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The 2020 Season

The Owls on the Road

It was a huge opening weekend for the Kennesaw State Owls baseball squad. They hosted three games at Stillwell Stadium and won all of them in convincing fashion, starting off the season 3-0 for the first time since 2013. The team now has a truckload of momentum heading into the big contest back at their home field on Wednesday against nationally ranked UGA, but after that game, the Owls will have to pack their bags for their first road trip of the year.

The Owls will take on three teams during the Coastal Carolina Tournament in Conway, South Carolina this weekend. It is the first of 13 road-trips the team will make over the course of the regular season, and the guys will hope to get off to a strong start away from Stillwell Stadium. Playing well on the road is essential to putting together a winning year, but it is no easy task. Traveling across the country while playing at a Division I level and managing a full-time school schedule is one of the most difficult aspects of collegiate athlete life.

Fortunately for the Owls, the 2020 road schedule is relatively kind. The Owls will not have to venture too far out of the Southeast and aside from one grueling week featuring three different states, the team will have plenty of long home-stands in between their travels.

Mapping It Out

2020 will see the Owls bringing their bats to six states and 12 cities in the Southeast. Inside the map are data about which teams they will be playing and their all-time records against them. There are also three layers in the map that can be toggled to reveal the routes the Owls will take from Stillwell Stadium to each destination.

Taking a long look at the map it’s easy to see the most difficult stretch for the Owls will be from April 17 to April 26. The team will travel through Lynchburg, Savannah and Jacksonville in nine days without any home games in between. The road-trip will feature two difficult in-conference rivals, and if that wasn’t enough already, final exams begin at Kennesaw State the Monday they return home. Yikes!

What About a Playoff Run?

If the Owls keep playing like they have on opening weekend they will have big aspirations for a playoff run in the summer. Using the Owls 2014 season as a guide, this map shows potential destinations for the club should they make it all the way to the College World Series in Omaha this June. A run could include some of their biggest road trips yet, but with finals wrapped up and school behind them, all focus would be on baseball.

By The Miles

The Owls will endure 5,970 long miles on all their regular season road-trips in 2020. The longest trip is to Fort Myers on March 27, and that’s a trip they would hope to repeat should they make the ASUN tournament at the end of the year. If they make it to the promised land in Omaha, they could add another 4,498 coveted bonus miles to their year, almost matching their regular season total!

While that may sound like a ton, it should be noted that MLB teams travel upwards of 30,000 miles during a single season. Playing on the road is simply part of being a ballplayer, and the Owls will hope for success on their many upcoming travels.

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The 2020 Season

What The Last Decade of Owl Baseball Says About 2020

As Valentines Day draws near in the bitter cold weeks of winter, love is in the air for baseball fans. The long and dismal off-season will finally come to an end when the Kennesaw State Owls take on St. John’s University on February 14th, and players and fans alike are eager to rekindle their love with America’s great past-time.

But what can we expect from the Owls in 2020? Will the offense continue to be a juggernaut in the Atlantic Sun Conference? Will the team finish above .500? Was last year’s exclusion from the ASUN tournament just a fluke?

To try and understand where the Owls may be headed in the upcoming campaign I’ve taken a deep dive through the team’s last decade of statistics. The data paints the picture of a team poised to score runs, but that is not likely not determine the success of their season. The secret ingredient will be the pitching staff.

Offense!

The Owls OPS through the decade has been consistent.

One thing the Owls have counted on through the years is a potent offense. The team OPS has been consistently solid and only dropped below .700 once over the 10-year stretch, though that certainly was not their worst overall season of the decade (more on that later). These marks have ranked near the top of the ASUN, with 2019’s offense being the best in-conference.

And there is little reason to think that this won’t continue in 2020. While the team will surely miss outfielder Jake Franklin, their second-best hitter by OPS in 2019 who graduated last year, the lineup still looks formidable. The Owls other top four bats will be returning, all with another year of experience under their belts. And the core coaching staff of Mike Sansing and Trey Fowler that has cultivated the team’s strong offensive presence through the decade is ready to once again swing for the fences in 2020.

Pitching?

The Owls Pitching has struggled in recent years.

