
Travis Weston's 2.83 ERA is the lowest among the Cal Poly starting pitchers heading into this weekend's Big West Conference series at home against UC Riverside.
Photo by: Owen Main | Cal Poly Athletics
Cal Poly to Host UC Riverside for Four-Game Big West Series
4/20/2021 9:43:00 AM | Baseball
WEEKLY NOTES: CAL POLY | UC RIVERSIDE | BIG WEST
AUDIO STREAM | VIDEO STREAM | GAME PROGRAM | TICKETS
LIVE STATS: FRIDAY | SATURDAY GAME 1 | SATURDAY GAME 2 | SUNDAY
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. -- Cal Poly (17-15 overall, 7-9 Big West), which won 10 of 13 games, including series wins over USC and then-No. 6 UCLA, after a 1-3 start, but has lost six of its last nine contests after opening Big West play by winning three of four at CSUN, continues conference play this weekend by hosting UC Riverside (10-17, 8-12 Big West) for a four-game set inside Baggett Stadium (cap.: 3,138).
Coach Larry Lee's Mustangs and the Highlanders of first-year head coach Justin Johnson clash Friday at 5 p.m. followed by a 1 p.m. doubleheader Saturday and the finale Sunday, also at 1 o'clock.
All four games of the series will be broadcast on ESPN Radio (1280 AM and 101.7 FM) with Zachary Anderson-Yoxsimer providing the play-by-play. Links for live stats and audio and video streams are available on the baseball schedule page at www.GoPoly.com.
Coming off a 9-7 performance in the COVID-19 shortened 2020 campaign, UC Riverside returned 27 of 31 letter winners, including nine position starters and eight pitchers. Top returnees are catcher Taylor Juline (.323, 10 hits in 2020), utility player Nathan Webb (.258, 17 hits, 9 RBIs) and outfielder Cole Polek (.258, 16 hits, 11 RBIs). The pitching staff is paced by right-handers Zach Jacobs (2-2, 2.57 ERA in 2020) and Trevor Bateson (1-0, 7.23 ERA) along with closer Andre Granillo (2-1, 2.84 ERA, three saves), also a right-hander.
UC Riverside opened its 2021 season two weeks later than most other teams and won two of three non-conference games against Big West member UC Irvine at home before losing 11 of its next 13 contests against San Diego, CSU Bakersfield and Cal State Fullerton. The Highlanders lost three of four to the Roadrunners and Titans, split four games at UC Davis and lost three of four to Hawai'i before taking three of four at CSUN last weekend.
More than halfway through its 56-game schedule this season, Cal Poly fell below the .500 mark in Big West games by dropping three of four games to first-place UC Irvine last weekend. After losing the opener 11-6 — the game was tied at 6-6 after six innings — Cal Poly scored a walk-off 4-3 win in Saturday's doubleheader opener, scoring three unearned runs in the ninth. Nick Marinconz ended the contest with a single off the left-field wall. The Anteaters closed out the twinbill with a 4-1 triumph as Michael Frias pitched eight innings of one-run two-hit baseball as well as Sunday's 17-1 win behind a 19-hit offensive attack.
Drew Thorpe and Dylan Villalobos combined on a two-hitter in Cal Poly's season-opening 4-0 win over Nevada, but the Mustangs stranded 38 runners on the base paths in the remaining three games of the series. It was a different story at USC as Cal Poly won two of three games in late February, its first win of a three-game set against USC in 27 Division I seasons. Thorpe and Andrew Alvarez combined on a three-hitter in a 2-1 victory Friday night at Dedeaux Field, the Mustangs parlayed 16 hits into a 9-4 triumph and the Trojans jumped to a 6-0 lead in the first two innings and held on for a 7-6 win to salvage one victory in the series.
In March, Cal Poly notched its first series sweep since April 2019 with a 3-0 whitewashing against Utah Valley. Boise State transfer Travis Weston tossed a complete-game two-hitter with a career-high 11 strikeouts in a 5-1 win while Andrew Alvarez, another lefty, tossed six scoreless innings with eight strikeouts and teamed with three relievers on a 6-0 shutout in the finale.
