Showing posts with label baseball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baseball. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2015

Bob Brainerd Catches Up with Former Panther Josh Uhen

Bob Brainerd from Time Warner Cable SportsChannel is not only a pro in front of the television camera, but he can do a pretty impressive job writing stories as well.

Recently, he caught up with former Milwaukee pitcher Josh Uhen, who is now on the roster for the Wisconsin TimberRattlers in Appleton, Wis., the Single A Minor League affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers.

Uhen was selected by the Brewers in the fifth round of the 2013 Major League Baseball Draft with the 152nd overall pick. That made him the highest-ever selection in Milwaukee program history, topping the previous mark of ninth round set in 2012. In his last season in a Panther uniform, Josh went 1-0 with a 3.80 ERA, recording four saves in 21 appearances.

The link to the official story is HERE.

A copy of the text is below.

Wisconsin's Own

by Bob Brainerd

It’s a conundrum that challenges every Wisconsin kid who burns with the passion to play baseball in the Midwest. How does one go about taking the field on a regular basis when, five months out of the calendar year, it’s covered with snow, not to mention, frigid temperatures unfit for comfortable play on the diamond? “I guess it’s one of those things where you don’t know anything different,” said Wisconsin Timber Rattlers Pitcher Josh Uhen, an Oshkosh native. “You start out playing in pretty cold weather and when you’re younger, the season doesn’t start as early. But once you get into middle school and travel ball you just layer up. And once you get into high school you have fall ball and that’s just different layers and a bunch of Under Armour to keep you warm.”

Uhen sparkled at Oshkosh North to earn him the opportunity to play at the next level, but he didn’t escape Mother Nature’s grip on the game. “When I played in Milwaukee there were games where I played and it was below 30 degrees with snow shoveled off the field,” said Uhen, who pitched for the Panthers for two seasons. “I don’t think you ever really get used to it, you just learn how to play through it.”

Uhen found himself back in the mix of the myriad of brutal spring weather when he was promoted to the roster in Appleton to start the 2015 season. Being the local product under scrutiny didn’t phase Uhen one bit. In fact, he embraced his homecoming and chance to pitch under the microscope. “Coming into it I thought it would feel different playing this close to home,” said Uhen. “But when I’m out here competing and I’m out here at the field every day you almost forget you are so close to home. My friends and family do a really good job when I’m here…they know I’m at work, they know I’m here to get a job done. It’s really not distracting or getting in my way of anything.”

Uhen was the media darling back in April, being poked and prodded about his return to his roots. Someone even dug up an old photo of Josh on the field at Fox Cities Stadium attending a Timber Rattlers game on his birthday. “It’s worked out, as far as I’m concerned, very well,” said Uhen. “It’s nice to see family and friends here more often and they get a chance to see me. But ultimately it’s the same game and it doesn’t feel any different than if I was throwing where I did in years past.”

Uhen has always felt right at home in the Fox Valley because that’s where his baseball beginnings developed. “I played, but didn’t play on any of the select teams, just Legion ball with my buddies,” said Uhen. “I ended up going to the Showtime Sports Team Wisconsin…my Dad said there was a tryout in Kimberly, let’s go up there. It ended up going well and that’s where I got a feeling of where I stacked up against other players in the state. It was the first time they took readings and timings and stats and all that stuff. Right after my junior year was when I could say I can get to the next level.”

Uhen played outfield and pitched at Oshkosh North and became a Third Team All-State player for his play during his senior season. College coaches took notice, including Head Coach Scott Doffek and Assistant Head Coach/Pitching Coach Cory Bigler at Milwaukee. They were helping to run a tryout in Appleton, saw Josh throw and extended an offer to join their Division 1 program.

“They gave me chance to earn spot and compete right away,” said Uhen. “When I got there it was an eye-opener seeing all the older guys. I was playing with fifth-year seniors and you can definitely tell this is the stage in your life where the maturing gets accelerated. In high school it was all about competing and you think you know a lot about the game. In college, you learn how to play the game and the speed of the game picks up and you’re forced to make adjustments a lot quicker.”

Everything was falling into place for Uhen. He adjusted to the learning curve of campus life in the Horizon League and anticipated big things on the mound when spring sprung in 2011. “My freshman fall went pretty solid and they had plans to make me a mid-week starter and try to work me into that,” said Uhen. “But over the winter, that’s when I developed some elbow stuff.”

Stuff. Serious stuff. Soreness so painful that Uhen had to face his fear and accept he needed Tommy John surgery to repair his damaged wing. A deflating detour before he ever threw a pitch for the Panthers. “I went from being on Cloud Nine to hearing the news and it was tough,” said Uhen. “Anytime they say your career could potentially be in jeopardy it opens your eyes. Initially I was upset but once you have the surgery, your mindset changes from ‘Why me?’ to ‘OK, now I need to do everything I can’ to get back to where I was at.”

