08 Aug

they also serve …

Dave Clark and Travis Chapman won’t throw a pitch or swing the bat this weekend, but they’ll be on the field at Yankee Stadium and involved in the action. Clark, the former Jackson State star from Shannon, and Chapman, a Mississippi State alum, are first-base coaches for Houston and the New York Yankees, respectively. Those teams, rivals with a history and 2025 playoff contenders, will face off in a three-game series. With the likes of Jose Altuve and Aaron Judge and Carlos Correa and Jazz Chisholm taking hacks in this series, Clark and Chapman figure to be plenty busy playing traffic cop at first base. They are among a sizable group of former players with Mississippi connections who now work in managerial or coaching roles in the big leagues. At one time in 2018, there were seven major league managers with a Mississippi tie, either a school alum or a player or manager for Jackson’s old Texas League club. Today, Brian Snitker, 2005 Mississippi Braves skipper, and Ray Montgomery, who played for the Jackson Generals in the 1990s, are the only two. Snitker is retiring after this season on the heels of a great run in the ATL, the 2025 season notwithstanding. Montgomery is the interim manager for the Los Angeles Angels, presumably just keeping the seat warm for the return of Ron Washington next year. For the Milwaukee Brewers — MLB’s hottest team — Chris Hook, a former Biloxi Shuckers coach and a Jackson Generals pitcher, serves as pitching coach for an outstanding staff, and Starkville native Julio Borbon is the Brewers’ first-base coach. The Crew is hosting the New York Mets this weekend. John Gibbons, former Jackson Mets catcher, is the Mets’ bench coach, and Antoan Richardson, who starred for the Mississippi Braves, is their first-base coach. Laurel native Bobby Dickerson is the infield coach for Philadelphia. Marcus Thames, the Louisville native and East Central Community College star, is the hitting coach for the Chicago White Sox. Jim Hickey, a former Jackson Generals pitching coach, is the longtime pitching coach of the Washington Nationals. The Colorado staff includes Clint Hurdle, skipper of the last JaxMets team in 1990, as bench coach and ex-JaxMets first baseman Ron Gideon as first-base coach. Chris Truby, who manned third base for the Jackson Generals in the mid-’90s, is now a coach for Pittsburgh. P.S. Former Southern Miss standout Landon Harper came within one out of a seven-inning perfect game Thursday for Double-A Columbus in Atlanta’s system. Harper finished with a one-hitter and improved to 3-6 with a 3.67 ERA after the 2-0 win over Rocket City. … Former Jackson Prep star Konnor Griffin homered — his 15th overall this season — for High-Class A Greensboro (Pittsburgh). The minor leagues’ No. 1 prospect is batting .332 with 64 RBIs, 87 runs and 50 steals in 92 games over two levels of A-ball. … Blaine Crim, Mississippi College alum, hit his 19th homer of the year, his first for Triple-A Albuquerque since Colorado claimed him off waivers from Texas. The bomb came against his former team, Round Rock, and erstwhile big leaguer Craig Kimbrel. … The Los Angeles Dodgers reportedly will call up Justin Dean, who played center field for the 2021 Double-A South champion M-Braves. … The North Delta Dealers, behind the two-hit pitching of Eli Akins, won the Cotton States League championship last Sunday, beating regular season champ Tallahatchie 2-1. Hayden Short and Patrick Mangels drove in runs for North Delta. Akins, a 6-foot-6 righty at Delta State, went 6-1 in the New Albany-based college summer league. Tallahatchie finished 14-5-1 this season and led the loop in hitting and pitching.

