Garrett Buechele admits he can be annoying.
“I’ve always been a curious kid,” the Oklahoma third baseman said. “When I was little I was always asking my dad, ‘Why is this going on? Why is this happening?’ I just want to be in the loop. It helps me understand the game more.”
When there’s a runner on base and OU coach Sunny Golloway calls for a hit-and-run instead of a bunt, Buechele wants to know why. He wants to know more about everything.
The questions come constantly, but the coaches never looked at it as an annoyance.
“He’s not second-guessing me,” Golloway said. “He just has a vast knowledge of the game and he wants more. I’ve never taken any offense to it. It’s more like I would like the whole club to be.”
Getting a whole club of Buechele’s would be tough. Just about every player on OU’s roster grew up playing baseball from the time they were old enough to swing a bat. But few got the early insight Buechele did. His father, Steve, played 11 years in the major leagues with Texas, Pittsburgh and the Chicago Cubs.
Some of his earliest memories are being in big league clubhouses with father. He remembers playful wrestling matches with Sammy Sosa when his father played for the Cubs.
Most of all he remembers trying to figure out the strange game of baseball.
Most of the questions don’t really have answers. How Buechele even wound up at OU involved a quirk.
After a standout career at Arlington (Texas) Lamar High School, he was set to go to Kansas. He liked the school and the town. There was just one thing. The Jayhawks’ coaching staff wanted him to become a catcher.
“To me, that sounded terrible,” Buechele said. “I caught a few games and my knees didn’t really appreciate it.”
Lucky for the Sooners, Norman happened to be on the way home. The Buecheles stopped by the OU baseball offices and talked to Golloway. After a season in redshirt, OU had an everyday third baseman.
Buechele will bring a .352 batting average and 36 RBIs into this weekend’s series against Texas A&M.; There hasn’t been a new player in the lineup who’s made a bigger impact than Buechele. He’s started every game and made only six errors.
“He’s been very consistent,” OU first baseman Aaron Baker said. “He’s been a great guy for us because his attitude is so good. He’s helped us a lot.”
Golloway still kicks himself for not giving Buechele a shot last season. But the player, in retrospect, sees why he needed a season to adjust to the college game.
He was just 17 when he graduated from high school and another year of maturing physically helped. Mentally, however, OU’s coaches saw what they needed to see.
“He knew you needed to get here early and he knows there’s days when you need to stay late,” OU assistant coach Tim Tadlock said. “There’s no doubt he has a very good understanding of the game.”
Making adjustments in baseball is a constant necessity. After just about every game, the third baseman is on the phone with his father. Steve is managing the Rangers’ Class A team in Bakersfield, Calif., but he watches most Sooner games on the Internet. Pointers are given and more knowledge is absorbed.
When it comes to baseball, Buechele can’t wait, for class is always in session.
Sports
Buechele so curious
- Sports
-
-
Ricketts delivers early as Sooners cruise easily past Foxes in opener
Keilani Ricketts didn’t waste any time as she began her final postseason at Marita Hynes Field. The senior opened with her signature fastball to Marist’s leadoff batter Maureen Duddy. It sailed past for strike one. So she repeated the ...
-
Sooners remain in seventh place after two rounds of NCAA regional
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — In the second round of the 54-hole Tallahassee Regional, being played at the scoring-friendly Golden Eagle Country Club, the Oklahoma men stood still Friday on the 6.965-yard, par 72 layout. And still, the 25th-ranked ...
-
Oxbow upsets Orb
BALTIMORE — Oxbow put D. Wayne Lukas in the record books again with an upset of Orb in the Preakness Stakes on Saturday, giving the Hall of Fame trainer his 14th win in a Triple Crown race....
-
Sooners win playoff for top-five finish berth to nationals
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — The Oklahoma men didn’t do themselves many favors. In seventh place at the Tallahassee Regional after both 18 and 36 holes at Golden Eagle Golf and Country Club, the Sooners entered Saturday’s final round needing to ...
-
Sooners have to battle their way into regional final following Razorbacks’ rally
Arkansas didn’t panic. Even down five runs and down to their final out in the sixth inning, the Razorbacks responded with a series of hits against Big 12 Pitcher of the Year Keilani Ricketts, scoring four runs to cut the Oklahoma lead to ...
-
Wildcats win pivotal series against Sooners
MANHATTAN, Kan. — Oklahoma’s dreams of winning a Big 12 Conference baseball title died Friday night. Its hopes of entering the Big 12 tournament coming off a series victory drowned Saturday....
-
Pacers advance over Knicks
INDIANAPOLIS — Lance Stephenson scored a playoff career-high 25 points and led a late 11-2 run Saturday night, leading the Indiana Pacers past the New York Knicks, 106-99 and into the Eastern Conference finals for the first time since ...
-
Defense just as crucial to Sooners’ win as clutch hits
Coach Patty Gasso said suspect fielding was one of the Sooners’ biggest weaknesses early in the season. It was something the coach focused on improving as the Sooners entered conference play, and something her players responded to. OU ...
-
Brewers top Cards in 10
ST. LOUIS — Jeff Bianchi drove in two runs with a 10th-inning single up the middle, and the Milwaukee Brewers beat the St. Louis Cardinals 6-4 on Saturday night. Joe Kelly (0-2) allowed runs for the first time in five appearances and took ...
-
Trying day at track for Ganassi
INDIANAPOLIS — Once again, Chip Ganassi Racing will start the Indianapolis 500 packed close together. Unfortunately, for the foursome, that proximity is in the middle of the pack....
- More Sports Headlines
-



