logo
Jack Kartsonas' 'unorthodox' journey to WVU could soon put his name among baseball's elite pitchers

Jack Kartsonas' 'unorthodox' journey to WVU could soon put his name among baseball's elite pitchers

Dominion Post10-05-2025

MORGANTOWN — With six solid innings Sunday, WVU pitcher Jack Kartsonas will finally reach the NCAA's and Big 12's requirement for innings pitched to be included among the best in earned run average.
Depending on how that start goes against Kansas State, Kartsonas could become the Big 12's leader in ERA and possibly settle in as high as third in the country.
Six years ago, that statement would have seemed like wishful thinking, maybe even a bit absurd.
Even to Kartsonas.
'I always knew what I was capable of, but physically, my first year of college, I just wasn't there yet,' Kartsonas said.
That first year of college was at John Carroll University, a Division III school in Ohio.
It wasn't exactly where great baseball careers were born and it wasn't exactly where Kartsonas wanted to be.
'I thought I was a lot better than I was,' he admits.
The journey Kartsonas took from there into becoming one of the Mountaineers' top pitchers, he calls, 'super unorthodox.'
Truth be told, Kartsonas' story is one of belief — both in himself and the belief he had from those close to him — and maybe simply being the right guy at the right time.
To be sure, there was plenty of adversity along the way. There was enough bad luck that no one would have blamed Kartsonas if he decided to move on from the game.
'There were a lot of people who had faith in me when not everyone did,' Kartsonas, a native of Pittsburgh said. 'My family kept believing in me. My college coaches at John Carroll believed in me. That allowed me to have the success and the journey I did.'
He first got the opportunity to make the leap from Division III to Division I in 2020, when he transferred to Kent State.
Then came shoulder surgery after his first season with the Golden Flashes. That cost him 2022.
He bounced back and had a solid junior season, rotating between the role of a starting and relief pitcher. Last season, he was used primarily as a starting pitcher.
Then came elbow surgery.
This is where WVU head coach Steve Sabins comes into the picture.
He had first heard about Kartsonas through a friend in the Pittsburgh area named Chase Rowe, who works in amateur baseball.
'When Jack first entered the transfer portal, I called Chase and said, 'What's the scoop on this guy?' like I do about hundreds of players every summer.
'Chase said the guy was an absolute warrior and an animal. The success he had (in 2024) was while he needed surgery.'
Sabins pulled the trigger, even though Kartsonas was nowhere near ready to pitch. It wasn't until last Thanksgiving that Kartsonas was even ready to step on a mound and throw again.
He didn't begin to pitch to live hitters until January.
'I think they did a really good job of slowly building me up,' Kartsonas said. 'I missed the whole fall. The first time I got back on the mound was around Thanksgiving. I didn't face a hitter until mid-January. The progression of my pitch count earlier in the year lined up with where my arm was at. Now I'm at the point of throwing about 100 pitches a week and feeling really good.'
He'll enter Sunday's game with a 6-1 record and a 1.84 ERA. That just may be a tad better than really good.
'He's prepared for anything that comes his way, just because of everything he's been through,' Sabins said. 'He's decided he's going to keep working hard, no matter the results. He's going to stick with it. He's been through adversity and he's going to be a part of a team and do anything he can to help it.
'In his world, he's probably living his best life going from Division III to Kent State to injury and surgery to being on a really great team and leading a great team.'
Kartsonas began the season as a reliever. It wasn't until a month ago that WVU promoted him to Sunday starter.
That promotion came with a bit of luck. Sabins knew he wanted to change his pitching rotation and started naming names to his assistant coaches.
WVU assistant Jacob Garcia chimed in, 'What about Kart?'
'I was like, well he's 23-years old and has starting experience and he's fully healthy,' Sabins recalled the moment. 'We'll give the ball to Jack and see how many pitches he can throw.'
Since taking over as a starter, Kartsonas has gone at least six innings in each of his four starts. He's allowed just a combined three earned runs over those games.
With just one more game like that, Kartsonas' journey will have gone from a little Division III school in Ohio to having his name on top of all other pitchers in the Big 12 and among the nation's best.
'If someone would have told you six years ago that I'd be here right now, no one would have believed you,' he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

SUPER COMEBACK: No. 24 WVU downs Kentucky 13-12 to advance to the super regionals
SUPER COMEBACK: No. 24 WVU downs Kentucky 13-12 to advance to the super regionals

Dominion Post

time4 hours ago

  • Dominion Post

SUPER COMEBACK: No. 24 WVU downs Kentucky 13-12 to advance to the super regionals

