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Wake Forest 2023 baseball season thread (Deacs end historic season with extra inning loss to LSU: Final record 54-12 and top 4 finish nationally)

Sportsmanship warning on Oral Roberts, presumably for language. They don’t just need to be worried about being tossed out of the game, I’m pretty sure they can be tossed from school for using profanity…
They’re probably just there to play ball. After all of this exposure I would not be shocked to see 90% of the starters in the portal so they can go to a real school.
 
A LONG read but a great story about Bob Koontz, the1955 WF alum ESPN interviewed during the Stanford game. WAKE FOREST VS. STANFORD: 2023 MEN'S COLLEGE WORLD SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
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OMAHA, Neb. — From the last row of section 120 of Charles Schwab Field, you can see the Wake Forest team huddling near the dugout down below. Game time is coming soon and the Demon Deacons will officially be back in the Men's College World Series after 24,820 days.

The last time that happened was 1955, the same year Disneyland opened in California and the first McDonald’s opened in Illinois. For the national anthem before the game that June, they stood to face an American flag with only 48 stars, since Alaska and Hawaii were not yet states. The NBA had eight teams, including the Fort Wayne Pistons, Minneapolis Lakers and Rochester Royals. The western-most franchise in Major League Baseball was the Kansas City Athletics. In the NFL, the idea of a Super Bowl was still 12 years away. There have been 104 other schools make it to Omaha since then, from the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors to the Maine Black Bears.

A long time ago for Wake Forest.

But maybe like yesterday to the man sitting in section 120.

Bob Koontz is 90 years old and the walk around the concourse with his daughter Beth White is a taxing feat on a hot day. They have to stop three times to rest. Perhaps staying home and watching on TV might would have been better.

“That was never a consideration,” Beth says.

HISTORY: How often each seed makes the Men's College World Series

No, Bob Koontz has to be here. To understand why, notice the white shirts he and his daughter are wearing. They have a Demon Deacon mascot in the middle of a diamond with the words national champs, 1955. Wake Forest won the CWS that year, including a backup catcher named Bob Koontz.

“It was,” he says 68 years and seven days later, “one of the greatest things in my life.”

Back home in Lexington, North Carolina he still has his cleats and glove from ’55. Also, a sign that hung outside the ticket office at Rosenblatt Stadium. NCAA PLAYOFFS. Gen. Adm 1.00 Students .50. He, uh, decided to make it a memento and take it from the premises that championship night. Not to worry, the statute of limitations on sign pilfering surely has run out. By the way, as evidence that celebratory larceny can cross generations, current Demon Deacon Brock Wilken lifted a Wake Forest placard last week from the super regional as a keepsake. “It’s going in my room next to my trophies,” he said. But will he still have it in the year 2091, 68 years later, like Bob Koontz?

Koontz holds up his right hand. There’s the 1955 championship ring, big as life. He still remembers the name of the downtown hotel where the Wake Forest team stayed. The Paxton. Still remembers the buzz of that grand old ballpark Rosenblatt, though he looks around the modern and packed Charles Schwab Field and says, “it was nothing like this. I was just a kid. It was something I’ll never forget.”

The particulars of his own series are a little fuzzy now. “I was the No. 2 catcher. I think I got to play in two ball games. Might have been one,” he says. But he remembers the joy well enough, and that when the team left as champions he was certain of one thing.

“I thought I’d never be back here. But here I am.”

Life has been good. He had a fulfilling career as a pilot for Piedmont Airlines. A long and happy marriage that lasted 62 years until his wife passed away last year. Raised a family. And stayed close to Wake Forest. His grandson Zach — one of Beth’s sons — pitched for the Demon Deacons. Beth mentions a family interlude with her father and sons earlier this spring.

“We were sitting around and they were talking Wake Forest baseball,” Beth says. “The boys started talking about it and said to him, `they’re doing so well, if they make it to Omaha what do you think about going?’

“The tears started coming out of his eyes.”

