2005 ACC Tournament Webcasts
After dropping two of three at Virginia Tech to close the 2005 regular season, Wake Forest travels to The Baseball Grounds of Jacksonville in Jacksonville, Fla. for the 2005 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament. The Demon Deacons, as well as Duke, Virginia Tech and Maryland, will play two rounds of single elimination baseball on Tuesday, May 24, with the winner playing its way into the first round of the tournament. The eighth-seeded Deacs will face 11th seeded Duke at 11 am. With a victory over the Blue Devils, Wake Forest would then face the winner of the Hokies/Terps at 8 pm.
RANKINGS...
Wake Forest, Virginia Tech, Maryland and Duke are each unranked in any of the four polls.
INJURY UPDATE...
Redshirt freshman Andrew Knox and junior catcher Dan Rosaia remain out indefinitely... Knox has a slight tear in his labrum and has not pitched since Mar. 2 against High Point... Rosaia injured his ankle against South Alabama on Feb. 18 and will miss the entire season after undergoing surgery on Mar. 21... Senior Tim Morley is questionable for the series at Virginia Tech... Senior center fielder Matt Miller injured his right ankle in the series finale against Clemson. Miller missed the entire series with Virginia Tech and remains questionable for the ACC Tournament.
PROBABLE POSITION STARTERS...
Pos. # Player B-T Cl. GP-GS Avg. HR RBI Notes
DH 29 Ryder Mathias R-R R-Sr. 53-53 .309 11 53 Has 8 HR and 24 RBI over last 15G
C 4 J.B. Tucker R-R Sr. 53-53 .324 13 60 Leads team in BA, HR, RBI
1B 26 Brendan Enick R-R R-So. 43-42 .315 5 42 2nd on team multi-RBI games (15)
2B 12 Andy Goff R-R Fr. 52-52 .197 2 32 4th on team with 14 two-out RBI
3B 9 Matt Antonelli R-R So. 53-53 .324 5 32 Leads ACC & 3rd in NCAA w/ 51 BB
SS 3 Ben Ingold R-R Sr. 51-51 .313 4 36 Hitting .352, 4HR, 28RBI in last 38g
LF 2 Brett Linnenkohl L-L Fr. 53-53 .244 4 39 Only player on team with two 3B
RF 21 Grant Achilles R-R R-Jr. 19-13 .254 1 7 Played SS, 2B, 1B and RF this year
CF 7 Casey Sterk R-R Jr. 51-48 .272 1 24 Raised BA from .197 over last 33g
THE STARTING PITCHERS...
Wake Forest will start sophomore righthander Charlie Mellies (2-5, 4.56 ERA) against Duke. The Clifton, VA native has made nine starts and eight relief appearances for a total of 73.0 innings pitched. He has allowed 97 hits and 20 walks while striking out 38. Mellies has allowed six home runs and opponents are batting .312 against him. Mellies blew the save and picked up the loss in the regular season finale loss at Virginia Tech this past Saturday.
The Demon Deacons would most likely turn to junior Kip Byrum if they are to advance past the Blue Devils. Byrum (3-1, 6.98 ERA) has made three starts and 18 relief appearances out of the Demon Deacon bullpen. The Greenville, NC native has tossed a total of 48.1 innings. He has allowed 59 hits and 29 walks with 22 strikeouts. He has allowed five home runs and opponents are batting .303 against him.
With another possible victory, the Deacs would turn to senior Brian Bach (2-3, 4.70 ERA) for their possible matchup with Georgia Tech on Wednesday. The Winston-Salem, NC has made seven starts and 11 relief appearances for a total of 59.1 innings. Bach, who tossed a complete game earlier this season against Duke, has allowed 66 hits and 13 walks with 32 strikeouts. He has allowed just one home run all season and opponents are batting .278 against him.
Sophomore righty Josh Ellis (5-4, 6.26 ERA) would start a possible fourth game for Wake Forest. The Lexington, KY native has made a team-high 14 starts and tossed a team-best 79.1 innings. He has yielded 107 hits and 32 walks with 48 strikeouts. He has allowed a staff-high 11 home runs and opponents are batting .333 against him.
