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KSU’s Matthys named to Freshman All-America team

NCAA Arkansas Kansas St BaseballThe Kansas State record holder for wins and saves by a freshman, relief pitcher Jake Matthys has been named to the Louisville Slugger Freshman All-America team, Collegiate Baseball announced Wednesday.

Matthys is the sixth Wildcat to earn Freshman All-America honors since 2006 and the first pitcher honored since James Allen in 2009. The Big 12 Freshman of the Year, Matthys was one of eight players from the conference to be named to the team.

A product of Spring Lake Park, Minn., Matthys enters the Corvallis Super Regional with an 8-1 record and a 1.96 ERA to go along with nine saves. Aside from the school freshman records, the right-hander has the most wins by a K-State relief pitcher in the Big 12 era and currently ranks eighth in school history in single-season ERA. Matthys has continually performed well under pressure, allowing just three of his 31 inherited runners to score and retiring 24 of his 32 first batters faced.

Matthys picked up a pair of saves last week to help the Wildcats earn their first-ever regional title. He tossed 2.1 no-hit innings with two strikeouts against Bryant before pitching the final two scoreless frames in the regional championship against Arkansas. The appearance against the Razorbacks was his 32nd of the year, which broke the school record for relief outings.

Kansas State travels to Corvallis, Ore., to take on Oregon State in a best-of-three series for the right to advance to the College World Series. The Super Regional begins with a 6 p.m. (CT) contest Saturday, while Game Two is slated for 9 p.m. (CT) Sunday. If necessary, Game Three will be played at 6 p.m. (CT) Monday.

— KSU Sports Information —

Schedule set for Kansas State’s Super Regional at Oregon State

riggertKStateThe NCAA and ESPN have announced the Super Regional schedule for this weekend as Kansas State’s best-of-three series at Oregon State will be played Saturday through Monday, at Goss Stadium in Corvallis, Ore.

The Wildcats and Beavers open their series Saturday with a 6 p.m. (CT) contest, while Sunday’s game will hold a 9 p.m. (CT) first pitch. If necessary, the decisive third game will be played on Monday, with the winner advancing to the College World Series. Sunday’s final game would be played at 6 p.m. (CT). All three contests of the NCAA Corvallis Super Regional will be shown on ESPNU and can be heard on the K-State Sports Network.

Kansas State, which has set a school record for wins at 44-17, went 3-0 to win the 2013 NCAA Manhattan Regional this past weekend at Tointon Family Stadium. The top-seeded Wildcats jumped out of the gate Friday with a 20-11 victory over in-state rival and No. 4-seed Wichita State before defeating third-seeded Bryant, 7-1, on Saturday.

In the championship round of the regional Sunday night, K-State scored two seventh-inning runs and received 7.1 scoreless innings from its bullpen to edge No.2-seed Arkansas, 4-3, and advance to the program’s first ever Super Regional.

2013 NCAA Corvallis Super Regional – Kansas State vs. Oregon State (Best of Three)

Game One: Saturday, June 8, 6 p.m. (CT); ESPNU
Game Two: Sunday, June 9, 9 p.m. (CT); ESPNU
Game Three: Monday, June 10, 6 p.m. (CT); ESPNU

— KSU Sports Information —

K-State defeats Arkansas to advance to NCAA Super Regional

KSUKansas State’s bullpen team of Gerardo Esquivel, Nate Williams and Jake Matthys tossed 7.1 scoreless innings and the Wildcats scored two seventh-inning runs to advance to their first-ever Super Regional with a 4-3 victory over Arkansas Sunday night in the championship round of the 2013 NCAA Manhattan Regional at Tointon Family Stadium.

The Wildcats, who set a school record by winning their 44th game this year and enter the NCAA round of 16 with a 44-17 record, will travel to Corvallis, Ore., to take on Oregon State for the right to advance to the 2013 College World Series. The Razorbacks, who went to the College World Series last season, ended their year at 39-22.

K-State found itself in an early 3-0 hole in the bottom of the first when Arkansas left fielder Brian Anderson stroked a two-RBI single before Matt Vinson capped the frame with a two-out RBI single through the right side of the infield.

Looking for more, Arkansas loaded the bases with two outs in the second inning, but Esquivel came out of the bullpen to induce an inning-ending pop out. The ball caught by shortstop Austin Fisher began a streak for Esquivel of retiring 13 of the 14 batters he faced, including one via strikeout.

