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Bama News
The interesting mix of expectations for Alabama baseball
Alabama baseball opens the 2021 season Friday.
Itâs been seven years since Alabama baseball made the NCAA tournament, five since playing in the SECâs postseason.
Expectations, to be frank, havenât been a rite of February around Sewell-Thomas Stadium so thatâs what made this year interesting. Coach Brad Bohannonâs fourth Crimson Tide team has a taste of that hype ⊠with a few caveats.
The 16-1 non-conference start to the pandemic-shortened 2020 season created a little buzz around the relatively dormant program. It was enough to crack a few pre-2021 rankings, peaking at No. 25 in the Baseball America version.
Three others had Alabama no lower than 30th but thereâs a catch made clear when the SEC preseason poll was released.
And it dashed some cold water on that national chatter. Alabama was picked to finish last in the seven-team SEC West in a season that begins Friday against McNeese State.
Bohannon sees the humor in it all.
âUsually going into a season, youâre pissed about not being ranked or youâre pissed about or trying to rein the kids in because theyâre ranked too high,â he said with a building laugh. âWeâre kind of in between. For the first time, Alabama has some expectations by some people and we have some preseason rankings. And then you look at something else and another publication says that we suck.â
Also, the SEC West is stacked once again.
The division has four of the top nine teams in the coaches poll that had Alabama No. 30 and Texas A&M the only team below that.
No divisional team was lower than A&M at No. 33 in the NCBWA poll while Auburn at No. 37 was the lowest in Collegiate Baseballâs ranking that pegged the Tide at No. 27.
âThe beauty of playing in the Southeastern Conference and especially in the West is it all takes care of itself,â Bohannon said. âYou play 30 league games and if you win half or more, nobody can argue that youâre not one of the top 15 teams in the country. But itâs human nature to look at all that.â
Youth is also a factor for this version of the Tide.
The program lost 15 players from last yearâs group including third-round draft pick Tyler Gentry. Six positional starters are back while Bohannon plans to try a few different pitchers in extended outings.
The opening weekend pitching rotation starts with Connor Prielipp (Friday), Antoine Jean (Saturday) and Dylan Smith (Sunday). Bohannon said they will use eight or nine different pitchers for extended outings early in the season to see how they respond. Chase Lee and Brock Guffey will see the high-leverage moments coming out of the bullpen.
Consistency will be the biggest concern early on.
âWe still play like a team that has 19 freshmen on it and I think thatâs probably a theme around college baseball,â Bohannon said. âBaseball is a game of repetition and we just havenât played enough games in the last 10-11 months and weâre hopeful we can play cleaner, sooner.â
McNeese State comes to Tuscaloosa to open the season with a 3 p.m. CT Friday game. The Cowboys went 10-7 last season with a 12-4 win over Missouri and a split two-game series with Southern Miss. MSU received votes in the Collegiate Baseball rankings and was picked to finish second in the Southland Conference preseason poll.
The Tide plays 19 non-conference games before opening SEC play March 19 at Arkansas. Alabama navigated that pre-conference season nearly flawlessly in the ill-fated 2020 season and how it wouldâve done after that will always remain a mystery.
Still, it was enough to generate some buzz around a program that has been in a decade-long slump. Now itâs a matter of living up to the talk in Year 4 of Bohannonâs program.
âThis was a total rebuild when I got here in the summer of 2017,â Bohannon said, âso I understand there are a lot of people who want us to go out there and prove it before they dote on us and thatâs certainly very logical. There are people who are familiar with our roster and know we have a lot of good players, so I donât shy away from all that.â