EARLIER THIS SEASON AGAINST THE BLUE DEVILS... Wake Forest swept their series with Duke earlier this season -- all three victories coming by a single run. In the opener, the Deacs took a 11-4 lead into the ninth inning, but had to hold on as the Blue Devils plated six runs in the top of the ninth inning and actually had the tying run at second base before Kyle Young was able to get the final out. Similar to the opener, Wake Forest had a 5-1 advantage going into the eighth inning, but Duke tied the score, 5-5. Senior J.B. Tucker's RBI double in the bottom of the eight secured a 6-5 victory for the Deacs. In the series finale, senior Brian Bach tossed tossed a complete game to lead the Demon Deacons to a 3-2 victory. He allowed just one earned run. Bach tossed a Wake Forest 118 pitches, 78 of which were for strikes. The complete game was not only Wake's first of the season, but it was Bach's third of his career and first since April 17, 2003 when he went the distance against Davidson.
EARLIER THIS SEASON AGAINST THE TERRAPINS... The Deacs were able to take two of three from Maryland despite dropping the opening game of the series 5-4 in 10 innings. Kip Byrum picked up the victory in the second game of the series with 3.1 innings of one-run baseball. Kyle Young tossed two scoreless innings for the save. In the series finale, Senior J.B. Tucker went 3-for-3 with three runs scored and three RBI, including a two-run double in the eighth inning.
EARLIER THIS SEASON AGAINST THE HOKIES... Wake Forest dropped two of three at Virginia Tech this past weekend. The Demon Deacons captured the middle game of the series, 7-5, thanks in part to sophomore Matt Antonelli going 3-for-5 with two runs scored and three RBI, including the go-ahead two-run triple in the top of the eighth inning. The Hokies rallied late in the opener and the finale. Virginia Tech used a four-run seventh inning on Thursday night to win, 6-3, then plated two in the bottom of the ninth to win the rubber game, 7-6.
WAKE FOREST NOTES FROM CLEMSON SERIES...
Wake Forest blew a seven-run lead to the Tigers in the second game of the series. It was the biggest lead the Deacs have blown since Apr. 13, 2001 when the Deacs blew a 7-0 lead in a 18-11 loss to Georgia Tech.
HITTING STREAKS... Entering the ACC Tournament, two Wake Forest players have hitting streaks of at least seven games.
Player Statistics During Streak
Casey Sterk (10) .364 (16-44), 6 R, 4 2B, 6 RBI
Brendan Enick (7) .281, 9-for-32, 8 R, 2 HR, 10 RBI
STREAK ENDS... Senior J.B. Tucker recently had a 16-game hitting streak come to an end. Tucker, who had 12-game hitting streak earlier this season, batted .460 with six home runs and 24 RBI over the streak. He scored 21 runs and recorded seven doubles.
MAJOR POWER SURGE... Wake Forest drilled 14 home runs in their first six games after returning from their 13-day layoff. The Demon Deacons hit three home runs in three straight games (Clemson, 5-14/5-15; High Point, 5-17).
SAME STARTERS... Wake Forest has had four players - Matt Antonelli (3B), Brett Linnenkohl (LF), J.B. Tucker (C/DH) and Ryder Mathias (1B/C/DH) - start all 53 games this season. Andy Goff (SS/2B) has 52 contests, while Casey Sterk (CF/RF) and Ben Ingold (2B/SS) have been in the starting lineup on 51 occasions. Antonelli is the only player to start all 53 games at the same position -- playing every inning at that spot.
MONTH OF MAY... Wake Forest has struggled in the month of May each of the past two seasons. The Deacons dropped all nine of their games in May last season and were just 1-7 in the month in 2003. Wake Forest snapped a 14-game losing streak in the month of May with their victory over Elon on May 10. Wake Forest is 4-5 in May this season
MATHIAS ON A TEAR... Senior designated hitter Ryder Mathias recently ended an absolute 10-game tear (4.23-5.17). Mathias batted .463 (17-for-39) with eight home runs and 22 RBI. Mathias slugged an absurd 1.103 and had a pair of multi-home run games. In fact, Mathias homered twice in the same inning against Appalachian State on May 11. He was the first Demon Deacon to do so since Jeff Ruziecki blasted two home runs in the second inning versus UNCG back on April 30, 2002.
REMBIELAK ON HIS WAY TO 400... first-year head coach Rick Rembielak is on the brink of his 400th career victory. In 11 years at Kent State, Rembielak went 373-251-1. After the Deacs victory over Virginia Tech this past weekend, Rembielak now has 398 victories.
