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#22 Baseball opens regional play in Lincoln on Friday against #18 Ole Miss

Sun Devil Baseball will make its 43rd NCAA postseason appearance in program history this weekend after Arizona State was selected as the No. 3 seed in the Lincoln Regional of the 2026 NCAA Baseball Tournament.

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#22 Baseball opens regional play in Lincoln on Friday against #18 Ole Miss#22 Baseball opens regional play in Lincoln on Friday against #18 Ole Miss
Alyssa Colwell

LINCOLN -- Sun Devil Baseball will make its 43rd NCAA postseason appearance in program history this weekend after Arizona State was selected as the No. 3 seed in the Lincoln Regional of the 2026 NCAA Baseball Tournament. The four-team, double-elimination regional at Hawks Field at Haymarket Park will begin on Friday, May 30 in Lincoln, Neb. 

The Lincoln Regional is hosted by Nebraska – the No. 13 overall seed in the nation – which is hosting a regional for the first time since 2008. The regional also features No. 2 seed Ole Miss and No. 4 seed South Dakota State. The third-seeded Sun Devils will take on Ole Miss on Friday at 6 p.m. AZT (8 p.m. locally in Nebraska), with the game scheduled to be broadcast nationally on ESPN2. The winner will face the winner of the Nebraska -South Dakota State game on Saturday at 5 p.m. AZT. A loss on Friday put put ASU in the elimination game at Noon AZT.

Follow the action

The double elimination tournament will be broadcast on an assortment of ESPN mediums with  ASU’s Friday game against the Rebels scheduled to be on ESPN2.  Saturday’s game’s are currently slated to be broadcast on ESPN+ but that is subject to change. Karl Revech and Kyle Peterson will be on the call throughout the weekend in Lincoln.

Friday’s game will be available over local airwaves on KDUS 1060 AM. and Tim Healey and Max Rossiter will be on the call all weekend with the remainder of the weekend TBD.

It should be noted there is a chance that there might be delays throughout the weekend due to other games running long and inclement weather scheduled throughout the area over the course of the weekend. Fans are encouraged to follow along schedule updates and in-game content throughout the weekend on the Sun Devil Baseball Twitter account (@ASU_Baseball).

#10Things (X-Friendly notes)

1.  Only 27.0 percent of Cole Carlon’s pitches have ended up in play this season, the second-lowest total nationally (min. 70 innings).

2. ASU has the nation’s 24th-lowest strikeout rate on offense (15.8%) and will be facing the nation’s third best pitching strikeout rate in Ole Miss’s 34.8%.

3.  Landon Hairston’s 1.952 OPS when one of the first three batters an opponent reliever faces is the highest by ANY player in the country  since at least 2019.

4. Taylor Penn has stranded approximately 87.6 percent of his baserunners, a total good for third in the nation among players with at least 40 innings of work.

5. Brody Briggs’ 7.81 runs saved via blocks this year are ninth in the country and his 11.77 overall runs saved are 22nd in the nation among catchers.

6. The Sun Devil pitchers have 91 strikeouts this season with runners in scoring position and two outs, a total good for 10th in the nation.

7.  The first round matchup between Ole Miss and ASU features the nation’s 7th and 9th-best average team fastball velo’s at 93.4 and 93.2, respectively.

8. ASU and Ole Miss rank 5th and 11th in the nation in average exit velocity on offense at 90.7 and 90.2 MPH.

9.  Ole Miss and rank first and second in the nation in total swings and misses among pitching staffs at 1,327 and 1,311, respectively.

10. Arizona State is 21-6 in games in which it has at least three hits to opposite field this season compared toa  16-13 record when it doesn’t.

By the numbers

93

Sun Devil pitchers have posted an average fastball/sinker velocity of 93.2 this season, a total that currently sets good for ninth among all Division I programs.  Arizona State also ranked ninth last season at 92.5. ASU ranked no higher than 28th in the category from 2019-2024 (28th in 2019 at 89.5 MPH). ASU’s overall average pitch velocity on all pitches is 88.3, tied for eighth in the country. Among pitchers with at least 30.0 innings pitched this season, ASU has the No. 15 (Cole Carlon, 95.9), No. 22 (Derek Schaefer, 95.5) and No. 24 (Alex Overbay, 95.3) pitchers in the country in average fastball velo. For perspective, from 2019-2025 the Sun Devils had just one player TOTAL that averaged 95+ MPH fast balls for a season in over 20 innings (Lucas Kelly last season).

91

Conversely, Arizona State’s average exit velocity at the plate this season is 90.7 MPH - good for the fifth-highest tally in Division I. The Sun Devils currently have a hard-hit ball average (exit velo over 95 MPH) of 45.5 percent, which is 18th in Division I baseball and the team’s 457 hard-hit balls (exit velo over 95 MPH) are 16th.  ASU has put a barrel on 314 balls this season, good for 12th in the country and the squad’s 21.1 overall barre% is 30th. 19.2 percent of ASU’s balls put into play this season have qualified as line drives  with an exit velocity over 95 MPH with a launch angle between 10-30 degrees, the 19th-highest percentage in the country. Four players rank in the Top-100 nationally in the category: Dominic Smaldino (28th, 94.8), Landon Hairston (38th, 94.3), Nu’u Contrades (55th, 93.7), DeanToigo (76th, 93.3).

14

Other teams have continuously tried to keep Landon Hairston off guard as 67 times this season an opponent has made a pitching change either directly before facing the lefty or within two batters of facing him. And continuously, Hairston has shown that it doesn’t matter. His 12 home runs as one of the first three batters an opponent reliever has faced are 1st in the country. He has 27 hits and 34 RBIs in that scenario, ranking first in both. He .509 average off pitchers that face him within their first three batters faced - 7th-best in the country. His absurd 1.952 OPS off those pitchers is first in the country. In fact, that’s the highest of any player in the country since AT LEAST 2019. Hairston has been equally a pest as the very first batter of a game, having recorded a hit to leadoff a game 24 times (in 56 games) - second in the nation.

