Blair for the dramatic
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Barry Faulkner
Like all closers, UC Irvine freshman Blair Erickson is familiar with
the concept of crash landing.
But unlike nearly all of his bullpen brethren who strive for the
27th out, the 6-foot-1, 205-pound right-hander has yet to fall from
the lofty mound perch from which he has produced near-perfection.
Instead, his history with freefall stems from a disastrous descent
during a pickup basketball game the spring of his senior year at
Jesuit High near Sacramento.
“I went up for a shot and a guy pushed me while I was in the air,”
recalled Erickson, who, entering Thursday’s series opener against
visiting Minnesota is 8 for 8 in save chances for the No. 23-ranked
Anteaters. He needed just 16 games to eclipse the school
single-season save record held by two others. “When I came down, I
ruptured the ligaments in my left ankle and wound up missing the
whole (2003) baseball season.”
Ironically, the long, slow recovery from the injury, which
required the insertion of a surgical screw, led Erickson to the
pitching assignment for which he believes he was best suited. Still
battling tightness in the ankle, he fell behind fellow starting
candidates in the fall, making the bullpen his logical destination.
A heralded starter as a prep -- he won 11 of 15 varsity decisions
and posted an ERA of 1.40 and 1.69, respectively, as a sophomore and
junior -- Erickson said his competitive drive often left his tank
empty for the latter innings of his starting assignments.
“Believe it or not, I think I had the closer mentality as a
starter,” said Erickson, drafted in the 28th round by the
Philadelphia Phillies last spring. “I’ve always been one to go out
and attack and challenge hitters. As a starter, I had a tendency to
overdo it and I’d get tired. Now, I have one or two innings, so I can
give it all I have.”
With a fastball that has topped out at 94 mph, a hard slider and a
developing change-up, Erickson has had more than enough to stifle
opposing hitters thus far.
In 18 innings through March 15, he had fanned 25, fashioning a
3.00 ERA and limiting foes to a .231 batting average.
UCI Coach John Savage, who before coming to UCI tutored USC mound
superstars Mark Prior an Barry Zito, wasn’t shy about praising this
season’s surprising prodigy.
“There was confidence he’d be able to come back [from the injury],
but how he’d come back was the big question,” Savage said. “We knew
his ability was very good, but we thought he’d be rusty. We thought
it would take some time for him to get back into game shape, let
alone Division I shape, let alone being a Division I closer. But he’s
a great student of the game, who has watched and listened very well
and adapted to his role as well as any freshman I think I’ve ever
seen.”
Initially projected as a setup man, Erickson opened eyes in the
‘Eaters’ second game of the season, a home-opening win over Cal Feb.
13.
He started the eighth inning with UCI ahead, 9-7, and bracketed
strikeouts around a flyout for a 1-2-3 frame that prompted Savage to
send him out for ninth. After a strikeout and a single, Erickson
induced a 6-4-3 double play to earn his first save and, within days,
the title of full-time closer.
“The original plan was to have him set up, but he evolved before
our eyes that Friday night against Cal,” Savage said. “He was
remarkable in that eighth inning and we threw him out there for the
ninth. It was real evident to me that his role was as a closer. He
has told me he really loves that role and you don’t want to change
something that’s working.”
Savage believes Erickson, who saved all three games in a road
sweep of then-No. 25-ranked Baylor March 5-7, has the right blend of
stuff, composure and desire to nail down victories in the ninth.
“There’s a toughness to his game, but there is also a calmness.
When you’re trying to close out three straight games on the road
against Baylor, you better have some presence to you. He has
displayed that early on in his career, that’s for sure. He has a
bulldog presence, but he takes a really professional approach that
you like to see in a guy,” Savage said.
Erickson said he savors the challenge of having the game in his
hands.
“Being as competitive as I am, sometimes it’s tough for me to
watch the first seven innings, because I want to get into the game,”
Erickson said. “When your in the bullpen throwing to a catcher and
that phone rings [summoning a reliever into the game], it will get
you going. As a starter, you rarely get the chance to finish a game.
So, to be able to get the last out and have the catcher run out and
shake your hand is a good feeling. It’s awesome.”
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