DALLAS (NCBWA) – Nine standouts from throughout the nation
dot the 12th annual 2011 National Collegiate Baseball Writers
of America District Players of the Year, announced today by
the organization.
The 2011 NCBWA District Players of the Year are District I: SS-3B
Matt Gedman (Massachusetts); District II: OF George Springer
(Connecticut); District III: 1B Adam Brett Walker (Jacksonville);
District IV: SP-UT Danny Hultzen (Virginia); District V:
UT Cody Fick (Evansville); District VI: C Chris O'Brien
(Wichita State); District VII: SP Taylor Jungmann (Texas);
District VIII: UT C.J. Cron (Utah); District IX: SP Trevor
Bauer (UCLA).
Some of the previous NCBWA District Players of the Year have
been Howser Trophy recipients, such as Mark Teixeira of Georgia
Tech, Mark Prior of USC, Khalil Greene of Clemson, Rickie Weeks
of Southern, Jered Weaver of Long Beach State, Alex Gordon of Nebraska,
Brad Lincoln of Houston, David Price of Vanderbilt, Buster Posey
of Florida State and Stephen Strasburg of San Diego State.
Gedman, the son of longtime Boston Red Sox standout catcher Rich
Gedman, was ranked 16th nationally in Division I batting average
through games of June 9 with a .402 batting average to pace the
Atlantic 10 Conference. He became the first UMass player selected
in the Major League draft since 2005 after copping consensus All-A-10
Conference honors and leading the team in virtually every hitting
category. The multi-position infielder also was a New England Intercollegiate
Baseball Association All-Star in 2010, and became the second Minuteman
ever to win the A-10 individual batting title. He struck out just
13 times in 189 official at-bats as one of the nation's top contact
hitters and has been considered for All-America recognition.
Springer, the 2009 Big East Conference Rookie of the Year, has
seen his career soar all the way into UConn's first-ever NCAA Super
Regional appearance this week against defending NCAA champion South
Carolina. The junior outfielder paced the 45-18-1 Huskies with 83
hits, 12 home runs and 77 RBI to date in '11 and is the school career
leader in runs with 219 and homers with 46. His grandfather George
Springer and father George Spring, Jr. were both football and baseball
standouts. His head coach, Jim Penders of the famed Penders baseball/softball/basketball
family, helped George III earn consensus All-Big East laurels in
2011.
Walker garnered Atlantic Sun Player of the Year laurels while
posting one of the nation's top batting averages at .411. The semifinalist
for the Dick Howser Trophy topped the Jaguars in almost every statistic
on offense and was second team Louisville Slugger All-America in
Collegiate Baseball magazine. He had an on-base percentage of close
to .500 and managed the sixth-highest season home run total in JU
history with 13 along with a perfect 14-for-14 in the stolen bases'
department. Walker paced the A-Sun in average, on-base percentage,
hits, and doubles as a sophomore this season.
Hultzen, another semifinalist for the Howser, enjoyed one of
the most memorable dual position performances in Atlantic Coast
Conference history in 2011 with the Cavaliers. The Outstanding Player
in the '11 NCAA Charlottesville Regional was the second player chosen
in the recent Major League Baseball Draft by the Seattle Mariners.
He enters the Charlottesville Super Regional with a school-record
148 strikeouts this year in 103-plus innings, an 11-3 overall record
as staff ace and 1.57 ERA. He also has fanned 348 in his career
for a UVa mark and is 31-5 since 2009 and was ACC Player of the
Year as a junior for the 52-9 Cavs. Hultzen batted .336 with 34
RBI in 37 games when he was a DH or hit for himself while pitching.
Fick, another dual position standout for Evansville, was a first
team All-Missouri Valley Conference selection and league Player
of the Year in one survey. He led the Purple Aces with a .406 average,
drove in 71 runs in 53 games for a 1.4 average (among the tops nationally),
topped the team in eight different statistical categories as a hitter,
and was 7-4 on the mound with a 2.36 ERA. He had five complete games
and a pair of shutouts in just 11 starts and was a 23rd round draft
selection of the Philadelphia Phillies as a lefthanded pitcher.
He also is one of the top candidates for the College Baseball Foundation's
Jon Olerud Two-Way Player of the Year Award.
