of offense against the Bulldogs with 24 hits in a 22–3 win which is the most runs in over eight years, as they also scored 22 in a win over Kent State at the Ultimate Dugout Baseball Fiesta in Albuquerque, N.M, on Feb. 22, 2004.[23] Behind a career-high five hits from Josh Scheffert, the Nebraska baseball team posted its fifth straight win with an 11–4 victory over the Louisiana. The Huskers pounded out 17 hits on the afternoon and scored 42 runs on 52 hits through the first three games of the series[24] but the Bulldogs responded with a 6–5 victory to avoid a sweep.[25]

The Huskers hosted Northern Colorado in a 2-game midweek series before conference games begin. On March 20, a seven-run fourth inning powered Nebraska to a 12–3 win in game one[26] but was unable to overcome a four-run eighth inning by the Bears resulting in a 6–4 loss splitting the series a game a piece.[27]

Conference play opened on March 23 against Illinois and fell behind early but were unable to battle back in an 11–3 loss.[28] Nebraska rebounded in game 2 with an 18–5 win over the Fighting Illini to tie the series. Trailing 3–0 going into the bottom of the second, NU plated 11 runs on seven hits, as the first nine batters of the inning reached base and scored. All but one of the Huskers' starters had at least one hit on the day.[29] The rubber match went to the Huskers as they put together one of its best games of the season with a 13–3 win over the Illinois to win in the first ever Big Ten series. The Huskers outscored Illinois by a combined score of 31–8 in the final two games of the series to open conference play with a series win for the first time since 2008 when they swept Kansas State in Manhattan. Husker fans topped the 5,000 mark in all three games, with a combined 15,697 fans coming out to see the Huskers open conference play.[30]

The team wrapped up its 17-game home stand with a 6–3 win over the Kansas State Wildcats in a mid week game. The Huskers started and ended the home stand with wins over the Wildcats. Now 18–9 on the season and 2–1 in Big Ten play, the Huskers went 12–5 on the home stand.[31]

Nebraska headed to Northwestern for their first road conference series on March 30. They opened the series with a 7–4 win over the Wildcats[32] but a season-high six errors from the Husker defense combined with 12 strikeouts from the NU offense resulted in an 8–4 loss in game 2 while none of the Wildcats' eight runs were earned off the Husker pitching staff. It is the Huskers' first loss this season when out-hitting their opponent as the Huskers out-hit the Wildcats, 7–6.[33] A complete game from Northwestern's Zach Morton was too much for the Huskers with only six hits in game 3 dropping the series in a 6–1 loss.[34]

Nebraska looked to sweep the season series with KSU as they traveled to Manhattan, Kan. They picked up their 20th win of the season to sweep the Kansas State Wildcats with a 6–0 win as five pitchers combined for the four-hit shutout.[35]

The Huskers returned home to host the 12–14 Iowa Hawkeyes in their 3rd conference series. A four-run fifth inning propelled the Iowa Hawkeyes to a 4–3 series-opening win over the Nebraska. The Huskers took a 2–0 lead into the fifth and cut Iowa's lead to one with a run in the bottom of the fifth, but were unable to plate a run over the final four innings to tie the game.[36] The Huskers evened the series in game 2 with a strong outing from Brandon Pierce in his first career conference start to help the Huskers post a 9–4 win.[37] A game-tying two-RBI triple from Pat Kelly followed by a walk-off single from Kale Kiser completed a dramatic ninth-inning comeback by the Huskers, as the Huskers rallied for a 9–8 win to take the series.[38]

The Huskers hosted Creighton in the first of three meetings on April 10. A career-high 8 innings from sophomore Jon Keller carried Nebraska in a 5–3 victory over the Bluejays. Keller improved to 4–1 on the year, as he gave up just two runs (one earned) on three hits, while striking out six.[39]