0

The Sun Devils did not lose a single series on the road this season, going 5-0 in weekend road series (all coming in conference action). It marked the first time ASU since 1982 that the Sun Devils went undefeated in conference road series since it was 4-0 in the 1982 season. Arizona State was one of just seven teams in the country that did not lose a road series this season (UCLA, UNC, Georgia, Oregon State, Liberty and Bethune Cookman).The wins weren’t without their fair share of drama as the Sun Devils had to win FOUR of those by way of the game-deciding rubber match in the weekend finale ASU’s four road rubber match wins were the most in the nation (as were its six overall rubber match victories).

HONORING BOB HORNER

  • The Sun Devil Baseball family lost a true legend on Tuesday, as Sun Devil Hall of Famer Bob Horner passed away at the age of 68. Horner, who played at Arizona State from 1976 to 1978, raised the standard for anyone putting on the Sun Devil uniform, thanks to his historic three-year run in Tempe.
  • The team will honor Horner with commemorative “BH” patches at the Lincoln Regional this weekend.
  • Horner’s 1978 season was another one for the history books, as he again set the new single-season home run record with his 25 round-trippers. He batted an amazing .412 with 100 RBI, once again leading Arizona State to a WAC title and the College World Series. In addition to earning First Team All-American honors, he was named the inaugural winner of the Golden Spikes Award, presented to the top amateur baseball player in the United States.
  • Horner finished his incredible ASU career with a batting average of .383 with 229 RBI and 56 home runs, setting a then-NCAA record and a school record that stands to this day. He totaled 262 hits along with 104 walks, while striking out only 69 times in his 186 career games at Arizona State.
  • On June 6, 1978, the Atlanta Braves selected Horner as the Number One Overall pick in the 1978 Major League Baseball Draft. Two days later, Horner closed out his collegiate career in Omaha, making the All-College World Series Team for a second consecutive year.
  • On June 16, only eight days after playing in the College World Series, Horner made his Major League debut with the Braves. He also collected his first career hit that night, fittingly a home run in the sixth inning. Horner won the 1978 Rookie of the Year award, despite playing in only 89 games. He played 10 seasons in the Majors, retiring following the 1988 season.
  • Horner was inducted into the Sun Devil Athletics Hall of Fame in 1979, and his Number 5 is an honored on the outfield wall at Phoenix Municipal Stadium.
  • In 2006, Horner was a charter member of the College Baseball Hall of Fame, one of the first 10 to be inducted.

HOW THEY GOT HERE

  • Arizona State quietly put up some of the best metrics in performance of any team in the country across numerous categories during the regular season. While much ado was made about the team’s lackluster No. 44 RPI, that number proved to be the extreme outlier about EVERY advanced season reporting metric.
  • Arizona State finished 33rd in the Diamond Sports Rankings, 35th in the KPI, 27th in the ELO, 24th in the Massey Ratings, 26th in Boyd’s World ISR, 27th by 64Analytics, 28th in the NET and 24th in the TSR.
  • The Sun Devils went 11-2 in weekend series and were not swept in a single series. Arizona State was one of just 15 teams that won at least 11 three-game series this year and one of just seven power conference teams to accomplish the feat.
  • Arizona State went 5-0 in weekend road series, all coming in conference play. It marked the first time ASU since 1982 that the Sun Devils went undefeated in conference road series since it was 4-0 in the 1982 season.
  • The Sun Devils went 6-1 in rubber matches on the year, emphasing its “Toughest Teams Win on Sundays” mantra. ASU improved to 11-2 over the last two seasons in rubber matches, its 11 wins leading the country (as were its six this season). Arizona State won four of its rubber matches on the road, another tally that led the country.
  • Winning 19 conference games this season, ASU improved its tally in the category for the fourth consecutive season. ASU won 16 games in 2023, 17 in 2024, 18 in 2025 and 19 this season.  Arizona State is one of just nine power conference teams that have won at least 70 conference games in the last four seasons (Arkansas, UNC, Oregon, Texas, West Virginia, USC, Georgia Tech, UCLA).
  • Arizona State is one of just four Power Conference teams that have 16 or more conference wins in EACH of the last four seasons, alongside Arkansas, Oregon and USC. They are one of just 26 total teams over the 300+ that have accomplished the feat.

ON DECK - OLE MISS/LINCOLN REGIONAL

  • Arizona State is 3-0 all-time against Ole Miss, hosting the Rebels in the 2007 Tempe Super Regional and winning both games after previously downing the SEC opponent back in the 1964 College World Series.
  • The Rebels and the Sun Devils are the two of the top teams in the nation in terms of striking out opponents and ranked fifth and sixth in total strikeouts at 637 and 629, respectively. They are the top two teams in the country in terms of swing-and-miss with Ole Miss leading the way at 1,327 with Arizona State at 1,311.
  • Ole Miss features the nation’s seventh-fastest average fastball velo at 93.4 with ASU sitting at ninth at 93.2.
  • The two squads are also among the top power-hitting teams in the nation with Arizona State ranking 10th with 108 homers and Ole Miss at 18th with 100.
  • The Sun Devils have faced off against the host Huskers 12 times throughout history, most recently dropping a three-game series in Lincoln in 2019. Arizona State leads the all-time series, 7-5.
  • The last postseason matchup between the two teams came in the 2007 Tempe Regional Finale, a 9-7 Sun Devil victory to advance to the Super Regionals. The two teams also faced off in the 2005 College World Series with ASU dropping a 5-3 decision in the first game of the tournament to the Huskers before later eliminating Nebraska with an 8-7 victory - one of the most memorable games in program history with Jeff Larish tying a College World Series record with his three homers.
  • ASU has never faced South Dakota State in program history.