O'Brien had a senior season to remember for legendary coach Gene
Stephenson and the Shockers as a finalist (first in WSU history)
for the prestigious 2011 Coleman Company Johnny Bench Award delivered
by Papa John's Pizza. He also was named the Joe Carter Missouri
Valley Conference Player of the Year after hammering out a conference-best
.410 average with 56 runs, 100 hits, 25 doubles, 10 homers, and
70 RBI – all bests for the 2011 Shockers. He ended his career with
a 29-game hitting streak, fifth-best in WSU season history and the
longest among DI standouts as of June 9. O'Brien is also a semifinalist
for the Howser Trophy.
Jungmann posted exceptional numbers in a Texas program noted
for its dominating starting pitching for decades. The consensus
All-America righthander and Big 12 Conference Pitcher of Year hurled
coach Augie Garrido's Longhorns to a share of the Big 12 Conference
title by posting a 13-1 record on the mound. Jungmann yielded a
paltry .167 average to opposing hitters and has averaged almost
a strikeout an inning (120 in 129 1/3 frames). He has posted five
complete games and three shutouts, while allowing just 20 earned
runs for the nation's best team ERA staff (2.35).
Cron, the lone repeat selection from the 2010 District Players
of the Year, followed a .431 season as a junior with 20 homers and
81 RBI by leading the nation with a .803 slugging percentage. The
son of former Los Angeles Angels 1B Chris Cron joins Howser Trophy
winner and 2004 LAA draftee Jered Weaver as just the second collegiate
player picked first by the Angels in eight seasons. C.J. Cron, who
has caught, played first and served as a DH, was a first team All-America
in '11 with 15 homers and 59 RBI in 49 games. The three-time All-Mountain
West selection helped the Utes to second place in the MWC behind
2010 NCAA World Series entry TCU.
Bauer shared world-class pitching stats with Hultzen and Jungmann
as a consensus All-America choice. The Pacific-10 Conference Pitcher
of the Year was almost “Mr. Automatic” on the hill with a nation-leading
10 complete games in 16 starts and conference-season-record 203
strikeouts in 136-plus innings. He pitched the Bruins into the host
role for the 2011 Los Angeles Regional and surrendered just 22 runs
(19 earned) all season while posting the best ERA in the Pac-10
and one of the Top 10 numbers in NCAA stats. Bauer also followed
Hultzen and Jungmann into the group of semifinalists for the Dick
Howser Trophy and is a top candidate for 2011 CBF National Pitcher
of the Year.
The group, divided into areas as follows: District I-Maine, Vermont,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania; District
II: Connecticut, West Virginia, New York, New Jersey, Delaware,
District of Columbia; III: Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama,
Florida; IV: Georgia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina,
Maryland; V: Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin;
VI: Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, North Dakota, South
Dakota; VII: Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana; VIII: Wyoming, Utah, Idaho,
New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada, Montana; District IX: California,
Oregon, Washington, Hawai'i, Arizona, Alaska.
2011 NCBWA DIVISION I DISTRICT PLAYERS OF THE YEAR |
Dist. |
Player |
Pos. |
School |
Cl. |
Hometown |
I |
Matt Gedman |
IF |
Massachusetts |
Sr. |
Framingham, Mass. |
Maine, Vermont,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania |
II |
George Springer |
OF |
Connecticut |
Sr. |
New Britain, Conn. |
Connecticut,
West Virginia, New York, New Jersey, Delaware, District
of Columbia |
III |
Adam Brett Walker |
1B |
Jacksonville |
So. |
Milwaukee, Wisc. |
Kentucky,
Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida |
IV |
Danny Hultzen |
P/UT |
Virginia |
Jr. |
Bethesda, Md. |
Georgia,
Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland |
V |
Cody Fick |
UT |
Evansville |
Jr. |
Freeburg, Mo. |
Ohio, Indiana,
Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin |
VI |
Chris O'Brien |
C |
Wichita State |
Sr. |
Tulsa, Okla. |
Iowa, Missouri,
Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota |
VII |
Taylor Jungmann |
P |
Texas |
Jr. |
Temple, Texas |
Texas, Arkansas,
Louisiana |
VIII |
C.J. Cron |
UT |
Utah |
Jr. |
Phoenix, Ariz. |
Wyoming,
Utah, Idaho, New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada, Montana |
IX |
Trevor Bauer |
P |
UCLA |
Jr. |
Valencia, Calif. |
California, Oregon, Washington, Hawai'i, Arizona, Alaska
|
Complete
release with statistics (.pdf) |
Founded in 1962, the NCBWA is dedicated to the advancement of
college baseball. Membership is open to writers, broadcasters and
publicists of the sport. For more information about the NCBWA, visit
the association's official Web site, ncbwa.com.
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