07 Aug

caught up in middle

Games aren’t always saved in the ninth inning. Middle relievers frequently work on the razor’s edge. Drew Pomeranz, the 36-year-old left-hander out of Ole Miss, faced such a situation on Wednesday with the Chicago Cubs. He came on in the sixth with the Cubs holding a one-run lead, a runner on base, two outs and the dangerous Elly De La Cruz up for Cincinnati. Pomeranz struck him out on four pitches. And his job was done. Rookie starter Cade Horton would get the win. Pomeranz was credited with a hold, his ninth in 38 appearances, and reduced his ERA to 1.97. He also has a save and two wins on his 2025 ledger. The Cubs used three more relievers, added on some runs and won 6-1 at Wrigley Field. Take 2: In Washington, Konnor Pilkington, the ex-Mississippi State standout, got the call in the fifth inning, two on, one out and the Nationals locked in a scoreless battle with the A’s. Pilkington struck out Nick Kurtz, pitched around Brent Rooker and got J.J. Bleday on a ground ball to end the inning. The lefty went back out for the sixth and gave up a tie-breaking solo homer to Tyler Soderstrom — the first he has allowed in eight appearances — before getting two outs and departing for another reliever. The Nationals tied the score in the bottom of the sixth and went on to win 2-1 via a walk-off hit. Pilkington, called up just last month, has been an effective pitcher in clutch situations though he has no wins, saves or holds. He has inherited seven baserunners and not allowed one to score in his 7 2/3 innings of work; he has put up a 2.35 ERA for a last-place team. P.S. Ole Miss alum Nick Fortes got his first hit — a home run — in his sixth game for Tampa Bay since joining the club in a trade on July 29. The Rays, with Fortes behind the plate, beat the Los Angeles Angels 5-4. … Philadelphia has claimed UM product Jacob Waguespack off waivers from Tampa Bay and assigned the right-hander to Triple-A Lehigh Valley. He has been on the injured list since late May. Waguespack, who has a 5.11 ERA in 31 career MLB games, had pitched well (0.46) in the minors this year.

06 Aug

numbers to crunch

4 — Hits by Brent Rooker in a 16-7 win Tuesday by the A’s over Washington in a game chock-full of crazy numbers, including 24 hits — nine for extra bases — and five walks by the visitors at Nationals Park. Former Mississippi State star Rooker hit two doubles, drove in three runs and scored three.
3 — Home runs by Shea Langeliers of the A’s in the catcher’s first career game batting leadoff. Langeliers, who powered the Double-A Mississippi Braves to a league title in 2021, went 5-for-6 and scored four times. It was his second career three-homer game, and he now has 22 bombs on the season.
4 — Walks drawn by Nathaniel Lowe in the Nationals’ humbling defeat. The MSU alum, teammates with Rooker back in 2016, went 0-for-1 and is batting .221 with a .294 OBP — far off his career numbers — in his first year with Washington.
13 — Wins this season for Garrett Crochet, who allowed two runs in seven innings as Boston beat Kansas City 6-2 for its seventh straight win. Ocean Springs native Crochet, pitching on nine days rest, is 13-4 with a 2.24 ERA in 23 starts for the surging Red Sox.
13 — Wins this season for Freddy Peralta, who went five innings for Milwaukee to subdue Atlanta 7-2. The former Biloxi Shuckers standout, 13-5 with a 3.03, helped the Brewers win their sixth straight and improve to an MLB-best 69-44.
7 — Hits and RBIs in four August games for Isaac Collins, who had two of each in Milwaukee’s win at Truist Park. The 5-foot-8, 188-pound Shuckers alum, batting .285 this season, was the National League rookie of the month for July.
5 — RBIs by Dakota Jordan in a two-homer game for Low-Class A San Jose in San Francisco’s organization. The ex-MSU star from Canton, a 2024 draftee, has 14 homers and 82 RBIs in 84 games. Coming off the IL, he is 11-for-19 with four bombs and 12 RBIs in four games in August.
1 — Save, in his first opportunity at Triple-A Omaha (Kansas City system), for Brandon Johnson. The Ole Miss product threw a scoreless 10th in a 7-6 win at Indianapolis, trimming his ERA to 6.37 in his 22nd game for the Storm Chasers. He had a 0.79 and seven saves at the Double-A level this year.
P.S. Rooker, former State standout Jake Mangum (Tampa Bay) and Shuckers alum Sal Frelick (Milwaukee) were selected as their team’s Heart and Hustle Award winners for 2025. The award honors a player who best embodies the values, spirit and tradition of the game. An overall winner will be chosen after the season.

