TERRE HAUTE —
The development and growth of a pitcher can be a gradual thing, a combination of accruing physical tools and escalating mental toughness.
Or as, Yogi Berra put it, “Baseball is ninety percent mental. The other half is physical.”
Indiana State junior Sean Manaea has returned to campus after a summer to remember in the prestigious Cape Cod League.
The addition of a change-up and a jump in velocity in his fastball — and possibly the addition of a mustache? — helped Manaea to dominate some of the best hitting prospects in all of college baseball.
The 6-foot-5, 215-pound left-hander was named The Cape’s Pitcher of the Year after throwing 52 innings with 85 strikeouts and a 1.22 earned-run average. Opponents batted just .119 against Manaea, who was also named Summer Player of the Year by Perfect Game USA.
“I saw maybe four balls squared up all year off him,” Hyannis Hawks manager Chad Gassman told Baseball America. “It was almost like he put it on autopilot and said ‘I’ll see you in the eighth inning.’”
Manaea said his gains in velocity were a surprise to him when arrived for his first appearance in June.
“It just happened I guess. The whole spring I felt like I was 88-92 [mph]. Then 96 showed up on the scoreboard and I was like ‘that was pretty cool.’”
Manaea threw between 94 and 96 all summer long, which was great news to Indiana State coach Rick Heller, who has already sent several pitching prospects to the minor leagues in his short tenure at ISU. Jake Petricka went in the second round of the 2010 MLB Draft, but Manaea has given himself a chance to become the highest Sycamore to be drafted.
One scout told the Cape Cod Times that Manaea ranks among his top three prospects for next year’s draft.
“That was just a great thing to have one of the best seasons in Cape Cod history. It popped for him this summer. It’s great for Sean. Great for the program with all the attention he’s gotten,” Heller said. “He has a chance to be a top overall pick. He’s did everything he needed to do.”
Developing a change-up was tops on Manaea’s priorty list for the summer. Manaea toyed with the circle-change the fall before his sophomore season at ISU, but it never clicked with him. Late in the spring, he tried a change-up with a splitter grip that he learned from a teammate.
“It was a lot easier to hold and throw than the circle change. I didn’t know what to do with that [circle change],” Manaea said.
Apparently, neither did the hitters in The Cape. Manaea’s combination of a powerful fastball and sharp slider and change-up made him nearly unhittable.
“We wanted him to be more efficient with his pitches and improve his secondary stuff. He pitched like a first-round draft pick. He’s a guy that can throw three pitches for strikes,” Heller said.
Manaea was no slouch for Heller as a sophomore, striking out 116 and walking 37 in 105 innings, but opponents hit .248 against him and he had a 3.34 ERA. Manaea struggled early in games, especially early in the season.
“I had a lot higher expectations. I was mediocre at best, I felt I could have done a lot better, but it’s all one step at a time because my freshman year was absolutely horrible. Just keep improving. Hopefully my junior year is good,” Manaea said.
Manaea became a strong starter and a strong finisher this summer, Gassman told Perfect Game USA.
“He shocked us this summer with the way he was finishing guys off at 1-2 and 0-2 counts. That was the thing the Indiana State coaches were so impressed with. “In the past he’d go 2-2, 3-2 and let the hitter foul a bunch of pitches off. Not this summer. He only was getting to 85-90 pitches in the eighth inning at times. He did a tremendous job of improving that aspect of his game.”
Manaea credits that mental approach to the game, the bulldog mentality it takes to be a highly successful pitcher.
“My confidence was a lot better going out there. I wasn’t looking at who they were, the name on the jersey. I wasn’t even worrying about them. I was worrying about me and my catcher, throwing the ball to the glove. I’ve got to work on that this spring, and have the same confidence I had this summer,” Manaea said last week.
Experience gained over the last two years, including the 2011 summer pitching for Dubois County in the Prospect League, has helped him make improvements on how to attack hitters.
“Definitely, just facing all these really good hitters, going through all the ups and downs of baseball. If I didn’t have that, I’d be mediocre. Just having those downs I went through my freshman year, it was good for me,” Manaea said.
Manaea arrived at ISU a tall but skinny prospect out of Northwest Indiana who topped out at 87 miles-per-hour. Manaea pitched three years for South Central High School in Wanatah before helping Andrean to a Class 3A state championship.
Training with the ISU strength and conditioning staff has played a part as well.
“It’s huge because I didn’t really work out in high school. Just coming here the first couple workouts, I was so dead,” Manaea said. “They killed me. I’m a lot stronger than I was my freshman year. That helped me a lot, has helped me gain velocity.”
That all-around strength is key for a pitcher, he said.