Nebraska traveled to Columbus, Ohio to play the 20–12 Ohio State who is tied with Nebraska at second place in the Big Ten. A rough first inning put Nebraska in a 7–0 hole that they were never able to climb out of in game 1 at Bill Davis Stadium as the Buckeyes went on to win the game 10–2.[40] Game 2 got postponed due to rain and played a double header on Sunday. Home runs from Kale Kiser, Kash Kalkowski, and Josh Scheffert accounted for all five of Nebraska's runs a 5–4 win over the Ohio State Buckeyes to end their 7-game win streak.[41] Nebraska swept a doubleheader with a 17–9 score to win its first conference road series since taking 2-of-3 from Baylor in Waco, Texas, during the 2008 season.[42]

Without a midweek game, Nebraska welcomed the #16 Purdue Boilermakers who entered the series with a 9-game win streak. After falling behind 4–0 to start game 1, Nebraska evened the score at 5–5 in the bottom of the fourth, but Cameron Perkins' second home run of the game in the top of the fifth proved to be the eventual winner in an 8–5 game.[43] For the 4th conference series, the Huskers rebounded after falling in the opener. In front of a season-high crowd of 6,257 fans at Hawks Field on Saturday afternoon, the Huskers evened its series with Purdue with an 8–3 win.[44] The Huskers dropped the series finale by a score of 8–3 in front of another 6,000+ fans at Hawks Field.[45]

Nebraska vs Creighton on April 24th at TD Ameritrade Park

The baseball team headed 50 miles to TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha, Nebraska to play their second game of the series. Behind a pair of hits from four different Huskers and a three-hit game from the Nebraska pitching staff, Nebraska earned its second win of the season over the Creighton Bluejays with a 4–1 win.[46]

Nebraska hosted its final non-conference series of the season when the CSU Bakersfield Roadrunners visited Hawks Field. Senior Kale Kiser came through with his second walk-off hit of the season in the bottom of the 11th inning of game 1 to propel the Huskers to a 3–2 win over the Roadrunners.[47] The Roadrunners then tied the series with a 10–2 win in front of 5,111 fans in game 2.[48] The rubber match was cancelled due to rain which kept the series tied giving Nebraska a record of 28–16 after the weekend.[49]

The Huskers went on the road the next weekend to play the Indiana Hoosiers, who entered the series as one of the hottest teams in the conference in second place in the Big Ten. Behind a seven-strikeout performance from freshman Kyle Kubat and three home runs from the Husker offense, Nebraska put an end to the Indiana Hoosiers' four-game winning streak with a 13–2 win [50] but couldn't take the series the next day as walks and miscues cost the Huskers in a 7–5 game.[51] Nebraska failed to win the series as Indians bats were tough on NU's pitching with 16 hits in a 9–6 game.[52]

The Huskers looked to sweep Creighton for the first time since 2008 in their last meeting of the year on May 8 but were unable to finish the sweet as the Jays used 16 hits to produce an 8–1 win.[53]

The Huskers headed back home to hose their last conference series against Minnesota. A two-run home run from freshman Pat Kelly and a six innings of solid work on the mound from freshman Kyle Kubat led Nebraska to their 30th win of the season with a 4–3 victory over the Minnesota Golden Gophers.[54] Sophomore Michael Pritchard went 0–4 ending his hitting streak at 25 games which ties Derek Dukart (1994) for the third longest hitting streak at NU since 1958. Freshman Pat Kelly's 7th home run of the season propelled Nebraska to victory for the second straight game the Golden Gophers, as the Huskers held on to an 8–7 victory. His seven home runs this season are the most by a NU freshman since Alex Gordon hit seven in 2003.[55] Behind three solo home runs, Nebraska secured the Huskers' first sweep of a conference foe since NU swept Texas Tech at Hawks Field to end the 2010 season and put an exclamation point on Senior Day. The Huskers won each game by one run and put themselves into fourth place in the Big Ten standings.[56]

Wichita State came to Lincoln for the Huskers last home game of the season as the Shockers spoiled Nebraska with a 19-hit performance coasting to a 13–2 win.[57]

Nebraska went on the road for their last regular season games against the Michigan Wolverines. The Huskers punched their ticket to the Big Ten Tournament with a 15–2 win over Michiganas they strung together a conference-high 20 hits. They were then held to just five runs in a 6–5 loss to the Wolverines in game 2. They secured the No. 4 seed at the Big Ten Tournament with a 7–3 win over the Michigan ending the season with a 14–10 conference record.

