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Bullpen, Big Fifth Inning Propel Baseball to 4-0 Start

ASU-Austin Peay - Box Score Opens in a new window
Bullpen, Big Fifth Inning Propel Baseball to 4-0 StartBullpen, Big Fifth Inning Propel Baseball to 4-0 Start
PHOENIX – Sun Devil Baseball rallied for the fourth consecutive day to defeat Austin Peay, 5-3, on Monday afternoon at Phoenix Municipal Stadium.
 
Arizona State moved to 4-0 on the season behind a strong team effort on the mound and a five-run fifth inning. As has been the theme so far this year, the Sun Devils did not flinch when facing an early deficit, erasing an early three-run deficit via another explosive offensive inning.
 
Chasing Governor's starter Cody Airington in the fifth inning proved to be key. He exited the game with Austin Peay up 3-1 and ASU proceeded to score four runs to take a lead they would not relinquish. Isaiah Jackson went deep for the first time this season, the 17th of his Sun Devil career, to start the rally. Brandon Compton collected two more RBIs on a single, bringing his season total to nine in only four games. The top of the order combination of Nu'u Contrades and Kien Vu each added an RBI of their own which proved to be the difference.
 
Right-hander Rohan Lettow made his first appearance of the season, getting his first career start for the Sun Devils. He covered the initial 3.2 innings, allowing three runs while striking out a pair. The Arizona State bullpen took over from there, dominating the remainder of the game. The trio of right-hander Jonah Giblin, left-hander Cole Carlon, and right-hander Will Koger combined for 5.1 innings of scoreless work to secure the 4-0 start.
 
TURNING POINT 
Austin Peay jumped out to an early lead, scoring in the first, third, and fourth innings to build a 3-0 lead. The Sun Devils struggled to break through Austin Peay's starting pitcher, going scoreless for the first four innings. With one out in the bottom of the fifth, Isaiah Jackson took the first pitch he saw and hit it over the left field wall to break open the scoring for the Sun Devils. Jackson's home run sparked an offensive explosion that led to five runs scored in the inning. Although the Devils didn't score again, the five runs proved to be enough to secure the win. 
 
BIG MOMENT 
After starting pitcher Rohan Lettow went 3.2 innings, giving up three runs, the Sun Devil bullpen was tasked with holding the game down and maintaining the lead. Jonah Giblin, Cole Carlon, and Will Koger did just that, pitching a combined 5.1 scoreless innings, only giving up two hits and one walk, with five strikeouts. Giblin continued to remain steady on the mound with 3 scoreless frames, Carlon made up for a rough first appearance with a scoreless inning of his own, and Koger closed out the game for his second save of the season.
 
FINAL STRAW
Heading into the top of the ninth, the Sun Devils held onto a 5-3 lead that they originally gained in the bottom of the fifth. Will Koger was called to relieve Cole Carlon to close out Austin Peay's hopes. With two Governors occupied on first and second with two outs, Koger prevailed through the pressure and successfully got the last out of the ballgame with a flyout to Isaiah Jackson

PLAYER OF THE GAME 
Jonah Giblin came up big for the Sun Devils, pitching three scoreless innings and striking out four. Already in a 3-0 hole, Giblin shut down the Austin Peay offense, holding them to just one hit during his three innings of work - an infield single. His strong outing gave the offense an opportunity to come back, which they did in the bottom of the fifth. 
 