The 24th-ranked WVU baseball had one final comeback in it at the Clemson Regional. The Mountaineers, trailing 12-7 in the eighth inning, scored six runs in the bottom of the eighth to come back to defeat Kentucky 13-12. West Virginia clinched its second straight super regional appearance with the victory, the first under coach Steve Sabins. Armani Guzman, who was named MVP of the regional, hit the game-clinching single to score the winning run in the bottom of the eighth to finish off a six-run inning for the Mountaineers (44-14). 'More than just myself, it shows (the team) we all have it,' Guzman said. 'I was a guy who didn't play the last month and a half and now I'm here in this position.' Being so close to a super regional, the Mountaineers didn't hold back anything to start the game, but their streaky hitting didn't allow them to keep a lead consistently. In the bottom of the first, junior catcher Logan Sauve hit a solo blast to left center to score the first run of the game. WVU didn't fall into the same hole they once did on Friday against the same Kentucky team in the opening-round game. Of course, WVU came back in walk-off fashion to win that game in the bottom of the ninth inning, scored four more runs in the ninth inning to beat Clemson on Saturday, but saved its best for last in the third game of the regional. After some really strong pitching in the last two games from WVU starters, Robby Porco struggled on the mound. Porco was relieved for Reese Bassinger in the top of the second after Porco walked three straight Wildcats to load the bases. After scoring 16 runs in their previous game against Clemson, the Wildcats bats stayed hot. The first batter that Bassinger would face, Devin Burkes hit a hard ball to left center field that would bring in two Wildcats to score. That wouldn't be the end of Kentucky's (31-26) relentless hitting. In the same top half of the inning, Cole Hage would hit another two RBI single to bring in another pair of Wildcats. Kentucky took a quick lead after WVU scored first. In the top of the third, Wildcats' veteran third baseman Patrick Herrera beamed the baseball down the third-base line and scored Carson Hansen all the way from first base. The Mountaineers would answer strongly in the bottom of the fourth, scoring six runs to take the lead back. A fielding error and a two-RBI single by Ben Lumsden would bring West Virginia right back in the mix of things. Who else other than Guzman to bring in two runners home with another two-RBI single. All regional, Guzman has been elite when the moment required him to be. He finished the three games going 8 for 12 with six RBIs. Just when all the momentum had flipped to WVU, Kentucky retook it once again. Hudson Brown delivered a RBI single to send Herrera home from second base and tie the game back up again. This would effectively end Bassinger's day and bring in lefty Ben McDougal. McDougal, much like the rest of the WVU pitchers, struggled. In the three batters McDougal faced, he hit two of them and walked the other to give Kentucky the lead back. Unfortunately for the Mountaineers, Carson Estridge didn't provide what was needed. Kentucky designated hitter Hudson Brown hit a gut-punch of a home run to extend the Wildcats lead. 'It was a really weird balancing act that we haven't had to do much this year.' WVU head coach Steve Sabins said. 'The offense stepped up huge and kept coming.' Pinch-hitting for Jace Rinehart, Grant Hussey nearly came in and hit a grand slam to tie the game. Kentucky left fielder Cole Hage robbed him of it, banging into the left field wall to make the catch. When all hope was seemingly lost, the WVU Mountaineers rose from the ashes. 'That's the three best set of games I've ever been a part of as a player or a coach in my life,' Sabins said. 'It literally had everything you could have imagined, including walk-offs, and six-run eights…' Once again, West Virginia was able to load the bases. This time, in the bottom of the eighth, they were able to convert as Sam White drew a walk that would score a run. With two outs, both Gavin Kelly and Lumsden would hit RBI singles to score four more runners to tie the game. With three outs remaining for Kentucky to tie or take the lead, Griffin Kirn came in and did what he does best. He got the job done for WVU and retired the Kentucky batters to end the game. To describe the WVU series of games this weekend, Sabins said, 'Heroic plays, heroic performances, heroic at-bats, it's the best television you could have watched for three straight games.' — Story by Nic Costello

Arizona State's Kenny Dillingham talks Big 12 competitiveness, mentions Rich Rodriguez's impact
Arizona State's Kenny Dillingham talks Big 12 competitiveness, mentions Rich Rodriguez's impact

Dominion Post

time12 hours ago

  • Dominion Post

Arizona State's Kenny Dillingham talks Big 12 competitiveness, mentions Rich Rodriguez's impact