NO LUMP OF COLE

  • Cole Carlon showed no signs that moving to a starting role fazed him this season, entering this weekend ranked fifth in the nation with his 124 strikeouts and fourth with his with his 14.49 strikeouts per nine innings. Carlon earned Big 12 First Team All-Conference honors for his regular season efforts.
  • Carlon’s 12.79 career K/9 is 15th among active Division I players. Carlon’s 244 career strikeouts are fourth-most at ASU since the 1999 season. His 124 strikeouts this season are the fourth-most at ASU for a single season since 1999.
  • Carlon has been at his best with traffic on the bases as he has allowed just a .135 batting average against (10-for-74) with runners in scoring position - the sixth-lowest tally in the nation (min. 70 innings). He has allowed just one extra-base hit with a runner in scoring position, tied for third-lowest.
  • His 45 overall strikeouts with runners in scoring position are first in the country and five more than any other player. With a runner in scoring position and two outs on the board, Carlon’s 21-inning ending strikeouts are second-most in the country (min. 70 innings).
  • Carlon has stranded approximately 82.1 percent of his baserunners this season, good for 11th among D1 players with at least 70 innings of work.
  • Carlon’s 95.7 MPH fastball/sinker average velocity is third-best among pitchers with 70.0+ innings of action this season. His fastest velo of the season of 100.7 is third-best as an individual with at least 70.0 innings of work this season.
  • Only 27.0 percent of Carlon’s pitches have ended up in play this season, the second-lowest total nationally (min. 70 innings).
  • Opponents have swung and missed on 271 of Carlon’s pitches this season, the highest total in the country and 16 more than the next-closest player.
  • Carlon’s overall whiff rate on pitches in the zone of 34.6 percent is tops among all pitchers with 70+ innings of work (326 total). His 44.4 overall miss percentage is also first in the nation.
  • Carlon became one of the top relievers in college baseball last year, earning All-America honors from the NCBWA to become ASU’s 135th all-time All-American. He also earned All-Big 12 first team recognition and was named the Collegiate National Team for USA Baseball.
  • Carlon received a slew of preseason recognition coming into 2026 with a trophy case that includes  being D1 Baseball’s #9 Big 12 2026 Draft Prospect, D1 Baseball’s #68 of Top 200 starting pitchers , a 3rd Team NCBWA Division 1 Preseason All-American, Baseball America’s #8 Big 12 2026 Draft Prospect , Baseball America’ 3rd Team Preseason All-American (Relief Pitcher) and on the Big 12 Preseason Team (Relief Pitcher).
  • Last season, Among D1 pitchers with at least 500+ pitches in the regular season, Carlon’s 41.9 whiff percentage was 2nd in the nation. His 55.3 whiff percentage on his slider was fifth among pitchers who threw it at least 150 times.
  • He had 82 strikeouts in the regular season, third on the Sun Devils, 10th in the Big 12 and 105th in the nation - but notable as all came out of the bullpen. Of the 117 players in D1 baseball to record 80 strikeouts in the regular season, Carlon accomplished the feat in the second fewest innings of work (Vanderbilt’s Connor Fennell, 82 in 50.1 innings).

SLIDING INTO THE DM’S

  • Among pitchers with at least 400 sliders thrown this season, Carlon’s .192 average against on the pitch is the 20th-lowest in the country.
  • He has induced an in-zone whiff percentage of 43.4 percent on the slider that is highest of any pitcher in the country that has thrown it at least 400 times this season and fourth-lowest among ALL pitchers with 70+ innings of work, regardless of total sliders thrown.
  • Batters are making contact in the zone on the slider just 59.9 percent of the time, which is the the lowest total in the country (min. 400 sliders).
  • Carlon is getting batters to swing on the slider 53.7 percent of the time, which is fourth-most in the country (min. 400 sliders).
  • His 57.2 overall slider whiff percentage (including sliders out of the zone) is most in the country among those with 400+ thrown. He has gotten batters to chase out of the zone 40.4 percent of the time, sixth-best in the country.
  • His 86.7 MPH average velo on the slider is third in the nation among pitchers with at least 400 sliders thrown.

HAIRY BONDS

  • Landon Hairston has not experienced any sort of sophomore slump in Year Two with the program, quickly establishing himself as one of the elite pure AND power hitters in the country.
  • Hairston was named the Big 12 Player of the Year - ASU’s first since 2010 -  a finalist for Baseball America’s College Player of the Year, and a semifinalist for the Golden Spikes Award and the Dick Howser Trophy.
  • Hairston enters the weekend as ASU’s new single season home run king, claiming sole possession of the spot with his 28th of the year at the Big 12 Tournament. His 28 homers rank fourth in the nation.
  • Hairston is fifth in the nation with his .413 batting average. He had a 28-game hitting streak ended at UCF earlier in May, which was tied for the fifth-longest in Sun Devil school history.
  • His 20 doubles this season are tied for 39th the country and second in the Big 12. In doing so, he joined Bob Horner’s 1978 season as the only other player to reach the 20/20 club at ASU. Should Hairston reach 25 doubles, he would be come just the first player in the NCAA since at least 2000 to reach 25 in both.
  • Hairston’s leads the entire nation with his 1.415 OPS (min. 3 PA per game) - over 50 points higher than the next closest player. His .897 slugging percentage is also tops in the nation.
  • Of his 92 hits this season, 50 have gone for extra bases (20 doubles, 28 homers, 2 triples) - five more than any other player.
  • Hairston had just one extra-base hit through his first 27 games as a Sun Devil. In his 83 games since, he has 66 extra-base hits.
  • He has had just 19 games this season WITHOUT an extra base hit. He had a streak of 13 consecutive games with an extra-base hit ended against Arizona on April 13.
  • Hairston is the national leader with his four grand slams this season - also tying the ASU school record in the process.  The NCAA single season record is six.
  • His 404.22 average distance on his homers is 32nd among D1 players with 15+ home runs this season (137 total). Hairston’s 94.3 average exit velocity is 38th in the nation.
  • Hairston’s WAR of 5.23 is third in the country while his 68.39 total Offensive Runs over Replacement is first - over three more than any other player.