The Uhen support staff was well armed to tackle the emotional part. Bigler, hooked his pitching prospect up with Dr. William Raasch, the Brewers Head Team Physician in Milwaukee. Everyone else in the Uhen circle rallied to make sure his path still navigated forward. “My parents have always been big supporters and been very positive through the tough times and my coaches did a good job in helping me out,” said Uhen. “Once I had the surgery, it’s kind of self-motivating. I think one of my better qualities is being able to motivate myself and work through things. I pushed through it and it worked out well.”

Uhen followed the instruction manual on how to rehab from elbow surgery to the letter, even if there were parts he felt like skipping over to push the process along to return him to the mound in quicker fashion.

“The initial throwing program starts out extremely basic throwing from 15 feet and only using your wrist.” Uhen began. “That progresses and it’s so gradual that you don’t even realize it. The first time where it was noticeably a turning point was my first max-effort bullpen. We were at San Diego State and it was my first scheduled live bullpen airing it out. Our coach wanted to get the gun on my pitches just to see where I was at. I finished 87, 88, 89, and I wasn’t freaked out but worried thinking what happened? But then the next week we were in Arkansas and I threw a bullpen and all the velocity was back. I think it was just my body adjusting and trusting myself, trusting my rehab.”

While Uhen was closely monitoring his numbers on the radar gun, he was cognizant to realize he was beginning from the beginning and going back to the very basics of pitching to regain what he worked so hard to establish.

“The biggest thing is learning to pitch again, and it’s learning to pitch again from the beginning and getting your command back after not throwing for a year,” said Uhen. “You have to get a feel for your release point on your breaking ball and changeup. I don’t think I got that back until another season or two later because I threw 12 maintenance innings that were controlled starts my redshirt freshman year, then my redshirts sophomore year I didn’t get a lot of repetition because I was the closer. So it took me until my first year of pro ball to get that repetition and settle in. They always say it takes you a year to get back from surgery and it might take another full year to get back to being a pitcher instead of just a thrower.”

All this steady progress was convincing enough for the Brewers to tab Uhen in the fifth round of the 2013 MLB Draft, the highest slot a Milwaukee Panther has ever been selected. He got a taste of professional baseball that year pitching in 14 games for the Brewers Arizona Rookie League squad, then advanced to Helena and the Pioneer League in 2014, where Uhen went 2-4 in 15 games. Josh was healthy, normal, minus all the “stuff.”

“The biggest thing for me is the one on one competition from within a team sport,” said Uhen. “You need those other guys behind you to make plays, but ultimately, it’s a battle between you and the hitter and to me it’s competition at one of its highest levels. That’s one of those things where you’re trying to beat that one guy and that’s what is really fun for me.”

And what could be more fun than a promotion to your home state, playing in a ballpark 15 minutes from home base? Uhen has come out of the Wisconsin bullpen providing relief or a bridge to the back end of a starting pitcher tandem. An inning here, an inning there, Uhen had an ERA of 3.16 into mid-June, striking out 27 and walking just seven in 19 outings. “There are days I’ve even forgotten I had the surgery,” said Uhen. “After four years, no pain. Maybe that first year back I would think about it every now and then but most of the time I forget I even had it.”

But how quickly a dream season can turn into a potential nightmare. On June 26, Uhen was rocked in a home game against Clinton for nine earned runs. His elbow felt funky, and thoughts of that “stuff” returning crept back into his mind. “I’d be lying if I said no,” said Uhen. “But it was the first time in four years I’ve had any little something wrong around there. I guess that’s why I wanted to make sure it was alright. I wanted to make sure nothing was wrong because the last time I did feel something in there, things were really wrong. I felt some discomfort and I talked to our trainer and we figured it was best to just shut it down and rehab a little bit and get things right instead of trying to push through it. Health trumps everything.”

The shutdown sidelined Uhen for the majority of July, but certainly a better exchange than the year of baseball he lost in college. Uhen has overcome his latest setback and also taught himself another lesson in ways to avoid a mound absence in the future. “Coming out of the bullpen you get put in situations where you’ve got to hurry up and get loose quickly so I’ve got to take it upon myself throughout the game to stay loose, prepare, continue to stretch and keep warm because sometimes you can get away from that and that’s when injuries can happen.”

The mission for the remainder of Uhen’s Wisconsin Timber Rattlers experience is to remain healthy and continue to show the progress that the Brewers saw when he bounced back cleanly from a pitchers worst setback. Uhen will also lap up the luxury of heading back to his boyhood residence after the final out is recorded each night in Appleton.

