|
Warrior Baseball Outlook
2011
Gary
Picone knows there will be a
lot of people watching,
ready to make comparisons.
He also knows that kind of
pressure comes with the
territory when you are the
one replacing a legendary
coach who built the most
powerful baseball program in
the history of the NAIA.
For the
first time in 35 years, Ed
Cheff will not be the one
standing in the third-base
coaching box or in the
dugout for the Warriors. The
Hall of Fame coach, who won
16 national titles, retired
after 34 years at the
Warrior helm. Cheff posted a
1,705-430-2 record for a
.799 winning percentage and
his win total is second
all-time with one baseball
program at any collegiate
level and the fourth most
victories among all college
baseball coaches.
So how
do you follow those numbers?
“You
don’t,” Picone said,
laughing. “I see this
position as a great
opportunity to lead the
program that Ed Cheff
built.”
Despite
the coaching change, little
else is expected to change
with the program, which
posted a 48-5 record a year
ago but went a disappointing
1-2 at the Avista NAIA World
Series.
For a
number of years, Picone was
Cheff’s top assistant and
pitching coach. Even when
Picone left his assistant’s
job to take over as athletic
director at LCSC, he stayed
close to the baseball
program, which made him a
natural to take over when
Cheff decided to retire.
“Ed and
I have different
personalities, but not much
has changed,” Picone said.
“A lot of what I know I
learned from Ed so our
coaching philosophies are
the same.
We haven’t changed
anything significantly. This
should look like the team we
always have.”
Pitching
depth and defense, two usual
staples of the program,
appear to be the strengths
again this season.
“I think
we have a solid and deep
pitching staff,” Picone
said. “And we can put a
really good defensive team
on the field. We also have a
chance to be balanced
offensively from top to
bottom.”
The
schedule will have a new
look this season as the
Warriors attempt to win 40
or more games for the 32nd
straight year.
The Warriors open
with their usual two
tournaments in February and
also will play home and away
games against fellow Region
I teams. In May, however,
when the rest of the NAIA
teams are involved in
playoffs, LCSC will play
host to a three-day
three-team round-robin
tournament against NCAA
Division III schools. The
Warriors end the regular
season with a game at
Seattle University on May 17
and that is the only
Division I school on LCSC’s
schedule for the second
straight year.
[to read
the complete 2011 Outlook,
which includes an in depth
look at the Warriors by
position, check out the
Warriors' 2011 printed
program.]
2010
outlook
2009
outlook
2008
outlook
2007
outlook
|