The Huskers opened the post season against Michigan State. They nearly completed one of the biggest comebacks in program history but a leaping catch by Michigan State second baseman Ryan Jones on a line drive off the bat of Pat Kelly secured a 10–9 win for the Spartans at Huntington Park. The Huskers entered the bottom of the ninth inning down 10–2, but five two-out runs had the Huskers in position to tie the game. They got sent to the losers bracket and played Penn State in game 2 and the Huskers responded with 12–3 victory racking up 18 hits as Stock extended his hitting streak to 20 games. Along with Michael Prichard's 25-game hitting streak earlier this season, it marks the first time in school history that a pair of teammates have each produced hitting streaks of 20 game or more in the same season. Nebraska was then set up to play Ohio State in an elimination game. The Buckeyes ended the Huskers season with a 6–2 win. The Huskers out hit the Buckeyes, 9–8, but NU stranded 10 runners on the afternoon and committed three errors in the field.

Statistics

Hitting

Player G BA AB H 2B 3B HR TB SLG R RBI BB SO SB
Michael Pritchard 57 .387 212 82 10 0 0 92 .434 51 22 21 10 6
Josh Scheffert 50 .358 179 64 12 0 8 100 .559 37 41 15 24 5
Richard Stock 52 .351 211 74 20 3 4 112 .531 40 45 8 18 1
Austin Darby 42 .324 139 45 9 0 2 60 .432 24 15 16 25 7
Rich Sanguinetti 55 .323 217 70 11 2 2 91 .419 44 43 16 35 7
Pat Kelly 45 .313 163 51 6 2 8 85 .521 27 37 6 24 5
Chad Christensen 57 .311 228 71 9 2 10 114 .500 49 48 19 36 8
Kash Kalkowski 48 .310 174 54 8 0 4 74 .425 25 37 4 17 7
Blake Headley 25 .304 46 14 0 0 0 14 .304 6 6 6 10 1
Cory Burleson 44 .273 132 36 7 0 1 46 .348 25 22 9 32 3
Kale Kiser 54 .259 158 41 7 1 6 68 .430 37 37 38 17 6
Kurt Farmer 25 .250 68 17 1 1 2 26 .382 15 10 11 10 2
Bryan Peters 30 .241 79 19 3 1 0 24 .304 18 11 7 10 2
Ty Kildow 23 .182 22 4 0 0 0 4 .182 8 0 4 8 2
Sam Stucky 13 .172 29 5 1 0 0 6 .207 7 1 4 12 0
Total 58 .315 2057 647 104 12 47 916 .445 413 375 184 288 62

Pitching

Player App GS W L SV ERA CG ShO IP H R ER BB SO
Dylan Vogt 25 0 2 1 2 1.84 0 0 53.2 46 15 11 14 34
Kyle Kubat 15 8 5 1 0 2.63 0 0 51.1 56 18 15 19 31
Ryan Hander 16 4 3 0 0 2.97 0 0 33.1 29 11 11 10 25
Aaron Bummer 20 0 1 0 0 3.26 0 0 19.1 16 8 7 10 22
Travis Huber 20 0 1 2 7 3.32 0 0 21.2 25 11 8 10 17
Brandon Pierce 23 6 5 4 2 4.21 0 0 57.2 55 34 27 37 35
Tom Lemke 14 8 4 4 0 4.57 0 0 45.1 64 26 23 10 20
Dexter Spitsnogle 8 5 0 1 0 4.87 0 0 20.1 22 12 11 6 14
Jon Keller 13 10 4 1 0 5.37 0 0 52.0 66 41 31 25 33
Tyler King 27 2 2 1 0 5.40 0 0 28.1 27 26 17 18 21
Zach Hirsch 14 13 4 5 0 5.52 0 0 60.1 80 39 37 14 32
Luke Bublitz 21 0 2 1 1 6.15 0 0 26.1 37 19 18 7 19
Tyler Niederklein 19 2 2 2 1 7.11 0 0 38.0 48 30 30 14 19
Jeff Stovall 10 0 0 0 0 8.68 0 0 9.1 20 10 9 5 6
Total 58 58 35 23 13 4.40 0 2 517.0 591 300 253 199 328