Kansas State rewarded the junior right-hander in the seventh inning when Ross Kivett and Tanner Witt led off the frame with walks against Michael Gunn (1-1). After the Razorbacks brought in Jalen Beeks and K-State bunted Kivett and Witt into scoring position, Arkansas elected to intentionally walk Jared King. However, on his second pitch, Beeks bounced a ball over the plate and to the backstop, allowing Kivett to score the tying run.

Arkansas took off the intentional walk and began pitching to King, but a 3-1 pitch went wild again as Witt scored the eventual winning run.

“It was a great ballgame – I really do not know what to say,” head coach Brad Hill said. “It was a great ballgame. Obviously, Arkansas has a tremendous club. Their pitching is phenomenal. When we got down 3-0 in the first inning, you get concerned about whether you can get back into it and if you can continue to hold them at three runs, because it felt like if they would have got five or six, it would have been difficult to come back against that club. I should have learned by now, after 61 or 62 games, to never count these guys out, ever. They have done a tremendous job all year to just continue playing their game and do what they do.”

Williams entered the game in the seventh inning and sat the Razorbacks down in order. After the right-hander walked a batter to begin the eighth, Matthys entered for a 32nd time this season to toss two scoreless frames with the final out coming on a fly ball to left field as K-State celebrated behind the mound.

“We have been in this situation before and I knew that if I put up four zeroes, that would give our guys that chance,” Esquivel said. “Our offense prides itself on never giving in, and they did not do that today. They just came through. I gave us a chance, handed the ball off to Nate (Williams) and he did a very good job in the seventh inning and then Jake (Matthys) finished it off.”

Esquivel, who earned a spot on the all-regional team, earned the win in his second-straight appearance after tossing 4.1 innings with a walk and a strikeout. The Chicago, Ill., product continually found the strike zone as 35 of his 49 pitches went for strikes and he threw a first-pitch strike to 12 of the 14 batters he faced.

Williams issued a walk in an inning-plus, while Matthys allowed two hits and struck out a batter in his two scoreless frames. Matthys’ 32nd outing out of the bullpen set the single-season school record, while he earned his ninth save of the year to tie for fifth in school history.

The Wildcats were led offensively by Shane Conlon, who went 2-for-4. Arkansas’ Joe Serrano was the only other player in the game with multiple hits by going 2-for-5.

Esquivel was joined on the all-regional team by Blair DeBord (catcher), Conlon (first base), Kivett (second base), Witt (outfield) and King (outfield). Kivett, who went 6-for-12 with two homers and five RBI, was named the most valuable player.

The 2013 NCAA Corvallis Super Regional will begin either Friday or Saturday, June 7 or 8, at Goss Field. Complete details, including television information, will be announced by Tuesday.

— KSU Sports Information —

Wildcats defeat Bryant to advance to NCAA Regional Championship

KSUKansas State centerfielder Jared King made a diving catch to save a pair of runs in the fifth and promptly hit a two-RBI double the next half-inning to break a 1-1 tie and spark the Wildcats to a 7-1 victory over Bryant Saturday in the winner’s bracket of the 2013 NCAA Manhattan Regional at Tointon Family Stadium.

The top-seeded Wildcats, who tied their single-season record for wins as they improved to 43-17, move to the championship round of the Manhattan Regional Sunday night at 7 p.m., and will face the winner of the Bryant vs. Arkansas game, which will be played at 2 p.m., Sunday afternoon. With the loss, the Bulldogs fell to 45-17-1.

With the game tied and two on and two out in the bottom of the fifth, Joe Flattery (5-4) threw a first-pitch fastball to Kevin Brown who hit a sinking line drive into the right-center field gap. King laid out for the ball and caught it a foot from the ground to end the inning and strand the two runners.

The effort ignited a Wildcat offense that had troubles against Bryant starting pitcher Craig Schlitter (10-4), who had retired 15 of the previous 16 batters. After Ross Kivett reached on a leadoff error and was sacrificed over to second base, Shane Conlon singled to left field to put runners on the corners and knock Schlitter out of the game.

A switch hitter, King flipped around to bat right handed against left-hander John Heally and shot a 2-2 pitch into the same gap he robbed a pair of Bulldog runs to give the Cats a 3-1 advantage. K-State added two more on a passed ball and a two-out error to take a four-run lead at 5-1.