NOTABLES 
  • Sun Devil Baseball has trailed in 42 of its last 57 victories dating back to the 2023 season - including all four games this season. ASU had nine wins in each of the last two seasons in games where it trailed by at least three runs, adding its first of the year on Monday. 
  • Through four games, 13,232 fans have attended a game at Phoenix Municipal Stadium. That is the most through four games in program history.
  • Right-hander Will Koger is the first Sun Devil to have two saves through four games since RJ Dabovich had two through the first four games of the 2020 season.
  • ASU has yet to allow a run in the ninth inning this season through four games. In their first four games a season ago, they gave up five runs in the ninth inning.
  • The Sun Devils have now averaged 10.7 runs per game over the last 21 games dating back to last season (225 runs).
  • Jacob Tobias has now reached base in 28 consecutive games dating back to last season.
  • Isaiah Jackson had both a home run and a stolen base in the victory, the third time in his career he has done each in the same game.
  • The Sun Devils had their ninth inning scoring at least three runs this season. The team had 68 such innings in 2024. The fifth inning today was also the first time scoring five runs in an inning. 
  • Arizona State has scored 38 runs through four games, the third-most by the program since moving to Phoenix Municipal Stadium in 2015.
Most Runs Through 4 Games (Since 2015)
58: 2019
47: 2024
39: 2025
29: 2022
28: 2018
  • Three of the four wins this season have come by two runs or less, as the Sun Devils have executed in late-game situations. 
    • ASU went 11-13 in games separated by less than two runs last season and are 3-0 so far this year. 
    • To take that a step further, ASU gets their first win in a game that was decided by exactly two runs. They were 3-8 in such games a season ago.
  • Four different pitchers combined to hold a Govs' offense that ranked No. 1 nationally averaging 10.8 runs per game last year to only three runs on seven hits.  Austin Peay only had four games during the regular season last year in which they were held to three runs or less.
  • Austin Peay also led the nation last year in batting average, hitting at a .359 clip. ASU pitching held them to just 7-for-31 (.226)  from the plate.
  • The Sun Devils held the top home run hitting team in the nation last year, who hit 2.61 per game, to just one long ball which came on the first batter of the game.
  • After giving up 14 runs in the previous three games, the Arizona State bullpen threw 5.1 innings of scoreless baseball. 
QUOTABLES
Head Coach Willie Bloomquist
On pitching staff's success
"They did a really good job. Guys settled down. Lettow did a good job starting us off, gave up a few runs, wasn't as sharp as he wanted to be, but battled and got us through three and two thirds innings. Giblin, I can't say enough about the job he did. He's Mr. Steady that comes in there and calms the waters, puts up zeros for a few innings, and hopefully gives our offense a chance to get back on track, which is kind of what happened. And then, Carlon bounced back from a tough outing the other day, it looked like the Carlon we've seen all fall and spring. So that was nice to see. And then Koger threw the ball well. Walked a couple guys which is uncharacteristic, but he had balls coming out pretty hot. So I was happy to see that."
 
On fan support during the first four games
"It's been great. Big thank you to the fans for coming out this weekend. Even today was a nice crowd for being a Monday afternoon, and it's been helpful, not only for our guys to get a little energy, but it's great to play in front of fans, and we'll do our best to play a good brand of baseball for them and entertain them while they're here. I think we've seen four exciting games at the end of the day where there hasn't been a blowout, they've all been, not the prettiest games in the world, but they've all come down to the last pitch or two, and they've been exciting games. So hopefully we can win by a little bit bigger of a margin than that. So I can relax a little bit, but it's been great to have fan support. They're awesome."
 
On the team chemistry through four games
"I'm not worried about them being a team. They're a pretty tight knit group in there, so that part of it is never an issue, hasn't been an issue. All four of my years here, I feel like these guys in the clubhouse are great kids. We don't recruit turds, we recruit good kids in and every once in a while we swing and miss, but not very often. We try to do our homework and bring in kids that are academically oriented, good citizens, and good kids that want to work hard and get better. And when you have a full gamut of those guys, full locker room of it, for the most part, they're going to be pretty tight in there, and they're all like minded kids, they get along pretty well. So, as far as the team chemistry, they're a pretty tight knit group."
 
Outfielder Isaiah Jackson
On getting his first homerun this season:
"It's always a good feeling to see it go. I've been feeling a lot better in the box over the past couple of days just trying to work out the kinks, so it's good."
 
On the record-breaking weekend for attendance:
"I think they're really noticing we got some special brewing in Tempe this year. It's something you want to be a part of for sure."
 
On grinding out a victory when originally being down 3-0 heading into the 5th inning:
"We definitely get the confidence. As an offense, we know that even if the other team goes out and puts up a couple of runs, we know our guys in the bullpen are gonna come in and do their job. We have a lot of confidence. Facing these guys in the fall we were getting tired of it because they're really good and really deep. It was the most uncomfortable fall I've had for sure in a long time. It's just the confidence of seeing that and we're ready to go."
 
Right-handed pitcher Jonah Giblin
On what was working when he stepped up to the mound:
"Having confidence and trusting my guys behind me. And knowing that they got my back and just really attacking in the middle. That's kind of what we preach. Trust some of the stuff and on attack mode."
 
On the flexibility of the bullpen:
"That's kind of what we do. Be ready to do whatever you're called on for. In the bullpen, if you're down there you're ready to come in for an inning, you're ready to come in for one batter. If you need to go 3 or 4 innings to pick some guys up, that's what you do. Maybe you don't come out of the bullpen. Maybe you're going to start later in the week. All the guys are ready for any role, and I think it's really cool how flexible we are."
 
Left-handed pitcher Cole Carlon
On what was working with the fastball today:
"Mainly just all up here and trusting myself knowing I just have to put it over the white part of the plate and get guys out. That's where my stuff works the best. I was just trying to go after them today rather than when previously it was kind of erratic, a little too amped up. So today just calming down and trusting myself."
 
On how the bullpen showed out this four-game weekend:
"Big time. We have guys up and down the bullpen who can just absolutely shove it. We did it all fall, so we just go out there and have confidence in anyone. Anyone on our staff in any situation, which is nice."
 
