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Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Clemson baseball transfer portal tracker 2025: Who's in, who's out for Erik Bakich
CLEMSON — The offseason is here for Clemson baseball despite its hopes to still be playing in the College World Series The Tigers (45-18) won their most games under coach Erik Bakich and most since 2018 to host a regional for the third straight season. However, they suffered an early elimination after losing to region No. 2 seed West Virginia and No. 3 Kentucky to fall way short of their CWS goal. Advertisement Now, Bakich looks to revamp his 2026 roster via the transfer portal as Clemson is losing key hitting and pitching contributors and looks to end its 15-year drought of not making it to Omaha. The transfer portal opened June 2 and will close July 1. Graduate transfers can enter outside of the window, and if a school's coach leaves, players on those rosters will have an additional 30-day window to enter the portal. Here's a look at who is leaving and joining Clemson baseball via the transfer portal. Who is transferring to Clemson baseball? Hayden Simmerson, RHP: Simmerson committed to Clemson on June 4. He posted a 3.36 ERA with Catawba, a Division II school, this season and led the country with 16 saves. He has two years of eligibility remaining. Advertisement Ariston Veasey, RHP: Veasey announced his commitment to Clemson on June 3. He appeared in five games with Alabama in 2025, posting a 9.82 ERA over 3⅔ innings. He has two years of eligibility remaining. Who is transferring out of Clemson baseball? Tristan Bissetta, OF: Bissetta entered the portal on June 4. He batted .227 with three home runs over 31 games in 2025 before a late-season injury. He has one year of eligibility remaining. Destination: TBA Ethan Darden, LHP: Darden entered the portal on June 2. He started in nine games this season and posted a 6.08 ERA with a 4-2 record. A triceps injury limited him to nine games. He has one year of eligibility remaining. Advertisement Destination: TBA Luke Brown, RHP: Brown made six appearances over two seasons with Clemson. He has a 21.60 ERA over 3⅓ innings. He has two years of eligibility remaining. Destination: TBA Jackson Cole, LHP: Cole redshirted in 2024 and made six appearances in 2025 with Clemson. He has a 14.73 ERA over 3⅔ innings. He has three years of eligibility remaining. Destination: TBA Derrian Carter covers Clemson athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email him at dcarter@ and follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter, @DerrianCarter00 This article originally appeared on Greenville News: Clemson baseball transfer portal tracker: Who's in, who's out for 2025


USA Today
3 days ago
- Sport
- USA Today
Everything Erik Bakich said after Clemson baseball was eliminated from NCAA Tournament
Everything Erik Bakich said after Clemson baseball was eliminated from NCAA Tournament With their backs to the wall, the Clemson Tigers turned in their ugliest performance of the season in Sunday's NCAA Tournament loss to the Kentucky Wildcats in the losers bracket of the Clemson Regional at Doug Kingsmore Stadium. It was a recipe for disaster for the Tigers, whose seven errors and 13 hits allowed led to another disappointing postseason ending on its home field. Kentucky took advantage of Clemson's miscues by scoring 11 runs between the third and fourth innings en route to a 16-4 victory. For the third straight season and the seventh time since 2011, Clemson was eliminated from the NCAA Tournament in front of its home fans. The Tigers finished the season 45-18 overall, one more victory than the program recorded in each of its previous two seasons under coach Erik Bakich. Bakich was disappointed by the team's loss but remained upbeat about the future and said that he thought the Tigers had even "overachieved" this season. Erik Bakich opening statement "Today obviously sucked and I don't want to dwell on how overly poorly we played in the game today when big picture (is) we have a group of seniors and a group of players that deserved a better finish than this. That's really the most disappointing thing; more disappointing than the seven errors and too many free passes and all the stuff. "You've got guys like Dom Listi, Andrew Ciufo, Josh Paino, Lucas Mahlstedt, Reed Garris and all of our seniors that have just poured their hearts out for this team. To win 45 games, sweep South Carolina, and we did -- even though we didn't come close to reaching our goals here in the month of June, there were some things that we'll look back on and say there were some positives to take away from this season. "I'm very disappointed that Cam Cannarella doesn't get to play in Omaha. That's a guy that comes around once every blue moon. A special talent like that, you want to see him shining the brightest on the biggest stage. I hate that for him, but I'm just in a mode right now where of course we're going to move on and look at what needs to happen for Team 129 to not be in this position. But right now, this moment, right here, this press conference, this is going to be about appreciation for our seniors. "For Team 