“Keeping body balance, having a strong core is important for that. Working out the legs too because you push off the mound. Just having an overall strong body,” Manaea said.
Another thing that helps Manaea as an elite pitching prospect is his pickoff move. He picked off seven runners during his sophomore year at ISU, while runners were just 2-of-9 on stolen base attempts.
Manaea is just ready to keep working on improving. He’ll still have to have a dominant spring to be picked as high as some are projecting.
“I’m really excited to get out there this spring. Just keep pitching how I have been, not try to change anything. Can’t get a big head like that. I’m just trying to be normal Sean,” he said.
As for being a potential first-rounder, he’s not getting into the hype that’s built up.
“I’m not trying to worry about that. I’m just wanting to go out and pitch. It’d be real awesome to get drafted, trying not to worry about it. Just go out and have fun,” Manaea said.
Sounds good to coach Heller, who has his ace but will need to replace two other weekend starters.
“It brings to light all we’ve been able to do over the last few years with developing players. People have taken notice. It’s good for all of us,” Heller said. “It’s a very big deal, what he accomplished this summer. Another positive is that Sean is more confident in himself. He’s grown up a lot. He’s handled himself well. Best of all, he’s a good guy.”
College
Manaea makes himself desirable MLB prospect after Cape Cod excellence
ISU left-hander preparing for big junior year with Sycamores
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Bradley ends 16-game MVC losing streak against ISU
Momentum was the only thing riding on Indiana State’s baseball game against Bradley on Friday. With a five-game winning streak going, ISU wanted to keep the good vibes going into next week’s Missouri Valley Conference Tournament.
ISU couldn’t do it. -
Behind 16 hits and Manaea's pitching, ISU beats Bradley
Indiana State’s baseball team rode a wild ride of emotion on Thursday.
First came the public announcement that Bob Warn Field would host the 2014 Missouri Valley Conference Tournament. Later, Sean Manaea’s availability to pitch ISU’s series opener against Bradley was in doubt. -
Indiana State women add five transfers, including experienced D-I point guard
Indiana State coach Teri Moren believes the addition of five more newcomers to the program — in addition to the five who had already joined the program earlier this calendar year — will provide her coaching staff the athleticism and depth it needs to play a successful, up-tempo brand of basketball next season.
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Metro roundup: Woods softball takes seventh in national tournament
The St. Mary-of-the-Woods softball team finished seventh in the United States Collegiate Athletic Association softball tournament on Tuesday at Firestone Stadium.
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Metro Roundup: Indiana State’s Shakir Bell on Performance Awards watch list
College Football Performance Awards has announced its watch list for the 2013 CFPA FCS Running Back Award, and Indiana State’s Shakir Bell earned a spot on the list.
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ISU baseball team builds on success with 14-2 rout
Indiana State’s baseball victory over Alcorn State on Friday would take on more meaning Saturday if the Sycamores could build momentum and pick up on the good work they did in Friday’s ninth-inning rally.
Mission accomplished.
The Sycamores were aggressive from the opening inning at the plate and starting pitcher Devin Moore gave them eight valuable and effective innings on the mound as ISU defeated Alcorn State 14-2 at Bob Warn Field.
“It was a really good experience for everybody. It felt great to finally come out here and put some things together. It’s also really nice when your offense puts a lot of runs on the board,” Moore said.
Moore’s eight innings of work were as valuable as gold to an ISU team that is short on quality arms due to injury and ineffectiveness. He didn’t allow a hit until the fourth inning and one of the two runs he conceded was unearned. -
Johnson, Lyke win MVC titles for ISU
Indiana State’s Felisha Johnson and Maurice Lyke were both crowned Missouri Valley Conference champions on Saturday during the MVC Track and Field Championships at Drake University.
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ISU earns badly-needed win
Alcorn State’s baseball team might be ranked in the bottom 10 in RPI and Indiana State might have never lost to a Southwestern Athletic Conference team. So it wouldn’t appear that a quality win was in the offing when Alcorn State visited Bob Warn Field on Friday.
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Metro roundup: RHIT’s Evans sets Div. III record in high jump
For the third time this season, Rose-Hulman senior Liz Evans topped the NCAA Division III all-time national record in the outdoor high jump Friday night.
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ISU’s Mascari and Hope win MVC track & field titles
Indiana State produced two champions during the opening day of action in the Missouri Valley Conference track and field championships Friday at Drake. Freshman John Mascari, a Terre Haute native, won the men’s 10,000-meter race and Nicole Hope won the women’s pole vault for the second time in three seasons.
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ISU pole vault tradition continues with help from its author
Pole vault is track and field for the adrenaline junkie, Indiana State senior Nicole Hope proclaimed during a recent practice at Marks Field.