ALL EYES ON THREE

  • Landon Hairston (who wears #3) has 79 RBIs this season, good for fourth in the country. HOWEVER, all 79 RBIs have come while hitting as the leadoff batter in the Sun Devil lineup, which is easily the most of any Division I leadoff hitter.
  • For perspective, that total is already for most for ANY leadoff hitter in Division I RBIs for an entire season since at least 2019, surpassing Christian Moore’s 71 over 65 games in 2024.
  • Other teams have continuously tried to keep Landon Hairston off guard as 67 times this season an opponent has made a pitching change either directly before facing the lefty or within two batters of facing him. And continuously, Hairston has shown that it doesn’t make a difference.
  • His 12 home runs as one of the first three batters an opponent reliever has faced are 1st in the country. He has 27 hits and 34 RBIs in that scenario, ranking first in both categories. He is batting .509 off new pitchers that face him within their first three batters faced - seventh-best in the country. His absurd 1.952 OPS off those new pitchers is first in the country. In fact, that’s the highest of any player in the country since AT LEAST 2019.
  • Hairston has been equally a pest as the very first batter of a game, having recorded a hit to leadoff a game 24 times (in 56 games) - the second-highest total in the country (UT Martin’s TJ Grimes, 26). His four game leading homers are third in the country.
  • His .462 average to lead off games is 10th among all players with at least 30 games led off. He has a hit on the FIRST PITCH of a game nine times - two more than anyone else in the nation.
  • Hairston is third in the country with his 79 runs scored.
  • Opponents have intentionally walked Hairston 12 times this season, the third-highest total in the country.
  • Landon Hairston became ASU’s 38th Freshman All-American last season, as selected by the NCBWA and was named to the All-Big 12 first team as a utility player and to the Big 12 All-Freshman team.
  • Hairston moved from D1Baseball’s No. 101 outfield in its preseason rankings to its No. 2 outfielder in its Week 6 update.

NOT SO NU’U ANYMORE

  • Nu'u Contrades is ASU’s most veteran presence as he enters his fourth year with the program - a rarity in the modern age of college baseball.  Contrades was selected by his teammates as a Co-Captain of the 2026 squad entering the year.
  • Since the start of April, Contrades has at least one extra-base hit in 17 of 26 games. His 21 extra-base hits in that time are 22nd in the country as he vaulted to the No. 2 ranking among second basemen by D1Baseball in their Week 12 update.
  • Contrades’  17 homers were eighth in the conference and Top-60 nationally despite missing a decent chunk of time this season and batting off one leg for the majority of the season.
  • Contrades’ 408.68 average distance on his homers is 16th in the nation among players with at least 15 homers this season.
  • Contrades has homered four times off relievers entering the game as the first batter they have faced, tied for fourth-most in the country. His 11 RBIs in that scenario are  tied for 19th in the country.
  • Contrades has struck out just 25 times this season (13.5 percent on 185 ABs). Last season, he notably struck out just 30 times - compared to 28 walks -  on 181 ABs on the year (16.6 percent) after striking out 51 times with just 9 walks his freshman season on 217 ABs (23.5 percent).
  • Unfortunately the veteran was down a couple games while dealing with a hamstring injury sustained in the finale against LMU, missing nearly three weeks and the first two weekends of Big 12 action. Even with returning to the lineup, Contrades has operated mostly under 100 percent with the injury lingering.
  • Contrades has looked more to form on the basepaths in recent weeks and is 10-for-10 on stolen base attempts this season. His 91.7 career stolen base percentage (33-of-36) is the highest among all ASU players since 1999 with at least 30 bases stolen.
  • Prior to his injury, Contrades was credited with saving 3.09 runs on infield ground balls this season, good for 34th in the nation but third among all second basemen.
  • Contrades made his long awaited return to the diamond last season after missing the majority of 2024 season with a back injury. He enteredl last season on D1Baseball’s sixth-ranked third baseman in the country and the No. 22 MLB Draft prospect in the Big 12. Contrades has shifted over to second base this season. He was ranked by D1Baseball as the #21 second basemen in the country entering the year.
  • Unfortunately, after a strong season for the majority of last year, Contrades missed ASU’s final month of the season with a hand injury. Prior to the injury, Contrades was reaching base at a .416 clip over his .309 average while posting 15 doubles, three triples and six homers. His 24 extra-base hits were tied for second on the team at the time
  • He ranked third in the Big 12 at the time with those 15 doubles and tied for second in the Big 12 with nine doubles in conference-only games.
  • Contrades was 14-for-15 on stolen bases last year, The 14 stolen bases were tied for 9th in the Big 12 at the time of the injury. Contrades batted out of the leadoff position often last year and reached on 21-of-51 (.412) leadoff opportunities
  • He was named the Big 12 Co-Player of the Week for his efforts against Oral Roberts, where he homered three times and batted at a .385 average with five RBIs and six runs scored. 