128, when you look at our stats, it doesn't equal 45 wins. There's no way you look at our stat sheet and say, 'That's a 45-win team.' So you really look at it and say these guys emptied the tank and squeezed every drop of everything to have some of the success that we've had this year. All that credit goes to guys like Dom Listi, who empties the tank every single day as do the rest of them and play as hard as they can possibly play. So yeah, the way the game was today, there's obviously no good takeaways of today. But big picture, this group collectively did everything right except we didn't finish where we wanted to." Bakich on how he'll judge the 2025 team "I'd say it's a team that overachieved to get to 45 win; a team that was very consistent with their work ethic and just the intangibles that they brought starting Day 1 in the fall until the very end. There was never a question of effort, never a question of attitude. I'll just always remember this group as they found a way in so many close games, so many one-run games, tight games, they just found a way to flex their mental toughness and come out ahead. It's just incredible, really. Early in the season, when our first goal was in front of us with the Gamecocks, that was an awesome weekend. So they'll always have that. That will be part of the history book with this team. "But [ultimately], we fell short in the ACC, and we fell short in the postseason. We were one win away in the regular season and in the (conference) tournament from being champions and obviously ran out of gas here. It's a tough tournament. You have to understand how hard it is to get through a regional. Everybody's good now in college baseball. It's so important to get into the winners bracket and stay there. We didn't do it (Saturday). "We are not going to let the outcome of one game today sour what were some pretty good achievements for this team. But that being said, it's not good enough. I know that. I've been here for the best of Clemson baseball in 2002 and have experienced coming so close, playing for a national championship. It feels exactly like this. There's only one team truly happy at the end. "So you remember what this feels like and you also remember what it feels like to go to Omaha, too. You're playing with a chip and training with a motivation to not feel like this, but also to taste what it's like to experience the best of college baseball. Ultimately, that's the disappointing thing. When you love a group and the leaders and the kids and they do everything right, you just feel like they deserve to experience the best of college baseball. That's what makes the finality of a college season that falls short so tough." Bakich on Clemson fans, standing ovations for Cam Cannarella, Andrew Ciufo and Dominic Listi "The fans are awesome. We have one of the most passionate fan bases, so when you have a very passionate fan base, you know what you're going to get. They have high expectations, as do we. I think all of them appreciate what they've seen out of Cam Cannarella for the last three years. They understand. Some of them have been here since Coach [Bill] Wilhelm was here, and they've seen some star players come through this program. They recognize that that over the last three years, they've witnessed one of the best centerfielders in the history of college baseball -- if not the best. "So I appreciate them showing their appreciation for Cam, and then I think they recognize that Dom Listi and Andrew Ciufo were great additions to our team. Dom gets on base over 50 percent of the time. That's just insane. Andrew Ciufo has just played lights out shortstop all year long and he really surged here offensively as of late. So I think everybody appreciates when you have guys that come in here and contribute to help Clemson. We experienced that last year with some of the grad transfers and we got it this year with some of them as well." Here's the full postgame press conference with Erik Bakich's comments following Clemson's season-ending loss on Sunday, as well as comments from outfielder Dominic Listi. Contact us @Clemson_Wire on X, and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news and notes, plus opinions.
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Battered: Kentucky baseball thumps Clemson, eliminates Tigers from NCAAs
Clemson baseball's season has ended in a familiar spot: Its home ballpark. The Tigers were booted from the postseason with a 16-4 loss to Kentucky in an NCAA regional elimination game on Sunday at Doug Kingsmore Stadium Advertisement Clemson has now failed to advance out of a regional it hosted for the second time in three years and sixth time in seven tries. The team's streak of missing the College World Series in Omaha has also hit 15 years (2010). Roughly 12 hours after collapsing against West Virginia on Saturday, Clemson (45-18) didn't look like it was playing in a must-win game against Kentucky. The Tigers were plagued by poor pitching, poor defense and poor execution against Kentucky (31-25) in one of the more demoralizing losses of coach Erik Bakich's three-year tenure. 