BEES 12, QUINCY 5: Schulte’s Cycle Leads Opening Rout

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Kooper Schulte’s first batting practice session with the Burlington Bees on Tuesday was, by his description, “pretty, pretty bad.”

His first game of the Prospect League season was a lot better.

Schulte hit for the cycle, going 5-for-5 with five runs batted in the Bees’ 12-5 win over the Quincy Doggy Paddlers in the season opener at Community Field.

“It was the first time I’d hit with a wood bat in almost a year,” Schulte said of his afternoon struggles.

Schulte opened the game with a first-inning triple. He hit a two-run home run to left field in the third inning, singled home a run in the fourth, drove in two more runs with a bloop single in the fifth, then opened the seventh inning with a double.

Schulte said he wasn’t sure about the significance of what had happened when he heard the cheers after the double into the right-center field gap that gave him the cycle.

“I asked O (Bees manager Owen Oreskovich) what was going on, and he said, ‘You just hit for the cycle,’” Schulte said, smiling.

“I knew what he needed to do, but I wasn’t going to bring it up,” Oreskovich said, laughing.

Oreskovich wasn’t sure early Monday if he was going to have Schulte for the opener. Schulte, who is from nearby New London, just finished the season with Iowa — the Hawkeyes lost to UCLA in Saturday’s Big Ten Tournament semifinals — but he sent Oreskovich a text message in the afternoon that he was going to be available.

“We had exit meetings with the coaches this morning, got back to New London by 11 o’clock this morning, and I was on my way here by noon,” Schulte said.

“I’m always glad to have that kid in the lineup,” Oreskovich said.

Schulte, who hit .268 for Iowa this season, played for the Bees in 2023, hitting .373 before a hand injury ended his season. So Oreskovich knows what he has in the shortstop.

“I think it’s the way he’s brought up, you know, especially with his father being who he is (Southeastern Community College coach Justin Schulte), one of the most winningest coaches out there right now,” Oreskovich said. “But I think it’s just the way he’s brought up with his work ethic — he’s one of the hardest workers ever. And, you know, he hates losing and he hates failing.”

Burlington’s Keanu Spenser rounds the bases after his fourth-inning home run (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

The Bees broke open a 3-3 game with a four-run fourth inning capped by Keanu Spenser’s home run to deep left field. They added two runs in the fifth, two in the sixth and one in the seventh.

Everyone in the Bees’ lineup reached base. Burlington had 14 hits.

“It was awesome to see that,” Oreskovich said. “And we’ve got some guys still to come in here who can do some damage.”

The Bees went 6-23 in the first half last season, and the talk in the clubhouse before the game was about starting strong.

“These guys want to win,” Oreskovich said.

“It feels good to start out 1-0,” Schulte said. “There’s a lot of energy in here, a lot of good vibes, with a win like this.”

Parker Lewin, the second of four Bees pitchers, got the win, pitching 2 ⅓ scoreless innings.

The Bees go on the road to end the week with four games — Wednesday and Thursday at Normal and Friday and Saturday at Clinton.

“We’ve got to stay locked in,” Oreskovich said. “Going on the road is kind of always tough, especially when you’re on the road for multiple days in a row. But this is a different group, so I think they’re up for the challenge, and I don’t think it’s going to matter to them too much.”

Top photo: Bees shortstop Kooper Schulte slides into third on his first-inning triple. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Familiar Faces, And Plenty Of Arms, As Bees Open Season

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

Owen Oreskovich is in his fourth season of managing the Burlington Bees, and he’s learned that the most important thing to get through the 58-game schedule is pitching.

Lots of pitching.

The Bees open the Prospect League season on Tuesday night against the Quincy Doggy Paddlers with a roster that includes 20 pitchers. Oreskovich also has three two-way players who played the field and pitched this season with their college teams.

“Mostly, I was just recruiting pitching for a month and a half,” Oreskovich said Monday. “Because I know how it can get during the season, so that was a main focus for me. Just having a bunch of guys we can run out there if we have to.”

The depth, Oreskovich said, will help him challenge his pitchers.

“We’ve got a lot of guys, so it can be a ‘next guy up,’ but I hope we don’t run into that problem,” he said. “Throwing strikes is number one, and that’s what we want. So it will be a good challenge for them.

“Finding guys who throw a little harder was a main thing, as was finding guys that can fill the strike zone up. I have learned that throughout the years — pitching matters in this league. You can score as many runs as you want, but if you give up more, you’re gonna lose 100% of the time. So, yeah, finding a lot of pitchers was a main goal of mine.”

The roster consists of several players who have been with the Bees before. That, too, is going to be important, Oreskovich said.

