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Tulane Baseball at Mid-Season

Most of Tulane fandom is focused on Tuesday’s basketball game against USC and the progress of Spring football leading up to next season. Interest in our mid-week baseball games at USM and home against Northwestern State is approaching an all-time low. Yet, we have now played 28 of our 56-game regular season schedule, exactly half way. It might be time to see where we stand.

At 17-11, we’re not where we need to be to compete for an at-large NCAA berth. Our remaining schedule is tougher than what we’ve seen so far, and we’ll be playing a higher proportion of away games to boot. If we were able to go 17-11 the rest of the way, we’d be at 34 wins, not close to realistic consideration. To reach 40 wins, which most people don’t think would do it, we need to go 23-5 over the last half of the year. Even our most optimistic fans question that as a possibility.

Currently, Warren Nolan predicts us ending up at 35-21 (18-10 the rest of the way) and an RPI of 126. I don’t put a lot of faith in those predictions at this time, but it is what it is. So, what’s the problem? Well, to put it succinctly, it’s pitching, hitting, defense, and coaching.

On the mound, our best two starters, Fladda, and Cehajic, have ERA’s of 5.54 and 4.28 respectively. They’ve averaged 5.3 innings and 4.5 innings per start each. In the fifteen games started by others, they’ve averaged 2.1 innings per start with an ERA of 6.68. Our best two haven’t been good and our remaining options have been very bad.

In the bullpen, Lombardi and Montiel have allowed 2 earned runs in 31.1 innings (0.57 ERA). That’s beyond good; that’s great! Beyond them, however, our relievers have a combined ERA of 5.97, truly bad. Can all of these things improve? Of course, but, as the weather warms, hitting tends to improve. And the tougher schedule and increase in the number of away games makes major improvements unlikely.

On the hitting side, we’re batting .258 with 22 HR’s. Of course, the same issues affecting pitching will affect hitting. Warmer weather helps, but away games and better competition may negate that advantage. Our current batting average is our 2nd worst over the last 10 Years. Only 2023 was worse. And, if we were to double our current home run total, 44 would only be more than the Covid-shortened 2020 year and the 2021 season over the last ten years. Last season we hit 91 HR’s to give a recent comparison. Despite some claims to the contrary, we are not getting better.

Fielding and defense are also a problem. I’ve mentioned our low fielding percentage before—currently .967, but our inability to make standard plays, the misjudged fly balls, and the inaccurate outfield throws all contribute to overall defense even if not considered in fielding percentage. I simply don’t have the data or, frankly, the ability to compute the more objective statistics, such as total fielding runs above/below average, defensive runs allowed, or defensive range as compared to others, to better rate our defense. But, subjectively, most unbiased observers probably come to the same conclusion: our defense is not very good.

Finally, our coaching. Some people defend our coaching at every turn. That’s fine. Rating a coach is very subjective and people can cite different facts and statistics to support their position. Personally, I’ve met Coach Uhlman, though briefly, and like him as a person. He also probably knows more about baseball and this team than me or almost any one of our fans. It’s his job. And, he may even be the best coach we can hire or afford. I certainly hope not. To be candid, I never thought he should have been hired in the first place. Hiring the right-hand man of a failed head coach, who was at least partially responsible for those results, made no sense to me. But, hire him we did. Like almost all Tulane fans, I wished him well and hoped he would be the one to return Tulane to the “glory days” of Retiff, Brockhoff, and Jones. It hasn’t happened through three years but, given his contract extension, he has still more time to step up to the challenge. Since he’s evidently going nowhere, I hope he does.

To date, Coach Uhlman has a 75 and 83 record, the worst overall record since Doug Hafner, over 60 years ago. Even Travis Jewett (130-116) had a better record. The last two years, our conference has declined and our out-of-conference schedule has been a joke. NIL and our school’s high cost are clearly issues for any Tulane baseball coach and, again, maybe this is the best we can do. But, for me, it isn’t enough. We’ve won the conference tournament the past two years after coming up well short during the regular season. That tells me that our kids have the potential. Heck, instead of one of the weakest schedules in the country, we could have the toughest schedule and still have a shot at a regional by winning the tournament. Why aim so low? But my major complaint with our coaching is the lack of improvement from our players. Some guys come in and play well and then “peter out” in succeeding years. Why is that? We’ve shown that we can play better (see the conference tournaments) but we don’t do so consistently. I think our players are better than they are performing. To me, that’s on coaching. They are not getting the most out of our players. The intangibles of defense and base running that we don’t seem to have is also on the coaches in my view. And, as I’ve tried to show above, I don’t think we’re improving year over year. Pitching, hitting, and defense don’t seem to be getting better. That, too, is on coaching.

Of course, we have 28 regular season games and the conference tournament to go. Hopefully, we can surprise once again in the tourney, because an at-large berth is virtually gone.

Roll Wave!!!

Scrimmage update has arrived (finally)

It's a very busy day for me with the basketball news on top of the scrimmage, but I will have the full report at some point. There were two fights near the end of the scrimmage that forced Sumrall to stop it and have the players do punishment sprints, but he admitted he was not really upset about the intensity. The three top QBs took turns operating from their own 25 and then in a red zone drill, with Kellen Tasby and one of the walk-on QBs getting in at the end of the 10-series affair.

The full update will come in this thread.

Mari Jordan back, Kam Williams to Kentucky, Rowan Brumbaugh non-committal

They had the first basketball interviews today since the day Tulane lost in the AAC tourney, and there is a lot of news. For one, Mari Jordan was back at practice after missing Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday (the Wave did not practice Thursday), and Ron Hunter said Jordan had taken his name out of the portal. Second, Kam Williams committed to Kentucky, an indication of how high his reputation is. Third, Rowan Brumbaugh, who is more of an open book than any player I have ever covered, refused to commit to returning next year. Here is his full interview today, where he was brutally honest about everything he was asked.