“I thought it was another tough game again tonight,” head coach Brad Hill said. “It was a great pitching matchup. Both guys got settled in after that first inning and it was just a well-pitched ballgame that came down to just a tremendous play that Jared made that swung momentum our way, which we carried right into our offense. We scored some runs right after that inning, which was a huge swing in momentum right there and that was pretty much the game.”

Flattery allowed just one run while working around seven hits and a walk with three strikeouts in his first appearance since May 18 against Oklahoma. After allowing a run on a ground out by John Mullen in the first, the left-hander stranded two runners in the second and pitched consecutive 1-2-3 innings in the third and fourth before benefitting from King’s defensive work in the fifth.

“Before that pitch, Coach (Hill) had me in the other gap. He saw a couple swings from the batter, and he made the adjustment the pitch before for me to shade over to the other side,” King said about his catch. “I was just lucky that I caught it, I guess. I tried to track it as much as I could and I gave my best effort to try to catch it. The catch was a big momentum swing for our team and to be able to tack on those runs in the inning (after the catch) was big.”

Jake Matthys, who entered with runners on first and second in the seventh inning, needed just 26 pitches to record the final seven outs of the game and pick up his eighth save of the year. Matthys’ outing was his 31st this year, tying the single-season school record for relief appearances, while his eight saves extended his hold on the K-State freshman record and are tied for sixth overall in school history.

Nate Williams also threw 1.2 scoreless innings as the K-State pitching staff allowed just three hits for the final seven innings.

Kivett registered his second-straight multi-hit game of the NCAA Tournament by going 2-for-5 with a RBI and two runs scored. The Big 12 Player of the Year scored in the first inning on a RBI single off the bat of Tanner Witt, while Kivett produced a RBI ground out in the ninth inning. Blair DeBord added another run in the ninth when he scored on a wild pitch.

Conlon also registered his 24th multi-hit game of the year by going 2-for-4 with a run. Austin Fisher doubled in the fourth inning to push his season total to 20, which is tied for fourth in school history in a single season. He was also hit by a pitch and scored in the sixth inning.

Schlitter allowed three runs (two earned) on four hits with no walks and six strikeouts in 5.1 innings. All six of the right-hander’s strikeouts came during his stretch of retiring 15 of 16 hitters. Catcher Jonathan Scott was the only Bulldog with a multi-hit game as he went 2-for-2 with a walk.

— KSU Sports Information —

Kansas State opens NCAA tournament with big win over Wichita State

KSUKansas State scored nine first-inning runs to set the tone for the afternoon, while second baseman Ross Kivett hit a pair of home runs as the top-seeded Wildcats opened the 2013 NCAA Manhattan Regional with a 20-11 victory over No. 4-seed Wichita State Friday afternoon at Tointon Family Stadium.

K-State, which scored in every inning except the second, improved to 42-17 on the year and will face the winner of the evening session between No. 2-seed Arkansas and third-seeded Bryant at 7 p.m., Saturday evening. Wichita State fell to 39-27 on the year and will face the loser of Friday’s evening matchup in an elimination game at 2 p.m., Saturday afternoon.

The Wildcats scored their 20 runs on 19 hits as eight of the nine starters recorded at least one hit and six had multi-hit games. Kansas State also coaxed nine walks from Wichita State pitching and was hit by a pitch six times, the second-most ever in a NCAA Tournament game. Kivett led the way with four hits and four RBI, while Tanner Witt also had four hits and drove in one run and Jon Davis had four RBI.

Kansas State’s 20 runs were the most in its NCAA Tournament history, topping a 16-run effort against Xavier in 2009, while they were the most by a Wildcat team overall since a 20-2 victory over Chicago State on April 28, 2010. K-State’s 19 hits were also a season high and the most since collecting 21 at San Diego State early in 2012.

The Wildcats were not without their faults, however, as they allowed five two-run innings and gave up their second-most runs in a NCAA Regional game.

“That was kind of an ugly game,” head coach Brad Hill said. “Neither team wanted to play like that. It was ugly, but we won and that is the good thing about it. Offensively, we did a tremendous job of covering ourselves today. Don’t get me wrong, I’m an offensive guy so I love the 20 runs, I just hate giving up 11. Give the guys a lot of credit. They did not give away at-bats today.”