“I have Brandon Diaz and Scott Lieser living with me too and it’s nice to get home cooked meals every now and then,” laughed Uhen. “It’s not as often as people might think because we’re at the field from 2pm until 11pm and I get home and my parents are in bed. I get up to come to the field and they’re at work so it’s really no different than having a different house family except for the fact they’re my parents. But it’s nice being able to stay in my own bed.”

When Josh Uhen rests his head on his familiar pillow his sleep state conjures up visions of one day pitching on a Major League mound. It’s the same dream every individual he shares a dugout with in Appleton has, with one exception. This is a Wisconsin kid, and a true blue Brewers fan, who admired the talents of Richie Sexson, Geoff Jenkins, Jeromy Burnitz and Ronnie Belliard.

“You know what you’ve got to do to get the job done, but I think my dream might be a little different just because I grew up a fan going to County Stadium growing up and then Miller Park,” said Uhen. “Seeing Craig Counsell come home and get the opportunity to play for the Brewers and the welcome that he got I think it would be absolutely unreal to get the opportunity to play for the team that I got drafted by and the team that I’ve loved my whole life.”

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Fox 6 Sports Does Feature Story on Baseball's Sam Kohnke

The following is reprinted from the Fox6Now.com website:

“100% better:” With cancer in remission, UWM baseball player hopes to make the most of this season

Posted 9:45 pm, April 21, 2015, by Tim Van Vooren, Updated at 02:01pm, April 22, 2015

MILWAUKEE (WITI) — There are more than 30 players on the UW-Milwaukee baseball team, but none of them is as happy to be there as one local product, who is happy to be anywhere.

Scott Doffek is in his 21st season coaching basketball at UWM. He pretty much knows the drill. When a player asks to meet with him in late summer, it’s usually about a workout plan for the fall or playing time for the upcoming season — something along those lines. In August 2014, Sam Kohnke told Doffek he had cancer.

“It was tough telling the coaches, but they were 100% behind me,” Kohnke said.

“He just said it straight out — ‘this is where I’m at,’ and from the moment he said it, you could see the attitude of ‘this is just another obstacle,'” Doffek said.

Kohnke has a history of tackling obstacles. From Nicolet High School, he went to UW-Whitewater, but he then transferred to UWM for graphic design and made the Panthers baseball team as a walk-on catcher/pitcher. Poised to enjoy his senior year, he was diagnosed with Stage Two Hodgkins Lymphoma. He was then faced with eight chemotherapy treatments over four months.

“It definitely beats you down. There’s about three or four days in there when you feel pretty crappy — not much you want to do, quite nauseous, but I knew that it was just, I knew I had to get through the first one and then focus on the next one and it was just kind of checking off checkmarks in the book — like I’ve got to get through eight of these,” Kohnke said.

Kohnke made it through and is now in remission. His joy over being back in his baseball uniform is obvious.

“To have the attitude that he does every single day is just pretty cool,” Doffek said. “I’ve gained a lot of new found knowledge and appreciation for life — to know that it could be taken away so quickly.”

Before any game, the Panthers share the field with their opponent. Kohnke has already taken on the toughest foe he’ll ever face — cancer, and he’s come out of the battle a better man.

“100% better. I think I’ve gained a lot of new found knowledge and appreciation for life — to know that it could be taken away so quickly. The little moments are really cool and I try to teach or instill that the idea of life is precious and you need to live every day, and it sounds incredibly cliche, but moments are important and they can become special,” Kohnke said.

“You can look at it as unfortunate to be put in his situation when you’re young, or you can look at it as fortunate, because now, the rest of his life, I think he’s going to have a different understanding of what actually is important, and I’m hopeful that that lesson resonates with all of our guys,” Doffek said.

Doffek speaks from a personal perspective — having lost a brother to cancer when he was in his 20s. The coach is squarely in Kohnke’s corner.

“You know, he hasn’t had a lot of opportunity to play much since he’s been here in the last year-and-a-half, but I won’t be surprised if there’s a game coming up where he’s a factor and he makes a big difference in a ballgame. And when that moment comes, I can guarantee you he’s not thinking about the time he spent getting chemo or radiation. He’s just one of us — trying to win a ballgame,” Doffek said.

The UW-Milwaukee Panthers are having a strong season, and Kohnke is hopeful he can help them in any way possible to maintain their success throughout the season. After graduation, he plans to become a graphic designer and work in Milwaukee. He already has a job offer stemming from an internship.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Former Panther Student-Athlete Hired at Holy Cross

Ricky Babcock, a former baseball player at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, has been hired as the assistant director of athletic facilities at the College of Holy Cross.

