Sportradar

2022-06-25 03:11:25 By : Ms. Michelle Zou

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OMAHA  — Just like the softball team, the Oklahoma baseball team is on to the Championship Finals. That's thanks to a second win over Texas A&M in the last five days, this time a 5-1 triumph in the Men's College World Series Semifinals.

And after that thrilling victory, head coach Skip Johnson met with the media to give his thoughts. OUInsider.com presents all of those right here.

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SKIP JOHNSON: I thought Sandlin set the tone early executing one pitch at a time. That's what we talked about. We practiced it, actually, the other day in the shadowing, and Jimmy getting a big hit, separating the game. When you get to separate in the game early, you tend -- your breaking ball gets better, your fastball command gets better, getting a lead early.

Then it's just about establishing a strike zone and throwing strike one and going pitch to pitch. Really proud of our club. Hats off to Texas A&M. Had a really good team. To navigate through that lineup was really hard at times, and just really proud of our baseball team and what we've done.

Q.  Skip, just walk us through from your vantage point, what was working for David out there today?

SKIP JOHNSON: His fastball command and his slider and just trying to keep those guys off balance as much as you can.

Like he said, getting strike one was really huge for him. Then trying to locate a pitch after that. I thought his change-up was good late. At times he took some curve balls off the sliders that were really good as well.

Q.  Can you talk about the value that Jimmy brings to this team, both obviously his bat and also just the reliable glove behind the plate and also massaging the pitchers through games all throughout this run?

SKIP JOHNSON: I think it's missed from the catching standpoint. The leadership that he provides, the comfort when he goes to the mound and either chews their butt out or gets them fired up or makes them execute pitches. I think that leadership from the catching standpoint is what is really needed.

We've had guys in the past -- I've had guys in the past that were really good at that, and we work really hard on that as a staff to teach that. Coach Overcash works with the catchers and does a great job of teaching that leadership quality.

Those guys know that Jimmy cares about them because they know he will put his body in front of you, he will play hurt. He is just a baseball player, and he is a prospect too.

Q.  How crucial is it for you for David -- or for you and the team for David to pitch his way out of the fourth after giving up the back-to-back hits?

SKIP JOHNSON: I listened to whoever said about the fourth inning. I think he was really, really executing pitches in that inning.

I mean, you look at all the guys that are really good in pitching, and it's really the only thing you can control is throwing the ball to the target and executing the pitch. You can't control the outcome.

You might be able to think you can control the outcome, but if you are trying to make those guys swing and miss, they don't swing. I thought for him to focus like that in the middle of a game in that environment was a high elite level of focus and concentration and execution of pitches.

Q.  Can you describe the importance of David's performance today as it relates to how your starting pitching sets up, avoids tomorrow, for instance? Then, obviously, keeps your bullpen fresh for the rest of the weekend.

SKIP JOHNSON: It's huge. Now Bennett can go on a full week's rest. They're used to doing that. Any time you get them off that, you kind of worry about it a little bit. We actually threw a bullpen for Bennett just in case he had to throw tomorrow just to stay ahead of the game.

Then Horton will have a full game's rest of going into his outing probably the second game. Then we'll just get a cowboy hat and pull names out of it after that and go from there.

Q.  Skip, I wanted to ask you, there was no jubilant celebration after. It looked like they were still all business after they got the game's final out. How much does that impress you, and do you see the same signs as you have had from past teams that you have coached that reached this point?

SKIP JOHNSON: I think those kids are focused. I don't know if it's dog-piling or whatever it is. I mean, it's kind of weird sometimes. I don't tell them not to dog-pile, I can tell you that.

I'm real emotional. It might not seem like I am. I'm just thanking Jesus for the moment really and all the people that are pulling for a bunch of guys named David. It happened to be David pitching today.

Q.  I asked the guys about the trip to Rosenblatt. Can you give us a little insight on when you decided you wanted to do that and what that was like to see your guys on what's essentially baseball hallowed ground?

SKIP JOHNSON: For sure. That's why I have the best baseball operations guy in baseball, Ryan Gaines. He came to me before we went over to practice, and he goes, Man, I got a good idea. I asked him, What's that? He said, Let's go over to Rosenblatt. I said, That's cool. Let's go over there and show those guys where this place has been, what the College World Series is about, where the Oklahoma Sooners won the last national championship in 1994 on. It was really big.

Just explained to them when they got off the -- before they got off the bus, you know, this is what college baseball is about. I remember it was like an airport, balls leaving that yard. I got to play in 2009 in Rosenblatt, and it was really special. Didn't get to come back in 2010, but got to open up 2011 here. It's a great place.

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Q.  In that fourth inning, Coach, I know you talked a little bit about it already, but it looked like David's -- maybe his relief point, he was high on those curve balls, leaving them upstairs, and Jimmy went and talked to them. Just how impressive is it for him to kind of correct that and come back and strike all those guys out and kind of adjust and pitch the way he did the rest of the way?

SKIP JOHNSON: Well, you got in that situation, it's really not about mechanics. It's just about your mental side of executing the pitch one pitch at a time.

You don't want to talk about mechanics. It gets away from just executing the pitch, but that's the leadership Jimmy showed to execute the pitch one pitch at a time.

I mean, the level of focus what he did after that really him releasing the pitch and getting to the next pitch, it's 100% of what you got to get to the next pitch and control yourself. We talk about that a lot. I don't know if I've seen all year long an execution of what he did. I mean, it was pretty fun to watch.

Q.  Just as far as how fitting is it that it's a guy named David that goes out and does what he does today, and how special is this group, just to you personally?

SKIP JOHNSON: Yeah, I mean, it's really special. A guy named David. That's really what kind of what started this deal. It started with the lines back the beginning of the year, and then it's transitioned to David and being just a bunch of Davids. I'm really proud of those guys.

They really have been selfless. Chazz is biting at the bullet to go down in the bullpen. You can see him getting ready for whatever inning it was. It was going into the seventh, and we had a list of guys that we could -- we were going to use him in that list. Then when he got to the eighth inning, I was going to go with Trevin because the match-ups were better for Trevin than it was for Chazz, and he hadn't thrown, and Chazz is one of our better arms.

We have to keep telling those guys, hey, finish. Finish. Keep looking at it. Keep working at it. Keep dreaming, doing all those little bitty things that get those guys out there on the mound.

THE MODERATOR: We'll have more questions for you at 11:00 on Friday. Thank you.

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