13 Apr

anniversary time

Several of the Magnolia State’s brightest big league stars have debut anniversaries to celebrate this year. Claude Passeau, one of the state’s great pitchers, debuted in 1935. Boo Ferriss broke in with the Boston Red Sox 80 years ago, throwing a shutout in his first game on April 29, 1945. Don Blasingame, the Corinth Comet, debuted 70 years ago. Chet Lemon, one of the best defensive center fielders of all-time, played his first MLB game in 1975. Paul Maholm, a recent Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame inductee, broke in 20 years back and Jacob Lindgren — whose promising career was marred by injury — 10 years ago. But the spotlight here is on Buddy Myer, the Ellisville native and Mississippi state alum, who launched his 17-year career 100 years ago. A middle infielder, he played in just four games for the old Washington Senators in 1925 but got the first two of his 2,131 career hits, the record for Mississippi natives in the majors. He made the team’s roster for the ’25 World Series and got two more hits in the loss to Pittsburgh. He went 6-for-20 in the ’33 World Series, also with the Senators. Myer won a batting title in 1935 and hit .303 for his career; only Negro Leagues star Cool Papa Bell (.325) holds a better average among Mississippians. Myer scored 1,174 runs, hit 130 triples, stole 157 bases and posted a 48.4 WAR (fourth-best among Mississippi-born players) in 1,923 games. Remarkably, he walked (965 times) more than twice as many times as he struck out (428). Indeed, it was a very different game a hundred years ago. Myer — a two-time All-Star who got MVP votes in four seasons — played it very well.

12 Apr

on this date

Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia officially opened on this date in 2004, and Bobby Abreu, the former Jackson Generals standout playing for the Phillies that year, hit the first home run there. Abreu, who played in Jackson in 1994, had a flair for home runs. He hit 16 for the Gens in ’94 and 288 in an MLB career that has gained Hall of Fame attention. He put up nine 20-homer seasons, two of them 30-homer campaigns. He won the All-Star Game Home Run Derby in 2005 with a performance that fans and media still buzz about. The homer he belted on April 12, 2004, against Cincinnati’s Paul Wilson came in a year in which he would win a Silver Slugger award. Alas, the crowd at Citizens Bank, which has become one of the majors’ most raucous venues, didn’t have a lot to roar about that day. Abreu’s bomb was the only run the home team scored in a 4-1 loss.

09 Apr

spotlight on …

Focus today on Ellisville and Community Bank Park, where Jones College will host Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College in a big — yes, they’re all big — conference doubleheader. The big move in the NJCAA Division II poll this week was made by Jones (27-8, 13-3 MACCC), which jumped from No. 8 to No. 5 after running its win streak to eight games. Pearl River Community College (33-5) remains No. 2 in the national poll and atop the MACCC standings at 13-1. East Central is ranked third (up from fourth) at 31-7 and is 13-3 in the league. Jones is 13-1 at home, its only loss there to Itawamba in mid-March. The individual spotlight at JC belongs to Chase Russell, an All-Stater from Madison Central High who leads the state in hitting at .417 with four homers — including a walk-off grand slam last week — and 24 RBIs. T.J. Dunsford is second in the league in batting at .397, and Braden Smith, out of Brandon, has nine homers and 36 RBIs. Russell, originally a Southern Miss signee, also leads Jones pitchers with a 3.96 ERA and has a 3-1 record. Josh Lee (Gulfport) is 5-0, 4.05. Jones is coached by former Mississippi State catcher Wes Thigpen, who came over from Gulf Coast four years ago. Gulf Coast, under new coach Zach Allen, comes to Ellisville with a 27-13 mark, 9-5 in the league. … Pearl River’s K.K. Clark, from Brandon via MSU, was named MACCC pitcher of the week after tossing a five-inning no-hitter at Meridian. Hitter of the week is East Central’s Briceton Johnson, a freshman from Maben who hit .615 with a grand slam and a three-run homer in four games.