Click HERE to read the full release.

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Porcaro Featured in "IAMUWM" Video

Junior Mike Porcaro of the Milwaukee baseball team was the latest student-athlete to be featured in an IAMUWM video spotlight on UW-Milwaukee's homepage.

Watch it here:

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

MLB Draft Starts Later This Week

The Milwaukee baseball team recently wrapped up the 2013 campaign, but if the past two years are any indication, there will certainly be at least one more press release coming...

The Major League Baseball Draft gets underway Thursday. And, with that, the Panthers look to add to their impressive streak. Over the past two MLB drafts, UWM has seen four of its players get selected, including the first multi-pick draft in 2012 when three players were tabbed by big league clubs.

Last year, Jordan Guth (Philadelphia Phillies; ninth round), Eric Semmelhack (Milwaukee Brewers; 12th round) and Paul Hoenecke (Los Angeles Dodgers; 24th round) were all selected. The season prior, Chad Pierce was drafted by the Brewers in the 38th round, giving Milwaukee more draftees in that time period than any other Horizon League school.

The team again has a few players who could be among those selected in 2013. Leading the way is redshirt sophomore Josh Uhen, who I have seen projected as high as a second-round pick.

Here is the LINK to the MLB Draft Preview of Wisconsin, by the Perfect Game website, which features Uhen.

I decided to do some research, to see just who the highest draft choice in Horizon League history was. According to what I found, here is the list of players taken in the first 10 rounds (please email me any additions if I missed anyone!).

1. Brad Hennessey, Youngstown State, 2001 First Round, #21 by the San Francisco Giants
2. Jason Henry, UIC, 1984 Second Round, #84 by the NY Yankees
3. Curtis Granderson, UIC, 2002 Third Round, #80 by the Detroit Tigers
4. Joe Smith, Wright State, 2006 Third Round, #94 by the NY Mets
5. Justin Thomas, Youngstown State, 2005 Fourth Round, #113 by the Seattle Mariners
6. Jeremy Hamilton, Wright State, 2008 Fifth Round, #166 by the Philadelphia Phillies
7. Pat Neshek, Butler, 2002 Sixth Round, #182 by the Minnesota Twins
8. Justin Parker, Wright State, 2008 Sixth Round, #198 by the Arizona Diamondbacks
9. Kyle Gaedele, Valparaiso, 2011 Sixth Round, #203 by the San Diego Padres
10. Jordan Guth, Milwaukee, 2012 Ninth Round, #308 by the Philadelphia Phillies

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Baseball Team Honored By "College Sports Madness"

The "College Sports Madness" website named its 2013 Horizon League All-Conference Teams today and, as anyone associated with the Panthers this year would have guessed, it was UWM-heavy to say the least, especially with its specialty award winners.

(And, some of the positions for players are a bit questionable...)

The lists are below:

Field Player of the Year: Michael Porcaro, Milwaukee

Pitcher of the Year: Jake Long, Milwaukee

Freshman of the Year: Mitch Ghelfi, Milwaukee

Coach of the Year: Scott Doffek, Milwaukee

First Team

P Jake Long, Milwaukee
P Tomas Michelson, Illinois-Chicago
P Karch Kowalczyk, Valparaiso
IF Ryan Boise, Illinois-Chicago
IF Michael Porcaro, Milwaukee
IF Drew Dosch, Youngstown State
IF Garrett Gray, Wright State
IF Tanner Vavra, Valparaiso
OF Chris Manning, Valparaiso
OF Mark Fowler, Wright State
OF Derek Peake, Milwaukee
UTIL Andrew Bain, Valparaiso

Second Team

P Mike Schneider, Milwaukee
P Casey Henn, Wright State
P Ian Lewandowski, Illinois-Chicago
IF Josh White, Youngstown State
IF John Loeffler, Valparaiso
IF Will Fadness, Milwaukee
IF Nick Dinello, Youngstown State
IF Mitch Ghelfi, Milwaukee
OF Tyler Detmer, Illinois-Chicago
OF Jonathan Capasso, Milwaukee
OF Kieston Greene, Wright State
UTIL Ryan Solberg, Milwaukee

Thursday, May 16, 2013

FOX6′s Brandon Cruz went “Beyond the Game” with the UWM baseball team.

Brandon Cruz from FOX6 stopped by "the Hank" last week and put together a great piece on the Milwaukee baseball team.

He talked to head coach Scott Doffek and a handful of seniors, going through all of the adversity that the Panthers faced this spring with scheduling and the weather to claim their first Horizon League regular-season title since 2001.

Here is the LINK to the story.

