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Bryce Robison
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2019-20 Highlights

• Defeated No. 25 Oregon State 4-3 in Surprise, Arizona

• Five of seven victories came off game-winning runs in the eighth inning or later

• Defeated crosstown rival Utah Valley 5-4 in season’s only home game

• Played 15 freshmen, including eight pitchers

• Senior pitcher Jarod Lessar signed a free agent contract with the New York Yankees

Season Review

With its talented young core, BYU baseball had a number of bright spots in its 2020 season before the campaign was cut short after just 16 games due to circumstances regarding the spread of COVID-19.

The Cougars were set to open their first West Coast Conference series at home against LMU on March 12 when concerns about the virus and containment led to the cancellation of the series the day of the opening game. After the NCAA announced the cancellation of all its remaining championships shortly after, BYU and other programs across the country also ended their seasons. BYU was 7-9 on the year when the season closed.

“This was a great bunch of guys to coach, and the potential of this team is unlimited,” head coach Mike Littlewood said. “I think we all knew this particular nonconference schedule was going to be rough on this young team, but I saw progress every day. We were a little up and down throughout our 16 games, which speaks to the inexperience of this team, but we had great wins against a good Gonzaga team, a very good Oregon State team, and to go on the road against a top Big West team in Cal Poly and win the series speaks volumes about these guys.”

The Cougars opened the year with a nonconference victory against rival Gonzaga in Surprise, Arizona, 7-1. With the game tied in the eighth, BYU scored six runs to defeat the Bulldogs.

After close 2-0 and 5-4 losses to New Mexico in a doubleheader, BYU finished its run in Surprise with a victory over No. 25 Oregon State. Down 3-1 in the seventh, BYU tied the game after a ground out by freshman McKay Barney and a wild pitch scored two runs. Then in the eighth, the Cougars loaded the bases before sophomore Zack Petersen was hit by the 10th pitch of his at bat to bring in the go-ahead run. Three freshmen came in from the bullpen to maintain the lead and give BYU a 4-3 win.

BYU Baseball vs UVU - March 3, 2020_1.mp4

In the second weekend of the year, the Cougars played four at Cal Poly, winning three, including a marathon 14-inning victory.

BYU and New Mexico met again for four more games in Albuquerque the following weekend, playing for the first time since being long-time conference foes in the Mountain West and Western Athletic conferences. The Lobos took three of four, squeezing out an 8-7 win in game one along with coming out on top in games two and four. In game three BYU had its largest offensive output of the year, winning 18-9 on 17 hits and nine walks. Sophomore Jaren Hall went 3-for-5 with four runs, two walks, five RBI and a grand slam. Freshman Andrew Pintar added four hits and four runs and junior Mitch McIntyre had four RBI.

The Cougars then played their first and only home game of 2020 on March 3 against Utah Valley. BYU gave up four runs in the first inning, then did not allow a run over the last eight innings nor a hit in the final seven frames. BYU broke a 4-4 tie in the fifth when Peyton Cole drew a bases-loaded walk, bringing in sophomore Austin Deming for the game-winning run for the 5-4 victory.

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Awards

Bryan Call: Academic All-WCC honorable mention
Danny Gelalich: Academic All-WCC honorable mention
Jaren Hall: Academic All-WCC honorable mention
Mitch McIntyre: Preseason All-WCC
Reid McLaughlin: NCBWA Preseason All-American, Stopper of the Year Award Watchlist
Easton Walker: Preseason All-WCC

BYU’s final games proved to be a series at Oklahoma State. The Cougars played the perennial Big 12 favorites close each game but lost all three.

“Even though we lost three games at Oklahoma State, I was really proud of the way we competed against the reigning Big 12 champions,” Littlewood said.

Statistical leaders for the Cougars included Cutter Clawson with a .350 batting average in nine games with seven hits, one home run, five walks and three runs. Among players with 30 or more at bats, Pintar led all players with a .286 average, finishing with 16 hits, 12 runs and three doubles, all team highs. Junior Hayden Leatham led BYU with two home runs while Deming had a team-best 10 RBI. McIntyre led the Cougars with 11 walks and two stolen bases on the year.

On the mound, freshman Bryce Robison led the team with a 1.32 ERA in seven appearances, totaling 10 strikeouts against two earned runs in 13.2 innings. Junior Justin Sterner had a 2.53 ERA in four starts with 24 strikeouts while fellow starter Cy Nielson had a team-high 27 strikeouts in his freshman campaign.

The Cougar pitching staff ended the shortened season averaging 8.4 strikeouts per game, second in program history only to the 8.9 mark set by the 1967 Cougar squad.

Following the season and an MLB Draft that lasted only five rounds, senior pitcher Jarod Lessar signed a free agent deal with the New York Yankees.

In all, 34 Cougars saw playing time on the year, 15 of whom were freshmen. Twenty players made at least one start (not counting pitchers), including eight freshmen (not counting pitchers). With a young, talented roster, the underclassmen were called on to fill major roles, with as many as five freshmen starting in the same game, including twice when all four infield positions and the catcher were each freshmen. Eight freshmen also pitched at least one inning this season.

“These guys really know how to compete, and that is something that you just can’t teach,” Littlewood added. “I would have loved to see how all of our young guys progressed through the conference season, I know they would have been great.

“I believe Cougar fans have good reason to be excited about the future of BYU baseball.”