To catapult oneself about 14 feet into the air with a large $500 fiberglass pole on a daily basis is a risky endeavor.
“We have to be fearless. You can’t be afraid at all,” said Hope, who has also catapulted herself into the NCAA’s elite in the event, ranking 15th in the NCAA with her leap of 13-feet, 9 1/4. -
Sycamores searching for answers after seventh loss in eight games
These are the bad times for the Indiana State baseball team.
The will is there for the Sycamores to pull out of their worst slump of the season, but the results are not. The suffering continued on Wednesday at Bob Warn Field as Eastern Illinois defeated ISU 5-3. -
METRO ROUNDUP: ISU men's track picked first in MVC Championships, women second
The Indiana State men’s track team has won the last two Missouri Valley Conference outdoor championships, but the women have not stood on the top podium since 1999.
That may change this year, but the Sycamores will face some stiff competition in their quest for the championships. -
North grad Welker helps Whitson earn first NCAA bid as coach
Eastern Kentucky girls golf coach Mike Whitson, an alumnus of his employer, enjoyed his stay in Terre Haute as coach of Indiana State, where he started the women’s golf program.
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METRO ROUNDUP: Rose-Hulman wins HCAC all-sports trophy
Rose-Hulman has won the Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference men’s all-sports trophy for the fifth time in the past six year, the league announced Monday.
Rose tallied 66.5 points for its finishes in 11 men’s sports, just ahead of Franklin with 66. Hanover was third with 53 points. -
METRO ROUNDUP: Rose-Hulman tennis falls in HCAC semifinal
Rose-Hulman’s hot streak in men’s tennis came to an end Saturday in the semifinal round of the Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference tournament at the West Indy Racquet Club.
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Manaea fights off bad hip, wet weather to toss four innings
Mother Nature has been the bane of the Indiana State baseball team’s existence all season. Eight games wiped due to weather are a testament to that. So it was no surprise, though no less disappointing, when she didn’t deal Indiana State pitcher Sean Manaea the greatest hand on Saturday as he tries to recover from a hip injury.
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ISU track enjoys big night at IU's Billy Hayes Invitational
The Indiana State Sycamores either won or finished as the top collegian in 12 events, led by the record-breaking performance of senior Brandon Pounds at the 2013 Billy Hayes Invitational Friday at Indiana University.
Pounds broke his own school record to win the men’s hammer throw. -
Lansing looking for more home games for next fall
Indiana State’s men’s basketball team is looking for a few good games.
Home games that is.
The Sycamores have filled in most of the blanks in their nonconference schedule, but as ever, ISU coach Greg Lansing would like to visit the friendly confines of Hulman Center a bit more often. -
Secret weapon: Kelsey Rosselli finishing Woods career with a bang
At Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, reporting game results to the Tribune-Star after a win or a loss is not always a high priority.
So when one of its athletes enjoys an outstanding season, like senior Kelsey Rosselli is doing for the Pomeroys’ softball team in 2013, media publicity doesn’t always follow.
In fact, her efforts almost seem like a government secret.
Rosselli’s name might sound familiar to longtime Terre Haute softball followers because she was a standout for North High School, from where she graduated in 2009.
Since then, she’s helped The Woods finish runner-up in three straight U.S. Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) national tournaments in 2010, 2011 and 2012. -
ISU baseball gets back into rhythm with victory
Baseball is a rhythm game. With contests every day or five times a week in the case of many college programs, you have the chance to build on success or wallow in a slump.
Mother Nature took that rhythm away from Indiana State’s team last week. After a 7-1 loss to Indiana on April 24, ISU was supposed to play a three-game series at Tennessee-Martin, but it was wiped out by rain.
So the rhythm was disturbed, but perhaps that wasn’t a bad thing.
ISU was in a five-game losing streak before its unintended vacation and the Sycamores made a move in the right direction Wednesday with a 7-0 win over DePauw at Bob Warn Field.
“It was a disappointing weekend. We went all the way down to Tennessee and didn’t get to play. We sat around in the hotel room. We came here and it was still raining. It was nice to get out and see some live pitching,” ISU center fielder Landon Curry said. -
Metro roundup: ISU hands out spring awards
The Indiana State University athletic community, along with family, friends and fans, paused Tuesday night to honor the spring sports teams at the Terre Haute Savings Bank Spring Sports Banquet.
Most of the ISU teams are still in competition with the baseball team having 13 games left of its regular-season schedule before beginning the Missouri Valley Conference tournament May 21, the softball team with just three games left of the docket this coming weekend against Southern Illinois and the track and field program with just one more meet before beginning its postseason events.
