Elsemiller & Gearrin Land on Stopper of the Year Watch List
Cory Gearrin <br>
Courtesy MercerBears.com
Cory Gearrin
Courtesy MercerBears.com

Friday, April 20, 2007

LINCOLN, Neb. - The top two closers in the Atlantic Sun Conference are among the forty players named to the midseason watch list for the second annual National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association Stopper of the Year Award. Mercer's Cory Gearrin and Stetson's Robbie Elsemiller have lived up to preseason expectations to land on the midseason watch list. The award will be given to the top relief pitcher in Division I college baseball.

Elsemiller has piled up a league-leading 11 saves so far this season. The junior runs his career total to 30, the second most in Atlnatic Sun history. Gearrin's collected eight saves for the Bears in his first season and leads the A-Sun in strikeouts per nine innings, averaging 14.62.

Of the 40 pitchers who make up the midseason watch list, nine have already reached double figures in saves, including VMI's Kevin Crum, who leads the country with 14 saves in 18 appearances this season. Sam Houston State's Luke Prihoda and USC's Paul Koss have already collected 12 saves apiece to rank second nationally, while seven other pitchers have at least 10 saves.

The 40 pitchers on the mid-season watch list have combined to save over 300 games during the first half of the 2007 season (thru games of April 15) and have converted 89 percent of their save chances as a group. Prihoda, Richmond's Brian Alas and UC Irvine's Blair Erickson are all perfect on the 2007 season in save chances while recording at least 10 saves. Erickson already earned a spot in the NCAA record books earlier this month, breaking the previous mark of 49 career saves set by USC's Jack Krawczyk's in the late 1990s.

The list features players from 20 conferences, including five each from the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Big 12. The Pacific-10 and Conference USA also have four closers on the list, while the Atlantic Sun, Big South, Mid-American, Missouri Valley and Sun Belt Conference all had multiple members of the watch list.

"This is a truly outstanding group of pitchers that cover the landscape of college baseball," said NCBWA 1st Vice-President Shamus McKnight, Assistant Media Relations Director at the University of Nebraska. "The recognition for this award over the last two years has grown immensely as we have seen the increased emphasis on having strong relief pitching in the college game."

Nominations were made by each school's baseball sports information contact and over 80 pitchers were nominated from around the country. A preliminary preseason watch list was released in February. At the end the regular season, the Division I leader in saves and four other relief pitching standouts will be selected as the award's finalists. These finalists will be released on Wednesday, May 30, just prior to the beginning of NCAA regional play.

From the list of finalists, the NCBWA's All-America Committee will select a winner. The third annual winner will be announced on Wednesday, June 6, two days prior to the beginning of NCAA super regional action. Last year's winner was Don Czyz from Kansas. J. Brent Cox of Texas won the inaugural award in 2005.

The NCBWA, founded in 1962, presents the Dick Howser Trophy to the nation's top player. It also selects a Division I All-America Team, Division I and III Players of the Week, Division I District Players of the Year and Division III Players of the Year.

NCBWA Stopper of the Year Mid-Season Watch List
Pitcher - School

Daniel Schlereth - Arizona
Kyle Heyne - Ball State
Nick Cassavechia - Baylor
Matt Gorgen - California
David Anderson - Coastal Carolina
Andy Masten - Creighton
Michael Seander - Duke
Shane Mathews - East Carolina
Matt Brinkmann - Evansville
Daniel Edwards - Kansas State
David Mixon - Louisiana-Monroe
Cory Gearrin - Mercer
JD Melton - Navy
Eryk McConnell - NC State
Andrew Carignan - North Carolina
Matt German - Northern Illinois
Garrett Richards - Oklahoma
Chance Chapman - Oral Roberts
Jason Dominguez - Pepperdine
Brian Alas - Richmond
James Hayes - Rider
Luke Prihoda - Sam Houston State
Shawn Sanford - South Florida
Patrick Ezell - Southern Miss
Robbie Elsemiller - Stetson
Sam Demel - TCU
Randy Boone - Texas
Kyle Nicholson - Texas A&M
Link Saunders - The Citadel
Josh Dew - Troy
Daniel Latham - Tulane
Blair Erickson - UC Irvine
Paul Koss - USC
Casey Weathers - Vanderbilt
Casey Lambert - Virginia
Luke Pisker - Virginia Commonwealth
Kevin Crum - VMI
Josh Ellis - Wake Forest
Nick Hagadone - Washington
Noah Krol - Wichita State