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COLLEGE WORLD SERIES


June 18, 2018


Pat Casey

Kevin Abel

Tyler Malone

Kyle Nobach


Omaha, Nebraska

Oregon State - 14, Washington - 5

THE MODERATOR: We're joined by Oregon State coach Pat Casey, student-athletes Kyle Nobach, Tyler Malone and Kevin Abel.

Coach, an opening statement.

COACH CASEY: Well, you know, crazy game. Long day. I thought our guys came out really prepared after the rain delay.

We were kind of scuffling out of the chute. Got a big hit out of Tyler Malone. But really appreciate the way they hung with it and got themselves a win.

THE MODERATOR: Questions for the student-athletes.

Q. Tyler or Kyle, during that rain delay, obviously you guys hadn't played that great up to that point. Was there anything that you guys or any of the players kind of said during the rain delay that kind of got this team zoned in a little bit?
TYLER MALONE: Yeah, we got together. We played a little game called Mafia. It's a little game we played together. We had a little bit of a lot of fun and vibes and listened to music. Before we went out, Nick got our guys up. He's been our leader. He gets us going. He talked to us, and we came out ready to play with some energy. So it was good.

KYLE NOBACH: Also Joe Casey did a 30 bubble gum piece challenge and stuffed 30 pieces of bubble gum in his mouth it was out to here, looked like a chipmunk. Kept it pretty loose.

Q. What exactly is Mafia?
TYLER MALONE: You got a mafia. You got a sheriff. And then you have a doctor. So the mafia chooses, the mafia chooses who they want to kill or take out of the town. And the sheriffs try to determine who was in the mafia, and then the doctor tries to save and then there's an open discussion. So it gets pretty heated. It's pretty fun.

KYLE NOBACH: A lot of debate. (Laughter).

Q. Tyler, you had a long time to think about that plate appearance when you guys were down a run. What went through your mind during the rain delay, and how did your approach that trip to the plate concern what was on the line at that point?
TYLER MALONE: For the past two years I've engulfed the role I'm in and truly understanding what I could do to help my team. Even though I haven't been playing that much recently I have to understand that my name could get called upon whenever.

But I've really -- over the past couple of months, I've really brought God into my life, and He's given me that strength. And I was just waiting for it. So when I was going out to that plate, I just kept running through my head I could do all things through Christ, who strengthens me, and He was right there and carried me. So...

Q. Kyle, take us through that at-bat that led to that bomb?
KYLE NOBACH: I took a pretty big swing at one of the pitches, kind of pulled off of it. Same thing that happened in the Regional when I hit a home run, Casey told me to stay inside the ball. I got a pitch out of the plate and I tried to stay through it and tried to finish more towards right field and kind of flew out. And luckily the wind wasn't blowing like it had been.

Q. Kevin, while your teammates were stuffing gum in their mouths deciding who they want to knock off (laughter), you had four hours to kill between pitching and then coming back. How did you stay loose and how did you convince Coach Casey that you were up to come back in this game?
KEVIN ABEL: I was playing Mafia with them, too. (Laughter) but kind of --

KYLE NOBACH: He was taking people out.

KEVIN ABEL: In between just doing some dynamic stuff, keeping the legs loose and doing some shoulder routines and riding the bikes that we have in the training room. Keeping the blood pressure up. And kind of just went from there.

Our trainer kept coming in asking me, Are you feeling good? Staying loose? All that stuff. I kept saying, I feel great, I feel great. And just Coach Casey and Yeskie said, All right, go out and get it done. So we did, they picked me up, got some runs, and played some defense and that was it.

Q. Somebody mentioned that Nick spoke to you during the delay. Of course he's your captain. Just wondered what the message was. Have an idea what Coach Casey would tell you there, but what did you hear from one of your peers?
TYLER MALONE: He just talked about there's a lot of guys in our locker room, it's win or go home at this point, and there's a lot of guys that would never put this uniform on again. It means a lot to us, and a lot of people don't really understand it until you play here and you're around Case and this program.

That's motivating for us. We don't want to go home. There's some guys in that locker room that will never play a baseball game again. That's including myself and Jack, and so that's what motivates us. And that's what his message was, just to strictly compete.

Q. Kyle, last year with the surgery obviously you weren't able to participate with this team in the run they went on. How difficult was that, and how rewarding was it for you tonight to come through in the big moment like you did?
KYLE NOBACH: It was really difficult. Probably one of the toughest things I've done in my life, which is probably good. There's people that have gone through a lot harder things than I have. I tried to continue to work and put in the time in the weight room and that really helped me. I put on some good muscle and kept hitting, and that's what motivates me, too, as well.

People are motivated by different things. And it hurt to watch because you want to be out there and play with your brothers. And I finally get to do it.

THE MODERATOR: Thank you. Questions for Coach.

Q. Pat, you had the bases loaded there when they called the rain delay. How did you feel going into the rain delay and how concerned were you with the way your team would handle it, given that you were in a pretty good situation when the rain delay was called?
COACH CASEY: Yeah, you know, you probably would prefer that momentum we had going to let him get to the plate.

We can't control certain things. One of them certainly is the weather. But I felt good about Tyler. I mean, he's a streaky guy.

And he went up and swang at the first pitch, gave us a huge lift. I was going to wait and hit him for Preston, and then I said we may not get to that point.