'No good takeaways from today,' Bakich said postgame. Kentucky junior James McCoy (13) scores during the NCAA baseball Clemson Regional at Doug Kingsmore Stadium in Clemson on Game recap In a game in which Bakich promised his team would 'empty the tank,' Clemson's outfield committed four errors in the first four innings and the Tigers burned through five pitchers after true freshman starter Talan Bell struggled. Advertisement After trailing 2-0 in the top of the first inning, Kentucky ripped off 11 runs in a two-inning span — including multiple scores on errors, wild pitches and free passes — to blow the game open and take a 13-3 lead on Clemson after four innings. It didn't get any better from there. Clemson's bats went cold on offense again — the Tigers' only run from the second through sixth inning came on a wild pitch — and they tallied a stunning seven outfield errors in less than six full innings. Clemson, the No. 1 seed in its region and No. 11 overall seed in the 64-team field, ultimately used six pitchers who surrendered 16 runs and 13 hits to Kentucky. The Wildcats, who entered batting .267, hit a scorching .470 (16-34) as a team. The Tigers, meanwhile, hit .257 (9-35) as a team, struck out 11 times and mustered just two runs in the last eight innings after scoring two runs in the top of the first. Advertisement Clemson's six pitchers allowed five unearned runs, four walks and three hit by pitches. Four of six pitchers (Bell, Jacob McGovern, Justin LeGuernic and B.J. Bailey) allowed at least three runs apiece. Another, Nathan Dvorsky, lasted just eight pitches. 'Today obviously sucked,' Bakich said. 'I don't want to overly dwell on how poorly we played in the game today, when, big picture, we have a group of seniors and a group of players that deserved a better finish than this.' 'So that's really the most disappointing thing, more disappointing than than seven errors and too many free passes and all the stuff.' Clemson Head Coach Erik Bakich gets a hug from Clemson outfielder Cam Cannarella (10) after the NCAA baseball Clemson Regional at Doug Kingsmore Stadium in Clemson, S.C. Sunday, June 1, 2025. Kentucky won 16-4, ending Clemson's season. 'Didn't finish where we wanted' Clemson, which reached the super regionals in 2024, has now failed to advance out of a regional it was hosting for the second time in three seasons under Bakich. Advertisement This is also the sixth time in seven tries — across three different coaches — that Clemson baseball has failed to advance out of a NCAA home regional and the 11th time in 12 regional appearances that Clemson's been eliminated. The Tigers were swept 2-0 at home by Florida in their super regional appearance last year. 'Things didn't go the way we expected or wanted, but this place still changed my life and gave me one of the best years of my life,' Clemson transfer left fielder Dominic Listi said. 'It's been amazing, even though we didn't get where we wanted to.' With the win, No. 3 seed Kentucky advances to Sunday night's regional championship against No. 2 West Virginia. UK must beat WVU twice to advance to the super regionals, while the Mountaineers need just one win. Clemson's regional is paired with the Baton Rouge Regional, featuring No. 6 LSU. Advertisement Bakich said he felt like this year's Clemson team overachieved, given how much production it lost from 2024. The Tigers, who ranked as high as No. 2 in the country in late April, will look back and find some positives in a year that included a sweep of rival South Carolina as well as a run to the ACC tournament championship game. But getting hammered by 12 runs in an elimination game is going to leave a mark. Same for the fact that Cam Cannarella, Clemson's star junior center fielder, a likely first-round MLB Draft pick who delivered time and time again in the postseason and could wind up getting his jersey honored at DKS, will never play in Omaha. 'When you look at our stats, it doesn't equal 45 wins,' Bakich said. 'These guys emptied the tank and really squeezed every drop of everything to have some of the success we've had this year. ... But we didn't finish where we wanted to.' 2025 Clemson baseball regional schedule All games at Doug Kingsmore Stadium in Clemson Advertisement Friday, May 30 Game 1: No. 2 West Virginia 4, No. 3 Kentucky 3 Game 2: No. 1 Clemson 7, No. 4 USC Upstate 3 Saturday, May 31 Game 3: No. 3 Kentucky 7, No. 4 USC Upstate 3 Game 4: No. 2 West Virginia 9, No. 1 Clemson 6 Sunday, June 1 Game 5: No. 3 Kentucky 16, No. 1 Clemson, 4 Game 6: No. 2 West Virginia vs. No. 3 Kentucky, 6 p.m. Monday, June 2 Game 7 (if necessary): No. 2 West Virginia vs. No. 3 Kentucky, TBD


USA Today
7 days ago
- Sport
- USA Today
Clemson baseball coach Erik Bakich announces Game 1 starter for Tigers' NCAA regional