Friday night they took a short drive to where Rosenblatt Stadium once stood, now marked by a miniature diamond and plaques. That was where the baseball dream came true for Koontz and Beth took a picture of her father touching the list of champions that’s on display, with his fingers on the line that reads Wake Forest.

“I think this means the world to him,” she says. “We never expected to get to do this with him.”

So here he is on this glorious Saturday, with his memories and a great seat in the shade not far from the Wake Forest dugout. He’s confident in the current Demon Deacons. “I think they’re a well-balanced team,” he says.

FULL SCHEDULE: Men's College World Series dates, time and scores

And he has support. A woman walks by his seat to check on him. Her name is Heather Yates-Davis. “We were supposed to go to the Grand Canyon and my husband said, I think we’re going to Omaha, it’s on my bucket list,” she says. Perfect, not only for her husband, but because she can keep an eye on Koontz. She’s the physician’s assistant for his doctor.

“You all right? Is your back better?” she asks him. Yep, he nods. Fine. He’s at the ballpark. She snaps a picture, for the doctor back home.

Quite a day, then, for the catcher from 1955.

“I can’t believe it,” Koontz says of being here in this town, for this event, to watch this team.

Now if only these 2023 guys will win.

More than four hours later, they do. It’s been a grind; they need to score two runs in the eighth inning to escape Stanford 3-2. It’s the first Wake Forest MCWS victory in nearly seven decades. Wilken says that’s fun to know but “history is not on our radar screen.” And pitcher Rhett Lowder mentions how “I’m just thinking any win in Omaha is a good day, so doesn’t really matter what history says.”

The Demon Deacons turn a double play to end the game but Koontz is not there to see it. A long weather delay sent him back to the hotel. He watched Wake Forest finish the job on television. But he’ll be back Monday night.
 
They’re probably just there to play ball. After all of this exposure I would not be shocked to see 90% of the starters in the portal so they can go to a real school.
But many of them already transferred into ORU, so they'd need a waiver or to graduate to transfer again.
 
Is Sullivan available Monday if needed? Don’t remember exactly how much he threw.
 
But many of them already transferred into ORU, so they'd need a waiver or to graduate to transfer again.
Maybe their coach will get hired elsewhere too. Does that provide a freebie transfer these days?
 
Keener didn’t pitch at all in the super either, although I’m sure he threw simulated innings. But I feel like he should be good for 2-3 innings if needed.
 
A LONG read but a great story about Bob Koontz, the1955 WF alum ESPN interviewed during the Stanford game. WAKE FOREST VS. STANFORD: 2023 MEN'S COLLEGE WORLD SERIES HIGHLIGHTS
SHARE



OMAHA, Neb. — From the last row of section 120 of Charles Schwab Field, you can see the Wake Forest team huddling near the dugout down below. Game time is coming soon and the Demon Deacons will officially be back in the Men's College World Series after 24,820 days.

The last time that happened was 1955, the same year Disneyland opened in California and the first McDonald’s opened in Illinois. For the national anthem before the game that June, they stood to face an American flag with only 48 stars, since Alaska and Hawaii were not yet states. The NBA had eight teams, including the Fort Wayne Pistons, Minneapolis Lakers and Rochester Royals. The western-most franchise in Major League Baseball was the Kansas City Athletics. In the NFL, the idea of a Super Bowl was still 12 years away. There have been 104 other schools make it to Omaha since then, from the Hawaii Rainbow Warriors to the Maine Black Bears.

A long time ago for Wake Forest.

But maybe like yesterday to the man sitting in section 120.

Bob Koontz is 90 years old and the walk around the concourse with his daughter Beth White is a taxing feat on a hot day. They have to stop three times to rest. Perhaps staying home and watching on TV might would have been better.

“That was never a consideration,” Beth says.

HISTORY: How often each seed makes the Men's College World Series

No, Bob Koontz has to be here. To understand why, notice the white shirts he and his daughter are wearing. They have a Demon Deacon mascot in the middle of a diamond with the words national champs, 1955. Wake Forest won the CWS that year, including a backup catcher named Bob Koontz.

“It was,” he says 68 years and seven days later, “one of the greatest things in my life.”