So he hasn't had an opportunity to go out there defensively. So, you know, that part was a concern. But I thought we needed a lift. We were down 3-0, and we needed somebody to give us a lift. And he certainly did.

Q. Pat, in the first game, in the first four innings of this game, what did you see from your team that was so different from what you've seen from this club pretty much the whole year, and what did you kind of see after that?
COACH CASEY: Well, Kendall, you know that if you take any club in the country, and you can go through certain times and they don't score a lot of runs or they don't hit.

Just hitting is so contagious. And we played Hartford, I think, at the beginning of the year, three, four games, and man we struggled and struggled and struggled. And then we played Stanford, and boom, boom, boom. We just needed to get something that would get us going and a little excited.

And I think a couple of those guys in the middle were trying to do it all at one time instead of do what we do. And we got some base runners. We got some energy, and then we were off to the races.

Q. This probably isn't exactly top of mind, but we just saw two West Coast teams battle it out and play pretty competitively, I guess, until you pulled away. I don't know, was it in your mind, did you enter the postseason thinking you needed to make a statement for your league, for the West Coast, that narrative is out there that that side of the country has been disrespected over the last few years?
COACH CASEY: Well, I do think it's difficult to get as much attention on the West Coast as you get in the SEC and the ACC.

There's a lot of things happening there. And so we feel like we can play with anybody. And it is nice to see teams come out here from the West Coast. I would have preferred to be playing somebody else than somebody in our conference, that's for sure, but that's the way the brackets are set up.

So I've got a lot of respect for Washington's players, the way they play. I think they play hard. I think they're great kids. They had a heck of a season.

But I do think that we're always trying to take a stand. We talk about that a little bit, always as coaches what can we do to -- I think our conference -- I mean, if you look at the SEC and they put in the headset, they put in the replay. You know, they're on the cutting edge, you know?

And I just think baseball needs to be elevated in our conference and promoted and be more important. That's my personal opinion. And I think we could play anybody in the country.

Q. Coach, can you kind of walk us through what happened with Steven Kwan and with him out of the lineup, how did that change your approach going forward?
COACH CASEY: Well, you know, I had no option. He had come in said he felt a hammy and he couldn't run. So next man up. Happened to be Preston Jones and puts the ball in the right field corner and gets us going with it. And Preston is going to be a good player. He just doesn't have the experience. Kwanny arguably down the stretch has been as good as anybody in our club. He does so many things for us. So that's a tough one there. I don't know how that's going to turn out. I don't know if he's going to play again.

If he can, I know Kwanny, he will.

Q. Just on Kevin Abel, was there any -- were you hesitant at all to put him back out there after throwing the 17 pitches and lengthy rain delay? What was the thinking and the process of him getting ready again?
COACH CASEY: No, not with that few number of pitches and a guy that hasn't thrown for, you know, nine days. The kid's strong. I think that we kind of work guys into not pitching as much as we do -- make them go back in the game a few years back, the guys pitched a lot. Sometimes guys pitched double headers, then we came up with this thing if we have a middle guy and a setup guy and a closer, we can really confuse everybody and drag this game on for three hours and 54 minutes. We're only here nine hours today so we wanted to make sure we did it right.

Q. Obviously with Kevin likely to be your starter in the next game, I guess at this point who would maybe be in the mix to be that guy then to pitch?
COACH CASEY: You know, that's a good question. And we'll talk about that tomorrow when we see how everybody feels. There's people who have to throw on short rest here. Abel would have been the guy had we been in a situation that he could have.

If we didn't win, we're going home. So he was the best option. And he was outstanding. And you gotta win one at a time. And I've been here before. And we had some guys really step up and throw on short rest and throw a lot of pitches and won a lot of games in a row.

Somebody's going to have to do it, maybe a reliever that hasn't started. There's a few guys that you can look at that have been in games that started. Gambrell is one of those guys, Eisert could start. There's a bunch of options.

Q. From Washington's standpoint and going back to your first trip, is there something that you learned in your first trip in the College World Series that you can carry over and build from that you remember?
COACH CASEY: Absolutely. I think I've told this story before. But we played -- we got eliminated in two straight in '05. I come in the locker room, and the guys are hanging their head. I'm saying guys, this is crazy. You're in the College World Series. Monumental task to come here to get here and then to win.

And so I tried to get them pumped up a little bit to realize that this is a huge step in what we're trying to do. And I was walking out of the stadium at Rosenblatt. Had my jersey thrown over my shoulder. Last guy out. Todd Stansbury, our associate at the time, was walking with me, the guy's pushing a kid up in the wheelchair. I turned around and looked at Stansbury, and I said, That's why guys have to appreciate what they're doing. I took my uniform and I laid it on the kid's lap. He had a Texas hat on, and his dad looked at me said, Wow, thanks, Coach.

Two weeks later I got an email saying that his grandfather graduated from Oregon State. I said I know we're going back now. You know what I mean? Great things happen here.

I'll tell you what, if you watched Washington in the middle of the season, you wouldn't have thought they would be here. Had to win a Regional clear across the country. Went back, won the Supers. I know those guys are going to in a day or two really feel like this is not only a great time for us but also a great motivator for what we can do in the future.

THE MODERATOR: Thank you.

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports

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