08 Apr

one month out

One month from today, Mississippi’s new pro team — the Mississippi Mud Monsters — is scheduled to launch its 2025 season. The independent club, owned by Joseph Eng, will play Florence (Ky.) on May 8 at Pearl’s Trustmark Park, former home of the Mississippi Braves. The Mud Monsters will play a 96-game schedule — 48 home dates spread over nine homestands — in the 18-team Frontier League, an MLB Partner League. The team’s manager is Jay Pecci, the hitting coach Jamie McOwen and the pitching coach Robert Carson, a former Hattiesburg High star who pitched in the big leagues.
Here’s a look at the Mud Monsters’ unofficial, very preliminary roster, based on the Frontier League’s transactions page:

Pitchers
Chris Barraza, RH
Gage Bihm, LH (Hinds CC)
James Boeree, RH
Tahj Cunningham, RH/OF
Luis Devers, RH
Jalen Evans, RH
Aubrey Gillentine, RH (USM)
Josh Lanham, RH
Brandon Mitchell, LH
Zack Morris, LH
Josh Paulina, RH
Jeremy Peguero, LH
Michael Reed, RH
Sergio Sanchez, RH
Jackson Smith, RH (Northwest CC, MS Coll)
Rodney Theopile, RH
Tyree Thompson, RH
Brian Williams, RH

Catchers
Victor Diaz
C.J. Dunn (Olive Branch HS)
Nick Hassan
Andriel Lantigua

Infielders
Ryan Cash, 3B
Samil De La Rosa, 2B
Kasten Furr, SS
Travis Holt, SS
Dane Simon, UT

Outfielders
Kyle Booker (DeSoto Cent)
Davis Bradshaw (McLaurin, Meridian CC)
Basiel Roberts
Brayland Skinner (MSU)

08 Apr

long shots

This seems like an apropos note for 715 Day: They say records are meant to be broken, but there is one mark in the Magnolia State that will be especially tough to top. In 2018, Zack Shannon of Delta State blasted 31 home runs, breaking a single-season record for state college players that had stood for 34 years. (The previous record of 29 had been set by Mississippi State’s Bruce Castoria in 1982, then tied by the Bulldogs’ Rafael Palmeiro in 1984.) But there are some players producing big pop around the state this year — even without torpedo bats. The leader of the pack as of April 7 is Josh Alexander of William Carey University. The Louisiana native, who previously played at Louisiana-Lafayette, has 14 homers. Mississippi State’s Ace Reese and Mississippi College’s Bryce LaRocca are hot on Alexander’s heels with 11 homers each. There is a large contingent at 10: Ole Miss’ Judd Utermark; Southern Miss’ Carson Paetow; Mississippi College’s J.T. Vance and Korey Cooper; and Carey’s Preston Ratliff and Rigoberto Hernandez. The junior college leaders are Dom Jackson of Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College and Holmes CC’s Hunter Azemar, both with 10. Delta State’s Dylan Coleman, who has nine bombs, has the distinction of hitting three in a game twice. MC’s Vance also has managed a three-homer game, along with Carey’s Jayden Mark, who has only four total. P.S. In keeping with the home run theme, on this date in 1986, Will Clark famously homered in his first career MLB at-bat — against Nolan Ryan, no less. After an All-America career at MSU, Clark was the No. 2 overall draft pick by San Francisco in 1985. His debut homer was one of six he would hit off Hall of Famer Ryan, and it helped the Giants beat Houston 8-3 at the Astrodome.

