J D Martinez and the three Sharks who went from Nova Southeastern to MLB Opening Day rosters

J D Martinez and the three Sharks who went from Nova Southeastern to MLB Opening Day rosters

J.D. Martinez and the three Sharks who went from Nova Southeastern to MLB Opening Day rosters NCAA.com

CHAMPS

PRESENTED BY Nova Southeastern has become quite the DII baseball factory. Winners of the 2016 national championship, the Sharks are the only program in DII to have four alum represented on 2018 Opening Day rosters. It all started with the 2009 class. J.D. Martinez, Michael Fiers and Miles Mikolas led the Sharks to a 37-19 record before all going in the same MLB Draft that summer. "I believe that 2009 season was that moment in time that the NSU baseball program was put on the national scene," then-head coach and current Athletic Director Michael Mominey told NCAA.com. "Our real focus was building a championship program with local kids starting with Broward, Palm Beach and Dade counties. All four of these guys came from highly-regarded high school programs in South Florida, so this was definitely an affirmation of what we have set out to accomplish when we got here. It was a great benchmark for things to come in the future. It changed recruiting, the perception of the program and garnering national attention." Mikey and Mateo suiting up for the big league club today at Marlins Park! — NSU Baseball (@NSU_Baseball)

J D Martinez Boston Red Sox

Martinez has had a busy few months. The right-handed slugger was dealt from the Detroit Tigers to the Arizona Diamondbacks at the trade deadline last season. After a solid postseason in which he hit .364 with a home run, Martinez hit the free agent market and was signed by the Boston Red Sox to a mega-deal in February. J.D. Martinez just hit a home run off Rick Porcello — Rob Bradford (@bradfo) Not bad for a former 20th-rounder. Mominey's scouting report:

Mike Fiers Detroit Tigers

Unlike his teammate who spent his career with the Sharks, Fiers transferred in to have one of the best seasons in DII baseball that year. The righty dominated the Sunshine State Conference going 10-3 with a 2.65 ERA. His 145 strikeouts led all of DII and is still the Nova Southeastern single-season record nearly a decade later. He went two rounds after his teammate, taken by the Milwaukee Brewers in the 22nd round. Fiers, too, reached the bigs at the end of the 2011 season and has been a big-league fixture ever since. Though he wasn't on the Houston Astros 2017 World Series roster, he did make 28 starts during the season and earned himself a shiny ring. He signed with Detroit this offseason, and as long as his back holds up, he is expected to be at the back of the rotation for the new-look Tigers, even if an early season DL stint may be looming. RELATED: Mominey's scouting report: "Absolutely the best competitor that I have ever been around. He got better each time he pitched and learned from each outing his senior year. His baseball IQ is off the charts and he had one goal in mind – play professionally and have a chance to play Major League baseball."

Carlos Asuaje San Diego Padres

Asuaje is the lone Shark not a member of the 2009 squad, playing under current head coach Greg Brown on the 2011 team. His career was no less impressive than the trailblazers that came before him. He began his Shark's career as the Sunshine State Conference's freshman of the year and followed it up with an SSC co-player of the year campaign. Asuaje put it all together in his final season hitting .320 while leading the team in doubles (13) and on-base percentage (.441). His 32 stolen bases were tops in the SSC his final season.

Miles Mikolas St Louis Cardinals

Mikolas was the highest drafted Shark of the bunch, selected by the San Diego Padres in the seventh round in 2009. He has been well-traveled since making his big league debut in 2012, and not only was he traded twice but he spent the past three seasons in Japan. After going 31-13 with a 2.18 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, and just 69 walks in 424.2 innings for the Yomiuri Giants, Mikolas is back stateside and in the St. Louis Cardinals rotation. The 29-year-old righty capped off his stellar Sharks career with a 2.06 ERA and a 10-to-1 strikeout-to-walk ratio. The Padres took notice and grabbed him early. Now, he finally seems to be in the best position of his career in the rotation for a team that seems to get the most out of its pitching. Mominey's scouting report: "[He showed] remarkable growth as an athlete and pitcher in three years’ time. He came into the program as somewhat of a “project” given his size and abilities as a freshman, but as a junior became one of the most dominant pitchers in program history. Physically dominant, great teammate, fun and a free spirit."
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