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  • 2024 Post Season Honors

    Six Shockers Receive 2024 AAC Post -Season Honors

    Senior left-handed pitcher Caden Favors was named First Team All-American Athletic Conference and freshman right-hander Tommy LaPour was named Newcomer Pitcher of the Year, two of six Shockers recognized in the conference's 2024 year-end honors announced Monday.

    Favors was Wichita State's lone selection on the First Team, while LaPour, infielder Camden Johnson and outfielder Derek Williams were tabbed to the Second Team.

    The Shockers earned a conference-high four players on the All-Freshman Team: LaPour, Johnson, left-handed pitcher Tyler Dobbs and outfielder Lane Haworth.​

    Favors emerged into one of the nation's more durable and consistent starters in his final season with Shockers. The southpaw finished the regular season with a record of 8-4 to go along with a 3.38 ERA over the course of 15 appearances and 14 starts. Favors ranks eighth nationally with 93.1 innings pitched and has racked up 95 strikeouts, just five away from becoming the first WSU pitcher to reach the century mark since 2011. With only 18 walks issued, the senior a 5.28:1 strikeout-to-walk ratio that leads the conference and ranks 21st in the country. He is the only hurler in the AAC with multiple complete games and twice racked up double-digit punch outs.

    LaPour has been a linchpin in the Wichita State rotation, going 5-3 with a 4.12 ERA over 14 starts in his debut campaign. Since the start of conference play, the right-hander has been one of the circuit's most dominant arms, holding opponents to a .217 batting average and logging six starts with two earned runs or less. His 7.28 hits allowed per nine innings ranks third in the conference and he has conceded just a single hit in each of his last two starts. All told, LaPour has worked 67.2 innings with 64 strikeouts against 33 walks, twice fanning nine hitters in a start.

    Johnson burst onto the scene as Wichita State's leading hitter at .333 while also pacing the club with 55 starts, primarily at third base. He announced his presence with authority on opening weekend, going 4-for-6 with five RBI in his second collegiate game against Little Rock, one of 22 multi-hit games for the freshman. Johnson also delivered one of the season's most iconic moments against Kansas on April 3, cranking a game-tying solo home run in the bottom of the eighth for his first career long ball. The Boerne, Texas native has racked up 13 doubles, one triple and two home runs, scoring 37 runs while knocking in 29 of his own.

    Williams wields one of the conference's most fearsome bats, hitting .326 with a team-high 14 home runs to go along with 13 doubles and 43 RBI. Over 49 starts and 55 games mostly in left field, the junior college transfer has authored an OPS of 1.060, drawing 19 walks and 17 hit by pitches to contribute to his offensive production. He homered in three consecutive games in early March, including a two-homer game against Utah Tech, then added a second multi-homer game against Tulane on April 26 in which he went 4-for-5. Williams added solid defense in left field to his resume and a perfect stolen base mark, swiping five bases in five attempts.

    Dobbs has been Wichita State's Swiss Army knife of the pitching staff, handling every role from left-on-left specialist to starter to long reliever. Over 21 appearances and nine starts, he has gone 6-4 with a 4.63 ERA in 56.1 innings of work, striking out 46 while walking 29. The southpaw has held opponents to a .237 batting average, highlighted by three dominant performances in which he allowed just one hit. He earned his first collegiate win against Oral Roberts with five innings of shutout relief, blanked Nebraska over five innings with six strikeouts, and carried a no-hitter into the seventh inning against Oklahoma State.

    Haworth has been one of Wichita State's most valuable players since the start of AAC action, going 2-for-4 in his first career start against UAB on March 23 and producing ever since. The freshman outfielder is hitting .310 with 10 doubles, one triple and three home runs, driving in 19 runs while scoring 21 through 32 games and 26 starts. He has compiled 10 multi-hit games, including a two-homer game on the road at UTSA and a four-hit game on the road at Memphis. Haworth has also quickly established a reputation as a clutch hitter, boasting a .333 batting average with two outs and driving in nearly half of his runs with two away.​


  • #2
    Favors Tabbed to All-Region Team

    Wichita State senior left-handed pitcher Caden Favors was named to the ABCA/Rawlings Central All-Region Second Team on Tuesday.