ABOUT TIME... Wake Forest, and many others in the ACC, has had their struggles with Elon. In fact, the Demon Deacons picked up their first victory over the Phoenix in Elon earlier this week for the first time since the 1997 season.
REMEMBER 1955... Wake Forest honored the 1955 NCAA Championship baseball last weekend against Clemson. The Demon Deacons are the only ACC school to capture the College World Series while a member of the conference.
OUT OF THE BOX... over the stretch from Feb. 18 through Mar. 27, the Deacs allowed a run in the first inning in seven straight games. In fact, Wake Forest has allowed a run in the first inning in 22 of 53 games.
HOME VS. AWAY... the Demon Deacons are 16-10 at Hooks Stadium this season and just 9-18 away from the friendly confines of Hooks Stadium. While Wake is 1-2 on neutral fields, the Deacs are 8-16 on the road. The proof is in the statistics. While Wake Forest is hitting .287 at Hooks Stadium and .278 on the road, the real difference is the pitching. The Deacs' pitching staff has a 5.55 ERA at home while WFU's road ERA is 7.21.
ENICK SAD TO SEE HOOK END... Redshirt sophomore Brendan Enick has had a breakthrough season in 2005, but that is due in large part to his success at home. In 24 games at Hooks, Enick is batting .402 with four home runs and 32 RBI, while compared to .211, one home run and 12 RBI in 16 games on the road.
HIT-BY-PITCH HIGHWAY... the Demon Deacons have been hit 94 times through their first 53 games of 2005. The Deacs were hit 51 times last season in 50 games. Senior Ryder Mathias has already been hit a school record 26 times and senior Matt Miller has equaled the previous school record of 16. At this pace, the Deacs will register 104 HPBs this season which would be the eighth most all-time.
Team Year G HBP
Nevada 1997 60 125
Long Beach State 1998 67 124
College of Charleston 2004 63 122
Cal State Fullerton 2003 66 117
Arizona State 2000 59 115
Long Beach State 1999 60 114
San Jose State 2000 65 105
*Wake Forest 2005 56 104
Cal State Fullerton 1998 64 102
Washington 1998 58 101
Nebraska 2002 68 99
MORE ON PLUNKING... Senior Ryder Mathias leads the team and is second in the country with 26 hits batsmen this season -- which is a single-season school record. The previous school record of 16 was held by Cory Sullivan. Mathias also owns the all-time career mark with 39.
Career
1. Ryder Mathias 2001- 39
2. Jason Aquilante 1998-01 34
3. Corey Slavik 1998-01 29
4. Ben Ingold 2002- 24
5. Cory Sullivan 2000-01 22
Mark Melito 1991-95 22
Single-Season
1. Ryder Mathias 2005 26
2. Matt Miller 2005 16
Cory Sullivan 2001 15
4. Jason Aquilante 2000 14
5. Jason Aquilante 1999 12
ANTONELLI PREFERS LEADOFF... in his two seasons as a Demon Deacon, sophomore third basemen Matt Antonelli has enjoyed his most success while hitting in the No. 1 spot in the lineup. In 46 career games in the top in the lineup, Antonelli is a career .344 (65-for-189) hitter with 53 runs scored, four home runs and 31 RBI. This season, Antonelli is hitting .347 (59-for-170) with 50 runs scored, four home runs and 29 RBI. He hit just .225 (9-for-40) in the first 11 games in the third spot.
SEEING CLEAR... Senior second basemen Ben Ingold did not play on Mar. 2 against High Point after undergoing Lasik's surgery the day prior. Prior to the surgery, Ingold was batting .158, but since the procedure (41 games) Ingold is batting .350 with four home runs, 27 RBI and 42 runs scored.
WALK THIS WAY... the Demon Deacons are third in the ACC in walks with 263. The Deacs have drawn at least six walks in 21 of their 53 games this season, including a season-high 12 against Cincinnati on Feb. 26.
DEACS ECLIPSE WIN TOTAL FROM 2004... With the victory over Maryland on Apr. 23, the Demon Deacons captured their 18th victory of the season. Wake Forest won all of 17 games in 2004. The Demon Deacs at 11-16 have nearly tripled their entire ACC win total from 2004 (4-20).