TOIG-A PARTY

  • Dean Toigo was voted by the Big 12 coaches as the conference’s Preseason Newcomer of the Year and has been one of the most prolific offensive threats in the conference thus season.
  • Toigo’s 17 homers this year are Top-60 in the country and eighth in the Big 12. His 405.91 average distance on his homers is 23rd among those with at least 15 homers.
  • Toigo has at least one RBI in 27 of his last 41 games. He had nine RBIs through his first 13 games this season and has 43 since then.
  • After having just eight hits in the first 10 games of the season, Toigo has 60 in the last 46 to bring his season average to .319.
  • Toigo’s OBP is over 100 points higher than his average at .427, due in large part to being a magnet for the baseball as his 17 HBPs this season are third in the Big 12.
  • The transfer from UNLV was named the Big 12 Newcomer of the Week on March 16 for his efforts against TCU and named to Baseball American’s National Team of the Week as well.

BIGGIE SMALS

  • Sun Devil infielder Dominic Smaldino is anything but small, giving his teammates a 6-6, 230-pound target over at first base.
  • Since starting the game on the bench in ASU’s series finale at BYU (April 18). Smaldino recorded multiple hits in eight of the last 11 regular season games and has homered in seven of the last 13 games overall.
  • His 16 extra base hits in that span are 15th in the country and his 10 homers are ninth. He has 26 RBIs is that stretch, which are 32nd in the nation.
  • His three-home run effort in the finale against Oklahoma State tied an ASU school record and marked him as the first ASU player to achieve the feat in the BBCOR era. His five homers in the series garnered him Big 12 Newcomer of the Week recognition.
  • Of the D1 baseball players averaging 3+ plate appearances per game this season (2,146 total), Smaldino’s 94.8 average exit velocity is 28th in the country and his 412.93 average home run distance is eighth in the country among players with at least 15 homers this year.
  • Smaldino’s six opposite field homers are 17th-most in the country.
  • Smaldino’ mammoth blast against Mississippi State at Globe Life Field was officially logged at 480.74 feet RECORDED homer by any Division I player this season and the longest recorded by a Sun Devil since 2019.
  • Smaldino has seen his line drive percentage jump to 30.1 percent this season. That total is especially notable as it sat at just 14.8 percent as a freshman and 24.8 last season. Conversely he has watched his groundball rate drop from nearly 45 percent in 2024 to 33.1 percent this season.

LASER SHOW

  • Arizona State’s average exit velocity at the plate this season is 90.7 MPH - good for the fifth-highest tally in Division I.
  • The Sun Devils currently have a hard-hit ball average (exit velo over 95 MPH) of 45.5 percent, which is 18th in Division I baseball and the team’s 457 hard-hit balls (exit velo over 95 MPH) are 16th. 
  • ASU has put a barrel on 314 balls this season, good for 12th in the country and the squad’s 21.1 overall barrel percentage is 30th.
  • 19.2 percent of ASU’s balls put into play this season have qualified as line drives  with an exit velocity over 95 MPH with a launch angle between 10-30 degrees, the 19th-highest percentage in the country.
  • Four players rank in the Top-100 nationally in the category: Dominic Smaldino (28th, 94.8), Landon Hairston (38th, 94.3), Nu’u Contrades (55th, 93.7), DeanToigo (76th, 93.3).

A DISCIPLINED APPROACH

  • The Sun Devils have recorded a 52.9 quality at-bat percentage this season (plate appearance ending in a hit, walk, sac bunt, sac fly or HBP, is eight pitches or longer, moves the runner, or with an exit velo over 95 MPH). That total is currently tied for 15th nationally.
  • ASU has done a good job of not simply watching pitches and taking strikes, with an in-zone swing percentage of 70.4 percent that is 21st in the country.
  • The team makes contact on 87.1 percent of the pitches in the zone, the 30th-highest total in the nation.
  • When sticking to the team’s approach of hunting pitches in the upper half of the zone, few teams are better than the Sun Devils and their .360 team average that is 14th nationally.  The team sees its average drop to .282 when chasing pitches in the lower third of the zone.
  • The Sun Devils are batting .261 as a team when trailing in the count this season, which is the nintth-highest in the country. The team’s .447 slugging percentage in pitcher’s counts is second in the country behind Georgia Tech (.505).
  • The Sun Devils have recorded 83 of their RBIs this season by way of hits to the opposite field, the 35th-most in the nation while ranking 28th as a team with a .386 average to opposite field.
  • Arizona State is 21-6 in games in which it has at least three hits to opposite field this season compared toa  16-13 record when it doesn’t.
  • Arizona State 15.8 strikeout rate was the 24th-lowest in the country. The team has just 89 strikeouts looking on the season, which were 15th-lowest nationally.
  • The Sun Devils are producing quality at-bats even while being agressive at the plate. The team’s .404 average on first pitches put into play this season is 38th nationally. The squad’s 135 hits on first pitches are the 25th in the country and the 23 first pitch homers are eighth.
  • Arizona State has advanced a runner from first to third base on a single 46 times this season, 19th-most in the country.

