West Virginia has the best overall and road records in Division I baseball, and the Big 12-leading Mountaineers are doing it with a first-year coach and a No. 1 pitcher who spent his first four seasons at a Division II school in Illinois.
College baseball notebook: 30-4 Mountaineers build nation’s best record with rebuilt pitching staff
West Virginia has the best overall and road records in Division I baseball, and the Big 12-leading Mountaineers are doing it with a first-year coach and a No. 1 pitcher who spent his first four seasons at a Division II school in Illinois.
The Mountaineers have won 10 straight and their 30-4 record gives them a .882 winning percentage, which ranks ahead of Arkansas’ .865 (32-5). Their three-game weekend sweep at Houston made them 18-1 on the road.
"I think this school and the state take a lot of pride in grit, and they take a lot of pride in having no excuses and showing up regardless of situation and battling through adversity," coach Steve Sabins said. "Whether it’s weather-related or public perception-related or anything else, being able to go do hard things is what the program is built on. No secret sauce.”
The offense is more productive than a year ago, when the Mountaineers went 36-24 and made a super regional. There’s a .300 hitter in every spot in the order, led by Skylar King’s team-best .377, and the Mountaineers have stolen 86 bases and have six players with at least eight.