ACHILLES TYPE EFFORT... Redshirt junior Grant Achilles was hitless in his first 29 plate appearances, but the backup infielder picked a great time for his first career hit -- a gametying, solo home run in the eighth inning against Winthrop on Apr. 19. Achilles, in his first career start at first base, then recorded a two-run single in the second inning against Charlotte on Apr. 20.
CHASING THE RECORD BOOK...
Ben Ingold
Career at-bats 845 5th
Career Hits 274 6th
Career HBP 24 4th
Ryder Mathias
Career HBP 39 1st
Single Season HBP 26 1st
Tim Morley
Career Innings Pitched 266.0 11th
CURSE OF DICK HOWSER OVER... Wake Forest's victory over Florida State on Apr. 10 was the first for the Deacs in Tallahasse since Feb. 25, 1995 -- a span of 15 consecutive losses. It also snapped Wake Forest's nine game overall losing streak to the Seminoles.
TAD BIT OF IRONY... Senior Brian Bach started in Apr. 10th's victory over Florida State. While Back was not a factor in the decision, the senior did toss 5.1 innings and four earned runs on seven hits. Ironically enough, the last Wake Forest victory over FSU came on March 31, 2002 -- a game that Bach started. That afternoon, Bach also went 5.1 innings and allowed three runs on 10 hits.
SERIOUS WORK OUR OF THE PEN... Junior closer Kyle Young pitched 4.0 innings of relief and allowed just one earned run on six hits in the victory over FSU on Apr. 10. The junior right-handed hurler struckout five and walked four. Young tossed 106 pitches on the afternoon.
BACH TO OLD SELF... In only his second start since returning from a torn rotator cuff, Wake Forest senior Brian Bach tossed a complete game to lead the Demon Deacons to a 3-2 victory over Duke in the series finale on April 3. He allowed just one earned run. Bach tossed a Wake Forest team-high 118 pitches, 78 of which were for strikes. The complete game was not only Wake's first of the season, but it was Bach's third of his career and first since April 17, 2003 when he went the distance against Davidson. Bach missed most of 2004 after undergoing season-ending surgery on April 11.
TURN ABOUT IS FAIR PLAY... In the Demon Deacons three-game series sweep of ACC rival Duke, the Deacs won each of the three games in the series by a single run. In fact, Duke did the same exact thing in their sweep of Wake Forest in 2004.
BEST PLAYERS BY CLASS... Baseball America recently ranked the top 50 collegiate players in each class, and Wake Forest was represented on that list. Two different Demon Deacons were named to the top 50 lists.
Wake Forest senior Ben Ingold and sophomore Matt Antonelli were each listed among the top 25 prospects for the respective class in the entire country. Ingold, a shortstop, was ranked as the 23rd best prospect among seniors, while Antonelli, a third basemen, was listed as the 13th best prospect among sophomores.
ANTONELLI A LOCK IN LINEUP... sophomore Matt Antonelli has started all 100 games of his Wake Forest career at third base. The last time another player started at third base was when Jamie D'Antona started against Virginia in the ACC Tournament on May 23, 2003.
BULLPEN RESPONDS AFTER TOUGH STRETCH... The Demon Deacon bullpen had struggled each of the past three series against, Miami, Carolina and Duke. In 20.2 innings of work against the Hurricanes, Tar Heels and Blue Devils, Wake Forest allowed 32 hits and walked 14. The Deacs earned run average was 9.15 and opponents were batting .348. But, at FSU the quartet of Kip Byrum, Kyle Young, Matt Hammond and Eric Niesen combined to throw 12.1 innings and allowed three earned runs on nine hits -- good for a 2.19 ERA.
BEEN AWHILE... the Wake Forest, 13-6, victory over #6 Miami was the first victory for the Demon Deacons over a top-10 team since beating NC State on April 12, 2003.
A COUPLE OF FIRSTS... a pair of freshman, Andy Goff and Mike Causey, each registered a couple of firsts this past weekend in the series against Miami. Goff smacked his first career home run in the 13-6 victory over the Hurricanes. Causey not only had his first career at-bat on Friday, but picked up his first career hit and RBI with a pinch hit in Sunday's 12-4 loss.