05 Aug

just doing his thing

Minnesota Twins management may have waved the white flag on this season, purging the roster at the trade deadline, but Matt Wallner is still out there battling, doing Matt Wallner things. The Southern Miss product — the school’s all-time home run leader — hit his 15th homer on Monday night. The sixth-inning shot at Detroit’s Comerica Park gave the Twins a brief lead before they ultimately fell to the first-place Tigers 6-3. It was the Twins’ fifth loss in six games and they now stand 52-60. If the club is fading away, Wallner is not. The 6-foot-4 lefty slugger, at .217 on the season, is batting .368 over his last seven games and has four homers in his last eight. He is one of those proverbial “three true outcome” players: In 259 plate appearances this season — he missed a chunk of time early on with an injury — he has struck out 75 times and walked 32 (with four HBPs) in addition to his career-high homer total. He has 44 career bombs in 240 games. When Wallner hits the ball, he hits it hard: Of his 48 hits in 2025, 28 are for extra bases. In Monday’s game, his homer off Casey Mize carried 436 feet to center field. Wallner also walked once and struck out once. And, oh yeah, he has a cannon for a right arm; USM used him as a closer at times. Playing right field on Monday, he threw out two Tigers on the bases. The Minnesota native may give disheartened Twins fans something to cheer about down the stretch. P.S. Wallner is tied for third in the all-Mississippi home run derby for 2025. Brent Rooker leads with 23, followed by Austin Riley at 16 and Wallner and Nathaniel Lowe at 15. Jordan Westburg — hitting .419 in his last seven games — belted his 13th homer for Baltimore in a losing cause on Monday. … On the topic of homers, ex-Ole Miss star Ryan Rolison yielded a bomb in Colorado’s blowout loss to Toronto at Coors Field and has now allowed 10 homers in 34 2/3 innings this season, his first in MLB.

04 Aug

there and here

Kemp Alderman, former Ole Miss star and Decatur native, has been named the Double-A Southern League’s player of the week (July 28-Aug. 3). The 2023 Ferriss Trophy winner had nine hits — two of them homers — eight RBIs and three runs for Pensacola in the Miami chain. He hit both homers on Sunday against ex-Mississippi State hurler K.C. Hunt in the Blue Wahoos’ 8-4 win over Biloxi. It’s the second time this season Alderman has won the league’s POW award. He is one of 11 Mississippians to win the top player award in various minor leagues in 2025, joining Connor Hujsak, Konnor Griffin, Blaze Jordan, Tyson Hardin, Jurrangelo Cijntje, Niko Mazza, Braden Montgomery, Rowdey Jordan, Blaine Crim and J.T. Ginn. … Cijntje, the switch-pitcher out of MSU, has been promoted to Double-A Arkansas in the Seattle system. He was 4-7 with a 4.58 ERA in 19 games at the High-Class A level in what is his first pro season. … Atlanta has placed DeSoto Central High product Austin Riley (abdominal injury) back on the 10-day injured list. Former Mississippi Braves infielder Nacho Alvarez was recalled. … Baltimore sent Houston Roth back to Triple-A Norfolk without getting the ex-UM standout into a game. He has a 2.21 ERA, four wins and two saves in 24 relief appearances between Double-A and Triple-A this season. … The Mississippi Mud Monsters, hitting the road Tuesday for a six-game, two-city trip, have revamped their roster in recent days, adding right-hander Braden Forsyth (a Magnolia Heights, Meridian Community College and Ole Miss alum); first baseman Jack Holman; LH Ben Riley Flowers (a Southern Miss product); 7-foot RH Brenton Thiels; and RH Carl Brice (Callaway High alum). RH Heath Mann was signed and then released. The independent club is 35-36, fourth place in the West Division of the Midwest Conference of the Frontier League. The regular season ends Aug. 31. Eight teams qualify for the playoffs, four from each conference, in the 18-team league. … Ole Miss alum Anthony Calarco, who had 10 hits and seven RBIs in last week’s six-game series vs. the Mud Monsters, is batting .335 with a league-best 20 homers and 92 RBIs on the year for Schaumburg, one of the FL’s best teams. He played in Oxford in 2023.