Honors and awards

Rankings

Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
— = Not ranked RV = Received votes
Week
PollPre123456789101112131415161718Final
Coaches'[58]—*RV
Baseball America[59]
Collegiate Baseball^[60]RV
NCBWA[61]RV

^ Collegiate Baseball ranked 40 teams in their preseason poll, but only ranked 30 teams weekly during the season.
NCBWA ranks 35 teams in their preseason poll, but only ranks 30 teams weekly during the season.
* A new poll was not released for this week, so for comparison purposes, the previous week's ranking is inserted in this week's slot.

Cornhuskers in the 2012 MLB draft

Player Position Round Overall MLB organization
Travis Huber 23 700 Minnesota Twins
Kale Kiser 23 711 Chicago White Sox
Richard Stock 23rd 713 Cleveland Indians
Khiry Cooper 25 781 Boston Red Sox
Chad Christensen 35 1067 Miami Marlins

References

  1. ^ "2012 Baseball Standings and Leaders". bigten.org. Retrieved March 3, 2013.
  2. ^ "Huskers Begin New Era in 2012". Huskers.com.
  3. ^ "Huskers Begin New Era in 2012". Huskers.com.
  4. ^ "2012 Schedule/Results". Huskers.com. Retrieved 2009-12-31.
  5. ^ "Huskers Drop Opener to Gonzaga". Huskers.com. Feb 17, 2012.
  6. ^ "Huskers Fail to Closeout [sic] Zags". Huskers.com. Feb 18, 2012.
  7. ^ "Huskers Drop Series Finale in Arizona". Huskers.com. Feb 19, 2012.
  8. ^ "Huskers Start Tournament with 5–2 Win". Huskers.com. Feb 24, 2012.
  9. ^ "Huskers Outscore Opponents 22–1 in Two Games". Huskers.com. Feb 25, 2012.
  10. ^ "Christensen Completes Husker Comeback". Huskers.com. Feb 26, 2012.
  11. ^ "Gophers Set to Host Dairy Queen Classic This Weekend". Gophersports.com. Feb 29, 2012.
  12. ^ "Huskers Fall in DQ Classic Opener". Gophersports.com. March 2, 2012.
  13. ^ "Sanguinetti's Homer Caps Huskers' Four-Run Ninth". Gophersports.com. March 3, 2012.
  14. ^ "Huskers Blast Gophers, 10–3". Huskers.com. March 4, 2012.
  15. ^ "Huskers Pounce Wildcats". Huskers.com. March 6, 2012.
  16. ^ "Kiser's Homer Carries NU to 4–1 Win". Huskers.com. March 7, 2012.
  17. ^ "Huskers Rally, but Fall in Extra Innings". Huskers.com. March 9, 2012.
  18. ^ "Three Home Runs Propel Huskers to 12–5 Win". Huskers.com. March 10, 2012.
  19. ^ "Bears Blank Huskers, 4–0". Huskers.com. March 11, 2012.
  20. ^ "Huskers Rebound with 9–5 win over No. 18 Cal". Huskers.com. March 12, 2012.
  21. ^ "Scheffert Blasts Huskers Past Jackrabbits". Huskers.com. March 13, 2012.
  22. ^ "Huskers Open Series with 9–2 Win". Huskers.com. March 15, 2012.
  23. ^ "Huskers Hammer Out 24 Hits in 22–3 Win". Huskers.com. March 16, 2012.
  24. ^ "Scheffert Leads Huskers to Fifth Straight Win". Huskers.com. March 17, 2012.