And here is the embedded video:

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Weekend Pitchers Featured on Time Warner SportsChannel

JP Cadorin from Time Warner Cable SportsChannel stopped by Milwaukee baseball practice last week to interview the weekend pitching rotation that has carried the Panthers to an 8-4 start in the Horizon League, currently good for first place by two games.

Cadorin interviewed senior Jake Long (4-0, 0.79 ERA in league play), senior Cale Tassi (2-2, 4.43 ERA) and junior Mike Schneider (2-1, 3,27 ERA). The trio have combined to start all 12 conference games, with each making four starts.

Air times of the feature are listed below:

Thursday, April 18th: 4 p.m. and 10 p.m.

Saturday, April 20th: 6 a.m., 9:30 a.m., 6 p.m. and 10:30 p.m.

Sunday, April 21st: 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Jake Long Honored Again

On Monday, senior Jake Long of the Milwaukee baseball team was selected as the Horizon League Pitcher of the Week for the second straight time.

That marked the first time a UWM pitcher has ever accomplished that feat. Today, the "College Sports Madness" website also selected Jake as its "Horizon League Player of the Week".

See the awards page HERE.

Friday, August 24, 2012

More Baseball Coverage From Bob Brainerd

As stated last week, Bob Brainerd, the voice and face behind the Milwaukee women's basketball TV games on Sports 32 and also the voice of the PA system for the Milwaukee men, can also write a good story.

His next featured article is on Chad Pierce, the Panther pitcher who was selected by the Milwaukee Brewers in the 38th round of the 2011 Major League Baseball Draft after earning Horizon League Pitcher of the Year honors as a senior.

With his permission, here is the text. If you want to see the full article with pictures, click HERE.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

When the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers Opening Day roster was paraded out in early April, the media darling was local product Chad Pierce (@pierce_chad). A former 38th round pick of the Brewers, the right-hander had a following in Fond du Lac as well as Milwaukee, where he pitched for the Panthers in college.

Pierce provided the feel good sound bites of spring, hoping that the positive vibes would trickle into the season moving forward. Looking back to his Pioneer Rookie League campaign was not an option.

“Right now, the confidence is there, but last year at Helena, if I had a bad outing it played on my mind,” said Pierce. “That’s not how I really am, and this year I’ve been able to bounce back after a bad outing. If I have one, I look forward to righting the ship.”

Losing was a shock to the system for Pierce, who possessed a bulldog mentality pitching for the Panthers. His senior season was stellar, named an All-Conference first teamer and tabbed the Horizon League Pitcher of the Year. But the roll he was on came to a screeching halt in Helena.

“Last year my confidence was completely shot,” said Pierce, who went 2-4 in 15 games with an ERA of 6.64. “I don’t know if I was worn down from the college season or what but things were rolling around in my head and they shouldn’t be. Especially in this game where you fail so much you can’t have bad thoughts in your head.”

Pierce kept rewinding the tape to his high school days. His accolades included All-State, All-District and Fox Valley Athletics All-Conference honors three times. Baseball America listed the Fondy ace as the fifth best Wisconsin prospect. When his scholarship at the University of Arkansas didn’t seem like a solid fit after two seasons as a pitcher and a catcher, his transfer back to his home state was a rebirth.

But the past for Pierce couldn’t compensate for a 2011 present that jeopardized his future.

“Last summer I even had doubts in my head if I even belonged there because it was bad outing after bad outing,” said Pierce. “When you have failure that much, it gets into your head if you belong.”

His tonic was a simple return trip to his roots. Pierce insulted himself with a blanket stuffed with positive cushion. He also changed the scenery from the mountains of Montana to the campus life of Milwaukee.

“During the offseason I cleared my head, worked out hard back at school where the coaches confirmed to me that I belong,” said Pierce. “I talked to (Head Coach) Scott (Doffek) and (Pitching Coach) Cory (Bigler) quite a bit throughout the season. My parents told me how much they cared…told me I could do it.

“I just got after it and came into this season with the confidence that I had in high school and especially at UWM. I wanted to get back to who I was.”

The Pierce of the past has taken the hill in the Midwest League with a renewed purpose. The 24-year-old has been able to strap himself in and ride the baseball rollercoaster with no fear, able to exit the ride, turn right around and maneuver his way through the turnstile for another spin.

“Last summer, I can’t say I was like that,” said Pierce. “I was tip-toeing around a lot and didn’t have that mentality in me. This year, I’ve been able to clear my head and get that back.”

Confidence and consistency are the buzz words Pierce dispenses in his daily vocabulary. Beefing up his offerings to opposing hitters also assisted Pierce to a statistical turnaround.