After Wichita State scored two runs in the top off the first, the Wildcats sent 15 men to the plate in the bottom half, which was highlighted by two-run singles by Davis and Austin Fisher. K-State also received RBI singles by Mitch Meyer and Witt, a pair of bases-loaded walks by Davis and Jared King, while another run scored on an error.

The nine runs in the first inning were the most by a Wildcat team in a NCAA Regional game, topping an eight-run third inning in K-State’s first-ever regional game against Xavier in 2009. The 11 combined runs in the first inning tied a NCAA record for first-inning runs in a tournament game.

Kivett, who had one career home run coming into the contest, recorded two-run homers over the left-field wall in both the sixth and seventh innings, the latter extending K-State’s lead to 18-9. His two home runs were the most by a Wildcat since King had two at CSU Bakersfield in 2011.

Meyer went 2-for-5 and drove in three runs, including a two-run double in the third inning. Fisher, who has had just one at-bat in the last five games, earned his first start since the opener against Oklahoma and shined by going 3-for-4 with three RBI. Fisher has a hit in 19 of his last 20 games as he lost an 18-game hitting streak in last week’s Big 12 Championship by going 0-for-1 against Texas Tech before being pulled due to an injury.

Left-handed reliever Jared Moore (4-0) earned the win after allowing two runs on four hits in 2.1 innings of work. The Boulder, Colo., product struck out a season-high four batters, including two in the third inning to put a stop to a potential big inning.

Wichita State starting pitcher Cale Elam (7-5) suffered the loss as he allowed six of the first-inning runs and recorded just one out. The Shockers had four hitters with two-hit games, including Johnny Coy, who had four RBI.

— KSU Sports Information —

Kansas State to host Wichita State in NCAA Tournament opener

riggertKStateA day after being awarded the first NCAA Regional host site in school history, Kansas State learned Monday that it will be joined at Tointon Family Stadium by No. 2-seed Arkansas, third-seeded Bryant and No. 4-seed Wichita State as the entire 64-team bracket was announced on ESPNU.

The top-seeded Wildcats will play host to the Shockers Friday at 2 p.m., in a game that will be televised nationally on ESPNU. Bryant and Arkansas will play later in the evening at 7 p.m.

Games on both Saturday and Sunday will also be played at both 2 p.m., and 7 p.m. If necessary, a second championship game will be played Monday night at 7 p.m. The entire regional will be televised on the ESPN family of networks, including the WatchESPN app and ESPN3.com.

Wichita State, the Missouri Valley Tournament Champion, enters NCAA Regional play with a 39-26 overall record and finished in second place in the MVC regular-season standings with a 15-6 mark. Kansas State and Wichita State will be playing for the third time this year when they meet Friday afternoon as the Wildcats won both games during the home-and-home series. On April 9, in Manhattan, K-State plated five eighth-inning runs to tie the game at six apiece and won in the bottom of the ninth on a two-out passed ball. A week later in Wichita, K-State no-hit the Shockers for 5.2 innings and Jared King hit a three-run homer in the first inning as part of a 4-1 victory.

Wichita State holds a 51-33 all-time record against the Wildcats, but K-State holds a 19-18 edge in games played in Manhattan and has won 12 of the last 18 meetings. Friday’s contest will serve as the first matchup between K-State and WSU in the NCAA Tournament.

Arkansas put together a 37-20 overall record and an 18-11 mark in conference play to finish second in the SEC Western Division. The potential match-up against the Razorbacks would be the 48th in school history but the first since 2003 as U of A holds a 29-18 edge. K-State played in the 2010 NCAA Fayetteville Regional but did not meet Arkansas.

After winning its first-ever Northeast Conference championship, Bryant enters regional play with a 44-16-1 overall record and finished first in the NEC regular-season standings at 27-5. The potential meeting with the Bulldogs would be the first in series history.

K-State enters regional play with a 41-17 overall record after finishing with a 16-8 mark in conference action. Kansas State won the Big 12 regular-season title, capturing the school’s first conference championship since 1933. Predicted to finish seventh in the preseason coaches’ poll, the Wildcats made the biggest jump in the preseason poll by a conference champion in league history.

Tickets for the NCAA Manhattan Regional are now available online at www.k-statesports.com to current baseball season ticket holders, as they are given first opportunity to purchase seating they held during the regular season. To reserve tickets, which also provides the ability to add extra tickets, season ticket holders should log into their online account and select “season renewals.”