Pitching is where the Owls have struggled in Division I play. The last four seasons have all seen a staff ERA of over 4.50, a number indicative of a team that has had a difficult time finding its pitching stride. Last season there were only five pitchers who threw more than 10 innings and kept their ERA below four, and only three of those five are with the team in 2020.

This puts a lot of pressure on a young pitching staff that will include eight freshman. A successful season will require a combination of solid development from returning pitchers and the flourishing of the new talent, a difficult task that if achieved could spell a return to form on the mound.

What It All Means

Fortunately for us fans, this data does not exist in a vacuum. To look into the crystal ball for the upcoming season, we can compare the team’s offensive and pitching numbers through the years to the overall team record for clues about what could play out in 2020. Using this method, two useful trends (or lack thereof) become evident.

The Owls mighty offense has not correlated to overall success.

Something that became obvious through analysis was that a good offense was not able to predict a winning season for the Owls in the 2010s. This is slightly disheartening, because it would seem that in 2020 the offense will likely be the Owls strongest asset.

While it is of course important for a team to score runs (duh), it is clearly not the deciding factor that will make or break the Owls. So then what is? You’ve likely already guessed it.

Pitching is King.

Pitching! The data shows without a doubt that the key to a good season for the Owls lies in their ability to command the mound. It is no coincidence that the best year in school history came in 2014 when the team ERA sat at a fantastic 3.47. That season saw the Owls play in the NCAA Division 1 Tournament for the first and only time, advancing all the way to a coveted Super Regional. Four pitchers produced elite sub-three ERA’s and paved the way for the school’s historic season.

In light of what we know about Owls pitching struggles last year, this may seem concerning for fans who are hoping for an exciting and victorious season. But those fans should take solace in the fact that the Owls have hired a new pitching coach to guide the staff in 2020. Travis McClanahan comes with an impressive resume in collegiate baseball spanning over 18 seasons, and his guidance of the young Owl arms could lead to a pitching renaissance that could in-turn produce a fruitful year for Kennesaw State.

2020 promises to be a fun year for the Owls one way or another. There is little doubt that the offense will provide a bang all season long, something spectators at Stillwell Stadium will surely appreciate. But if the Owls want to make waves in the collegiate baseball world this year, they will need to buck a downward pitching trend while maintaining the elite bats they’ve come to count on. If they can manage this advantageous balance, 2020 could be a year to remember.

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The 2020 Season

The ASUN Preseason Player of the Year: In Video

This past week, Kennesaw State University’s Terence Norman was named the Atlantic Sun Conference’s Preseason Player of the Year. Norman is coming off a fantastic season in which he lead the conference in batting average and hits while sporting a stellar .912 OPS in his third year with the Owls. If he continues on his upward trajectory and performs as well as many think he could in his senior-year campaign, he has as good a shot as any to take home the overall ASUN Player of the Year honors at the end of the season, and would only be the second owl in school history to do so.

But don’t take my word for it. Instead, let the man speak for himself in seven videos below that capture some of the elements of Norman’s electrifying game.

Big Power

Norman’s 2019 was his best for power so far, crushing a career high five home-runs and posting an impressive .481 slugging percentage. The 6’2′ senior could be primed for his best power year yet as he goes into his 4th season with the Owls. He has a ton of raw power and can take the ball out to the deepest part of the ballpark as well as just about anybody. In case you need more proof of that, here is another mammoth shot of the bat of number 6.

Norman Blasts a 400-foot bomb against Liberty

Defensive Stud

Norman brings more to a game than just his bat. The Kennesaw Mountain High alumni has manned the outfield wonderfully in his time with Owls, boasting a .957 fielding percentage in his three years with the club. Norman has great speed and tracking abilities in right field and a great arm to boot, as he came up firing for 4 outfield assists in 2019. He has great range and flair as a corner outfielder as can be seen in this highlight reel catch.

He’s a great mix of a flashy glove and a fundamentally sound outfielder. Watch him here make two great over-the-shoulder catches, an always difficult play made to look easy by Terence Norman.