No. 6 UCLA visited San Luis Obispo and the Mustangs earned a series win against the Bruins for the first time since Cal Poly's Big West Conference championship season in 2014. The Mustangs won the opener 5-4, overcoming an early 3-0 deficit. Three Mustang pitchers combined to strike out 14 Bruins. In the middle game, Cal Poly produced a pair of five-run rallies and a 17-hit offensive attack, but that wasn't enough as UCLA erased an early 5-0 deficit with 11 runs in the second, third and fourth frames, then held on for a 13-12 victory. Lee and Cole Cabrera belted two-run home runs and Emmerson also knocked in two runs as Cal Poly clinched the series in the finale with an 8-5 victory.
Cal Poly opened Big West play with a 13-10 setback in its series opener at Matador Field, but bounced back with 7-6, 12-1 and 10-8 victories. Emmerson went 10-for-18 (.556) with three consecutive three-hit games for the Mustangs and Lee knocked in 10 runs. After losing three of four games against UC San Diego in the second week of Big West play, Cal Poly hosted San Jose State for a three-game non-conference set. Following a pair of lopsided games — Cal Poly winning 10-1 Thursday and San Jose State taking the middle game 10-2 — the Mustangs rode the combined three-hit pitching of Travis Weston and Kyle Scott to a 3-0 shutout in the series finale.
At Long Beach State two weeks ago, Cal Poly dropped the opener 7-0, then bounced back with a 7-5 triumph in the doubleheader opener as Alvarez pitched seven scoreless innings. After a 2-1 loss in the nightcap, Cal Poly earned the split with a 5-1 win Sunday thanks to Bryan Woo's 5 2/3 scoreless innings of relief and a career-high eight strikeouts plus two hits each from Cole Cabrera, Myles Emmerson and Brooks Lee.
UC Riverside's top hitters 27 games into its season are second baseman Eli Stuart (.341, six doubles, 14 RBIs), center fielder Travis Bohall (.318, eight RBIs, 12 of 14 steals), Webb (.306, five doubles, three home runs, 22 RBIs) and designated hitter Dylan Orick (.301, 10 doubles, 21 RBIs). The pitching staff has been paced by Tucker Juline (2-1, 3.35 ERA), Jacobs (1-2, 4.33 ERA) and Tyler Frazier (1-1, 5.25 ERA), all right-handers. Four different relievers have saves.
Coached by Johnson (first season, 10-17, Mt. San Antonio College '97), UC Riverside has a .269 team batting average through 27 games. The Highlanders have stolen 20 of 29 bases, sport a 7.18 staff ERA with opponents hitting .325 and have compiled a .968 fielding percentage with 33 errors in 27 games.
UC Riverside, a member of the Big West since 2002, claimed the Big West title in 2007 and has qualified for the NCAA Division I regionals twice -- in 2003 and 2007. The Highlanders also earned NCAA Division II playoff berths nine times, capturing the national title in both 1977 and 1982.
Cal Poly and UC Riverside have met 204 times on the baseball field since the series began when both teams were California Collegiate Athletic Association members back in 1970. The Mustangs hold a 118-86 advantage, winning two of three versus the Highlanders inside Baggett Stadium in 2019 and sweeping the Highlanders to close out the 2018 season in Riverside. Cal Poly swept the Highlanders in 2012, 2013 and 2015 as well and is 21-6 against UC Riverside over the last nine years and 36-21 since moving to Division I prior to the 1995 season. In 2017, all three games of the series, played in San Luis Obispo, were shutouts — Cal Poly earning 1-0 and 5-0 wins before falling in the finale 4-0.
Larry Lee is 33-18 against UC Riverside while Justin Johnson is 0-0 against Cal Poly.
Johnson joined the UC Riverside baseball coaching staff in September 2014 as the program's director of baseball operations following one year as the head coach at Saint Katherine College. He became a volunteer assistant with the program the following year.
Prior to his stint at Saint Katherine's, Johnson spent two seasons as the associate head coach at Cal Tech, where he helped the Beavers to the program's first win in 10 years. Johnson began his coaching career at Valley View High School in Moreno Valley, where he helped guide the Eagles to two CIF-Southern Section playoff appearances.
A graduate of Diamond Bar High School, Johnson played at Mt. SAC for legendary coach Art Mazmanian. He was drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays, and played a summer as a free agent with the Los Angeles Dodgers in extended spring training.