Also, all Ahearn Fund members will receive an exclusive email offer to pre-order tickets through Tuesday as all tickets will be opened to the general public on Wednesday. A promo code will be sent to each Ahearn Fund member’s email account with ordering information.

Baseball season ticket holders and Ahearn Fund members may also order by phone on Tuesday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. by calling 800-221-CATS.

Tickets will go on sale to the general public at 8:30 a.m., Wednesday, with All-Session, reserved and general admission seating packages offered for the first-time event in Wildcat history. Fans may reserve their tickets in person at the K-State Athletics Ticket Office, by phone at 800-221-CATS or online at www.k-statesports.com.

If tickets remain, individual session tickets will be available beginning at 8:30 a.m., Friday and can be purchased online, by phone or in person.

All seating in the grandstand of Tointon Family Stadium will be reserved. General admission will be available only in the bleachers in the patio area along the right-field side and in the new temporary bleachers on the berm down the left-field line.

2013 MANHATTAN REGIONAL GAMES

Game One: Friday (5/31) – No. 1-seed Kansas State vs. No. 4-seed Wichita State, 2 p.m., ESPNU

Game Two: Friday (5/31) – No. 2-seed Arkansas vs. No. 3-seed Bryant, 7 p.m.

Game Three: Saturday (6/1) – Game One loser vs. Game Two loser, 2 p.m.

Game Four: Saturday (6/1) – Game One winner vs. Game Two winner, 7 p.m.

Game Five: Sunday (6/2) – Game Three winner vs. Game Four loser, 2 p.m.

Game Six: Sunday (6/2) – Game Four winner vs. Game Five winner, 7 p.m.

Game Seven (if necessary): Monday (6/3) – Game Four winner vs. Game Six winner, 7 p.m.

— KSU Sports Information —

K-State selected to host first-ever NCAA Baseball Regional

riggertKStateFor the first time in program history, K-State and Manhattan will serve as one of 16 national sites for the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Championship as the Big 12 Champion Wildcats were selected Sunday to host the 2013 Manhattan Regional beginning Friday at Tointon Family Stadium.

K-State will be joined by three other teams in the Manhattan Regional as two games will be played on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, with the championship game scheduled for Sunday. If necessary, a second championship game would be played Monday.

The complete 64-team bracket, top-eight national seeds and game times for each regional will be announced at 11 a.m., Monday during the 2013 NCAA Division I Baseball Selection Show on ESPNU.

“I am very proud of this team and what they have accomplished this year,” said head coach Brad Hill. “I am extremely happy that we are able to bring a NCAA Regional to the K-State and Manhattan communities. We have worked extremely hard to have the opportunity to reward our great fan base, alumni and university by hosting a regional. There are so many former players and coaches that have laid the foundation for this day to become a reality, especially Mike Clark. We are very appreciative of John Currie and his staff for their support and efforts in assisting us host our first NCAA Regional. Our team is looking forward to using the momentum we have produced leading into the NCAA tournament and representing Kansas State well by playing with the resiliency and competitive spirit we’ve shown all season long.”

K-State enters regional play with a 41-17 overall record after finishing with a 16-8 mark in conference action. The Wildcats are ranked in every major college baseball poll, including a No. 15 spot in Baseball America. The regular-season conference championship in 2013 was the first for the Wildcats in 80 years, while they made the biggest jump in the preseason poll by a conference champion in league history.

“We are proud of Coach Hill and our baseball team for the success they have had this season, winning the program’s first conference championship in 80 years,” said Athletics Director John Currie. “Hosting a regional at Tointon Family Stadium is not only another tremendous opportunity to showcase Manhattan and Kansas State University to the entire country but also the next step in the building process for our program envisioned when Bob and Betty Tointon, Coach Mike Clark and many others made possible our beautiful stadium over a decade ago. We are looking forward to welcoming three other programs to campus this week.”

— KSU Sports Information —

McFadden, Kansas State open Big 12 tournament with win over Texas Tech

KSUKansas State relievers Nate Williams and Jake Matthys combined for 3.2 scoreless innings to bolster a solid start by freshman Blake McFadden as the Wildcats edged Texas Tech, 4-3, Thursday in the opening round of the Phillips 66 Big 12 Championship at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark.

K-State improved to 40-16 on the year, reaching the 40-win mark for just the second time in school history. The Red Raiders dropped to 25-29.