07 Apr

a page-turner … so far

Though the book is far from finished, Ole Miss is writing one of the best stories in college baseball. From unranked in preseason — and picked to finish 15th in the vaunted SEC — the Rebels are 24-7 and ranked seventh nationally again this week in Baseball America’s Top 25. The Rebels battled for a 5-4 win in 12 innings at Kentucky on Saturday to win their third straight SEC series. They’re 8-4 in the league. National champs three years ago, UM foundered through the ’23 and ’24 seasons. Coach Mike Bianco rebuilt the roster for 2025 and apparently has found pieces that fit. The Rebels are middle-of-the-pack in the league in hitting (ninth in average) and pitching (12th in ERA). But they’re winning, which is all that really matters. In that 12-inning victory at Kentucky, they took a lead in the 11th, then lost it. Undaunted, they got a clutch two-run homer from Luke Hill — a .353 hitter — in the final frame and an heroic save from Alex Canney, who has a 1.50 ERA. A big week looms. The Rebels visit longtime rival Memphis on Tuesday, host undermanned Alcorn State on Wednesday and then welcome No. 4 Tennessee to Swayze Field for a weekend series that could define the season. The Vols, defending national champs, are 28-4 and 9-3 and no doubt plenty angry after losing a series at Texas A&M in ugly fashion (17-6 in the finale). UM fans are no doubt eager to see how the next chapter of this season is penned. P.S. Whenever there’s a list, there’s usually a Mississippian on it. Since 2007, Barry Bonds’ last season, San Francisco has started a different left fielder on opening day every year — 18 all told. Fred Lewis, former Stone County High and Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College standout, is on the list. He was in left field on April 7, 2009, and he went 1-for-4 with a walk and two runs — plus an error — in a 10-6 win over Milwaukee at AT&T Park. In 2009, Lewis was in the fourth year of a seven-year MLB career in which he batted .266.

06 Apr

minor matters

A pair of 2024 first-round draftees with Mississippi connections strutted their potential on Saturday. Jurrangelo Cijntje, the switch-pitcher out of Mississippi State, threw four scoreless innings in his pro debut for High-Class A Everett (Seattle system), and Braden Montgomery, the Madison Central High alum drafted out Texas A&M, hit his first pro home run for Low-A Kannapolis (Chicago White Sox). Cijntje, 15th overall pick, faced 14 batters, pitching righty 11 times, lefty three times. He allowed just one hit (to a righty), two walks (both to lefties) and struck out six against Spokane (Colorado affiliate) in the Northwest League contest. Cijntje was 11-7 with a 5.25 ERA in two years at MSU but has much better stuff, from both arms, than those numbers would indicate. Montgomery, the 12th overall pick (by Boston), belted 62 homers in three college seasons, 27 in 2024 at A&M. A broken ankle delayed his pro debut to 2025, and in his second game in the Carolina League, the switch-hitting slugger went yard. A Gatorade player of the year while at Madison Central, he is off to a 2-for-8 start with four RBIs and a stolen base for Kannapolis. … In a High-A Midwest League game of some local interest, former Mississippi State standout Brooks Auger faced ex-Ole Miss star Dylan DeLucia, with Auger and the Great Lakes Loons beating Lake County 6-1. Auger, who famously shut down Ole Miss in that dramatic SEC Tournament game last year, went 5 2/3, allowing one unearned run in his pro debut for the Los Angeles Dodgers. He was a sixth-round pick last summer. DeLucia, a hero on UM’s national title team in 2022, yielded four runs in three innings and took the loss. A sixth-rounder by Cleveland in ’22, he has been limited by injuries to 14 pro games. P.S. In MLB on Saturday, Brent Rooker, ex-MSU star, hit his fourth homer of the season, helping the A’s set a franchise record. The team has homered in its first nine games for the first time. The A’s won 7-4 at Colorado to improve to 4-5.

05 Apr

a rare feat

In the course of putting up video game numbers on Friday, Pearl River Community College pulled off an exceedingly rare feat. The Wildcats, the No. 2-ranked team NJCAA Division II, scored in every inning — 12 of them — in a 24-6 and 20-0 sweep of Itawamba CC at Fulton. “We capitalized on runners in scoring position,” PRCC coach Michael Avalon said in a school release. “We were disciplined with the strike zone. … Today, we cashed in throughout the day.” They scored 44 runs on 27 hits. They had a seven-run inning in Game 1 and five- and six-run frames in Game 2. Freshman Topher Jones drove in 11 runs on the day, including a (likely) school record eight in the opener, when he hit two homers. The Hernando High product, a midyear transfer from Mississippi State, is batting .320 with four homers and 42 RBIs. Caston Thompson had four RBIs in Game 1, and Jackson Hood chipped in three in Game 2. Jacob Johnson got the win in the second game, a five-inning contest, to improve to 8-1. The Wildcats are 33-5 and 13-1 in the MACCC. ICC is 19-17 and 6-10. … East Central (31-7, 13-3, nine straight wins) and Jones College (27-8, 13-3, eight straight wins), both nationally ranked, stayed on heels of The River with conference sweeps of their own on Friday. P.S. In a matchup of teams with 1-8 SEC records, Mississippi State fell to South Carolina 7-3 Friday night at Starkville’s Dudy Noble Field. MSU, nationally ranked in preseason, is now 17-13 overall. The SEC is a tough league. Since winning the national title under Chris Lemonis in 2021, the Bulldogs are 36-64 in conference games, 110-92 overall. At 1-9 this year, MSU is tied with Florida and Texas A&M for 13th in the 16-team league. Missouri is last at 0-9.