04 Aug

feel-good moment

In his fifth game since being promoted to Triple-A by Baltimore, Reed Trimble had himself a day. The Southern Miss alum from Tupelo went 3-for-5, drove in the tying run in the bottom of the ninth and scored the game-winner in Norfolk’s 10-9 victory Sunday over Memphis. A switch-hitting outfielder, the 25-year-old Trimble is batting .228 over four levels this season; he is 5-for-21 at Norfolk. Drafted 65th overall by the Orioles in 2021 — after hitting .345 with 17 homers that season at USM — Trimble has had trouble staying on the field. He has made at least six trips to the injured list and played in just 192 games over his five minor league campaigns. A .240 career hitter with 17 homers and 51 steals, he has slipped off the MLB Pipeline Top 30 prospect list in the Baltimore system. But he is getting a shot at the Triple-A level, and Sunday’s effort was certainly a feel-good moment. … Trimble upstaged former DeSoto Central High standout Blaze Jordan, who got his first hit (in his second game) for Memphis since being traded to St. Louis by Boston. P.S. And the winning pitcher of the first major league game ever played at a NASCAR track in Tennessee is: Hurston Waldrep. The USM alum and ex-Mississippi Braves standout threw 5 2/3 impressive innings for Atlanta in the 4-2 win Sunday against Cincinnati. The Speedway Classic was suspended in the first inning on Saturday night. Waldrep caught a ride in Sunday morning from Lawrenceville, Ga., where he was slated to pitch for Triple-A Gwinnett. In Bristol, he allowed just one run on three hits and two walks with four strikeouts for his first career win in his third MLB appearance. Eli White got the MVP award after hitting two homers, but what Waldrep did was just as valuable. “I’m happy to be here. It’s just been an unbelievable day,” he told mlb.com postgame. Alas, he was optioned back to Gwinnett today. The right-hander, a 2024 first-round pick (out of Florida), endured two rough MLB outings in 2024 and was 7-8 with a 4.42 ERA this year at Gwinnett, where had pitched well in his last several outings. … The Braves’ Austin Riley (DeSoto Central grad) felt abdominal pain after making a diving tag on Sunday, left the game and is likely to miss at least a couple more. … Former Mississippi College star Blaine Crim was claimed by Colorado off waivers from Texas and optioned to Triple-A Albuquerque. … Dakota Jordan, the former Ferriss Trophy winner at Mississippi State, put up a 5-for-6 with a homer for Low-Class A San Jose in a 15-7 win Sunday vs. Stockton. San Francisco’s No. 6 prospect, bucking for a promotion, is hitting .315 with 12 bombs.

