The anatomy of a turnaround: John Cohen & his success as UK’s baseball coach

April 27, 2008

Story by Jonathan Smith | Staff

When John Cohen got to UK in 2003, he inherited a recruiting class that had two players. That wasn’t the program’s only problem, though. It also had the Southeastern Conference’s most antiquated facilities and most apathetic fans. Yet Cohen managed to overcome all of that and orchestrate a major turnaround of the UK baseball program.

John Shelby was lost.

The freshman - half na’ve, half nervous - was on his way to the UK baseball offices to meet his new coach, John Cohen.

Even though he was new to the campus, he thought he was going in the right direction.

He arrived at the baseball offices. He found Cohen. He even shook his hand. But he was still going in the wrong direction.

“Hey man, I’d really appreciate it if you just turned your hat around,” Cohen said to Shelby. “That’s something that’s going to be important to us.”

Shelby complied.

“The bill of your cap represents the direction in life you’re going,” Shelby recalls Cohen saying. “You can either go forward or backward.”

From that point on, Shelby wore his hat forward. And from that point on, the UK baseball program only went forward.

The turnaround was beginning.

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Photo illustration by Ed Matthews | Staff


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Cliff Hagan bullpen is the throne for redshirts

April 25, 2008

Story by Matthew George | Staff

A group of jersey-clad teammates huddles outside the waist-high brick wall that separates the playing field from the rest of Cliff Hagan Stadium.

The group chews and spits, devouring handfuls at a time of baseball’s miniature delicacies while engaging in their best “Seinfeld” dialogue.

“You know David’s sunflower seeds are the best,” one said.

“Whatever, man. I still prefer Spitz,” another argued. “I like them because they are bigger. Plus, I think they taste better.”

Suddenly, a lanky figure emerges from the home dugout, lumbering toward them, followed in tow by a boulder garbed in blue sweats with his cap drawn low, shielding his face.

“Let’s get Aaron ready!” shouts the boulder, who as he draws nearer is identified as assistant strength coach Mike Brown.
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Redshirt catcher T.J. Daugherty, left, chats during UK’s game against Florida on Saturday. Photo by Britney McIntosh | Staff

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Seniors relish final games as Cats

April 23, 2008

Story by Bobby Reagan | Staff

The 2008 campaign for the UK softball team is coming to an end, as are the careers of five seniors.

Starting today, the Cats (16-31, 3-19 Southeastern Conference) will host their final two opponents at the UK Softball Complex this season. UK will face Eastern Kentucky today at 5 p.m. before a three-game set with Georgia this weekend.

The Cats weren’t given much credit by SEC voters at the beginning of the season with most preseason polls picking UK to finish dead last in the conference. Much to the chagrin of the Cats, the polls have been right, as UK has posted just a 3-19 record in the conference.

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Senior first baseman Ashley Dimkich slides into home plate during UK’s doubleheader loss to Louisiana State on April 9 at the UK Softball Complex. Photo by Elliott Hess | Staff

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Football dominates UK’s 6th-annual CATSPY Awards

April 22, 2008

 Story by Bobby Reagan | Staff

Throughout the year, the UK football team dominated the headlines for its season filled with dramatic wins and capped with its second consecutive Music City Bowl win. Last night, when all 491 students comprising every UK athletic team came together for the CATSPY Awards at Memorial Coliseum, it was the football team that once again stole the show.

The gridiron Cats proved to be the big winners of the evening, taking eight awards, including Team of the Year. Senior quarterback Andre Woodson was named the K-Association Male Athlete of the Year and head coach Rich Brooks won Coach of the Year.

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Senior running back Rafael Little celebrates as he makes his way to the stage to receive his Blue Heart Award last night at the CATSPY Awards in Memorial Coliseum. The Blue Heart Award honors an athlete who overcame many injuries during the season. Photo by Britney McIntosh | Staff

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Gators walk-in final run

April 21, 2008

Story by Travis Waldron | Staff

Florida freshman pitcher Tommy Toledo toed the rubber with the game on the line. Three of his first four pitches had missed the strike zone. With the bases loaded, this one couldn’t.