Before the 2020 season was halted on March 11 due to COVID-19, Cal Poly won two of three games in the MLB4 Tournament at Scottsdale, Ariz., rallying for two runs on sacrifice flies in the bottom of the ninth inning for a walk-off 9-8 triumph over defending national champion Vanderbilt and also shutting out Connecticut 5-0 behind the combined two-hit pitching of Taylor Dollard and Dylan Villalobos.
The Mustangs, however, won just three of their next 13 contests to finish 5-11. One of those victories was a 10-inning 5-4 decision over No. 5 Michigan inside Baggett Stadium as Taison Corio singled with one out and the bases loaded.
Lee welcomed back 20 lettermen off last year's squad, including seven position starters. The 2021 Mustang roster also has been bolstered by the addition of three transfers from Boise State, which dropped its baseball program last summer, and one from Washington State, first baseman/designated hitter Matt Lopez.
Catcher Myles Emmerson led the squad a year ago with his .317 average, but no other Mustang starter finished above .280. Emmerson is the only one of the five seniors on last year's squad who returned this season under the NCAA rule allowing every 2020 spring sport athlete another year of eligibility due to COVID-19.
Last year's freshman class, which includes the likes of shortstop Brooks Lee, infielder Nick Marinconz and pitchers Drew Thorpe, Derek True and Kyle Scott, is considered one of Lee's strongest and the lineup also will feature the likes of veterans Cole Cabrera in center field, Taison Corio at second base and Tate Samuelson, who has moved from first base across the diamond to third base this year.
In addition to Thorpe, Scott and True, the pitching staff is led by returnees Andrew Alvarez in the starting rotation and Bryan Woo and Dylan Villalobos out of the bullpen. Thorpe is the Friday night starter while Alvarez starts one of the games in the Saturday doubleheaders.
All three Boise State transfers figure to play prominent roles with the Mustangs this spring. Southpaw Travis Weston is Cal Poly's other Saturday starter, Joe Yorke has started all but one game at first base and Reagan Doss roams the grass in the outfield.
Leading the squad's hitters 32 games into the season is Lopez with a .367 average (No. 7 in the Big West), seven doubles, one home run and 22 RBIs. Lee, who claimed back-to-back Big West Player of the Week awards after going 7-for-12 against Utah Valley and 7-for-14 versus UCLA, driving in 14 runs in the two series, is hitting .365 with 16 doubles, two triples, seven homers and a team-leading 35 RBIs. He had a nine-game hitting streak halted by CSUN and a 12-game streak stopped by UC Irvine. Emmerson sports a .311 mark with seven doubles, a triple and 15 RBIs.
Thorpe (3-3, 3.86 ERA), Weston (3-3, 2.83 ERA) and Alvarez (4-2, 4.78 ERA) remain anchored in the starting rotation while Bryan Woo, Derek True, Kyle Scott (three saves) and Dylan Villalobos have worked the most innings out of the bullpen so far.
For the second time in the last five years, Cal Poly is playing all of its games in the Golden State. The 2017 squad also played all 56 games in California, going 28-28. The Mustangs also will play 33 of their 56 games inside Baggett Stadium, opening the season with 25 of their first 36 games at home.
Cal Poly won the Big West title in 2014 and has placed second six times (including three straight from 2017-19), third four times and fourth six times since 2000, posting a combined record of 310-258 in its first 23 years as a member of the Big West. Cal Poly has had just three losing seasons since 2000 and has reached the 30-win mark 12 times this century. The Mustangs have won 198 of their last 291 home games for a 68.0 winning percentage.
Lee (563-445-2) surpassed Fresno State's Bob Bennett for the Big West record for overall wins with the 2-1 series-opening win at USC in late February. During the UC Davis series in 2019, Lee eclipsed Cal Poly alum and former Long Beach State head coach Dave Snow with his 219th conference win. Snow guided the Dirtbags to 218 Big West wins from 1989-2001.
Lee reached the 500-victory milestone on April 20, 2018, with a 5-4 triumph over Long Beach State. He earned 460 wins in 16 seasons at Cuesta College and notched his 460th Mustang victory on March 13, 2017 against Gonzaga and his 1,000th career victory with a 3-0 triumph at UC Santa Barbara on May 23, 2019. He currently has a 1,023-686-5 record over 34-plus seasons as a head coach and coached his 1,000th game as Cal Poly's head coach on April 1, a 10-1 win over UC San Diego.