ELLIS LOOKS COMFORTABLE ON FRIDAY... Sophomore Josh Ellis, making his first career start on Friday night, scattered nine hits in 7.0 innings against the Tar Heels back on March 25. Ellis struckout a career-high tying seven and did not walk a single batter. Ellis' previous high for strikeouts without a walk was five earlier this season against Western Kentucky.
PROOF IS IN THE PUDDING... The Demon Deacons were hurt all weekend in the North Carolina series by their inability to get hits with runners on base or in scoring position. Wake Forest was just 10-for-57 (.175) all weekend with runners on base and 4-for-33 (.121) with runners in scoring position.
GOOD PITCHING DOES STOP GOOD HITTING... The Deacs managed just one earned run over the first 22 innings of the series with the Tar Heels.
A GEORGIA TECH ASSAULT... The Yellow Jackets scored 47 runs in the three-game series sweep back on March 11-13. It is the second most runs Wake Forest has ever surrendered in an ACC series, falling one run shy of the all-time record when Florida State plated 48 runs in 2004. Georgia Tech was also the first team to ever score 15+ runs in three straight games over the Deacs.
PITCHING HAD TOUGH WEEKEND AT GEORGIA TECH... there were some question marks surrounding the Wake Forest starting pitching. While the group got off to a pretty solid start, the rotation really struggled this past weekend at Georgia Tech. The trio of Tim Morley, Josh Ellis and Matt Hammond allowed 22 earned runs in 10.0 innings, good for a 19.80 earned run average. In fact, the Jackets hit .449 against the trio.
FRESHMAN SET DOWN CAVALIERS... The freshman duo of Matt Hammond and Eric Niesen picked up the win and save, respectively, in the sweep clinching victory over the Cavaliers on March 6. Hammond and Niesen held Virginia hitless over the final seven innings.
DEMON DEACONS BURNING UP... Wake Forest was on-fire the entire weekend against Virginia. The Demon Deacons scored 33 runs over the weekend and batted .355. In fact, the Deacs had at least eight different players come up with hits in two of the three games. Wake Forest had 10 extra-base hits. The Demon Deacons actually batted around in an inning in each of the three games. Wake Forest also had a quintet (Brendan Enick, Matt Miller, Andy Goff, Matt Antonelli and Ryder Mathias) all bat above .400 for the weekend.
ANTONELLI KNOWS HOW TO GET HOME... Sophomore Matt Antonelli scored five runs in the 15-8 rout of the Cavaliers on March 5. The five runs scored were a career-high and the most for the Deacs since senior Ben Ingold scored five times on March 1, 2004 against High Point.
DEACS BATTING AROUND ON THE CAVALIERS... The Deacs sent 10 batters to the plate in the eight-run first inning on March 5. The eight runs are the most runs in a first inning since March 25, 2003 when Wake Forest plated nine runs in the opening inning against High Point. The Deacs would back around each of the next two days as well.
ONE STREAK ENDS, BUT ANOTHER CONTINUES... While Wake Forest opened the ACC season with a victory for the sixth time in the last seven years, the victory on March 4 did snap a six-game losing streak to the Cavaliers. The Demon Deacons had not defeated Virginia since April 25, 2003.
QUITE AN ARRAY OF ARMS... Wake Forest used seven different pitchers against High Point on March 2. It was the most pitchers used in a single game since Apr. 11, 2001 when the Deacs used seven in an 18-4 rout of Appalachian State.
SOUTHPAW DUO SAD TO SEE CINCI SERIES END... A pair of Demon Deacon left-handed relievers picked up the first wins of their career in the series with the Bearcats. Senior Kip Byrum registered the victory in the series opener, while sophomore Sean Souders got the win in the second game of the series. After the opener was suspended due to darkness, both victories came on the same day, February 26.
ANTONELLI STRUGGLES MIGHTILY IN SERIES... Sophomore Matt Antonelli was held hitless the entire series (0-for-15) against the Bearcats. The hitless streak would reach 17 official at-bats - a career long skid for the third basemen.
MATHIAS DRILLS FIRST EVER GRAND SLAM... Senior Ryder Mathias smacked his first career grand slam on Feb. 26 against Cincinnati and the first such home run for the Demon Deacons since Steve LeFaivre went yard with the bases loaded against Florida State on May 20, 2004.
