Henry Van Zant: April NESCAC Player of the Month

Henry Van Zant '15 delivering a pitch against Bates. (Courtesy of Bowdoin Athletics/ Tom Van Zant)
Henry Van Zant ’15 delivering a pitch against Bates. (Courtesy of Bowdoin Athletics/ Tom Van Zant)

Editors Note: Statistics are through all April games.

More so than in any other sport that we cover, one player – in this case, an ace – on a NESCAC team can have a massive effect on a team’s record. Because the NESCAC regular season is structured with only weekend games one starting pitcher can start (at least) 33 percent of their NESCAC games. Having that one starter who you can rely on for a victory every time out is an enormous advantage. With apologies to all the other elite aces in the NESCAC (all three Wesleyan starting pitchers, Sean Meekins ’15, Tim Superko ’17, etc.), no player represented that more than Henry Van Zant ’15 for Bowdoin. After his junior year was mostly lost because of a shoulder injury, Van Zant was able to come back better than ever as a senior. He pitched his best throughout the month of April when he could be relied upon every game he pitched to give Bowdoin a chance to win.

Van Zant made five starts in April, four of which were NESCAC games and a fifth one against West-division foe Wesleyan. He also made a start on March 27 against Tufts where he went all seven innings and allowed zero earned runs. Over the course of April, he went the distance three times and threw 40 innings in total. During April, Van Zant tossed up a 2.03 ERA and 7.43 K/9. He also had a WHIP of 1.08. He went 5-0 in his starts. In that non-conference game against Wesleyan Van Zant held the Cardinals scoreless the entire game to give Bowdoin the 1-0 win. That game represented Wesleyan’s only loss to a NESCAC opponent until its loss to Amherst yesterday.

An appropriate comparison for Van Zant is 2001 Curt Schilling as powerful righties with above-average fastballs that rely mainly on a two-pitch combination. The biggest difference (alright, there are bigger differences. .. whatever) between them is their secondary pitches. Schilling was known for his split-fingered fastball while Van Zant relies on a vicious slider beside his fastball. Those two pitches are really it. He says that he also can throw a changeup, but “If those pitches [fastball and slider] are working, I can usually get by with just that.” Both pitches are ones that he can throw and consistently miss bats with. His fastball is so effective because of his ability to control it while also having a lot of movement on it. Van Zant throws a two-seam fastball that tails towards righties. He feels comfortable throwing it when he just needs a strike or when he wants a strikeout.

Catcher Chris Nadeau ’16 says that the approach for Van Zant does not change very much from game to game. Everything begins by establishing the fastball early on in the game. Then the slider starts to get used more and more as the game goes along. Van Zant rarely disagrees with the pitches that Nadeau calls. Van Zant says he “couldn’t ask for a better catcher than [Nadeau].” This is Nadeau’s first year as a full time starter, but he caught Van Zant down the stretch of last season so the two had a good feel for each other coming into this year.

The most impressive accomplishment of Van Zant’s April was a five-day stretch from April 24-28. On Friday he took the mound and went all nine innings to secure the win. He had to labor through more than 130 pitches and get out of a few early jams to overcome a rocky start, by his standards. Then, on three days’ rest, he took the mound against Bates in a must-win game for Bowdoin to have a chance of making the playoffs. He looked unsteady to begin the game allowing four runs through three innings. Then, with more than 200 pitches already in the last five days, Van Zant reared back and managed to throw five scoreless innings and left the game after the eighth with the score 12-4. He again threw more than 130 pitches in the game.

When asked about that heroic stretch Van Zant said, “It came down to wanting a chance at playoffs more than caring how my elbow currently felt. I definitely wouldn’t have been able to get through half that many innings without the rest of the boys fighting for it with me.” First baseman Chad Martin ’16 said Van Zant’s stuff did not show the effects of all those pitches at the end of the Bates game. “In the eighth, his fastball was still moving and the slider still had a lot of bite to it.” One of the strongest players on the baseball team, Van Zant makes sure to take good care of his body year round.

In the end Van Zant would come up just short of getting the Polar Bears to the playoffs, but it wasn’t for lack of effort. That start against Bates ended up being the final one of Van Zant’s career, but there is nothing he could have done to have things turn out differently. He won all five of his NESCAC starts, which coincidentally were Bowdoin’s only five wins in conference. His statistics are of course impressive, but they only begin to tell the full story. During the month of April, Van Zant came as close as possible to making a team game into an individual showcase. For that, he is Nothing but NESCAC’s Player of the Month for April.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.