Juan Aguilera

LUBBOCK, Texas โ€” You never know the identity of a postseason baseball hero before he becomes one.

Junior right-hander Juan Aguilera did not play a major role for the Arizona Wildcats this season. Entering the NCAA Tournament, the transfer from Cochise College had pitched eight times, totaling 11 innings. He did not have a decision.

But when UA coach Jay Johnson ran through his options after a two-hour-plus weather delay at the Lubbock Regional on Saturday, he zeroed in on Aguilera.

It turned out to be a prudent choice.

Aguilera pitched two scoreless innings to earn his first win as a Wildcat as Arizona outlasted Delaware 6-5 in an elimination game at Rip Griffin Park.

Although he brought a 7.36 ERA into Saturday, Aguilera actually had pitched better of late. He didnโ€™t surrender a run in three outings spanning 3ยบ innings in May. The biggest difference?

โ€œConfidence,โ€ said Aguilera, a product of Sierra Vista Buena High School. โ€œJust believing in myself. That was my problem before. Iโ€™ve just been working on that since Iโ€™ve been here.โ€

Aguilera also possesses what catcher Cesar Salazar described as a โ€œdirtyโ€ slider. Johnson picked Aguilera to start the 11th inning in part because he had an out pitch that would be effective against the Blue Hensโ€™ predominantly right-handed-hitting lineup.

After a rough start to his UA career, Aguilera is performing like the pitcher Johnson believed he could become.

โ€œThe confidence allows him to throw his pitches with conviction,โ€ Johnson said. โ€œHe probably thought for a little while, โ€˜Hey, do I belong here?โ€™ He just needed to feel about himself the way we did when we brought him in. Itโ€™s been a nice progression.โ€

Kindallโ€™s secret

Jerry Kindall wants Arizona to win. His blood runs red and blue. He just canโ€™t reveal his true feelings while calling the Wildcatsโ€™ regional games for ESPN.

The Hall of Fame coach โ€” who led Arizona to three College World Series championships โ€” is the analyst for the Lubbock Regional, working alongside Trey Bender. When the Wildcats are his assignment, Kindall makes a conscious effort to remain impartial. Itโ€™s not easy.

โ€œIโ€™m trying to be,โ€ Kindall said. โ€œBut in my heart, I am a Wildcat. I can put that aside. Iโ€™ve done the Pac-12. I think thatโ€™s the right thing.โ€

ESPN officials told Kindall about two months ago to keep this weekend open. He had no idea where heโ€™d be assigned. He hoped it would be Tucson, but Arizonaโ€™s rรฉsumรฉ did not warrant a hosting bid.

He ended up in Lubbock, and so did the Wildcats. Last yearโ€™s national runners-up lost their first game, immediately putting them in elimination mode. Kindallโ€™s teams faced that situation many times. Thatโ€™s when he traded in his lineup card for a psychiatristโ€™s notepad.

โ€œWhen we lost the first game of a double elimination, โ€ฆ I had to calm them down,โ€ Kindall said. โ€œI had to calm myself down.โ€

Kindall is a big believer in Johnson, who led the Wildcats to the CWS finals in his first season in Tucson. They were the only Pac-12 team to make the NCAA Tournament each of the past two seasons.

โ€œHeโ€™s the man for the job,โ€ Kindall said. โ€œHeโ€™s a terrific recruiter and he runs a very well-organized game. He thinks ahead. He has ways to score runs that I never did. I didnโ€™t even think about it. A double squeeze? Come on!โ€

Arizona pulled off a two-run squeeze during its sweep of Arizona State last month.

Kindall, 82, lives in Tucson but didnโ€™t make it out to Hi Corbett Field very often this season. He has 12 grandchildren, and they keep Kindall and his wife, Diane, pretty busy.

โ€œItโ€™s a wonderful chapter in our life,โ€ he said.

Inside pitch

  • After the players were allowed back on the field โ€” but before an official restart time was announced โ€” they bided their time with some non-baseball competitions. UA pitcher Luke Soroko raced Delaware pitcher Scott Zimmer to center field; Soroko won. The two teams also set up a bowling game, with paper cups serving as pins. Neither side was able to knock down any of the cups.
  • The rain delay limited right-hander Cody Deason to one inning โ€” but makes him available to pitch Sunday โ€œin some capacity,โ€ Johnson said. Deason emerged as Arizonaโ€™s No. 3 starter late in the season.
  • JJ Matijevic and Alfonso Rivas have combined for 128 RBIs, the most by a pair of Arizona teammates since 2007, when Bill Rhinehart and C.J. Ziegler totaled 129.
  • UA junior outfielder Cal Stevenson has a nine-game hitting streak and a 16-game on-base streak. In those 16 games, heโ€™s batting .411 (23 of 56) with 19 walks, 17 runs and 11 RBIs.
  • Senior shortstop Louis Boyd is batting .423 (11 of 26) in his last seven games, including five multi-hit performances.

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