Back home in Lexington, North Carolina he still has his cleats and glove from ’55. Also, a sign that hung outside the ticket office at Rosenblatt Stadium. NCAA PLAYOFFS. Gen. Adm 1.00 Students .50. He, uh, decided to make it a memento and take it from the premises that championship night. Not to worry, the statute of limitations on sign pilfering surely has run out. By the way, as evidence that celebratory larceny can cross generations, current Demon Deacon Brock Wilken lifted a Wake Forest placard last week from the super regional as a keepsake. “It’s going in my room next to my trophies,” he said. But will he still have it in the year 2091, 68 years later, like Bob Koontz?

Koontz holds up his right hand. There’s the 1955 championship ring, big as life. He still remembers the name of the downtown hotel where the Wake Forest team stayed. The Paxton. Still remembers the buzz of that grand old ballpark Rosenblatt, though he looks around the modern and packed Charles Schwab Field and says, “it was nothing like this. I was just a kid. It was something I’ll never forget.”

The particulars of his own series are a little fuzzy now. “I was the No. 2 catcher. I think I got to play in two ball games. Might have been one,” he says. But he remembers the joy well enough, and that when the team left as champions he was certain of one thing.

“I thought I’d never be back here. But here I am.”

Life has been good. He had a fulfilling career as a pilot for Piedmont Airlines. A long and happy marriage that lasted 62 years until his wife passed away last year. Raised a family. And stayed close to Wake Forest. His grandson Zach — one of Beth’s sons — pitched for the Demon Deacons. Beth mentions a family interlude with her father and sons earlier this spring.

“We were sitting around and they were talking Wake Forest baseball,” Beth says. “The boys started talking about it and said to him, `they’re doing so well, if they make it to Omaha what do you think about going?’

“The tears started coming out of his eyes.”

Friday night they took a short drive to where Rosenblatt Stadium once stood, now marked by a miniature diamond and plaques. That was where the baseball dream came true for Koontz and Beth took a picture of her father touching the list of champions that’s on display, with his fingers on the line that reads Wake Forest.

“I think this means the world to him,” she says. “We never expected to get to do this with him.”

So here he is on this glorious Saturday, with his memories and a great seat in the shade not far from the Wake Forest dugout. He’s confident in the current Demon Deacons. “I think they’re a well-balanced team,” he says.

FULL SCHEDULE: Men's College World Series dates, time and scores

And he has support. A woman walks by his seat to check on him. Her name is Heather Yates-Davis. “We were supposed to go to the Grand Canyon and my husband said, I think we’re going to Omaha, it’s on my bucket list,” she says. Perfect, not only for her husband, but because she can keep an eye on Koontz. She’s the physician’s assistant for his doctor.

“You all right? Is your back better?” she asks him. Yep, he nods. Fine. He’s at the ballpark. She snaps a picture, for the doctor back home.

Quite a day, then, for the catcher from 1955.

“I can’t believe it,” Koontz says of being here in this town, for this event, to watch this team.

Now if only these 2023 guys will win.

More than four hours later, they do. It’s been a grind; they need to score two runs in the eighth inning to escape Stanford 3-2. It’s the first Wake Forest MCWS victory in nearly seven decades. Wilken says that’s fun to know but “history is not on our radar screen.” And pitcher Rhett Lowder mentions how “I’m just thinking any win in Omaha is a good day, so doesn’t really matter what history says.”

The Demon Deacons turn a double play to end the game but Koontz is not there to see it. A long weather delay sent him back to the hotel. He watched Wake Forest finish the job on television. But he’ll be back Monday night.
Have heard about him in Winston area given from Lexington and his grandson pitched at Wake. Yet not a peep about him in local recent articles and tv stories about 55 team….any idea where this article was? Yesterday‘s interview during the Wilken homer was first I heard directly from him. Great story.
 
This Florida roster sure looks hella douchey. Like 45% of them are just Romneys.
 
Yeah my guess is we only use one of Keener or Sullivan tomorrow and only if needed. The other starts Wednesday.
 
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