“This year it’s all about my confidence compared to the way it was in Helena,” said Pierce. “For most of my outings I’ve been able to throw three pitches for strikes. At UWM last year, it was just my fastball and my changeup, or some days, just my fastball. This year, for the most part, it’s been more consistent…my confidence is there.”

The proper mindset has allowed Pierce to keep an even flow and counterpunch the highs and lows of professional baseball. His best start to date was on July 26 at Kane County, hurling seven shutout innings allowing just three hits and striking out eight. But two starts and two weeks later, Beloit belted Pierce off the bump scoring seven runs on eight hits in just four innings of work.

“Even in a couple of outings where I struggled, I still competed,” said Pierce. “That’s the mentality that I need. Now, even the times when I’ve gotten lit up a little bit our coaches told me ‘Way to get out of it…way to compete.’

“That’s who I am, that’s who I was in college where I would have outings and give up five or six runs in eight innings but they kept on throwing me out there because I’m still competing.”

The undo pressure of performing in front of the homefolks didn’t compound the problems Pierce was dealing with a season ago. Where some players might press to impress, Pierce lapped up the friendly surroundings of friends and family.

“I’ve felt better at home than I have on the road, and I don’t know if it’s comfort or what, but I just believe in my abilities this year,” said Pierce. “Being able to throw in front of your friends and your family all the time, it’s not an added pressure, it’s an added bonus. It’s made this season one that I’ll remember for a very long time.”

Home cooking, literally at times, helped jog the memories Pierce accumulated as a prep and collegiate standout. An easy road trip down Highway 41, Pierce has been home a handful of times this season, grabbing a meal, sleeping in his own boyhood bedroom.

“This season has definitely been one to get me back on track to be the pitcher I’ve been,” said Pierce.

Besides the comfort zone environment, Pierce was also eased into the Timber Rattlers rotation by piggy backing with right-hander David Goforth to start the season. Even though it was out of the norm for Pierce, getting a taste on the tail end of a start proved to be a settling force for the future.

“When I was coming in after Goforth, I was coming in usually in the seventh inning, sometimes in the sixth, so I didn’t have as many innings to cover,” said Pierce, who made 15 relief appearances, winning one game, saving two more. “I don’t know if my body was a little more amped up because it was only three innings I had to get through. But to be inserted into a starting role is something I have embraced. I’m a player who has a lot of routine and now instead of having to worry about my routine coming in after a guy, I now know exactly when I’m going to go in.”

Pierce has not only reclaimed his bulldog demeanor, he has pushed himself to go deep into ballgames, relishing the role of an innings eater. And while the season and postseason are still in play in Appleton, Pierce is already looking forward to an offseason on an uptick.

“Throughout the year, you always think about something I might change in the offseason,” said Pierce. “I’ve been working on a little cutter here and there and that might be something I work on in the offseason. Right now, I’ve got my three pitches and I’m trying to work with them the best that I can and leave the tinkering to after the season.”

The offseason is also where Chad Pierce will set aside his time to dream. For a kid from Fond du Lac, who grew up attending and admiring games involving the Brewers, the fantasy seems all too real and tangible at times.

“I don’t even know if words can describe it,” said Pierce. “Ever since I was a little kid I dreamed about playing at County Stadium and now, Miller Park. I’m getting that opportunity right now and it’s definitely a dream. I’ve always wanted to play for the Brewers, and right now, I’m having a good season and hopefully people in the organization have seen that and they realize I have something I can bring to the table.

“It’s a surreal moment, and people that come to the games, whether they are 20 or 70, are wishing they were still out there playing. I’m out there and it’s a dream to play here and hopefully make it up to the big club.”

Friday, August 17, 2012

In Case You Missed It...

Bob Brainerd, the voice and face behind the Milwaukee women's basketball TV games on Sports 32 and also the voice of the PA system for the Milwaukee men, can also write a good story.

Recently, he penned a great article on Eric Semmelhack, the Panther pitcher who was selected by the Milwaukee Brewers in the 12th round with the 395th overall pick of the 2012 Major League Baseball Draft.

With his permission, here is the text. If you want to see the full article with pictures, click HERE.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Home may be where the heart is, but it also appears to be where Wisconsin Timber Rattlers pitcher Eric Semmelhack (@ESEMMEL33) builds his career on the bump.

The former Oak Creek standout parlayed his way into a Division 1 roster spot on the UW-Milwaukee Panthers, and then got drafted by his hometown Milwaukee Brewers back in June. After some initial seasoning in Helena with Milwaukee’s Pioneer League rookie squad, Semmelhack is back in the comfortable surroundings of Appleton.