Next week, Cal Poly goes back out on the road for its next two Big West series, visiting defending conference champion UC Santa Barbara for a four-game set April 30-May 2 and CSU Bakersfield on May 7-9. First pitches with the Gauchos are set for 5 p.m. Friday, a 1 p.m. doubleheader Saturday and a 1 o'clock finale Sunday.
AUDIO STREAM | VIDEO STREAM | GAME PROGRAM | TICKETS
LIVE STATS: FRIDAY | SATURDAY GAME 1 | SATURDAY GAME 2 | SUNDAY
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. -- Cal Poly (17-15 overall, 7-9 Big West), which won 10 of 13 games, including series wins over USC and then-No. 6 UCLA, after a 1-3 start, but has lost six of its last nine contests after opening Big West play by winning three of four at CSUN, continues conference play this weekend by hosting UC Riverside (10-17, 8-12 Big West) for a four-game set inside Baggett Stadium (cap.: 3,138).
Coach Larry Lee's Mustangs and the Highlanders of first-year head coach Justin Johnson clash Friday at 5 p.m. followed by a 1 p.m. doubleheader Saturday and the finale Sunday, also at 1 o'clock.
All four games of the series will be broadcast on ESPN Radio (1280 AM and 101.7 FM) with Zachary Anderson-Yoxsimer providing the play-by-play. Links for live stats and audio and video streams are available on the baseball schedule page at www.GoPoly.com.
Coming off a 9-7 performance in the COVID-19 shortened 2020 campaign, UC Riverside returned 27 of 31 letter winners, including nine position starters and eight pitchers. Top returnees are catcher Taylor Juline (.323, 10 hits in 2020), utility player Nathan Webb (.258, 17 hits, 9 RBIs) and outfielder Cole Polek (.258, 16 hits, 11 RBIs). The pitching staff is paced by right-handers Zach Jacobs (2-2, 2.57 ERA in 2020) and Trevor Bateson (1-0, 7.23 ERA) along with closer Andre Granillo (2-1, 2.84 ERA, three saves), also a right-hander.
UC Riverside opened its 2021 season two weeks later than most other teams and won two of three non-conference games against Big West member UC Irvine at home before losing 11 of its next 13 contests against San Diego, CSU Bakersfield and Cal State Fullerton. The Highlanders lost three of four to the Roadrunners and Titans, split four games at UC Davis and lost three of four to Hawai'i before taking three of four at CSUN last weekend.
Drew Thorpe and Dylan Villalobos combined on a two-hitter in Cal Poly's season-opening 4-0 win over Nevada, but the Mustangs stranded 38 runners on the base paths in the remaining three games of the series. It was a different story at USC as Cal Poly won two of three games in late February, its first win of a three-game set against USC in 27 Division I seasons. Thorpe and Andrew Alvarez combined on a three-hitter in a 2-1 victory Friday night at Dedeaux Field, the Mustangs parlayed 16 hits into a 9-4 triumph and the Trojans jumped to a 6-0 lead in the first two innings and held on for a 7-6 win to salvage one victory in the series.
In March, Cal Poly notched its first series sweep since April 2019 with a 3-0 whitewashing against Utah Valley. Boise State transfer Travis Weston tossed a complete-game two-hitter with a career-high 11 strikeouts in a 5-1 win while Andrew Alvarez, another lefty, tossed six scoreless innings with eight strikeouts and teamed with three relievers on a 6-0 shutout in the finale.
No. 6 UCLA visited San Luis Obispo and the Mustangs earned a series win against the Bruins for the first time since Cal Poly's Big West Conference championship season in 2014. The Mustangs won the opener 5-4, overcoming an early 3-0 deficit. Three Mustang pitchers combined to strike out 14 Bruins. In the middle game, Cal Poly produced a pair of five-run rallies and a 17-hit offensive attack, but that wasn't enough as UCLA erased an early 5-0 deficit with 11 runs in the second, third and fourth frames, then held on for a 13-12 victory. Lee and Cole Cabrera belted two-run home runs and Emmerson also knocked in two runs as Cal Poly clinched the series in the finale with an 8-5 victory.
