1998 USC Trojans baseball team

The 1998 USC Trojans baseball team represented the University of Southern California in the 1998 NCAA Division I baseball season. The team was coached Mike Gillespie in his 12th season.

1998 USC Trojans baseball
ConferencePacific-10 Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 1
CBNo. 1
Record49–17 (21–9 Pac-10)
Head coach
Home stadiumDedeaux Field
1998 Pacific-10 Conference baseball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Northern
No. 13 Washington  xy 177 .7084117 .707
Oregon State   159 .6253514 .714
Washington State   1212 .5002524 .510
Portland State   420 .1671734 .333
Southern
No. 9 Stanford  xy 228 .7334214 .750
No. 1 Southern California  y 219 .7004917 .742
No. 2 Arizona State  y 1811 .6214123 .641
Arizona   1218 .4003323 .589
UCLA   1119 .3672333 .411
California   524 .1722232 .407
x Division champion
y Invited to the NCAA tournament
As of June 30, 1998[1]
Rankings from Collegiate Baseball

The Trojans won the College World Series, defeating the Arizona State Sun Devils in the championship game.

Roster

1998 USC Trojans roster
 

Pitchers

  • Rik Currier
  • Don DiDomizio
  • Seth Etherton
  • Tanner Eriksen
  • Ronald Flores
  • Marco Hernandez
  • Steve Immel
  • Craig Jones
  • Shaun Kramer
  • Jack Krawczyk
  • Peter Krogh
  • Jason Lane
  • Raul Lepe
  • Mike Penney
  • Jason Saenz
  • Chris Tessman
  • Brian Vieira
  • Mike Weibling
  • Taiki Yamaoka
 

Infielders

  • Carlos Casillas
  • Oscar Casillas
  • Dominic Correa
  • Seth Davidson
  • Morgan Ensberg
  • Robb Gorr
  • Ray Kasper
  • Brandon Mugavero
  • Bill Peavey
  • Josh Persell
  • Wes Rachels
  • Kevin Schultz
 

Outfielders

  • Jeremy Freitas
  • Greg Hanoian
  • Rod Perry, Jr.
  • Brad Ticehurst
  • Tony Alston
  • Ivan Garcia

Catchers

Schedule

1998 USC Trojans baseball game log
Regular season
January/February
DateOpponentScoreOverall recordPac-10 record
January 30Long Beach State16–41–0
February 1Long Beach State9–52–0
February 7Texas5–33–0
February 7Texas5–63–1
February 8Texas7–153–2
February 10at Long Beach State12–34–2
February 13vs. North Carolina10–05–2
February 14vs. North Carolina16–96–2
February 15vs. North Carolina10–27–2
February 18at Cal State Fullerton3–28–2
February 20vs. Arizona10–39–21–0
February 21vs. Arizona4–110–22–0
February 22vs. Arizona2–310–32–1
February 25at Pepperdine5–211–3
February 27UCLA6–112–33–1
February 28UCLA10–913–34–1
March
DateOpponentScoreOverall recordPac-10 record
March 1UCLA7–1213–44–2
March 3UC Santa Barbara15–814–4
March 6Oregon State9–015–4
March 7Oregon State7–416–4
March 8Oregon State6–1316–5
March 14Arizona State7–617–55–2
March 14Arizona State13–518–56–2
March 15Arizona State6–319–57–2
March 17Loyola Marymount6–420–5
March 20at Arizona6–421–58–2
March 21at Arizona7–622–59–2
March 22at Arizona10–623–510–2
March 24Pepperdine11–124–5
March 27at California10–625–511–2
March 28at California7–626–512–2
March 29at California8–127–513–2
April
DateOpponentScoreOverall recordPac-10 record
April 1Cal State Fullerton4–727–6
April 3Stanford0–127–713–3
April 5Stanford6–727–813–4
April 5Stanford7–428–814–4
April 6Hawaii-Hilo12–329–8
April 9at Arizona State3–1829–914–5
April 10at Arizona State5–729–1014–6
April 11at Arizona State4–2429–1114–7
April 14at Loyola Marymount6–1229–12
April 17California10–030–1215–7
April 18California14–1331–1216–7
April 19California5–232–1217–7
April 21at San Diego State9–433–12
April 24at UCLA14–634–1218–7
April 25UCLA17–1834–1318–8
April 26at UCLA17–1235–1319–8
April 28San Diego State17–1036–13
April 29UC Santa Barbara9–837–13
May
DateOpponentScoreOverall recordPac-10 record
May 9at Stanford2–437–1419–9
May 10at Stanford5–238–1420–9
May 11at Stanford5–139–1421–9
May 15at Portland State10–240–14
May 15at Portland State6–740–15
Post-season
DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall record
May 21vs. FordhamTiger Field10–641–15
May 22vs. Virginia CommonwealthTiger Field4–1441–16
May 23vs. ClemsonTiger Field8–542–16
May 23vs. South AlabamaTiger Field3–243–16
May 24vs. South AlabamaTiger Field4–344–16
DateOpponentSite/stadiumScoreOverall record
May 30vs. LSURosenblatt Stadium10–1244–17
June 1vs. FloridaRosenblatt Stadium12–1045–17
June 2vs. Mississippi StateRosenblatt Stadium7–146–17
June 4vs. LSURosenblatt Stadium5–447–17
June 5vs. LSURosenblatt Stadium7–348–17
June 6vs. Arizona StateRosenblatt Stadium21–1449–17

Awards and honors

Rik Currier
  • Freshman All-America[2]
Seth Davidson
  • Freshman All-America[2]
  • All-Pac-10 First Team[2]
Morgan Ensberg
  • All-America Third Team[2]
  • All-Pac-10 First Team[2]
Seth Etherton
Jeremy Freitas
  • All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention[2]
Rob Gorr
  • College World Series All-Tournament Team[2]
  • All-Pac-10 First Team[2]
Jack Krawczyk
  • College World Series All-Tournament Team[2]
  • All-America First Team[2]
  • All-Pac-10 First Team[2]
Jason Lane
  • College World Series All-Tournament Team[2]
Eric Munson
  • College World Series All-Tournament Team[2]
  • All-America Second Team[2]
  • All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention[2]
Wes Rachels
Brad Ticehurst
  • College World Series All-Tournament Team[2]
  • All-Pac-10 Honorable Mention[2]

Trojans in the 1998 MLB Draft

The following members of the USC baseball program were drafted in the 1998 Major League Baseball Draft.[4]

Player Position Round Overall MLB Team
Seth EthertonRHP1st18thCalifornia Angels
Jason SaenzLHP3rd94thNew York Mets
Brad TicehurstOF8th233rdTexas Rangers
Mike PenneyRHP8th236thMilwaukee Brewers
Morgan Ensberg3B9th272ndHouston Astros
Rob Gorr1B14th426thLos Angeles Dodgers
Craig JonesRHP16th467thKansas City Royals
Jeremy FreitasOF25th737thKansas City Royals
Jack KrawczykRHP25th746thMilwaukee Brewers
Jeff DePippoC27th813thCleveland Indians
Wes Rachels2B33rd974thPhiladelphia Phillies

See also

References

  1. "College Baseball Conference Standings – 1998". Boyd's World. Retrieved May 2, 2015.
  2. "2012 USC Trojans Baseball Media Guide" (PDF). USCTrojans.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 12, 2012. Retrieved July 2, 2012.
  3. "College World Series record Book" (PDF). NCAA.org. Retrieved June 22, 2012.
  4. "MLB Amateur Draft Picks who came from "University of Southern California (Los Angeles, CA)"". Baseball-Reference. Retrieved July 4, 2012.
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