Williams, who entered the game in the sixth inning with one out and the Wildcats on top 4-2, allowed a two-out RBI double to cut the lead to one. But the sophomore right-hander retired the next four batters before handing the game over the Matthys in the eighth.

Matthys, who broke the K-State freshman record for saves with seven, retired all six batters he faced with four strikeouts to finish the game.

“It was just a really clean, good ballgame,” said head coach Brad Hill. “Both sides pitched very well. We were fortunate enough to come out on top. Fortunately, some things went our way.”

Matthys, the Big 12 Freshman of the Year, needed only 19 pitches in his two scoreless innings and threw only four pitches out of the strike zone. He moved into a tie for third place in school history with his 29th appearance, which is the most by a freshman in school history.

McFadden (6-2) pitched out of tough situations in the first three innings by forcing Texas Tech to leave two on base in the second inning, while a caught stealing helped the right-hander face the minimum in the third. But in the fourth, Tech’s Eric Gutierrez hit two-run homer off the left-field foul pole to give Tech a 2-1 lead before McFadden settled down to get three consecutive outs and end the threat.

The Wildcat offense had to grind it out against one of the nation’s top pitchers, Trey Masek (5-2). K-State manufactured a run in the second inning without recording a hit when Jared King walked and stole second base before a pair of ground outs – the latter by Jon Davis – scored the game’s first run.

Tanner Witt led off the fourth with a double down the left-field line and Shane Conlon followed with a single to put runners on the corners. King drove home Witt with a sacrifice fly before pinch-hitter Kyle Speer doubled to the right-field wall, moving Conlon to third. Davis hit another sacrifice fly to produce the second run of the inning and Lance Miles, who pinch ran for Speer, scored on a wild pitch to build the lead to 4-2.

“You’ve got to tip your hat to (Masek),” said Conlon. “He pitched great and kept us off-balance. We had the one big inning that basically won us the ballgame. Our pitching staff threw great today and kept us in the game.”

Conlon finished with two hits and scored a run, while Davis registered his ninth multi-RBI game of the year. Gutierrez led Texas Tech by going 1-for-2 with two RBI and hit his fourth home run in as many games.

Top-seeded Kansas State continues play in Pool One Friday with a 12:30 p.m., contest against No. 5-seed Baylor at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark.

— KSU Sports Information —

K-State’s Finney named to Rimington Trophy spring watch list

KSUKansas State junior center B.J. Finney is one of 44 players nationally and three from the Big 12 Conference named to the 2013 Rimington Trophy Spring Watch List, the award committee has announced.

Finney, a native of Andale, is a former walk-on who has turned into a team leader for the Wildcats. Last season, he was a First Team All-Big 12 pick and a semifinalist for the Burlsworth Trophy which honors the nation’s top walk-on. The two-time team captain has started all 26 career games, including the last 25 at center heading into his junior campaign.

The Rimington Trophy is presented annually to the Most Outstanding Center in NCAA Division I-A College Football. Since its inception, the Rimington Trophy has raised over $2 million. The 14-year old award is overseen by the Boomer Esiason Foundation, which is committed to finding a cure for cystic fibrosis and has raised over $100 million for CF Research.

Dave Rimington, the award’s namesake, was a consensus first-team All-America center at the University of Nebraska in 1981 and 1982, during which time he became the John Outland Trophy’s only double winner as the nation’s finest college interior lineman. For more on the Rimington Trophy and a list of past recipients, visit www.rimingtontrophy.com

Other Big 12 centers on the list include Texas’ Dominic Espinosa and Oklahoma’s Gabe Ikard.

The Wildcats return 41 lettermen from last year’s 11-2 Big 12 Championship squad which is led by 2011 and 2012 Big 12 and National Coach of the Year Bill Snyder, who is in his 22nd season overall at Kansas State.

Kansas State returns 11 starters in 2013, while a total of 18 returners have earned starts during their Wildcat career. The Wildcats return nine players from 2012 that earned midseason or postseason All-Big 12 honors from various media outlets, including returning All-Americans Ty Zimmerman at safety and kick returner/wide receiver Tyler Lockett.

K-State opens the 2013 season and the new West Stadium Center August 30 with a primetime, nationally-televised home game on FOX Sports 1 against North Dakota State.