“Those guys know how it is and how it goes, and how I like to do things,” Oreskovich said. “And then there’s the comfort factor of them having been in this league. They’ve been to Community Field, they love it here. They think this atmosphere is incredible. Having guys back is huge  because I already know what I’m getting. It’s huge knowing that I’ve seen a lot of these guys or they have played for me.”

Oreskovich tapped into a couple of familiar pipelines. Four players played at Southeastern Community College in West Burlington. Four other players have come from Hawaii Pacific, a program that has been sending several players to the Bees in their five years in the summer league.

“The Southeastern kids, they’ve played for Coach (Justin) Schulte, and he does a great job there — those guys are winners,” Oreskovich said. “(Hawaii Pacific coach) Dane (Fujinaka)  is an awesome dude, and he knows how it is here, so I like taking their guys. I’ll take his guys any day of the week, and then, you know, it’s worked out for them as well. When they go back to school, they tend to do well.”

The Bees went 17-39 last season, 6-23 in the first half. It’s a start Oreskovich doesn’t want to happen again.

“We’re not going to have a full roster for the first week, week and a half,” Oreskovich said.  “Those first couple days are just going to be kind of seeing what we’ve got right and who we can plug where. It’s going to be huge to get off to a hot start. Winning is going to be emphasized in everything we do.”

Breaking down the roster:

Pitchers (20)

Kaimana Burgo (Hawaii Pacific) — 0-0 with a 15.75 ERA in eight games this season.

Colten Clarahan (Southeastern CC) — 0-1 with an 8.68 ERA. 

Kaelen Clarkson (SUNY-Plattsburgh) — 2-4 with a 4.71 ERA in nine starts

Mitchell Cox (Crown College) — 0-2 with a 3.72 ERA … 33 strikeouts in 36 ⅓ innings

Jack Duncan (Western Illinois) — Pitched in one game this season, allowing two runs. … Had five saves with a 5.47 ERA with the Bees last season.

Reese Ellison (Bethel) — 0-6 with a 7.39 ERA. Struck out 23 in 28 innings.Can also play outfield.

Zane Frese (Winthrop) — 0-0 with an 8.44 ERA. Struck out 6 in 5 ⅓ innings.

Raul Gil (Highland CC) — 1-1 with a 9.72 ERA. Struck out 24 in 16 ⅔ innings

Danny Harris (Mesa CC) — 2-4 with a 3.93 ERA and 2 saves. 

Morgan Jennings (Hawaii Pacific) — Did not play this season.

Zach Leuschen (Mt. Marty) — 3-0 with 16.00 ERA in nine appearances.

Parker Lewin (Minnesota) — Did not play this season.

Alex Logan (John Wood CC — 0-1 with a 7.62 ERA and 1 save

Ethan McDonald (Eureka) — 4-3 with a 5.92 ERA. … Had two complete games in nine starts.

Erick McKendry (Allan Hancock College) — Made one appearance, with two strikeouts in one inning.

Marshall Robinson (Faulkner) — 11.81 ERA in six appearances.

Jackson Rodgers (Western Illinois) — 3-2 with a 9.85 ERA this season.

Shawn Scott (Austin Peay) — Struck out the only hitter he faced in one appearance.

Kyle Smith (University of Health and Pharmacy) — 2-2 with an 8.17 ERA in 12 appearances, including seven starts.

Braeden Sunken (Maryville) — 0-2 with a 7.43 ERA and 1 save. Struck out 17 in 13 ⅓ innings

Jacob Walker (Mt. Marty) — 2-3 with a 4.94 ERA and 2 saves. … Struck out 43 in 47 ⅓ innings

Catchers (3)

Griffen Bushnell (Mount Mercy) — Hit .455 with 2 home runs and 9 RBIs

Abrahan Rios (Southeastern CC) — Hit .294 with 6 home runs and 34 RBIs

Danny Rollins (Murray State) — Hit .250 in two games

Infielders (5)

Dash Denton (Rock Valley College) — Hit .231 with one home run and 19 RBIs

Kooper Schulte (Iowa) — Hit .273 with 3 home runs and 25 RBIs. … Hit .373 with the Bees in 2023.

Caleb Selbers (Olney Central) — Hit. 328 with 5 home runs and 39 RBIs

Keanu Spenser (Hawaii Pacific) — Hit .353 in six games with the Bees last season. … Hit .091 in nine games this season.

Kila Teixeira (Hawaii Pacific) — Did not play this season.