THE HEAT SHEETS

  • Sun Devil pitchers have posted an average fastball/sinker velocity of 93.2 this season, a total that currently sets good for ninth among all Division I programs.
  • Arizona State also ranked ninth last season at 92.5. ASU ranked no higher than 28th in the category from 2019-2024 (28th in 2019 at 89.5 MPH).
  • The only non-SEC team in the Top 10 in the category outside ASU is Wake Forest, which leads the country at a 94.4 MPH rate.
  • ASU’s overall average pitch velocity on all pitches is 88.3, tied for eighth in the country.
  • Among pitchers with at least 30.0 innings pitched this season, ASU has the No. 15 (Cole Carlon, 95.9), No. 22 (Derek Schaefer, 95.5) and No. 24 (Alex Overbay, 95.3) pitchers in the country in average fastball velo.
  • For perspective, from 2019-2025 the Sun Devils had just one player TOTAL that averaged 95+ MPH fast balls for a season in over 20 innings (Lucas Kelly last season).
  • Colin Linder has a swinging strike rate of 13.6 percent on his fastball this year that is 16th-best among all pitchers with at least 500 fastballs thrown.
  • Opponents are putting Linder’s fastball into play just 27.0 percent of the time - the fourth-lowest total in the country among pitchers with 500+ fastballs.
  • Opponents are making contact with the pitch just 70.0 percent of the time, which is ninth-lowest among the 500+ crew.

FITZ-MAGIC

  • Sean Fitzpatrick enters his fourth season of college baseball and third season with the Sun Devils and was elected a team captain by his teammates entering this season. The southpaw bulked up over the offseason and it has resulted in a noticeable uptick in velocity.
  • Fitzpatrick has appeared in 84 games over his career in relief (81 at ASU), which currently ranks 10th among active Division I players.
  • Fitzpatrick has recorded 73 outs this season and 43 of those have come by way of strikeout. Among pitchers with 20.0+ innings of work, his 15.90 K/9 is fourth-best in the country.
  • He has inherited a team-high 37 baserunners this season - the ninth-most in the country - and just 12 have scored.  Among all players with at least 30 inherited runners this season (57), his 32.4 runs allowed rate is 16th.
  • Out of all D1 pitchers with at least 20 appearances this season (777 total), Fitzpatrick has given up just two base hits to the first batter he has seen in an appearance, tied for the 35th-lowest total in the country.
  • He has struck out the first batter he has seen 13 times, which is the fifth-most in the country (min. 20 appearances).
  • Fitzpatrick is getting a called strike 45.7 percent of the time he throws his slider, the third-best percentage in the country among pitchers with at least 200 sliders thrown.
  • Conversely, Fitzpatrick gets a swinging strike on 17.5 percent of his fastballs thrown, the eighth-highest percentage in the country among pitchers with at least 20 innings of work. Opponents put Fitzpatrick’s fastball into play just 11.1 percent of the time - the lowest percentage in the country among those with at least 20 innings.
  • The 57.1 contact rate on Fitzpatrick’s fastball is also the lowest among all pitchers with at least 20 innings of work.

YOUR BEST SALES PITCH

  • Sun Devil pitching coach Jeremy Accardo’s addition to the staff paid immediate dividends last seasonand continues to excel this season.
  • The team has a K/9 ratio of 11.5 that is seventh in the country and tops in the Big 12. ASU has struck out double digit batters in 37 games this season.  ASU has 629 strikeouts on the season, chasing the long-standing school record of 675 from 1975.
  • The team is inducing a 23.0 whiff rate on pitches IN the zone that is third in the country while the 33.4 OVERALL miss rate is second.
  • The team is allowing a Z-Contact rate (pitches in the zone where contact was made divided by total pitches in the zone) of just 46.6 percent, the lowest total in the country.
  • The team’s 1,311 overall swings-and-misses induced are the second-most in the country.
  • Only 33.0 percent of ASU pitches have been put into play this season, the sixth-lowest total in the country.
  • Opponents are missing (swing and miss/total swings) offspeed/breaking pitches 43.1 percent of the time - the sixth-highest total in the country and an improvement from its 39.7 mark last season. In 2024, opponents missed those pitches just 35.6 percent of the time.
  • Kole Klecker has had plenty of success getting batters to chase his slider OUT of the zone, with a 42.8 percent chase rate that is ninth in the nation among pitchers with at least 200 sliders thrown. His 54.1 percent swing rate induced on the slider in general is 17th-highest in the nation (min. 200 sliders thrown).
  • Taylor Penn is getting a swing and miss rate (miss/swings) of 39.8 on his changeup - Top-50 among pitchers that have thrown at least 150 changeups this year. His swinging strike rate (miss/pitches) on the pitch of 20.5 percent is also Top-50 among those pitchers.
  • Penn has stranded approximately 87.6 percent of his baserunners, a total good for third in the nation among players with at least 40 innings of work.
  • Last season, ASU had seven pitchers with 10.0+ innings pitched and a sub-4.55 ERA in the regular season. In 2024, the team had just a single player that met that criteria.
  • ASU’s overall team WHIP was 78th nationally at 1.48 last year. While not eye popping, It was notable as the team had not finished in the Top-100 in the category since 2012 (6th, 1.17). In fact, ASU had been outside the Top-200 five different times since then and outside the Top-150 eight times.
  • The team’s strikeout-to-walk ratio of 2.44 ranked 36th in the nation. The Sun Devils had not ranked in the Top-100 in that category in a non-COVID season since the 2015 campaign where ASU checked in at 79th in the nation with a ratio of 2.20.
  • ASU was first in the Big 12 with a 11.3 K/9 average last season, good for third nationally. The Sun Devils struck out double digit batters in 37 of 60 games.
  • ASU was one of just three schools in the nation with three different pitchers with 80+ strikeouts (Vanderbilt, Florida State) in the regular season.
  • ASU struck out 653 batters last season, the seventh-most in the country.  The tally was the second-most in school history in the aluminum bat era, just behind the school record 675 set by the 1975 team.