NEW FACE AT SHORTSTOP... senior Ben Ingold made his first career start at a position other than shortstop on Mar. 29 against Charlotte. Ingold played second base for the first time in 182 career starts to that point. Back on Feb. 22, Ingold failed to start at shortstop for the Demon Deacons for the first time since Feb. 12, 2003 at Elon -- snapping a streak of 108 consecutive starts at shortstop. Ingold has seen action in 204 games over his four-year career.
ENICK EARNS ACC HONOR... Wake Forest designated hitter Brendan Enick was named last week's Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Player of the Week. Enick had an incredible week. The redshirt sophomore batted .786 (11-for-14) with two doubles, one home run, six runs scored and seven RBI. Enick also had a slugging percentage of 1.143 and on-base percentage of .842. Enick went 3-for-3 against Appalachian State, 4-for-4 in the series opener against Cincinnati and then 3-for-4 in game two with the Bearcats. Enick recorded hits in nine consecutive official at-bats, the first nine hits of his Demon Deacon career. The nine consecutive hits are a Wake Forest baseball school record (post 1976). He actually reached base in 12 consecutive plate appearances.
YOUNG MOVES INTO CLOSER'S ROLE... after serving as one of the more consistent starting pitchers for the Demon Deacons the past two years, junior Kyle Young will now act as the Deacs closer. Young, who made 18 starts in 2003 and 2004, adopted the role when Justin Keadle was lost for the season after undergoing Tommy John surgery.
KEADLE GONE FOR SEASON... senior Justin Keadle was the Deacs most consistent starter in 2004 and then was named a Cape Cod League All-Star this summer, but will be out of action in 2005 after undergoing Tommy John surgery. Keadle will return in 2006.
ACC PRESEASON POLL... In a preseason poll of the ACC coaches, Wake Forest was picked to finish eighth in the conference.
School Points 2004 Record
1. Miami (8) 118 50-13
2. North Carolina (3) 110 43-21, 14-10 ACC
3. Georgia Tech 93 44-21, 18-5 ACC
4. Florida State 89 45-23, 16-8 ACC
5. Clemson 80 39-26, 14-10 ACC
6. Virginia 63 44-15, 18-6 ACC
7. NC State 55 36-24, 11-12 ACC
8. Wake Forest 34 17-33, 4-20 ACC
9. Maryland 30 22-34, 4-20 ACC
10. Duke 27 25-31, 8-16 ACC
10. Virginia Tech 27 29-27, 11-15 BIG EAST
RECRUITING TIDBITS... First-year Wake Forest baseball coach Rick Rembielak has received nine National Letters of Intent from recruits to play for the Demon Deacons in the spring of 2006.
Name Pos. B/T Ht. Wt. Hometown
Garrett Bullock LHP L/L 6-3 210 Greenville, NC
Allan Dykstra 1B L/R 6-5 198 San Diego, CA
Joel Ernst RHP R/R 6-4 185 Loveland, OH
Cory Hinde C R/R 5-10 185 Tallmadge, OH
Brad Kledzik RHP R/R 6-5 220 Fairfax Station, VA
Evan Ocheltree OF L/L 6-3 185 Richmond, VA
Dustin Hood INF R/R 6-2 190 Nederland, TX
Tyler Smith INF L/R 6-1 180 Boca Raton, Fla.
Greg Saville RHP R/R 6-3 210 Vienna, Va.
Deacons In The Pros
Mike MacDougal, P
Kansas City-AL, 2001-present
David Bush, P
Toronto-AL, 2004-present
Cory Sullivan, OF
Colorado-NL, 2005-present
In the Minor Leagues
(as of April 2005)
Jamie Athas (Giants) - AAA
Danny Borrell (Yankees) - A (Rehab)
Adam Bourassa (Rangers) - High A
Dan Conway (Rockies) - AA
Jamie D'Antona (Arizona) - AA
Adam Hanson (Indians) - A
Seth Hill (Rangers) - A
Kevin Jarvis (Cardinals) - AAA
Eric Schmitt (Yankees) - AA
Corey Slavik (Rockies) - AA
Kyle Sleeth (Tigers) - AA
Bille Masse (Yankees) - AA Manager
RADIO, LIVE-STATS & COVERAGE... All of Wake Forest's 2005 regular-season and postseason games again will be available via Gametracker on WakeForestSports.com ...12 games will be featured on the radio at 98.1 WBRF... each of those boradcasts, as well as four other ACC games and more to be announced, will be available via the internet.