Corey Boyette is back for his third season with the Bees. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Outfielders (6)

Corey Boyette (Lipscomb) — Hit .182 in 17 games this season. … Hit .286 with the Bees in 2023 and .295 last season.

Jace Figuereo (Southeastern CC) — Batted .326 with 9 RBIs this season … Hit .238 with 11 RBIs with the Bees last season.

Conor Fitzpatrick (Eureka) — Hit .356 with 22 RBIs

Connor Kave (Harper College) — Hit .333 with 1 home run and 18 RBIs. Stole 21 bases.

Caleb Klein (Southeastern CC) — Hit .333 with 7 home runs and 61 RBIs

Cole Yearsley (Winthrop) — Hit .250 with 2 home runs at 28 RBIs

Utility (3)

Noah Company (Eureka) — Hit .267 with 2 HRs and 14 RBIs … 0-3 with a 7.80 ERA

Ethan McDonald (Eureka) — Hit .139 with 6 RBIs. … 4-3 with a 5.92 ERA, with 48 strikeouts in 48 ⅔ innings.

Ryan Skwarek (McHenry) — Hit .412 with 58 RBIs … 2-2 with a 1.59 ERA, with 20 strikeouts in 17 innings.

Top photo: Keanu Spenser steals second base in a game last season. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)

Schulte Brings Experience, Familiarity To Hawkeyes

By JOHN BOHNENKAMP

IOWA CITY — Kooper Schulte was described as “a true son of a coach” by his new college coach, and that is the perfect description.

Schulte will be the starting shortstop for Iowa when the Hawkeyes open the season with a three-game series at South Florida, starting Friday. 

It is Schulte’s first season with the Hawkeyes after two seasons of junior-college baseball, and it’s a chance for him to play in the same program where his father, Justin, was a player before becoming one of the top junior-college coaches in the nation.

It is that bloodline that coach Rick Heller can see in Schulte.

“Really good baseball player, that’s the best way to sum it up,” Heller said at the Hawkeyes’ media day earlier this week. “He’s got a lot of intangibles to his game. Justin is a tough guy, he brings a lot of toughness to his teams, and Koop has that. He’s just a steady Eddie in how he goes about his business.”

The chance to play at Iowa was something Schulte couldn’t pass up.

“My dad played here, and obviously it’s a great program, so it’s pretty special for me to be a part of it,” Schulte said. “Coming from a coach like him, he asks a lot of questions about the program, what do we do and stuff. But at the end of the day, he just tells me to trust the coaches, do what they say, and just work hard.”

Schulte is coming off a season at Southeastern Community College, where he played for his father. He hit .317 with eight home runs and 45 runs batted in, becoming a first-team all-region selection while leading the Blackhawks to the NJCAA World Series.

Schulte, a graduate of New London (Iowa) High School, played at Central Arizona Community College in 2023. He played that summer for the Burlington Bees in the Prospect League, hitting .373 in 19 games before suffering a season-ending hand injury.

He played last summer for the Waterloo Bucks in the Northwoods League. He hit just .170, but appreciated what he gained from a higher competition level of summer baseball.

“I didn’t play the best baseball, but it was a good experience playing with a lot of other guys from Division I schools,” Schulte said. “So I got that little experience before coming here.”

Schulte spent Iowa’s fall workouts on different parts of his game.

“I worked a lot on my hitting, really honed in on my mechanics, really tried to feel myself create more power, use my strength more in my swing,” Schulte said.

“I think that there’s a chance that he may surprise some people and provide maybe a little more offense than advertised,” Heller said. “I think he’s done some stuff in his swing with Marty Sutherland, our hitting coach, and he’s strong right now. The ball’s jumping off his bat. And so we’re hoping we can get some offense out of Koop as well.”

Heller said Schulte has been impressive with his defense. 

“Koop is maybe the perfect guy to come in after Michael Seegers,” Heller said. “Michael was down there a long time, and was a big-time defender for us. I think Koop can step in and do a really solid job defensively.”

“He’s always been a really good defender in my eyes, and just like his dad, he’s always been super competitive,” said Iowa teammate Caleb Wulf, who played with Schulte at SCC and with the Bees. “He always knows how to win and how to put himself in the best position to succeed or do the job we need him to do.”

Schulte will return to the Bees this summer, but before that he will get a chance in the starting lineup of a program that is all too familiar to him.

“Coach Heller really wants me to just be that defensive player that I know I can be,” Schulte said. “So I take pride in my defense, make all the plays and if I hit, that’s a plus. But I’m really glad I’m here and getting this opportunity.”

Photo: Kooper Schulte fields a ground ball for the Burlington Bees in the 2023 season. (Steve Cirinna/Burlington Bees)