— KSU Sports Information —

K-State sets school record for All-Big 12 baseball honors

riggertKStateKansas State reaped the rewards of its first-ever Big 12 Championship season as a school-record seven players earned All-Big 12 First Team honors Tuesday and head coach Brad Hill was named Coach of the Year for the second time.

In addition, the Wildcats took home three other major awards with Ross Kivett voted by the league coaches as Player of the Year, pitcher Jake Matthys being named Freshman of the Year and Jared King receiving the Co-Scholar Athlete of the Year award.

The conference announced its postseason awards during a luncheon Tuesday at the 2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Championship.

Joining Kivett, Matthys and King on the first team were catcher Blair DeBord, first baseman Shane Conlon, shortstop Austin Fisher and outfielder/pitcher Tanner Witt. Kivett, King, Conlon and Fisher were all unanimous selections. Outfielder Jon Davis picked up honorable mention accolades, while Matthys and Levi MaVorhis earned spots on the Big 12 All-Freshman squad.

K-State had previously never had more than three players named to the league’s first team, and by having seven selections it tied the Big 12 record set by Baylor last season. Additionally, the three infielders on the list tied a league record with the 2008 Texas A&M squad.

With Hill’s nod as Coach of the Year, K-State became the first school in conference history to have its football, men’s basketball and baseball coaches all earn the honor during the same academic year. The Wildcats won conference championships in all three sports, the second school in league history to accomplish the feat.

Hill, who also earned the honor in 2009, guided the Wildcats to their first conference championship in 80 years with a 39-16 overall record and a 16-7 mark in Big 12 play. The 39 wins are the second-most in school history and tied for the most in regular-season play, while K-State’s 16 conference wins set a school record.

Kivett is the third Wildcat to be named conference player of the year, joining 1992 Big Eight Player of the Year Craig Wilson and 2010 Big 12 Player of the Year Nick Martini. The second baseman, who earned all-conference honors for the first time in his career, hit .359 on the year to rank fourth in the Big 12, while his .376 average against league foes ranked second.

A product of Broadview Heights, Ohio, Kivett enters the Big 12 Championship ranked second in the conference in hits (80) and steals (26), third in runs scored (46), fourth in triples (4), fifth in total bases (103) and sixth in on-base percentage (.434).

Matthys is the first K-State player to earn Big 12 Freshman of the Year accolades. The right-handed pitcher produced an 8-0 record with a 2.01 ERA and six saves in 28 relief appearances. He broke the Kansas State freshman record for wins as well as victories by a relief pitcher during the Big 12 era while also tying the school’s top freshman mark for saves. His eight victories are tied for first in the Big 12 this season, and the Spring Lake Park, Minn., product ranks second in appearances and seventh in saves.

King, who earned his second-straight Academic All-Big 12 First Team honor last week, is hitting .342 with 14 doubles, six home runs and a team-leading 46 RBI. King registered his first All-Big 12 First Team accolade after picking up second-team honors each of the last two years.

Witt earned his second All-Big 12 honor as he was an honorable-mention selection last season, while DeBord, Conlon and Fisher each garnered their first career honors. Witt is hitting .324 with seven doubles and 29 RBI, and the right-hander holds a 3.18 ERA with seven saves in 17 appearances on the mound. His seven saves rank sixth in the conference and are tied for seventh in school history.

DeBord, who has caught 51 games this season, is hitting .321 with 10 doubles and 30 RBI while holding a .992 fielding percentage. Conlon leads the team in home runs with seven as he is hitting .340 with 27 RBI and 16 stolen bases. Fisher led the Big 12 with a .412 conference-only batting average and is hitting .358 overall.

No. 1-seed Kansas State takes on eighth-seeded Texas Tech during the opening round of the 2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Championship at 12:30 p.m., Thursday at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City. The game will be shown to a national audience on Fox College Sports and will air on the K-State Sports Network.

2013 Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Awards
Coach of the Year: Brad Hill
Player of the Year: Ross Kivett
Freshman of the Year: Jake Matthys
Co-Scholar Athlete of the Year: Jared King

All-Big 12 First Team
Catcher Blair DeBord; Infielders Shane Conlon, Austin Fisher and Ross Kivett; Outfielder Jared King; Utility Tanner Witt; Relief Pitcher Jake Matthys

All-Big 12 Honorable Mention
Outfielder Jon Davis

Big 12 All-Freshman Team
Pitchers Jake Matthys and Levi MaVorhis

— KSU Sports Information —

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