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SLAMMIN’ SAMMY: Fuld broke
the College World Series hits record.
gonzalesphoto.com
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Clutching
at every CLICHÉ in the
playbooks, they beat the odds and came from behind,
overcoming a second-round loss in the College World
Series (CWS) to
play in the championship game.
But for the third time
in four years, the Cardinal had to settle for runner-up,
losing June 23 to Rice by
a record-setting margin, 14-2. “We couldn’t
give them much of a game,” coach Mark Marquess, ’69,
said of the disappointing finish against the Owls,
who had never won a national title in any sport. “We
haven’t made much of a game of it the last two times
[we played for the championship]. ”
Still, there was
plenty to be proud of. The Cardinal won 51 games—third-best
in the Stanford record books—and
earned its first Pac-10 title since 1999 (the team
shared the crown with Arizona State and UCLA in 2000).
There also
were enough individual awards to mount a parade around
Sunken Diamond.
Junior pitcher John Hudgins (14-3,
2.99 ERA) was named Pac-10 Pitcher of the Year and
Most Outstanding Player
of the CWS, and quickly signed a contract with the
Texas Rangers. Four teammates also signed major-league
contracts:
Tim Cunningham, ’03 (Rangers), Ryan Garko, ’03
(Cleveland Indians), Ryan McCally, ’03 (Tampa Bay
Devil Rays) and Carlos Quentin, ’04
(Arizona Diamondbacks).
Junior
outfielder Sam Fuld’s RBI single in the eighth
inning of the final game set the CWS record for career
hits with 24, besting a mark that had stood since the
early 1970s. Other key contributors were freshman left-handed
pitcher Mark Romanczuk and sophomore outfielder Danny
Putnam,
both of whom were named to the 2003 USA Baseball National
Team.
Putnam finished with a .348 batting average, 16
homers and 66 RBI, earning All-Pac-10, All-Regional
and All-CWS
honors. He also led the team in the postseason with
five homers, including a crucial game-winner. Romanczuk
compiled
a 12-2 record and a 4.01 ERA, striking out 80 batters
in 112 1/3 innings pitched, and was named one of four
Freshman Players of the Year, a Freshman All-American
and All-Pac-10.
Catcher Garko garnered the Fourth Annual
Johnny Bench Award—the first winner from Stanford.
He hit a team-high .402, becoming the sixth Stanford
player to bat over .400
for the season.
Over the summer, some 25 players
participated in amateur leagues. Now that they’ve
suited up with the likes of the Mankato Moondogs, Mat-Su
Miners, Solano Thunderbirds,
Alexandria Beetles and Rochester Honkers, they should
find questions about the Cardinal—“Is that
a bird, or what? ”—easy
to field.
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