  25. ^ "Huskers Come Up Short in Series Finale". Huskers.com. March 18, 2012.
  26. ^ "Kalkowski Drives in Four in 12–3 Win". Huskers.com. March 20, 2012.
  27. ^ "Huskers and Bears Split Two-Game Series". Huskers.com. March 21, 2012.
  28. ^ "Huskers Drop Series Opener to Illini". Huskers.com. March 23, 2012.
  29. ^ "Huskers Thump Illini, 18–5". Huskers.com. March 24, 2012.
  30. ^ "Huskers Win Series with 13–3 Rout of Illinois". Huskers.com. March 25, 2012.
  31. ^ "Huskers End Home Stand with 6–3 Win over KSU". Huskers.com. March 27, 2012.
  32. ^ "Huskers Open Series at Northwestern with 7–4 Win". Huskers.com. March 30, 2012.
  33. ^ "Errors Prove Costly in Husker Loss". Huskers.com. March 31, 2012.
  34. ^ "Huskers Drop Series at Northwestern". Huskers.com. April 1, 2012.
  35. ^ "Husker Complete Season Sweep of Kansas State". Huskers.com. April 3, 2012.
  36. ^ "Huskers Drop Series Opener to Hawkeyes". Huskers.com. April 6, 2012.
  37. ^ "Huskers Even Series with 9–4 Win". Huskers.com. April 7, 2012.
  38. ^ "Kiser Caps Four-Run Ninth with Walk-Off Winner". Huskers.com. April 8, 2012.
  39. ^ "Keller Baffles Bluejays". Huskers.com. April 10, 2012.
  40. ^ "Huskers Stumble in Series Opener at Ohio State". Huskers.com. April 13, 2012.
  41. ^ "Huskers Use Long Ball to Take Game One of DH". Huskers.com. April 15, 2012.
  42. ^ "Huskers Bury Buckeyes, Sweep Double Header". Huskers.com. April 15, 2012.
  43. ^ "Huskers Rally, But Fall to Boilermakers". Huskers.com. April 20, 2012.
  44. ^ "Stock Leads Huskers to 8–3 Win". Huskers.com. April 21, 2012.
  45. ^ "Huskers Drop Series Finale to No. 16 Purdue". Huskers.com. April 22, 2012.
  46. ^ "Husker Arms Silence Bluejay Bats". Huskers.com. April 24, 2012.
  47. ^ "Kiser Delivers Walk-Off Single in the 11th". Huskers.com. April 28, 2012.
  48. ^ "Huskers Drop Nightcap to Roadrunners". Huskers.com. April 29, 2012.
  49. ^ "Husker Baseball Cancelled". Huskers.com. April 29, 2012.
  50. ^ "Kubat Handcuffs Hoosiers in 13–2 Win". Huskers.com. May 5, 2012.
  51. ^ "Walks and Miscues Cost Huskers in 7–5 Loss". Huskers.com. May 6, 2012.
  52. ^ "Huskers Drop Series at Indiana". Huskers.com. May 6, 2012.
  53. ^ "Huskers Fail to Finish Season Sweep of Jays". Huskers.com. May 8, 2012.
  54. ^ "Freshmen Carry Huskers to Series-Opening Win". Huskers.com. May 11, 2012.
  55. ^ "Kelly, Pierce Lead Huskers to Series Win". Huskers.com. May 12, 2012.
  56. ^ "Huskers Sweep Gophers on Senior Day". Huskers.com. May 13, 2012.
  57. ^ "Huskers Fall in Home Finale". Huskers.com. May 15, 2012.
  58. ^ "College Baseball 360". College Baseball 360.
  59. ^ "Baseball America". Baseball America.
  60. ^ "Collegiate Baseball". Collegiate Baseball.
  61. ^ "NCBWA". NCBWA.