Baseball

Stanford-Baylor Baseball Game Notes (June 6, 2005)

Recap | Box Score

Greg Reynolds' 11.0 innings pitched and 10 strikeouts were both career-highs

Stanford's season ended with a loss in a Regional championship game for the second consecutive year

Stanford's updated all-time postseason record is 117-58 (.669), while its all-time regional record fell to 65-25 (.722)

Chris Minaker finished the season with 25 doubles to rank in sole possession of second-place on Stanford's all-time single-season list in that category, ranking just four behind school record holder Troy Paulsen's 29 two-baggers in 1990

Matt Manship finished the season with 17 career saves, ranking him tied for second on Stanford's all-time list with Scott Weiss (17, 1988-91)

Mark Romanczuk finished the season with 28 career wins and 329.1 career innings pitched to rank tied for sixth and eighth on Stanford's all-time lists in those categories

Nolan Gallagher finished the season with a 9.76 strikeouts per nine innings mark that ranks him eighth on Stanford's all-time list

John Hester tied a career-high with his three hits on Monday

Stanford made two errors Monday to drop its fielding percentage one point to .977, equaling the school record set by the 2001 club

Stanford's pitching staff finished the season with a 3.77 ERA to record an ERA under 4.00 for the fourth time in the last six campaigns

Stanford had five players - Jed Lowrie (2B), Chris Lewis (LF/RF), John Mayberry, Jr. (1B), Chris Minaker (SS) and Adam Sorgi (3B) - start all 59 of the team's games in 2005 with Mayberry and Minaker playing every inning of the season at their respective positions

Stanford head coach Mark Marquess finishes the season with an updated career record of 1224-590-5 (.674), ranking him eighth on the victory list for current active Division I coaches and 15th-place on the all-time list

Stanford posted its 12th straight winning season and 30-victory campaign in 2005

Stanford came from behind in 14 of its 34 victories

Stanford had nine games postponed due to weather

Stanford had a tough time in close games and extra innings, going just 8-11 in one-run games, 2-6 in two-run contests and 0-4 in extra inning affairs