Cal Poly opened Big West play with a 13-10 setback in its series opener at Matador Field, but bounced back with 7-6, 12-1 and 10-8 victories. Emmerson went 10-for-18 (.556) with three consecutive three-hit games for the Mustangs and Lee knocked in 10 runs. After losing three of four games against UC San Diego in the second week of Big West play, Cal Poly hosted San Jose State for a three-game non-conference set. Following a pair of lopsided games — Cal Poly winning 10-1 Thursday and San Jose State taking the middle game 10-2 — the Mustangs rode the combined three-hit pitching of Travis Weston and Kyle Scott to a 3-0 shutout in the series finale.
At Long Beach State two weeks ago, Cal Poly dropped the opener 7-0, then bounced back with a 7-5 triumph in the doubleheader opener as Alvarez pitched seven scoreless innings. After a 2-1 loss in the nightcap, Cal Poly earned the split with a 5-1 win Sunday thanks to Bryan Woo's 5 2/3 scoreless innings of relief and a career-high eight strikeouts plus two hits each from Cole Cabrera, Myles Emmerson and Brooks Lee.
UC Riverside's top hitters 27 games into its season are second baseman Eli Stuart (.341, six doubles, 14 RBIs), center fielder Travis Bohall (.318, eight RBIs, 12 of 14 steals), Webb (.306, five doubles, three home runs, 22 RBIs) and designated hitter Dylan Orick (.301, 10 doubles, 21 RBIs). The pitching staff has been paced by Tucker Juline (2-1, 3.35 ERA), Jacobs (1-2, 4.33 ERA) and Tyler Frazier (1-1, 5.25 ERA), all right-handers. Four different relievers have saves.
Coached by Johnson (first season, 10-17, Mt. San Antonio College '97), UC Riverside has a .269 team batting average through 27 games. The Highlanders have stolen 20 of 29 bases, sport a 7.18 staff ERA with opponents hitting .325 and have compiled a .968 fielding percentage with 33 errors in 27 games.
UC Riverside, a member of the Big West since 2002, claimed the Big West title in 2007 and has qualified for the NCAA Division I regionals twice -- in 2003 and 2007. The Highlanders also earned NCAA Division II playoff berths nine times, capturing the national title in both 1977 and 1982.
Cal Poly and UC Riverside have met 204 times on the baseball field since the series began when both teams were California Collegiate Athletic Association members back in 1970. The Mustangs hold a 118-86 advantage, winning two of three versus the Highlanders inside Baggett Stadium in 2019 and sweeping the Highlanders to close out the 2018 season in Riverside. Cal Poly swept the Highlanders in 2012, 2013 and 2015 as well and is 21-6 against UC Riverside over the last nine years and 36-21 since moving to Division I prior to the 1995 season. In 2017, all three games of the series, played in San Luis Obispo, were shutouts — Cal Poly earning 1-0 and 5-0 wins before falling in the finale 4-0.
Larry Lee is 33-18 against UC Riverside while Justin Johnson is 0-0 against Cal Poly.
Johnson joined the UC Riverside baseball coaching staff in September 2014 as the program's director of baseball operations following one year as the head coach at Saint Katherine College. He became a volunteer assistant with the program the following year.
Prior to his stint at Saint Katherine's, Johnson spent two seasons as the associate head coach at Cal Tech, where he helped the Beavers to the program's first win in 10 years. Johnson began his coaching career at Valley View High School in Moreno Valley, where he helped guide the Eagles to two CIF-Southern Section playoff appearances.
A graduate of Diamond Bar High School, Johnson played at Mt. SAC for legendary coach Art Mazmanian. He was drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays, and played a summer as a free agent with the Los Angeles Dodgers in extended spring training.
Before the 2020 season was halted on March 11 due to COVID-19, Cal Poly won two of three games in the MLB4 Tournament at Scottsdale, Ariz., rallying for two runs on sacrifice flies in the bottom of the ninth inning for a walk-off 9-8 triumph over defending national champion Vanderbilt and also shutting out Connecticut 5-0 behind the combined two-hit pitching of Taylor Dollard and Dylan Villalobos.