Toledo set. He looked home. His fastball popped the catcher’s mitt. It was low and away. The game was over.

UK’s Brian Spear drew the walk in the bottom of the 10th inning, giving the Cats a series-clinching 3-2 win yesterday at Cliff Hagan Stadium.

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Senior first baseman Brian Spear celebrates after hitting a sacrifice fly, scoring a run in the bottom of the third inning of UK’s 3-2 win over Florida yesterday. Spear drew the game-winning walk in the bottom of the 10th. Photo by Ed Matthews | Staff

“If you don’t win at home, you’ve got no chance of getting to the postseason,” UK head coach John Cohen said. “The road is treacherous. It’s bad for everybody.”

Due to Southeastern Conference rules and No. 24 Florida’s (25-15, 10-8 SEC) travel plans, the two teams couldn’t begin a new inning after 4 p.m. After junior closer Scott Green (4-2) retired the Gators in order in the top of the 10th inning, the No. 17 Cats (30-9, 9-9 SEC) came to bat knowing the stakes: It was now or never.

Sophomore left fielder Keenan Wiley lined the first pitch of the inning into left center field, where a diving Avery Barnes came up just short. The ball kicked off Barnes into shallow center field, and Wiley had a leadoff double.

“We knew he’d been throwing a lot of fastballs away, and that was really the pitch I was looking for,” Wiley said. “I saw it hit off him and when it went in the air, I was like, I got to try for two.”

Junior center fielder Collin Cowgill bunted the next pitch to the third base side, moving Wiley safely to third before a late tag. An intentional walk to Sawyer Carroll brought the UK crowd to its feet, the Florida infielders to the edge of the grass and Spear to the plate.

That’s when Toledo walked Spear to give the Cats the win.

The Cats are now just two games behind South Carolina for second place in the SEC East, and the win may have huge implications for the SEC finish. Last season, the Cats tied Louisiana State in a similar situation and missed the SEC Tournament by a half-game. Had they won, they would have advanced to the tournament.

“We didn’t want to let that happen again today,” senior pitcher Greg Dombrowski said. “It was a huge win for our team.”

With UK fighting for its SEC life, the defeat of Florida may lead to a better outcome at the end of the season.

After two high-scoring games to begin the series - an 11-7 UK win Friday and a 13-7 Florida win Saturday - Sunday’s series-deciding game was the exact opposite.

For nearly seven innings, Dombrowski and Florida’s Stephen Locke battled, each giving up two runs. Dombrowski worked ahead in the count all day by throwing first-pitch strikes to 22 of the 28 batters he faced. He tossed 6.2 innings, allowing seven hits and two runs.

“Greg set the pace,” Cohen said. “He doesn’t give advantage counts to anyone to work off of, and when he’s doing that he’s very hard to handle. He just competes his tail off. He does all the little things that are completely necessary to win in this league.”

UK took an early 1-0 lead on Cowgill’s 15th home run of the season. Cowgill reached base on 12 of his 14 plate appearances in the series.

The Cats pushed the lead to 2-0 with a little help from Florida in the bottom of the third. Wiley led off with a single and, after advancing to second on a pickoff attempt, moved to third on a wild pitch by Locke. Spear plated Wiley on a sacrifice fly to center field.

UK held a 2-0 lead until the sixth, when Florida’s Matt den Dekker lined a two-run home run over the right field wall to tie the game.

“It was a mistake,” Dombrowski said. “I left a change-up up and middle, and he made me pay for it.”

The win was UK’s 30th win of the season, making this the third straight season the Cats have reached that mark. The only other time UK has won 30 games in three consecutive seasons was 1991-94.

E-mail twaldron@kykernel.com.

 

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