The ISU women’s golf team is the team that has ended at this time, with the group recording a sixth-place finish at the MVC championships one week ago. -
METRO ROUNDUP: Rose baseball wins another thriller
Rose-Hulman earned its third victory in its last at-bat in the last five days with a 6-5 win over Franklin in Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference baseball Tuesday night at Art Nehf Field.
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ISU relay teams enjoy strong day at Drake Relays
It was a day for the relay teams to shine at the 104th Drake Relays Saturday as four of the five Indiana State relay teams that competed ran times that put the team among the top five in school history for their respective events.
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Indiana State baseball series canceled
Heavy rain from Thursday through Saturday has forced Indiana State and Tennessee Martin to cancel their three-game weekend baseball series in northwest Tennessee.
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Metro roundup; Five Wabash Valley players on Terre Haute Rex team
The Terre Haute Rex will look to three-peat as Prospect League Western Division champions with a roster that includes a quartet of Wabash Valley players. Indiana State University standouts Tyler Wampler and Josh Dove will reunite with former Little League and high school rivals Cody Gardner (Wright State), Tim Johnson (Vincennes) and Bryan Nacke (Vincennes) for the summer season.
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Indiana State loses 2 in MVC softball
Indiana State aspired to upset Illinois State to get at least a doubleheader split in Missouri Valley Conference softball Thursday at Price Field as the Sycamores opened an eight-game season-ending homestand.
Paige Schreiner hit a two-run blast over the left-field fence in the fifth inning and junior Shelby Wilson delivered a sizzling RBI triple down the right-field line in the sixth as ISU ended the day playing well against the league’s highest-scoring offense.
The result was still a 5-3 loss to the Redbirds (26-18, 11-6 Missouri Valley Conference) as freshman Halle Humphrey gave up four runs in the first two innings. Humphrey, called upon to pitch the opener as well — she’s the only full-time pitcher remaining on the team — gave up six runs and eight hits as the Sycamores dropped a 6-1 game to start the day. -
Sycamores fall: Slumping ISU drops 8-1 decision to No. 19-ranked IU
The margin in baseball between success and failure is so tight.
Indiana State learned that lesson the hard way against No. 19-ranked Indiana on Wednesday.
For most of the contest, ISU matched IU hit-for-hit, but couldn’t match the Hoosiers run-for-run as IU took maximum advantage of its baserunners to post an 8-1 victory at IU’s new Bart Kaufman Field.
IU — winners of four in a row and owners of a 19-game win streak earlier this season — proved its quality by putting the foot on the gas in the last three innings of the contest. The Hoosiers scored five of their runs in that period.
But up until that point, the game was in either team’s hands, but the Hoosiers took it with better situational hitting. IU’s first baserunners in three separate innings came around to score; two of them did so with two outs on the board. -
Creek latest to leave IU’s basketball program
Just a few weeks ago, one of the big questions surrounding Indiana University basketball was how the Hoosiers would contend with too many players and not enough scholarship spots.
That’s not a problem for coach Tom Crean anymore.
As of now, the Hoosiers are one scholarship under the 13-scholarship limit after Wednesday’s announcement that Maurice Creek was leaving the program.
Creek has another season of college eligibility, but chose to leave Indiana to seek more playing time. He’ll graduate from IU next week and will try to play elsewhere as a graduate student immediately.
“I feel like I would have a better opportunity for more playing time at another school where I can be eligible right away,” Creek said in a press release announcing his departure. -
Metro roundup: ISU baseball’s Alumni Weekend coming in May
The Indiana State baseball team will be hosting its Alumni Weekend on May 16-18, with its annual golf outing taking place May 17 at Idle Creek Golf Course.
The Sycamores will be host to Bradley on May 16-18 before heading to the Missouri Valley Conference tournament at Normal, Ill., the following week.
Idle Creek (5353 Eldridge Road) will be hosting the golf outing again, with registration and lunch starting at 11 a.m. before the event tees off at noon. Individuals can register for $100 with a foursome costing $400. Package A includes a foursome and a hole sponsorship for $500 while an individual hole sponsorship costs $150. Lunch, a cart and an Indiana State baseball cap will be included for all the golfers.
Beginning May 1, Indiana State plays 12 of its final 13 regular-season games on Bob Warn Field at Sycamore Stadium, including weekend series against Evansville (May 3-5), Alcorn State (May 10-12) and Bradley (May 16-18).
For more information on Alumni Weekend or the golf outing, contact ISU assistant coach Tyler Herbst at 812-237-4090 or at tyler.herbst@indstate.edu. - More College Headlines
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Bradley ends 16-game MVC losing streak against ISU