Clemson baseball coach Erik Bakich announces Game 1 starter for Tigers' NCAA regional Clemson baseball coach Erik Bakich announced on Thursday his Game 1 starter for the Tigers' NCAA Tournament regional against USC Upstate. The Tigers (44-16 overall) will start sophomore right-hander Drew Titsworth in its NCAA Tournament opener at Doug Kingsmore Stadium Friday. First pitch is scheduled for 6 p.m. ET. The game will be televised on ACC Network. Bakich called the decision to start Titsworth a "no-brainer." "Drew Titsworth has got the ball (Friday)," Bakich told reporters Thursday, adding, "We knew we were going to do it the whole time. Kind of a no-brainer for us. So yeah, excited to see him get out there for us. I feel really confident when he's on the mound." Titsworth began the year in the bullpen but transitioned to the rotation as Clemson's Saturday starter when left-hander Ethan Darden was sidelined by an injury in April. In 19 appearances including six starts, Titsworth is 5-1 with a 4.26 ERA. He's struck out 48 batters and issued 14 walks through 50 2/3 innings. Friday will mark Titsworth's seventh consecutive appearance as a starter. "We spent a lot of time recruiting Drew and his family,' Bakich said. 'Obviously from Frakenmuth, Michigan, so he was committed to Michigan. We got a long look at him early in his high school career. Just watched him really over the last six years, and he's always been a starter. He didn't become a reliever until he got here last year and the early part of this year. "He's a big, strong, physical, durable kid. He's just got that physical makeup that his body can handle the starting role. So it was more just the timing and the opportunity had to present itself for him to get into the rotation. With us switching out Sunday starters and Ethan Darden getting hurt, it really just presented the opportunity." Clemson is the No. 11 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and is hosting a regional for the third consecutive season. The Tigers are ranked No. 12 in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll and No. 11 by the NCBWA. They're No. 9 in the RPI. USC Upstate (36-23) defeated Charleston Southern in the Big South tournament championship game on Sunday to clinch its first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance. "They've had a monster year and just have a lot of power hitters and 5-6 guys with double-digit homers and are coming off a dogpile," Bakich said of the Spartans. "We know they're feeling really good and confident and hot. "We have a lot of respect for them, their program. Their program's always been good, but they certainly have been playing with some extra juice this year." Contact us @Clemson_Wire on X, and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news and notes, plus opinions.


USA Today
27-05-2025
- Sport
- USA Today
Clemson baseball could get major contributor back in time for NCAA Tournament regional
Clemson baseball could get major contributor back in time for NCAA Tournament regional Clemson baseball could be getting a major boost to its pitching staff just in time for the start of the Tigers' NCAA Tournament regional this week. Coach Erik Bakich said Monday that left-hander Ethan Darden, who opened the season as the team's Saturday starter, could rejoin the Tigers in time for the Clemson Regional, which begins Friday. "There's a chance," Bakich told reporters Monday when previewing the Clemson Regional. "We thought maybe even he would have a chance this past weekend in the ACC Tournament, but it looks like, just from a precautionary standpoint, one more week would best serve him." Darden hasn't pitched since April 12. He started the year with a bang, posting a 1.64 ERA over his first four starts entering the Tigers' ACC opener against Notre Dame on March 14. After that, Darden struggled against both Wake Forest (six earned runs in 2 2/3 innings) and Georgia Tech (nine earned runs in 3 2/3 innings) before turning in a quality start against California in Berkeley on April 5. He tossed six innings and limited the Golden Bears to three runs on five hits. Darden's last appearance came on April 12 against Stanford. In that game, the junior from Rock Hill lasted only 1 2/3 innings and allowed five runs (three earned) on six hits. Bakich told The Clemson Insider in early May that Darden had been dealing with a "tricep thing." Clemson has since turned to sophomore right-hander Drew Titsworth as its Saturday starter in games. "He's thrown off the mound already, and so if all progresses well this week, he should get the all clear for this weekend," Bakich said of Darden. "So we'll see. I'd say probable, but not guaranteed." Darden was 5-5 with a 5.13 ERA in 19 appearances (11 starts) over 66 2/3 innings a season ago. His early season success this year included a dominant start against South Carolina in the Palmetto Series on March 1 in Greenville. Darden tossed seven shutout innings and held the Gamecocks to three hits while striking out six. For the season, he's 4-2 with a 6.08 ERA in nine starts. Bakich added that Clemson hadn't decided on a starter for its NCAA Tournament opener against No. 4 seed USC Upstate on Friday. The West Virginia Mountaineers and Kentucky Wildcats are also in Clemson's regional as the Nos. 2 and 3 seeds, respectively. Clemson (44-16 overall), the top seed in its host site regional and ranked No. 12 in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll, will face the Spartans (36-23) at 6 p.m ET at Doug Kingsmore Stadium Friday. The game will be televised on ACC Network. Contact us @Clemson_Wire on X, and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news and notes, plus opinions.