04 Aug

a day at the park

It’s the 3rd of August, another sleepy, dusty, central Mississippi Sunday, and the Mississippi Mud Monsters are hosting the Schaumburg Boomers in a Frontier League doubleheader at Pearl’s Trustmark Park. … At 4:02 p.m., just before first pitch of Game 1, the crowd in the 6,000-plus seat ballpark is, uh, slim — think double digits — and the atmosphere subdued. Very. … The video board in left-center is “under repair” and displays only balls, strikes, outs and a basic linescore. … But there is music. And baseball. … Top of the first, Anthony Calarco, introduced as a former Ole Miss player, comes to the plate. The p.a. “taunts” him with the Mississippi State fight song. He rips an RBI double down the right-field line. There are cheers. … Bottom one, Brayland Skinner leads off with a double and comes in on a Travis Holt knock. … Kids behind the right-field fence can be heard razzing the Boomers right fielder. … Top second, Skinner, the Mud Monsters’ offensive catalyst, suffers an apparent leg injury tracking a fly ball. He limps off the field. … Third inning, Calarco, a hefty lefty hitter, rips another RBI hit. More cheers for the visitor. Boomers lead 2-1. … The “Chicken Dance” rings out on the p.a. after the third inning. It does little to inspire the scattered crowd. … Bottom four, the Mud-sters get two hits. But Boomers center fielder Banks Tolley — the St. Andrew’s grad — unleashes a laser to cut down Nilo Rijo at the plate. The sensational double play ends the inning. … Bottom five, the Boomers left fielder, Aaron Simmons, cuts down a runner at the plate to end that inning. Amazing. … Calarco is up in the sixth for his third at-bat. Cue the fight song. He crushes a line drive to left that clanks off Samil De La Rosa’s glove. Two batters later, Nick Podkul’s single up the middle makes it 3-1. … Bottom six, Jack Holman, recent addition to the Mississippi roster, smashes a double to the wall in center that Tolley almost reels in. A run scores, and it’s now 3-2 Schaumburg. … Some Mud-sters fans on the third-base side can be heard playfully mocking — “Rookie of the Year”-style — the anatomy of the Boomers pitcher, who has yielded only two runs. … Seventh inning: Chris Barraza replaces starter Brian Williams on the bump for Mississippi. Barraza walks four batters around a two-run hit by that man again, Calarco. … Following a much-needed visit from pitching coach Robert Carson, the former Hattiesburg High star and onetime big leaguer, Barraza fans two to end the inning. … The Mud-sters trail 5-2 going to the bottom of the final frame. … Hits by De La Rosa and Holt are squandered. A bouncer to the mound ends it. As the visitors quietly celebrate in the infield, the p.a. invites fans — who have grown in number, slightly — to have a catch on the field and stick around for Game 2. P.S. Mississippi pounds out 15 hits and rolls to a 12-6 win in the second game, the fourth game in two days between the teams. The announced attendance is 1,616.

03 Aug

three stars

Colt Keith: The Biloxi High product went 3-for-5 with a home run — for Detroit’s first run against Zack Wheeler — as the Tigers beat the Phillies 7-5 in a showdown of aces (Tarik Skubal vs. Wheeler) and first-place teams. Keith is batting .258 with nine homers and 33 RBIs and is hitting .316 over his last seven games.
Brandon Woodruff: The ex-Mississippi State standout allowed one hit (a homer), one walk and two runs over six innings and punched out eight to lead first-place Milwaukee to an 8-2 win against Washington. In five starts since coming off the injured list, Woodruff is 3-0 with a 2.22 ERA and 37 K’s in 28 1/3 innings.
Christopher Sargent Jr.: The former Southern Miss slugger drove in two runs with a double for Ogden in the independent Pioneer League and boosted his season RBI total to 101, best in the league. He is batting .381 with 25 homers.
P.S. Ex-Ole Miss star Ryan Rolison was recalled to the big leagues by Colorado; he had a 7.34 ERA in 22 games in his first stint for the woeful Rockies. … J.P. France, an MSU product, allowed four runs on two hits and four walks in a rehab start for Triple-A Sugar Land in the Houston system. … Blaine Crim, Mississippi College alum, was designated for assignment by Texas on July 31 and is in roster limbo. He is batting .284 with 18 homers at Triple-A Round Rock; he went 0-for-11 in The Show. … Mississippi native Lance Barksdale is on the umpiring crew for the historic MLB Speedway Classic in Bristol, Tenn. The Atlanta-Cincinnati game was suspended by rain and will be resumed today in the first inning.

