Mississippi State earns SEC’s top seed

Published 10:15 am Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Mississippi State won the Southeastern Conference regular-season title one year after finishing in the league basement.

Now the Bulldogs want to carry the momentum of that dramatic rise into the postseason.

Mississippi State (40-14-1, 21-9 SEC) enters this week’s Southeastern Conference Tournament as the No. 1 seed after winning its first regular-season league title since 1989. The Bulldogs had gone 24-30 overall and 8-22 in conference play in 2015 to finish last in the Western Division and post the SEC’s worst overall league record.

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Bulldogs coach John Cohen, who played for Mississippi State’s last SEC regular-season champions, said there isn’t much of a gap separating the top of the conference from the bottom.

“If you’re an inch off in the Southeastern Conference, you’re going to get punched in the mouth a lot,” Cohen said.

SEC Tournament play begins today in Hoover, Alabama. No. 6 seed Vanderbilt (41-15, 18-12) faces No. 11 seed Missouri (26-29, 9-21), No. 7 seed Mississippi (40-16, 18-12) meets No. 10 seed Georgia (27-29, 11-19), No. 8 seed Kentucky (32-24, 15-15) battles No. 9 seed Alabama (31-24, 15-15) and No. 5 seed LSU (39-17, 19-11) tackles No. 12 seed Tennessee (29-27, 9-21) in single-elimination games.

Today’s winners advance to double-elimination play beginning Wednesday along with Mississippi State, No. 2 seed South Carolina (42-13, 20-9), No. 3 seed Texas A&M (41-13, 20-10) and No. 4 seed Florida (44-11, 19-10). The tournament returns to a single-elimination format Saturday and has a championship game Sunday.

Mississippi State made its dramatic rise up the standings by getting improvement from its new players and receiving a huge impact from its newcomers. Mississippi State’s three top batting averages are owned by freshman Jake Mangum (.427) and junior-college transfers Nathaniel Lowe (.359) and Jack Kruger (.358). Kruger has a team-high .570 slugging percentage, Mangum leads the Bulldogs in on-base percentage (.479) and Lowe has a team-leading 47 RBIs.

“Those are all three new guys who have just had great first years,” Cohen said. “That’s not common in the Southeastern Conference.”

Cohen also led Kentucky to a regular-season title in 2006 and is the second coach to win an SEC regular-season championship at two different schools. Ron Polk led Mississippi State to four SEC regular-season championships before winning one at Georgia in 2001.

By STEVE MEGARGEE, AP Sports Writer