University of California, Santa Barbara
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Brigham Young University
Miller Park

400 E University Parkway Provo UT 84604

Jack Urquhart | Posted: 10 Mar 2017 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Jack Urquhart

Schneemann’s walkoff precedes dominant second game in twin bill

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PROVO, Utah – A game-winner in Friday's opener (7-6) and 20 total hits in the nightcap (17-3) gave BYU baseball a doubleheader sweep over UC Santa Barbara at Miller Park.

"In my fifth year here, that was probably the biggest day we've had," BYU head coach Mike Littlewood said. "It's nice to come back in the first game after losing a lot of close ones and the bats showed up in the second game. I'm really proud of (game one starting pitcher) Brady Corless. After giving up five he settled in and really competed for us. Hayden Rogers (game two starting pitcher) did the same thing."

Daniel Schneemann’s walkoff home run punctuated a comeback for the Cougars (6-7 overall record) in the first game of the twin set.

In the first inning, the Gauchos got to Corless with five runs on six hits.

BYU’s first runs came on a two-run bomb from designated hitter Bronson Larsen in the bottom of the second, when he drilled a 3-1 fastball over the centerfield fence to cut the UCSB lead to 5-2. It was Larsen’s fourth home run of the season.

Both teams were held at bay through the fourth inning as Corless settled in. He gave up just three hits and no runs over 4.1 innings after the rough first inning. He ended his day with 5.1 innings pitched, allowing nine hits and five earned runs.

David Clawson homered for the Cougars on the first pitch of the bottom of the fifth inning with a towering shot into the pine trees beyond the right field fence. A pair of singles from Brennon Anderson and Tanner Chauncey led to Schneemann's bases-clearing double to tie the game at 5-5. Consecutive singles from Keaton Kringlen and Kyle Dean put BYU up 6-5.

Aaron Cross replaced Corless with one out and a runner on in the top of the sixth inning. He surrendered a triple to Clay Fisher to tie the game again at 6-6. Chauncey fielded a groundball and fired home to hang up the runner between third and home for the second out and a flyout to right field set the Gauchos down.

Cross and the Cougar defense got three quick outs in the top of the seventh, highlighted by a leaping snag of a liner down the third baseline by Nate Favero.

That set up Schneemann’s walkoff shot down the right field line to lead off the bottom of the frame.

Cross moved to 1-0 on the season with the decision, going 1.2 innings and allowing just one hit.

In the second game, Anderson’s grand slam sparked a 17-3 Cougar win.

UCSB's Fisher led off the second game with a solo shot for a 1-0 advantage.

In the bottom half of the first inning, BYU got run-scoring singles from Brock Hale, Kringlen and Larsen. Larsen’s drove in two runs to give the Cougars a 4-1 lead.

BYU tacked on in the bottom of the second with two more runs. Clawson walked and got to third on a double by Anderson. Chauncey’s sacrifice fly scored Clawson and a double from Hale scored Anderson. With that, Hale extended his team-high hitting streak to 14 games.

Anderson’s grand slam in the bottom of the third scored Larsen, Favero and Clawson, and put the Cougars up 10-1.

In the fourth, Larsen punched a single through the left side to score Kringlen and put BYU up by 10 runs. Anderson came up with the bases loaded again and knocked in two more runs with a double. Chauncey then drove in a run on a double and another run came home after a single by Hale and an error. Chauncey scored the seventh run of the inning on a groundout and the Cougars were finally retired up 17-1.

UCSB scraped two more runs across against Rogers, but Jordan Wood pitched the final four outs and closed the door.

Rogers  (1-0), BYU's starter, allowed eight hits and one earned run over 7.1 innings for the win.

The Cougars are back in action on Saturday for the series finale against the Gauchos (5-9) at noon MST.

Ralph R. Zobell | Posted: 6 Mar 2017 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Ralph R. Zobell

Home opener starts Thursday in four-game series vs. UC Santa Barbara

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After 10 road games, BYU baseball begins its home season this Thursday against UC Santa Barbara to start a four-game series.

“It's been three long weeks of tough travel and tough ball games,” BYU head coach Mike Littlewood said. “To say we are happy to be back at Miller Park would be an understatement. We are playing very solid baseball and once we get our entire offense rolling we will be a very tough team to beat.”

Both he Cougars and the Gauchos have gotten off to slow starts, having won four games apiece. BYU is 4-6, while UC Santa Barbara is 4-7. UCSB leads BYU in the series 7-1.

Thursday’s game at 5 p.m. MDT at Larry H. Miller Field will be broadcast live on ESPN 960 AM along with its audio stream paired with BYU Radio and video stream via theW.tv. Friday’s doubleheader beginning at 2 p.m.  MDT will also be carried via the same media outlets as will Saturday’s noon finale. BYUtv will televise Saturday’s game live.

Maverik Buffo (1-2, 4.50 ERA) will start the four-game series on the mound for the Cougars. Brady Corless (2-0, 1.89) will start on the mound for BYU in the first game on Friday which has been shortened to seven innings. In Friday's nightcap, lefty Hayden Rogers (0-0, 2.38) will start the nine-inning game for the Cougars.  Kendall Motes (0-1, 5.14) will be BYU's starting pitcher in Saturday's game.

The Cougars have shown glimpses of their preseason projections. Seven BYU sluggers have hit home runs thus far, led by Bronson Larsen with three and Brock Hale with two. Hale leads the team with an 11-game hitting streak and a .385 batting average, aided by a grand slam in BYU’s 10-2 victory last week. However, the Cougars lost a pair of games by one and two runs last week at CSU Bakersfield in California.

“We were a little snake bitten offensively in the Bakersfield series, but I saw glimpses of the offense I know we are capable of becoming,” Littlewood said.“We just need to concentrate on the here and now and play every game like it's our last.”

The Gauchos were picked in a tie for second place in the preseason coaches’ poll in the Big West Conference.

UCSB finished No. 6 and was one of the eight teams to advance to last year’s College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska. The Gauchos tallied a 43-20-1 record and went 1-2 their historic first appearance in the World Series. They had bookend losses to Oklahoma State and Arizona in the CWS and eliminated Miami. UCSB defeated the No. 2 and No. 3 national seeds during its postseason run.

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