Published May 08, 2008 10:31 pm - Today's state schedule
4A at Shawnee HS — Fort Gibson vs. Weatherford, 5 p.m.
3A at Mustang HS — Keys vs. Beggs, 5 p.m.; Eufaula vs. Chandler, 7:30 p.m.
2A at Dolese Park, OKC — Drumright vs. Oktaha, 7:30 p.m.
Armed and dangerous
These Oktaha pitchers haven't given up much to opponents this season. And there's even worse news — they're backed up by some big-time offense
By Mike Kays
Phoenix Sports Editor
Oktaha coach Chris Burt hasn't had to stress much over his pitching staff this season. At 28-1 and riding a 22-game win streak, life has pretty much been a picnic in all aspects of his baseball life.
But he still thinks that pitching will be the ultimate determining factor when his second-ranked team begins play in the Class 2A state tournament with a 7:30 p.m. quarterfinal game against No. 9 Drumright (26-6) tonight at Dolese Park in Oklahoma City.
“Generally that first game is where everyone throws their ace, and you'll see the semifinal scores go up a bit because the No. 2 guys aren't always as solid as the No. 1s,” Burt said. “Then if you make the finals, it comes back to whether your No. 1 can go on a day's rest. We're pretty fortunate in that we've got several kids who can be plugged in.”
Therein lies the biggest stressor for Burt. Who's his ace?
Right-handers Cale Elam and Derek Ellison carry earned-run averages under 1. Ellison's the only Tiger saddled with a loss, a 3-2 loss to Keys — a Class 3A state entry — back on March 21 where all three of the senior's runs were unearned. He is 7-1 with an 0.80 ERA and 88 strikeouts in 52 2/3 innings of work. Elam, a sophomore, is 7-0 with an 0.95 ERA and 68 Ks in 44 1/3 innings.
And if Burt is forced to go deeper into his rotation, he has to resort to a pair of guys with ERAs under two: senior Brandon Vogt (5-0, 1.80) and freshman Cameron Proctor (6-0, 1.41). Vogt got a no-hitter earlier this season even though he allowed a run. Proctor, who got an OSSAA transfer to move from Midway where baseball wasn't offered, threw the shutout in the regional-clinching 10-0 victory over Watonga.
Every coach should be so burdened.
With guys like this, who needs offense — even though the Tigers have that, too. They've scored 10 or more runs in 12 games, including all three games in the regional tournament last weekend.
“We thought our pitching would be pretty strong. The offense, it just kind of like took off at one point this spring and has been in a groove ever since,” Elam said. “It obviously makes it easier on whoever is pitching because you don't have to worry about one bad pitch putting you in a hole. Mentally, it's a big advantage.”
But that doesn't mean Oktaha can't compete in the close ones — even if in the end, they're not close.
“We've had a pretty tough schedule but we saw the Bethel Tournament (in late April) as a big test with teams we figured to see at state, and we approached those games from the standpoint that one pitch could matter,” Elam said.
Elam threw in that tournament's championship game against the host team, then ranked where Oktaha currently is in the Okrankings.com listings. No. 2 Bethel went down 8-0 as Elam allowed just one hit.
Ellison, on the other hand, has had his tests. He blanked Eufaula, another 3A state entry, 5-0 on March 25.
“Cale and I in particular are really similar for sure,” Ellison said. “We compare notes. Cale even taught me a cut-fastball he learned from the coach at Eufaula (Stacy Helms) and it's my best pitch now.
“Overall, we're a really solid staff.”