Small ball in at OCC
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Bryce Alderton
Those looking to catch home run balls off the bats of Orange Coast
College baseball players may be in for a boring spring.
OCC Coach John Altobelli, entering his 12th season at the helm,
inherits seven returners from a team that went 19-21-1, 8-16 in the Orange Empire Conference, and failed to make the Southern California
regional playoffs.
Much like last year, Altobelli said OCC’s runs should come more by
the sacrifice fly or line-drive single than the long ball.
“We will have to manufacture runs because we are not a
power-hitting team,” Altobelli said. “We will have to hit and run
guys along since we won’t be able to sit back and wait for the home
run.”
Coast slammed 25 home runs a year ago. Sophomore right fielder
Jeff Piaskowski hit .286 with six home runs and 17 RBIs. Piaskowski,
along with probable starting center fielder Jose Castaneda, have both
signed with the University of Hawaii. Castaneda transferred from
Cypress, which won last year’s state title.
Freshman Keith Mastel (Fountain Valley High) should start the
season in left. Freshman Joe Parades adds another dimension in the
outfield and has “good wheels,” according to Altobelli.
Tyler Shaffer and Jarrod Carchio are the only returning infielders
at second and third base, respectively. Carchio had 17 hits in 59
at-bats last season (.288) while Shaffer hit .268 and scored 22 runs.
Sophomore Anthony Duarte transferred from Santa Ana College and
should provide some competition at second base. Freshman Garrett
Young adds a right-handed bat at third.
Robbie Blauer (Edison) figures to get the nod at first with Scott
Martin and Daniel Sokarda waiting in the wings.
Freshman Brandon Lewis, a CdM product, joined the team two weeks
ago. Altobelli is trying to find a spot for him.
“He brings a left-handed bat and he is a big guy [6-foot-3, 205
pounds],” Altobelli said. “I told him to be more aggressive.”
Bryan Jackson, a converted first baseman, and Mike Farias are the
two returners on a pitching staff that finished with a team ERA of
4.87 and tallied 302 strikeouts, 33 more than opponents.
Kyle Allen, Garrett Murdy and Jimmy Treece accounted for 14 of
Coast’s 19 wins. Allen, now pitching for Lewis-Clark State College in
Lewiston, Idaho, went 6-5 with a 3.35 ERA and a team-leading 120
strikeouts last season.
Altobelli named sophomore right-handers Mike Peck (Woodbridge) and
Reid Horton, along with left-hander Steven Johns (Villa Park) as the
top three starters.
“Peck throws hard and has a nice slider,” Altobelli said. “He is a
tall [6-5], lanky ... typical pitcher.”
Jackson and Farias, each won one game for Coast last season and
anchor a bullpen that will also feature freshmen Jonathan Salazar,
Josh Gagne, Vince McKinney, Shaun Busby and Brandon Lutgendorf, as
well as sophomores Brandon Wells and Ryan Ahern.
Busby played shortstop in high school and can switch hit.
Freshman shortstop Matt Cline is the probable opening-day leadoff
hitter while Dustin Hicks returns behind the plate. Hicks batted .301
with 37 hits in 123 at-bats last season. Sophomore Micah Hazen had 15
hits in 52 at-bats (.288) and will back up Hicks. Sophomore Jake
Brennan is another option at catcher.
Martin can play either first base or the outfield and has
impressed Altobelli during simulated games in the preseason.
Freshman Casey McDonald redshirted at UNLV last year and provides
infield depth.
Sokarda and Luke Beck, a freshman BYU transfer, figure to fill in
at designated hitter. Beck can play third base or pitch.
OCC, like every other team in the state, had its regular season
trimmed by eight games due to the state’s budget deficit, Altobelli
said.
The playoff format was also restructured during the off-season.
Sixteen teams (eight from the north and eight from the south) will
qualify for the regional tournament, which will feature
single-elimination games instead of a best-of-three format used in
past years. The top two teams from the north and the south will
advance to the state championship round, which will also be a
single-elimination format, contested over two days to cut down on
overnight expenses.
To further reduce travel expenses, seeding in the regionals will
take geography into account. Teams cannot travel farther than 150
miles to play games, making the possibility of facing a conference
opponent more likely, which would not have happened in past years,
Altobelli said.
So, can OCC make a return trip to the postseason?
“There is no reason why we couldn’t be a playoff team,” Altobelli
said. “Top to bottom, we have more depth, a better defense and are
more team-oriented than we were last year.”
The Pirates open Feb. 3, playing Mt. San Antonio College in the
Matt O’Brien memorial tournament at OCC.
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