    Favors is the first Wichita State pitcher since Charlie Lowell in 2011 to earn a spot on the All-Region team, though Payton Tolle did earn a spot as a utility player last season.

    Favors was the workhorse of the Wichita State weekend rotation, going 9-4 with a 3.21 ERA over 17 appearances that included 16 starts. The southpaw logged 106.2 innings, seventh-most in the country and the highest total from a Shocker since Jordan Cooper tossed 107.1 in 2010. Favors struck out 107 while issuing only 20 walks, good for a 5.35:1 strikeout-to-walk ratio that easily led the American Athletic Conference and ranked 18th nationally. His 1.69 walks per nine innings was the lowest rate in the conference while the 107 strikeouts ranked second on the circuit. He notched 10 strikeouts in consecutive starts against Utah Tech and Long Beach State on his way to becoming the first WSU pitcher with 100 strikeouts in a season since Charlie Lowell in 2011.

    Favors was the only hurler in the AAC with multiple complete games and worked at least 5.2 innings in every start with the exception of his final start before the conference tournament when he was lifted early to preserve his pitch count. He delivered two brilliant starts in the conference tournament, holding UAB to one run over 6.1 innings and top-seeded East Carolina to two runs over 7.0 innings.


    Comment


    • #3
      The quality of Favors' season kindof snuck up on me. Even as it was getting near its end. Those numbers are fantastic. What a great senior year and testament that sometimes good things do come to those who stick it out.

      Kudos, Caden! Good luck in your future endeavors, and thanks for being a Shocker!

      Comment


      • #4
        I love it when a senior has a great year to close out a career. In Caden's case, he was so-so as a freshman at Seminole State College going 2-3 with an 8.62 ERA in 31.1 innings although he had good stirike out numbers. Caden was very solid his sophomore and junior years as a Shocker, mostly out of the bullpen. He appeared in 44 games, including 9 starts, going 5-5. He had an ERA of 3.38 over 93.1 innings (averaging just a little over 2 innings per appearance). He had 84 strikeouts to 20 walks. So his numbers were good but his workload was totally different. That said this year's Shockers would have liked to have a guy like Caden coming out of the pen.

        So while Caden's numbers the previous 2 years were quite good I don't think I, or most others, really expected he would develop into such a high quality, durable workhorse as a senior. Clearly, the MVP of this Shocker team.

        For me, the King of Senior Year unexpected breakouts was and is Bret Bascue. I don't know if you recall Brett's path to his great senior year. I don't think he was highly recruited out of Derby High School. Maybe had an offer from Garden City CC. Redshirted in 2006.

        In his first 3 years from 2008-2009 Brett played in 81 of the Shockers 198 games with 54 starts and if I recall correctly, Bret a righty outfielder, was primarily a platoon player against left handed pitching. His first 3 years he hit .244 with 26 RBI and a SLP of .350 and a OBA of .356 for a OPS of .706 in his 81 games.

        As a senior, something clicked for Bret. He still was being most platooned against lefthanded pitching as he played in 43 of the Shockers 60 games with 33 starts. He hit .421 on 45-107 including 10 home runs after hitting only 4 in his first 3 years and driving in 37 runs. He SLP was .813 and his OBA was .492 for an OPS of 1.305.

        It could be my memory is hazy and they didn't go to strictly platooning Bret until his senior year. If that was the case, I guess it took Gene and JT 3-years to figure out this guy ate lefthanders for breakfast.

        In any case, that was just a crazy and unexpected turn around. Despite being a platoon player Brett's senior year was so good he made the MVC All-Conference 1st Team. I don't recall reading or hearing much about what may have been behind that breakout for Brett but I have no problem giving Caden Favors the Brett Bascue Senior Year Breakout Award.

        One thing I did find in a Paul Suellentrop Eagle article about the 2010 seniors was:

        Bret, you're enjoying a great senior season, starting every day and hitting over .400. How gratifying has this season been?

        Bascue: This is how you want to end your career. I was a role player and this was my next role.

        (Ryan) Jones: He deserves every minute of it. The guy his hitting unbelievably and lefties fear him. We've loved every minute of watching him.

        Read more at: https://www.kansas.com/sports/college/wichita-state/article1031070.html#storylink=cpy​
        Last edited by 1972Shocker; June 11, 2024, 03:22 PM.

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