Right-handed pitcher Will Koger
On his role as the closer and what he'd like to see moving forward:
"Getting the last three outs is always hard. I just try to throw it out in the middle of the plate, let our defense work. My job's pretty easy when I have Isaiah (Jackson) on the outfield making plays for me. Going forward, I think just keep continuing to do that. Keep attacking the hitters."
 
On having two collegiate saves in his career impacts the growth of his confidence moving forward:
"It's definitely new for me, but I think all of us can say we are getting aware of the game and getting a feel for it for the first time out playing the first couple of games. It felt good. Hopefully like I said, keep going for it."
 
INNING BY INNING 
First Inning 
Rohan Lettow took the mound for the Sun Devils in his first career start, giving up a leadoff home run. A base hit to second followed, then a fielder's choice groundout gave Lettow his first out. The defense then came up big, with Nu'u Contrades kicking off a double play to end the inning. 
 
The Devils didn't have an answer in the bottom half of the inning, going down in order without much of a fight. 
 
Second Inning 
Lettow seemed to settle in to kick off the second, retiring the side in 1-2-3 fashion. He got two quick outs on a ground ball to first and a flyout to right, before striking out the last batter, keeping the Governors to a 1-0 lead. 
 
The Sun Devils were unable to bring any runners in after securing a base hit out to left center. Following the base hit, a strikeout, an out on a fielder's choice, and a flyout ended the inning with a runner sitting on second. 
 
Third Inning 
Lettow returned to the mound for his third inning of work. He walked the first batter, then got a fly ball to right field, easily caught by Kien Vu. A single moved the runner to third, and a sacrifice fly gave Austin Peay a 2-0 lead. The next batter flew out to right for the third out. 
 
Brody Briggs led off for the Devils, grounding out to second. Kyle Walker followed, flying out to right field for the second out. Contrades then flew out to left field for another 1-2-3 inning. 
 
Fourth Inning 
Lettow remained on the mound for the Sun Devils to kick off the fourth inning. After giving up a run on a single to right field with two outs in the top of the inning, the Sun Devils brought in Jonah Giblin to relieve Lettow. A groundout to second base concluded the top of the inning for the Governors, who hold a 3-0 lead. 
 
The Sun Devils continued to struggle against Austin Peay's starting pitcher, going down in order for the second inning in a row. 
 
Fifth Inning 
Jonah Giblin returned on the mound for the Sun Devils, getting two quick outs on a ground ball to short and a strikeout. He hit the next batter, then struck out the following batter to limit the damage and keep the deficit at 3. 
 
After a quick strikeout to open the fifth, Isaiah Jackson cranked a home run to left field, his first of the season, putting ASU on the board. Jax Ryan followed with a single down the right field line, chasing starting pitcher Cody Airington from the game. Brody Briggs greeted the new pitcher with a single to left-center, moving Ryan over to third. Kyle Walker worked a walk, and Nu'u Contrades followed it up with a walk of his own, driving in Ryan, and forcing Austin Peay to make another pitching change. Kien Vu was hit by the first pitch he saw, driving in another run and tying the game 3-3. Brandon Compton continued his incredible start to the season, driving in two on an RBI-single, giving the Devils their first lead of the game, up 5-3. Vu was then thrown out trying to steal third, and Tobias struck out swinging to end the inning.
 
Sixth Inning 
Using the momentum from gaining the lead in the bottom of the fifth, Giblin retired the Governors in a 1-2-3 fashion with a popout, groundout, and a strikeout to end the top of the inning. 
 
The Sun Devils were unable to get anything going on the basepaths in the bottom of the sixth and were retired in a 1-2-3 manner, still holding onto a 5-3 lead heading into the seventh inning. 
 
Seventh Inning 
Giblin came back out for his third inning, giving up a leadoff single. He got an out on a flyout to left, but a wild pitch allowed the runner to move into scoring position. A walk put a runner on first, but Giblin was able to get a strikeout for the second out of the inning. Cole Carlon was the next man out of the bullpen for the Devils, inducing a ground ball to first to end the inning. 
 
ASU again struggled to get any momentum, with two groundouts and a lineout in the inning. The Devils lead 5-3 with two frames left to play. 
 
Eighth Inning 
After giving up a double down the left field line, Carlon prevailed under pressure and retired the Governors in a 1-2-3 manner. A foul out, flyout, and strikeout to end the top of the inning left a man for the Governors stranded on second.
 
The Sun Devils continued to struggle to bring anyone home, with two strikeouts and a groundout to end the inning. ASU heads into the final inning holding onto a promising 5-3 lead over Austin Peay. 
 
Ninth Inning 
Will Koger came out to pitch the top of the ninth, holding on to a two-run lead. A long first at-bat ended in a flyout to center, then a walk brought the potential tying run to the plate. The second out came via a pop up caught in foul territory by Walker. The Governors caught a break with a two-out walk. Koger then got a flyout to center to seal the win for the Sun Devils.