GRABBING THE BULL-PEN BY THE HORNS

  • As many fresh faces as there are in the starting rotation and in the field, the most veteran force on the roster likely comes from the team’s bullpen.
  • The bullpen has a 5.27 ERA this season - below the national bullpen AVERAGE of 6.30 - with a 24-9 record and a 350-132 strikeout to walk rate over 257.0 innings. The 350 strikeouts are the third-most of any bullpen in the nation.
  • Derek Schaefer has taken hold of the back end of the bullpen, settling in as the team’s closer with a mid-90s fastball and electric secondary pitches. Schaefer’s 95.5 average fastball velo is 22nd in the country among pitchers with at least 30.0 innings of work.
  • Schaefer seven saves are 36th in the nation this season and first in the Big 12. He was named to the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Award Midseason Watch List.
  • Schaefer was ASU’s fireman when its needed it last season, allowing just three of his 15 inherited runners on the season to score.
  • Taylor Penn has ate up valuable middle relief innings, posting a 6-0 record over his 30.1 innings out of the pen, striking out 35 and posting a 2.08 ERA - the 26th-lowest among relievers with at least 30 innings of work.
  • Last regular season, ASU had three players with a bullpen ERA of 3.00 or less with 10.0+ innings pitched (Cole Carlon, Easton Barrett, Jaden Alba) - a feat that hadn’t been achieved through the regular season at ASU since the 2013 team (Ryan Burr, Matt Dunbar, Josh McAlister). 

HEADED TO THE GAP

  • The Sun Devils currently rank 46th in the country and fourth in the Big 12 with 114 doubles this season, paced by Landon Hairston’s 20. Six different players have recorded double digits in the category.
  • The team has recorded at least one double in all but nine games this season and has multiple doubles in 31 games.
  • ASU led the nation with its 149 doubles last season and  recorded multiple doubles in 42 of 60 games. The team was  seventh in country at 2.48 per game.
  • ASU has had a player reach 20 doubles six times under Willie Bloomquist and at least one player do so in each season (2022-p). ASU had just two players, total,  reach 20 doubles from 2011-21.
  • 11 players recorded at least four doubles last season and eight reached double digits in the category.
  • The Sun Devils were tops in the Pac-12 and sixth in the country with 143 doubles in 2024 in 58 games and the 2.47 doubles per game were fourth in the nation. The total was 15 more than any other team in the Pac-12 even without making the postseason. 15 different Sun Devils had multiple doubles that season - the most of any school in the Pac-12.

CHICKS DIG THE LONG BALL

  • Arizona State is currently 10th in the nation with 108 home runs.  Thirteen different players have homered for the Sun Devils as the team has easily surpassed its total of 87 from last year.
  • The 1981 program record of 110 homers is very much at risk of falling should the Devils keep the current pace and continue into the postseason.
  • ASU is 25-7 when recording two or more homers this season and have four or more homers in ten games.
  • The team hasn’t had many cheapies either, with its average home run distance of 402.29 ranking fifth in the country (min. 50 homers) - and 10th regardless of home run total.
  • The squad’s 18 opposite field homers are tied for 15th in the nation and its 31 homers to center are seventh.
  • The Sun Devils are eighth in the nation when behind in the count with 38 homers.
  • ASU’s nine grand slams this season are tops in the country.
  • Arizona State had 87 home runs last season, a total that was fourth in the Big 12 and 38th in the country.  ASU was 19-3 when hitting two or more homers in a game.
  • Five times last season, ASU recorded five or more homers. That included a school record eight homers against BYU and 6 in two other games that were tied for third in school history.
  • The Sun Devils set a school record with eight home runs in the finale of the BYU series, surpassing its previous record of seven against Arizona on March 4, 2000. ASU got that in the first two innings of the game alone as eight of the team’s first 10 hits all left the ballpark.  ASU’s 15 home runs in the BYU series (8 Saturday, 6 Friday and 1 Thursday) were a school record for a three-game series.
  • The Sun Devils had 102 homers in 2024, good for 30th nationally and surpassing the program’s BBCOR record of 94 from the 2019 season. ASU became just the eighth Sun Devil team in the program’s illustrious history to reach 100 home runs and the first to do it since having 101 in 1990. The 2024 Sun Devils were the fastest to reach triple digits in the category in program history, doing so in 56 games.
  • ASU had five Sun Devils reach doublle digit homers in 2024 (Ryan Campos, Kien Vu, Brandon Compton, Jacob Tobias and Nick McLain), marking the first time at ASU since 1993 that five players accomplished the feat (Todd Cady, Doug Newstrom, Antone Williamson, Paul Lo Duca, Jacob Cruz). It was the first season that even four had reached the tally since 1994. The 2024 Sun Devils were the first ASU team to have 13 players homer since the 2008 squad also had 13.

COMING IN HOT

  • ASU has outscored opponents 1153-750 over its last 127 regular season games, going 85-39 in the process.
  • ASU has scored multiple runs in 104 of its 187 half-innings with runs this season. ASU has 57 innings with at least three runs scored, 31 with at least four and 24 with at least five.
  • Last season, The Sun Devils put up 69 innings where the team had scored at least three runs, 32 with four or more and 21 with 5 or more.
  • The team has reached double digit hits in 38 games this season.
  • ASU’s 626 total hits this season are eighth in the country, ranking sixth with a  .320 average AND the team’s .558 slugging percentage.
  • ASU is averaging 8.3 runs per game, good for 21st nationally.
  • ASU scored 253 runs in its 30 conference games last season (8.4 per game) - tops in the league. The team bat .328 in Big 12 games - tops in the league by 11 points.
  • Last season, ASU ranked 9th nationally and 2nd in the Big 12 with a .318 batting average in the regular eason and was 19th in the country and first in the league with a .527 slugging percentage. ASU was first in the Big 12 and 27th nationally with 8.4 runs per game in the regular season.
  • Eight times in the Willie Bloomquist tenure have the Sun Devils recorded 20 or more hits (since 2022). The team had just eight from 2008-21 and only three from 2011-21.
  • Both of ASU’s 20-hit games last season came on the road and three of the eight total under Bloomquist have met that criteria. Of the team’s 36 games with 20+ hits from 2000-2021, only eight came on the road.
  • The Sun Devils have scored 20 or more runs six times in 4+ seasons under head coach Willie Bloomquist. That total is notable as the team had just five such games TOTAL from 2009-2021.