The Mustangs, however, won just three of their next 13 contests to finish 5-11. One of those victories was a 10-inning 5-4 decision over No. 5 Michigan inside Baggett Stadium as Taison Corio singled with one out and the bases loaded.
Lee welcomed back 20 lettermen off last year's squad, including seven position starters. The 2021 Mustang roster also has been bolstered by the addition of three transfers from Boise State, which dropped its baseball program last summer, and one from Washington State, first baseman/designated hitter Matt Lopez.
Catcher Myles Emmerson led the squad a year ago with his .317 average, but no other Mustang starter finished above .280. Emmerson is the only one of the five seniors on last year's squad who returned this season under the NCAA rule allowing every 2020 spring sport athlete another year of eligibility due to COVID-19.
Last year's freshman class, which includes the likes of shortstop Brooks Lee, infielder Nick Marinconz and pitchers Drew Thorpe, Derek True and Kyle Scott, is considered one of Lee's strongest and the lineup also will feature the likes of veterans Cole Cabrera in center field, Taison Corio at second base and Tate Samuelson, who has moved from first base across the diamond to third base this year.
In addition to Thorpe, Scott and True, the pitching staff is led by returnees Andrew Alvarez in the starting rotation and Bryan Woo and Dylan Villalobos out of the bullpen. Thorpe is the Friday night starter while Alvarez starts one of the games in the Saturday doubleheaders.
All three Boise State transfers figure to play prominent roles with the Mustangs this spring. Southpaw Travis Weston is Cal Poly's other Saturday starter, Joe Yorke has started all but one game at first base and Reagan Doss roams the grass in the outfield.
Leading the squad's hitters 32 games into the season is Lopez with a .367 average (No. 7 in the Big West), seven doubles, one home run and 22 RBIs. Lee, who claimed back-to-back Big West Player of the Week awards after going 7-for-12 against Utah Valley and 7-for-14 versus UCLA, driving in 14 runs in the two series, is hitting .365 with 16 doubles, two triples, seven homers and a team-leading 35 RBIs. He had a nine-game hitting streak halted by CSUN and a 12-game streak stopped by UC Irvine. Emmerson sports a .311 mark with seven doubles, a triple and 15 RBIs.
Thorpe (3-3, 3.86 ERA), Weston (3-3, 2.83 ERA) and Alvarez (4-2, 4.78 ERA) remain anchored in the starting rotation while Bryan Woo, Derek True, Kyle Scott (three saves) and Dylan Villalobos have worked the most innings out of the bullpen so far.
For the second time in the last five years, Cal Poly is playing all of its games in the Golden State. The 2017 squad also played all 56 games in California, going 28-28. The Mustangs also will play 33 of their 56 games inside Baggett Stadium, opening the season with 25 of their first 36 games at home.
Cal Poly won the Big West title in 2014 and has placed second six times (including three straight from 2017-19), third four times and fourth six times since 2000, posting a combined record of 310-258 in its first 23 years as a member of the Big West. Cal Poly has had just three losing seasons since 2000 and has reached the 30-win mark 12 times this century. The Mustangs have won 198 of their last 291 home games for a 68.0 winning percentage.
Lee (563-445-2) surpassed Fresno State's Bob Bennett for the Big West record for overall wins with the 2-1 series-opening win at USC in late February. During the UC Davis series in 2019, Lee eclipsed Cal Poly alum and former Long Beach State head coach Dave Snow with his 219th conference win. Snow guided the Dirtbags to 218 Big West wins from 1989-2001.
Lee reached the 500-victory milestone on April 20, 2018, with a 5-4 triumph over Long Beach State. He earned 460 wins in 16 seasons at Cuesta College and notched his 460th Mustang victory on March 13, 2017 against Gonzaga and his 1,000th career victory with a 3-0 triumph at UC Santa Barbara on May 23, 2019. He currently has a 1,023-686-5 record over 34-plus seasons as a head coach and coached his 1,000th game as Cal Poly's head coach on April 1, a 10-1 win over UC San Diego.
Next week, Cal Poly goes back out on the road for its next two Big West series, visiting defending conference champion UC Santa Barbara for a four-game set April 30-May 2 and CSU Bakersfield on May 7-9. First pitches with the Gauchos are set for 5 p.m. Friday, a 1 p.m. doubleheader Saturday and a 1 o'clock finale Sunday.
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