On Mari Jordan being back and how significant that is:


"It's great news. Obviously he was a big part of this year, but at the end of the day we gotta go do it. We came in fourth place in the conference, like, that's cool and all, but we have a lot of stuff to do. Just having one player, we have to continue to build a good culture."

On the significance of the College Basketball Crown:

"I mean it's tough because we don't have a full roster. It's almost like a bowl game. It's a great idea. It should be fun, but going into next year I wouldn't expect this tournament to represent anything honestly."

On if he is over what happened against Memphis:

"Yeah, I'm over that. It's God's will at the end of the day. It's something to learn from. We'll be back."

On how comfortable he is with staying next year:

"I haven't made an official decision or anything like that, but I love it here. It's a great system. It works for me. It works for the team, so I just hope we can get some more guys."

On the deciding factors of staying or leaving:

"I love it here. There's nothing more from a people perspective, basketball school perspective. Honestly it would be more of a financial thing at the end of the day. When you look back five years from now, do you regret not taking a big opportunity? That's where I'm at for me. I'm always going to be an open book. I love it here. There's nothing more Tulane can do now at the end of the day."

On how much team needs to improve to get to NCAA tournament:

"A ton. You had one year of decent success, but we still came in fourth place in the American Conference. I don't even know if it was a top-10 conference this year (it was 11th), so we had success, but now is the time of year where everyone is told how good they are and people are told they are way better than they are. We literally came in fourth place in conference. We aren't that good. We don't have to keep getting so hyped up. We have tons of work to do. I'm just excited to get back in the gym. I love just working out and stuff because at the end of the day you have to guard the dude in front of you. You have to beat the team in front of you. It doesn't matter how much money you make, what school you go to, who thinks you're so good, who told you you're so good because you're not. I'm under an audience of one, and that's God."

Update: Thursday, March 27

Tulane had a spirited 11-on-11 session at the end of a a 90-minute practice on Thursday morning in preparation for Friday morning's scrimmage, which has been moved from Saturday because of the possibility of bad weather early Saturday. I did not realize the workout was ending early, so I caught only the last 40 minutes or so. A couple of times guys were tackled to the ground in what was supposed to be a non-tackling session, but Jon Sumrall prefers over-aggressiveness to under-aggressiveness and had no problem with the enthusiasm. The first thing I saw was a big run by Louisville transfer Maurice Turner on a cutback. He and freshman Javin Gordon have been the standouts of the spring at running back, but I will be very interested to see what Jamauri McClure does tomorrow. Although he has been quiet to this point, he excelled in every scrimmage last preseason. So far, Turner has been the home run threat and Gordon, who is built like Duda Barnes, has been Mr. Consistent, picking up the playbook quickly as an early enroller.

My spies said Cadin Semonza was not as sharp today as in other practices, but he completed three in a row during a 7-on-7 drill right before the 11-on-11 work. He started by going underneath to Gordo, then hit Sydney Mbanasor deep with a bit of a wobbly pass before throwing a dart to walk-on Walker Davis for about 20 yards.

When the 11-on-11 drill started, T.J. Finley let an inaccurate snap by Elijah Baker go through his hands on the first play. He followed with completions to Barnes underneath and Shaun Nicholas underneath around a draw by McClure.

Donovan Leary was next, and he completed a quick pass to Jimmy Calloway, who reversed field immediately and tried to cross to the other side, where linebacker Jean Clause Joseph met him and stripped him for a fumble the defense recovered. Leary then scrambled to his right and made a nice throw to Mbanasor, who received encouragement/motivation from wideouts coach Carter Sheridan all day. Leary was "sacked" on the next play, I believe by Geordan Guidry. Gordon caught a pass underneath on the last play.

Third was Semonza, who began by scrambing. He overthrew walk-on Trevor Evans on a deep route by a good margin before hitting tight end Anthony Miller for a dcent gain and throwing behind Nicholas on a slant.

Kellen Tasby got a turn and started off with a perfect pass deep down the middle to Bryce Bohanon. For a second I wondered if he could create a four-way competition, but his next throw went right to walk-on safety Carson Klein for an easy, inexplicable interception, I'm not sure who he was trying to hit. The day finished with a pass to LeRon Husbands underneath.

At one point, they had the two true freshman defensive linemen out there together--tackle PaLanding Drammeh and end Nik Alston--with rush endTy Cooper and Guidry. The top cornerbacks were Jahiem Jojhnson and Armani Cargo--I did not see Rayshawn Pleasant--but they are mixing and matching the defense a lot and I will get a better handle of the early depth chart tomorrow.

I still don't have a pecking order at QB. If I had to wager right now, I would put it at Finley/Semonza/Leary but with little separation. Your guess is as good as mine at receiver even though you have not watched practice. A bunch of them have made plays, but none of them have been consistently productive in the four practices I have seen. It will be interesting to see which guys make plays in the scrimmage. I would put Bryce Bohanon, who has not been a significant factor in the passing game, at the top of the list to this point, with no clear order behind him. Jon Sumrall says it is the position that concerns him the most and one he might have to address after the spring in the portal.

The scrimmage will be at the end of tomorrow's practice, which will be a normal one until the tackling portion to finish off the week.

Sumrall, Will Hall and Javin Gordon talked after practice. I do not have time to transcribe them right now, but will get those quotes later.
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