“I can’t say that it has sunk in, really,” said Semmelhack, a 12th round selection by the Brewers in the First-Year Player Draft. “I know I’m a part of the organization, I know I’m here for a reason and a purpose, but it just feels like I got incorporated into Appleton’s team and I think that’s the way I’m going to approach things.

“I’m with one team, and if I try doing the best I can with that one team, eventually it leads to better teams, if I have success.”

How Semmelhack even positioned himself to begin his climb up the Brewers company ladder as an armed prospect is worthy of review when you consider this pitcher didn’t really pitch until late in the game.

“I was always a hitter,” said Semmelhack, who played in a utility role at Oak Creek High School. “I really started pitching my junior year of high school. I was very raw, throwing it around here and there. They needed arms, and I had an OK one at the time, so that’s how that happened.”

What happened next was a transformation. Semmelhack’s arm began to blossom but the right-hander was barely aware, fixated on maintaining the strong tradition of Knights baseball, State Champions a record three years in a row prior to his stint with the Knights.

“I wanted to go there and keep the tradition rolling,” said Semmelhack. “It’s kind of a legacy that the guys left behind and you don’t want to be the ones to go in there and mess up the tradition. You try to maintain that and do as well as you can. It was pretty hard to repeat what they did, but I just tried to keep the tradition going of good baseball players coming out of Oak Creek.”

Semmelhack was very good, a workhorse during his senior season, logging more than 85 innings on the mound, notching ten wins and nearly 100 punch outs. UW-Milwaukee saw the upside, while Semmelhack saw an opportunity to continue the climb up the learning curve.

“I got stronger as a person in college because I peaked kind of late,” said Semmelhack. “When I first got to college I was still just throwing the ball…they called me a thrower, because I didn’t have awesome pitches, just going out there and threw my fastball as hard as I could and tried to get it in the strike zone. That worked for a little bit in college, but then throughout the years, it was about developing better mechanics, more off-speed pitches, and toward the end, trying to stay down in the zone.

“That’s what it was all about and now I’m here learning a bunch of new things and hopefully keep incorporating them and getting better.”

From Head Coach Scott Holler at Oak Creek, to Panthers skipper Scott Doffek, Semmelhack was all ears no matter which Scott was in them. With such a small sample size on the mound, there were plenty of lessons to be learned for this true student of the game.

“I had a lot of good people giving me a lot of help,” said Semmelhack. “I try to take in what everybody tells me, and through the course of all the people and instruction I was given in high school and college it led me to where I am right now.

“I’m still very raw and new and I learn something new every day and that’s what keeps me going…that I can keep getting better and piece it together.”

Listening may be one of Semmelhack’s bonus traits, but he also possesses the ability to keep a keen eye on his counterpart on the hill.

“If something is working for somebody else I want to have the edge on that too,” said Semmelhack. “I take listening very seriously and the more you can take in the more you can see what works and what doesn’t. It’s all part of trying to grow as a pitcher and as a person. I appreciate all the advice I get and I try to use it to the best of my advantage.”

One feature film he just won’t watch is one starring himself in the lead role. Semmelhack chooses to let others watch that action flick.

“I always think about if I was hitting, what would I look like in the batter’s box?” wondered Semmelhack. “I don’t really watch myself, I just know how I did then let the coaches tell me what they think and work on it.”

Someone who has been watching Semmelhack play and pitch from an early age is Eric’s father, Mike. A basketball player back in his day, Mike never played baseball on an equal level as his son, but he was able to coach and team Eric the value of competing at a very high level.

“He was always coaching my traveling teams and fall league teams, and he coached me right up until eighth grade and high school,” said Semmelhack. “It was about going out there and doing the best with what you have. That’s been my drive since I started playing baseball. I might not have the best stuff but as long as I can go out there and compete and give my team a chance to win, that’s the main point.

“That’s what he preached and struck home with me…you’re not always going to have great days, fight your way through it and that’s what makes you a better player.”

The bond is somewhat detached now, at least for Mike. Like an expecting father, Eric’s dad paces the ballpark when his son is in the spotlight on the mound, too jittery to sit still in one place for a nine inning affair.

“That’s what he’s done since high school, just paces,” laughed Semmelhack. “Even with people he knows, like when Chad (Pierce) pitches, he’ll be pacing around.”

Eric’s pace has been hectic, to say the least, since he was plucked from the talent pool by the Brewers in June. Mike was the one who flagged down his son with news from the draft while his son was running pregame drills with the Lakeshore Chinooks of the Northwoods League. After six games in Helena, shuffling within the Milwaukee organization brought Semmelhack back to Wisconsin to continue his work in progress two hours from his home base.

Priority one: Continue to stop, look and listen.