02 Aug

troublesome numbers

The Atlanta Braves strike out a lot — 947 times so far, fourth-most in the National League — and their worst offender is Austin Riley. The power-hitting third baseman out of DeSoto Central High has some good numbers — .260, 16 homers, 54 RBIs, 54 runs — but his punch-out number is problematic. He has struck out 127 times, tied for fifth-most in the NL, in 415 at-bats. He struck out four times — a proverbial Golden Sombrero — in the Braves’ 3-2 loss at Cincinnati on Friday night. The team whiffed 14 times. So many of the strikeouts seem to come in clutch situations. Yes, injuries have wreaked havoc with Atlanta’s pitching, but clutch hitting, making contact in key situations, also has been a season-long issue. They’ll sputter into today’s much-hyped Speedway Classic in Bristol, Tenn., with a 46-63 record, third-worst in the NL. They left eight runners on base Friday and went 1-for-9 with runners in scoring position. Case in point: In the eighth inning, with runners at second and third, one out and Atlanta down 3-0, Riley struck out for the fourth time. That kind of thing has plagued the Braves all season. Five players have fanned 83 times or more. They simply don’t hit enough home runs — 117 — to overcome that. P.S. Adam Frazier, Mississippi State alum, hit his fourth homer of the year — first with Kansas City — and the feisty Royals belted four bombs all told in a 9-3 win over first-place Toronto. … Former Madison Central star Braden Montgomery hit his first Double-A homer for Birmingham in win against Rocket City. The recently promoted Montgomery, one of the Chicago White Sox’s top prospects, is batting .268 with 12 homers, 58 RBIs and 12 steals across three levels of the minors. … MSU product Dakota Jordan returned from the injured list and went 2-for-4 with two RBIs in a win by Low-Class A San Jose. The San Francisco prospect is hitting .304 with 10 homers, 72 RBIs and 27 steals. … Colton Ledbetter, ex-MSU standout, swiped his 28th bag for Double-A Montgomery. The Tampa Bay prospect is hitting .284 with five homers, 33 RBIs and 52 runs. … Christian MacLeod, a 25-year-old left-hander out of MSU, was promoted to Triple-A St. Paul by thinned-out Minnesota and allowed a lone unearned run in 3 2/3 innings in his debut. He has a 2.26 ERA in 16 games over three levels. … Worth noting: Cal Raleigh, the Seattle slugger, set the record for homers by a switch-hitting catcher with his 42nd on Thursday. The previous record of 41 was set by Jackson Mets alum Todd Hundley with the New York Mets in 1996.

01 Aug

ode to jucos

In the display case honoring Scott Berry at the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum, there is a green jersey emblazoned with EAGLES. It’s a nod to Meridian Community College and, by extension, to juco baseball in the state, which doesn’t seem to get the attention it deserves. Berry, who’ll be formally inducted into the state’s Hall of Fame on Saturday, is best known as the former coach at Southern Miss, where he is the all-time leader in victories, including numerous championships. But Berry also spent 10 years as a coach at MCC, the last four as head coach after succeeding the highly successful Corky Palmer. Berry’s legacy at MCC is powerful: Over his four seasons, the Eagles were a perennial Top 10 team in the NJCAA, per the MCC website. His teams went 185-58, twice reaching the Juco World Series. The 1997 team, his first, was ranked No. 1 all season before falling in the district round of the postseason. He won numerous coach of the year awards, including two national honors, and he was inducted into the MACCC Sports Hall of Fame in 2014. More than 25 players advanced from Meridian CC to Division I schools during Berry’s tenure. Among that group was Cliff Lee, who went on to Arkansas and then to the big leagues, where he was an All-Star and Cy Young Award winner. All told, MCC has produced seven MLB players, including Corey Dickerson, Tyler Moore and Jamie Brown. There’s an impressive list of state juco alums from other programs who’ve made it to the big leagues: Roy Oswalt (a recent Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame inductee), Jarrod Dyson, Matt Lawton, Tim Anderson, Marcus Thames, Greg Hibbard, Bill Selby, Fred Lewis and Wendell Magee. Among the decorated coaches in addition to Berry and Palmer who’ve served in the state juco ranks are Ken and Cooper Farris, Rick Clarke, George McQuitter, Donny Castle, Keith Case, Sam Temple, Chris Kirtland, Rick Collier, Neal Holliman and Marc Carson. Kirtland won a national title at Jones, and current Pearl River coach Michael Avalon won the national crown in 2022. Current USM coach Christian Ostrander previously coached at Jones. Every season, and throughout each season, several state jucos will appear in the NJCAA Division II national rankings. That green EAGLES jersey in the museum display case serves as a subtle reminder of the quality and rich history of juco ball in Mississippi.