HOLD ON TO YOUR SEATS

  • The team posted the game-winning RBI/run in the sixth inning or later in 12 of the team’s wins last year. It has done so 11 times this season. The team has eight wins in one or two-run games on the year (9-8).
  • The Sun Devils have walked off ten games over the last two-plus seasons (not including run-rule games).
  • On the season, when ASU has a potential go-ahead or game-tying plate appearance (7th inn. or later), the team’s .360 average (54-for-150) in the 20 games the scenario has occured is fifth in the country.
  • ASU has trailed at one point in 76 of its last 117 victories dating back to 2023 - including 20 of its wins last season and 20 times this season.
  • With the team’s 9-3 loss in the finale of the Amegy Bank College Baseball Series at Globe Life, the Sun Devils lost their first regular season game by more than five runs since a 17-7 run-rule loss at Cal State Fullerton on April 17, 2024 - ending its nation-leading streak of 85-straight regular season games.
  • In four seasons under Willie Bloomquist, the Sun Devils have shown that no opponent lead is safe, with plenty of grit in erasing multi-run deficits. ASU has 25 wins over the last three+ seasons when trailing by at least three runs at some point in the game.
  • In 2022, the seven-run deficit overcome by the Sun Devils to defeat and take the series from Cal was the most since March 3, 2000 against Arizona. ASU doubled down at that in 2023  with the victories over North Dakota State and GCU, overcoming a 7-0 deficit in both (and 9-2 in entering the eighth against GCU) for victories in both.
  • ASU came from behind 13-6 in the regular season finale in 2024 against UNLV to walk it off in the ninth - the fourth seven-run comeback in the Bloomquist era.
  • It added its fifth and six such comebacks this season after rallying from a 7-0 deficit at Grand Canyon to win 12-8 and also from 7-0 against BYU to win 12-8 as well.
  • ASU has won 13 games in which it has trailed by at least five runs at some point in the game under Willie Bloomquist.

A FRESH LOOK

  • The Sun Devil roster will look quite a bit different in 2026, especially in the field. Arizona State welcomes a whopping 27 new faces (12 on the mound anf 15 position players) as ASU was aggressive in both the transfer portal and the high school ranks.
  • The Sun Devils brought in the nation’s No. 11 portal class according to 64Analytics. It was the highest-ranked class west of the Mississippi and the highest ranked class NOT in the SEC (8 teams) or ACC (2 teams).
  • ASU brought in six portal players rated in the Top-250 in the nation while not losing any players to the portal that were ranked in that Top-250.
  • Right-handed pitcher Kole Klecker was the highest-rated of the group, checking in at No. 54 after returning back home to the Valley after his time at TCU. Klecker was a Freshman All-American in 2023 and started a game for the Horned Frogs in Omaha at the College World Series. The Chandler native previous starred at Hamilton High School, winning a State Title as the starting pitcher his senior year in the championship game.
  • A pair of Cal transfers in PJ Moutzouridis (No. 98) and Dominic Smaldino (No. 155) will look to serve a prominent role in ASU’s infield. Moutzouridis was a Freshman All-American himself in 2024. Smaldino is anything BUT small, standing at 6-6 and offering a big target over at first base. The junior launched 11 homers for Cal last season and figures to greatly enjoy the lefty-friendly hitting confines of Phoenix Muni this season.
  • Dean Toigo has already been asterisked by the Big 12 coaches, who voted him the Big 12 Preseason Newcomer of the Year entering 2026. Toigo was the Mountain West Co-Player of the Year for UNLV last season and was also named a NCBWA Preseason All-American heading into this year as 64Analytics’ No. 187 transfer.
  • A pair of ACC transfers in Florida State’s Brady Louck and Virginia Tech’s Garrett Michel checked in at No. 242 and No. 243 in the transfer rankings. Louck was the top-rated southpaw out of Illinois out of high school while Michel is a light tower power-wielding bat that has battled through injuries in the last two seasons after a freshman campaign that saw him log 11 homers and 16 doubles.
  • Austin Roellig looks to man the hot corner for ASU this season and just missed being a Top-250 transfer prospect, checking in at No. 255. Roellig earned Big 12 All-Freshman honors and was a All-Big 12 Honorable Mention after his redshirt freshman campaign at Utah last year.
  • Junior College transfer RHP Finn Edwards was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 18th round of the 2025 MLB Draft before electing to continue his collegiate career with the Sun Devils thus year.
  • Alex Overbay (UNLV), Nick Annello (Jacksonville), Colby Guy (UNC Asheville)  and Taylor Penn (Western Kentucky)  bring a glutton of experience to the mound while Coen Niclai (Oregon), Dominic Longo (Utah Valley), Matt Polk (Vanderbilt) and Sam Myers (TCU) all figure to contribute in the field over the course of the season.
  • ASU signed the nation’s No. 22 freshman class in 2025 and while the veteran-heavy lineup will allow the group to mature, there is plenty of talent in the form of INF Finn Leach (No. 141 prospect nationally by Perfect Game), Marcelo Rodriguez (No. 244), Austin Musso (No. 331), Cooper Clouser (No. 416), Brenden Lewis (No. 433) all flashing throughout Fall and Spring practices.