05 Apr

update …

It probably comes as no real surprise that Konnor Griffin got a hit in his first pro at-bat Friday night. The former Jackson Prep star and Pittsburgh prospect also got a hit in his second at-bat, stole two bases and scored twice in Low-Class A Bradenton’s 6-2 win against Daytona Beach. Leading off and playing shortstop for the Marauders, he was 2-for-4 with a walk and handled three chances flawlessly in the field. … Also debuting Friday was Chicago White Sox prospect Braden Montgomery, a Madison Central High alum and another 2024 first-round draftee, who went 0-for-4 with a walk and an RBI in Low-A Kannapolis’ 7-4 loss to Hickory. … Mississippi State product Khal Stephen, a Toronto draft pick in the second round last summer, threw five shutout innings but got a no-decision for Low-A Dunedin. … Ex-Magnolia Heights star Cooper Pratt, a Milwaukee prospect, got a hit in his first Double-A at-bat and finished 1-for-4 for Biloxi, playing shortstop and batting second in a 4-0 loss at Pensacola. Ex-Ole Miss star Kemp Alderman, also a third-year pro and a Miami prospect, went 3-for-4 and scored twice for the Blue Wahoos in that game.

04 Apr

raise the curtain

While he got some at-bats in big league camp this spring with Pittsburgh, Konnor Griffin’s official pro debut is expected to come today, when the Low-Class A Bradenton Marauders visit the Daytona Beach Tortugas in a Florida State League opener. Former Jackson Prep star Griffin is one of a bundle of 2024 draftees from Mississippi who’ll make debuts today as the lower levels of the minors get into the 2025 swing. The 6-foot-4, 225-pound Griffin was the ninth overall pick by the Pirates, drew rave reviews during his spring invite and is currently listed as their No. 2 prospect. He is expected to play shortstop for the Marauders, through he also works in center field. Former Madison Central High star Braden Montgomery, the 12th pick by Boston, is now with the Chicago White Sox and on their Low-A Kannapolis roster; the Cannon Ballers open today against Hickory in a Carolina League game. Mississippi State product and switch-pitcher Jurrangelo Cijntje, the 15th overall pick by Seattle, is at High-A Everett in the Northwest League; the AquaSox are at Spokane, where Cijntje is expected to start on Saturday. Khal Stephen, picked in Round 2 last year by Toronto, is listed as the probable starter today for Low-A Dunedin in the Florida State League, and fellow ex-MSU standout Nate Dohm, a third-rounder in 2024 by the New York Mets, is slated to start on the mound for Low-A St. Lucie in the FSL. Dakota Jordan, former Jackson Academy and State star, is at Low-A San Jose in the San Francisco system, where he is joined by MRA and Southern Miss product Niko Mazza. Jordan, a fourth-round pick in 2024, went 1-for-7 for San Jose last summer; Mazza, an eighth-rounder, has yet to debut. Brooks Auger, who pitched at MSU and Hinds Community College, is at High-A Great Lakes in the Los Angeles Dodgers’ chain; he was a sixth-round pick. … Cooper Pratt, former Gatorade player of the year at Magnolia Heights, is with Double-A Biloxi, which opens today at Pensacola in the Southern League. Milwaukee’s No. 3 prospect in his third pro season, Pratt spent most of 2024 in A-ball but played for the Shuckers in the SL postseason last year and was 2-for-8 with a homer. Also with the Shuckers is MSU product K.C. Hunt, who reached Double-A last year and went 1-2 with a 2.20 ERA in six starts.