MORGANTOWN — The SEC meetings started off last week, and SEC commissioner Greg Sankey made his opinions heard about the current state of the College Football Playoff and how his conference wasn't getting the respect it deserved for how difficult the schedule is. Sankey indirectly took shots at the Big 12 and ACC without both conferences being able to retaliate, but later in the same week, the Big 12 had their meetings. Big 12 coaches met together to discuss the transfer portal, and more importantly, the future of how the national champions will be crowned each year. Defending Big 12 champion coach of Arizona State, Kenny Dillingham, took the podium with Kansas coach Lance Leipold to prove the conference is competitive. Dillingham's argument centered around the caliber of coaches in the conference. There are a lot of notable coaches, who've had historic careers, like TCU's Sonny Dykes, Colorado's Deion Sanders and Oklahoma State's Mike Gundy. Dillingham didn't mention those names and focused on the newest coach to the Big 12 this season, West Virginia's Rich Rodriguez. 'This league is so competitive,' Dillingham said. 'How many guys in our league have won a national championship? It's unbelievable. When you look at the [Leipold] sitting to my right, you look across, and it's Rich Rodriguez. That's a guy who could go into the Hall of Fame. He changed the entire game of how to play offensive football for an era. Our league is so competitive because I think the coaches in the league are phenomenal. I think we have one of the best-coached leagues out there.' The competitiveness of the Big 12 hasn't captured the eyes of the committee in the same way as the bigger conferences like the SEC and Big Ten, which helps Sankey's argument. However, the Big 12 is more competitive in some ways compared to the Big Ten. The Big Ten is top-heavy with teams that roll a lot of the weaker ones like, Penn State, Ohio State and Oregon. Whereas last year, the Big 12 had seven teams that were one game out of making the conference championship. Within the conference, the Big 12 is pretty competitive. Outside of the conference, the story changes. The Big 12 had just one team make the playoff, Dillingham's Sun Devils, and they were knocked out in the first round by the SEC's Texas. Dillingham agreed that maybe they were seeded too high, and welcomed the new seeding change that gives byes to the best four teams. 'It was a great change,' Dillingham said. ' Even though it would have negatively affected us last year. We lost two games going into it, so I think that would have been the right thing to do. I'm about, you should get what you earned that season. Last season, maybe we didn't earn the right to be the fourth seed. Maybe we earned the right to be the eighth seed. We finished ninth, 12th, whatever that was. I believe you earn your way to those seeds.' Dillingham liked the idea of the proposed five-plus-11 model that has five automatic qualifiers and then 11 at-large teams. Dillingham said he didn't care if there were more teams added, either. 'I really don't care,' Dillingham said. 'It's football. Football is fun. Sometimes we lose focus, and everybody focuses on the negative of college football and the negative of what all these things create. They don't focus on the positive. They don't focus on the fact that the experience our guys went through was one of the best experiences they'll ever have in their lives. It's just something they'll remember forever… If we add teams, it's an opportunity for those guys to be a part of something that they'll remember forever.' From the short 15 minutes the media received of Dillingham and Leipold, it sounded like they don't care about what happens to the College Football Playoff. They didn't complain or request a change to the system. All the Big 12 coaches want is to play football and for the games to be close. 'We just want competitiveness,' Dillingham said. 'We want the fact that you play games every year, and who knows who the best teams are going to be every year. I think that was more of the conversation of automatic qualifiers versus whether we just want to see the best teams every year. I think the coaches in our league, our ADs, just want the best teams. Whoever those best teams are in college football that year, let's have the best teams go for a championship.'

49ers rookie LB has already impressed Fred Warner in limited time together at OTAs
49ers rookie LB has already impressed Fred Warner in limited time together at OTAs

USA Today

time15 hours ago

  • USA Today

49ers rookie LB has already impressed Fred Warner in limited time together at OTAs

49ers rookie LB has already impressed Fred Warner in limited time together at OTAs San Francisco 49ers linebacker Fred Warner is one of the best in the league at what he does, and that's earned him All-Pro and Pro Bowl honors four times in his seven years since the team took him in the third round (No. 70 overall) of the 2018 NFL draft out of BYU. His performance earned him a three-year, $63 million extension with San Francisco this offseason, making him the highest-paid linebacker in NFL history. With that, it's not easy to impress Warner, but rookie linebacker Nick Martin has done just that in the early parts of the 49ers' offseason program. "I've loved everything that Nick's been about since he's arrived," Warner said during a recent media availability. "I heard the whole story about how he said he had my jersey before coming on the team... He's come in and he's asked me every single question known to man, like 'Fred, how are you doing this? What are you doing after practice? What are you doing after lift?' [He] wants to be a part of those things, and [he's not] afraid to ask those questions. "I've seen the athletic ability flash already on the field in the way that he closes space really quickly. He already has the great mindset of wanting to learn, so I'm really happy with where he's at." Martin, 22, was a three-star recruit out of Pleasant Grove High School in Texarkana, Texas, before committing to Oklahoma State for the 2021 season. With the Cowboys, he appeared in 35 games over four years, recording 203 tackles (24 for a loss), seven sacks, two interceptions, two forced fumbles and two fumbles recovered. He also earned All-Big 12 honors in 2023. San Francisco selected him in the third round (no. 75 overall) of this year's draft to not only help make up for Dre Greenlaw's departure, but also to fill in for Warner as the team's defensive signal caller, if necessary. Martin is projected to start his rookie year as a starter alongside Warner, and he's already started to prove himself to a player that he clearly grew up admiring on his journey to the pros. He'll have a chance to do that even more as the offseason program continues. More 49ers: Bryce Huff's teammate explains why it 'wasn't a great marriage' with Huff and Eagles

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store