Bears Baseball picked to repeat as Missouri Valley Champions – Ozarks Sports Zone
The defending Valley champs of head coach Keith Guttin
“If you’re basing it on last year’s team, I think it’s accurate,” Guttin said of the preseason poll. “This is a new year, so we’ll see what happens. Wichita State has virtually it’s whole team back, as well as its number one pitcher, and Dallas Baptist always has a very talented ballclub. There’s going to be a lot of competition, and we look for a good league race.”
The league’s eight clubs will meet at the MVC Championship, May 25-28, at Bob Warn Field in Terre Haute, Ind., for the right to represent the Valley in the 2016 NCAA Tournament.
The Bears enter the 2016 season ranked as high as No. 17 in Collegiate Baseball’s preseason poll after racking up a school-record 49 wins last spring en route to capturing both the MVC regular-season and conference tournament titles. MSU will welcome back 17 letterwinners and five regular position starters from last year’s club that earned the No. 8 national seed in the NCAA Championship and captured the Springfield Regional crown to advance to its second Super Regional.
Burger and Young each earned spots on Collegiate Baseball’s Louisville Slugger Preseason All-America squads in December following breakthrough 2015 campaigns. Burger was a third-team All-America choice establishing himself as one of The Valley’s top corner men in his rookie season, totaling a team-high 78 hits — the second-highest total overall in the MVC and the top mark for a Valley freshman — and a Missouri State freshman record 22 doubles, while batting a club-best .342.
Young was equally as impressive, picking up first-team All-America recognition from the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association after leading the MVC with a Bears single-season record 16 saves — which ranked third nationally — to go along with a 1.30 earned run average. He logged a perfect 7-0 mark overall and held the opposition to a .197 batting average over 41.2 innings spanning 30 outings and was one of five finalists for the NCBWA’s Stopper of the Year Award.