“As a junior in high school I was throwing well, we went to State, and during the whole recruiting process I picked up tips,” recalled Semmelhack. “I even picked up stuff watching other people, watching Major League games and college games. I kind of have my own mechanics, that’s always been the harp on me that my mechanics were not always the cleanest, but it’s a lot of learning from other people and trying to incorporate things that may drastically fail, but other things kind of work.”

Cataloging all of these helpful tidbits is a job itself, which may help explain why the overpowering notion of a kid from Wisconsin playing in the Brewers organization isn’t so overwhelming after all.

“I think the other stuff comes in the offseason when people talk about it,” said Semmelhack. “We’re playing games and every day you have a focus and it’s not about being with the Brewers, it’s about improving my game.

“Sometimes you get glimpses of it, you’re able to step back and say I am a part of the organization and that’s a cool feeling. But in the grand scheme of things it’s all about focusing and worrying about that next start and getting through it.”

Eric Semmelhack may exhale at season’s end and savor the thought of home cooking on his plate. An Oak Creek Knight, Milwaukee Panther, and now Wisconsin Timber Rattlers pitcher…does he dare to dream of padding his hometown resume as a member of the Milwaukee Brewers?

“I don’t really consider it a dream, I think of it as a goal,” said Semmelhack. “We put all that time and effort that we can into this, traveling, playing baseball, working every day at it, so I think it’s more about achieving the goal. If I can, that’s great, and if I fall short with all the work I’ve put into it, that’s OK, and it’s back to the real life.

“But I’ll try putting off the real life as long as I can.”

Friday, May 25, 2012

Live Blog: Baseball vs. Wright State at HL Tournament

Join UWM assistant SID Chris Zills for a live blog from Les Miller Field as the Panthers take on Butler on the baseball diamond in an elimination contest at the Horizon League Tournament. First pitch of Thursday's 9-inning affair is set for 10 a.m.

Panthers Featured on WUWM News

Courtesy of www.wuwm.com

The trial of baseball great Roger Clemens is in its sixth week. He stands accused of lying to Congress, stemming from his sworn testimony in 2008 that he had never used steroids. Clemens’ blazing speed on the mound earned him the nickname, “The Rocket.” He won baseball’s coveted Cy Young award seven times. Clemens attributes his success to hard work. A former strength coach claims he injected the all-star with steroids or the human growth hormone.

We chatted with members of the UWM baseball team during batting practice, to ask how they view the alleged use of steroids in their sport.

AUDIO HERE:

LINK TO STORY PAGE: HERE

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Live Blog: Baseball vs. Butler at HL Tournament

Join UWM assistant SID Chris Zills for a live blog from Les Miller Field as the Panthers take on Butler on the baseball diamond in an elimination contest at the Horizon League Tournament. First pitch of Thursday's 9-inning affair is set for 10 a.m.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Live Blog: Baseball vs. YSU at HL Tournament

Join UWM assistant SID Chris Zills for a live blog from Les Miller Field as the Panthers take on Youngstown State on the baseball diamond in the first game of the Horizon League Tournament. First pitch of Wednesday's 9-inning affair is set for 4 p.m.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Baseball vs. Wright State on TWC Sports 32

Time Warner Cable Sports 32 picked a great game to televise today, with the Milwaukee baseball team winning a thriller, 7-6, after senior Phil Striggow hit a two-run home run in the bottom of the eighth inning.

The game can be seen on a tape-delay basis at the following times over the course of the next week:

Saturday, May 19 at 3:30 p.m.
Sunday, May 20 at 8 p.m.
Monday, May 21 at 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday, May 23 at 9:30 a.m.

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Live Blog: Saturday Baseball at UIC

Join UWM assistant SID Chris Zills for a live blog from Les Miller Field as the Panthers take on UIC on the baseball diamond. First pitch of Saturday's 9-inning affair is set for 6:05 p.m.

Friday, May 4, 2012

Live Blog: Friday Baseball at UIC

Join UWM assistant SID Chris Zills for a live blog from Les Miller Field as the Panthers take on UIC on the baseball diamond. First pitch of Friday's 9-inning affair is set for 6:05 p.m.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Live Blog: Baseball at Iowa

Join UWM assistant SID Chris Zills for a live blog from Duane Banks Field as the Panthers take on Iowa on the baseball diamond. First pitch of Tuesday's 9-inning affair is set for 6:05 p.m.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Live Blog: Baseball at Northern Illinois

Join UWM assistant SID Chris Zills for a live blog from Ralph McKinzie Field as the Panthers take on Northern Illinois University on the baseball diamond. First pitch of Tuesday's 9-inning affair is set for 3:05 p.m.