Multi-Hit Machine

Racking up multiple hits in a game is Terence Norman’s bread-and-butter. The stud outfielder accumulated 20 such games in 2019, including four performances with four hits, leading the team in that department. His knack for these impressive games is a big reason he led the conference in hitting and a repeat performance could absolutely win him some hardware in 2020.

Check out Norman socking two hits in this game against Jacksonville during the last series of the 2019 season. They are a part of a four-hit performance that perfectly encapsulated the great season he delivered, showing his power skills on a deep opposite field home-run and his fundamental hitting skills on a sharp base-hit straight up the middle.

As can be seen, there is a ton to look forward to from this young man and other teams in the Atlantic Sun Conference will likely be haunted by his presence all season long.

Categories
The 2020 Season

4 Things To Watch For In 2020

The Owls are entering the 2020 campaign with something to prove. Five seasons removed from their only appearance in the NCAA Division I Tournament and three seasons removed from being conference champions, Kennesaw State is eager to remind the southeast about its baseball program. Fortunately for fans and players, there is a lot to look forward to next season.

Big Bats

Two of the Owls biggest bats are entering their senior year season in 2020. Infielder Justin Russell, who led the team last year in both home-runs (12) and OPS (.983), is back and hoping for his best year yet. The Kell alumni also boasted a team-best slugging percentage, providing a big power component to the lineup. Meanwhile, outfielder Terence Norman led the 2019 team in batting average, hits, and on-base percentage. Norman has had a fantastic career at KSU, tallying 165 hits across his three seasons with the club. With the help of these two and a host of others, the Owls hope to maintain last years conference-best offense to propel the team to victory.

A Pitching Change

It is longstanding wisdom in baseball that pitching wins championships. While the Owls 2019 offense was the best in-conference, the pitching staff left something to be desired. The team had a collective 4.90 ERA, good enough for third worst in the Atlantic Sun Conference. In agreement with the old wisdom, the three worst team ERA’s in 2019 belonged to the three teams at the bottom of the conference. However, it would seem the Owls have made a move to correct this with the hiring of new pitching coach Travis McClanahan.

McClanahan comes to KSU with a truckload of baseball experience. He was the head coach of the Gordon State College Highlanders for 18 years and is coming off a particularly impressive 50-win campaign in 2019. He has received numerous accolades including being named the Georgia Dugout Club Coach of the Year on two occasions.

“We are tremendously excited to add Coach McClanahan to our staff,” said Owls head coach Mike Sansing.

McClanahan might just bring the needed change of scenery and enthusiasm the KSU pitching staff needs in 2020 and it is certainly going to be interesting to watch as the season unfolds.

Mike. Sansing.

The Owls are currently in the midst of a three-year-long losing season streak. This is the longest such streak since the Owls made the switch to Division I play in 2006. Before this streak, the Owls had not even had back-to-back losing seasons in the Division I era. That impressive statistic can be traced back to the excellent coaching of Mike Sansing, who boasts an overall record at KSU of 967 – 551 after more than 25 years. That comes out to a winning percentage of .637, an impressive feat that surely means one thing for the Owls in 2020: they are due for a winning season.

If history can tell us anything about Mike Sansing’s Owls, it’s that they can’t be put down for long. Under his watch, the Owls have only had five losing seasons in the 14 years they have played in the Atlantic Sun Conference. The Georgia Dugout Club hall-of-famer clearly has a knack for winning, and with his leadership, a threatening offense, and a new-look pitching staff, fans of the Owls should absolutely be looking forward to a bounce-back season.

Big Crowds Ahead

The Owls are primed to have one of their best attended seasons yet, simply as a result of a record enrollment at Kennesaw State University. The fall semester saw almost 38,000 students and the largest freshman class in school history, firmly cementing KSU as the third-largest university in the state. If the Owls football program (which regularly drew 6,000 fans each game) is any indication, Stillwell Stadium should be rocking all season long. Its capacity sits at 1,200 spectators, and highly anticipated match-ups against opponents like UGA, Georgia Tech, and more should draw healthy crowds. Season tickets for the Owls in 2020 are available at a modest $39, a price-point that should entice fans to come out and provide the lively atmosphere the Owls will surely need in their efforts to make this season the best one yet.

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