Players In The Pros

P.J. Antoniato
Antoniato earned an early season promotion from Short-Season A affiliate Batavia to Advanced A Clearwater of the Florida State League. The 5-foot-9, 185-pound shortstop got off to a solid start at the plate, hitting .300 with Batavia and .244 with four extra-base hits in 16 games at Clearwater. Antoniato was a 15th round selection of the Philadelphia Phillies in the 2005 draft and went on to hit .198 with two doubles, a triple and 13 RBI in 34 games with Batavia in 2005.

Rich Aurilia
Aurilia resurrected his career in Cincinnati, helping the Reds to an 80-82 record by hitting .300 with 23 home runs and 70 RBI. He was versatile as well as productive, logging innings at first, second and third base and putting up big numbers in limited at-bats. The 6-foot-1 infielder signed as a free agent in the offseason and headed back to San Francisco, where he was a National League All-Star in 2001. Aurilia was selected by the Texas Rangers in the 24th round of the 1992 amateur draft after an All-BIG EAST career at St. John's.

Joe Burke
Burke earned a promotion to Advanced A Tampa in 2006 and went on to hit .293 with five doubles, nine RBI and 13 runs scored in 29 games. Burke was selected on the first day of the 2005 draft, going in the 18th round to the hometown New York Yankees with the 559th overall selection. A two-year starter with the Red Storm, Burke played in 37 games with Staten Island in 2005 and recorded a .220 batting average, four doubles, a home run and 13 RBI in 118 at-bats.

Rob Delaney
Delaney was the latest Red Storm player to sign a professional contract, joining the Twins in mid-June and heading to the club's Gulf Coast League affiliate to start his career. A steady workhorse while at St. John's, Delaney went 1-3 with a 4.74 ERA, 30 strikeouts and just one walk in 38 innings. After his season in the GCL was completed, he earned the promotion to Fort Myers to make three appearances in August and September.

Mike Dzurilla
Dzurilla played alongside Antoniato at Advanced A Clearwater in the Philadelphia Phillies organization and hit .217 with five doubles, a triple and 13 runs scored in 30 games. He was a seventh round draft choice of the Chicago Cubs in 1999 and has played eight seasons of professional baseball in the Cubs and Phillies organizations.

Craig Hansen
Hansen, a first-round draft choice of the Boston Red Sox in 2005, began his second professional season with the Double-A Portland Sea Dogs and was quickly promoted to Triple-A Pawtucket after five appearances. Hansen spent time as a starter at Pawtucket in an effort to refine his secondary pitches, was recalled by Boston and posted a 6.63 ERA and 30 strikeouts in 38 innings. In 2005, Hansen made history by becoming the first Red Sox player to make it to Boston the same year he was drafted.

C.J. Nitkowski
Nitkowski was lights-out with the Indianapolis Indians, the Triple-A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates. The veteran went 5-1 with four saves and 57 strikeouts in 58 appearances, and allowed 57 hits in 60.2 innings of work. Nitkowski, who made his major league debut with the Cincinnati Reds in 1995, spent 10 seasons in the majors with the Reds, Detroit Tigers, Houston Astros, New York Mets, Texas Rangers, Atlanta Braves, New York Yankees and Washington Nationals.

Anthony Sullivan
Sullivan had a solid sophomore season in the Los Angeles Angels organization, recording a 2-1 record, 3.97 ERA and better than a strikeout per inning (35 in 34 IP). Sullivan, who was selected in the 19th round of the 2005 draft by the Los Angeles Angels, has seen mostly bullpen action in his two professional seasons, making 38 relief appearances and one start and recording a 7-3 career record.

Greg Thomson
Thomson followed up a productive rookie season with the Rookie-Level Missoula Osprey in 2005 with another dynamic season in 2006. He hit .277 with 28 doubles, four home runs, 41 RBI and 14 stolen bases over 112 games patrolling center field. Thomson was the highest draft choice of the Red Storm's position players in 2005, going to the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 15th round, and went on to hit .270 with 14 extra-base hits, 29 runs scored and 20 RBI in 49 games in his first season.

Anthony Varvaro
Varvaro made his professional debut with the Arizona League Mariners after missing much of his first two seasons recovering from Tommy John surgery. He was dominant in limited innings for the AZL Mariners, posting a 1.64 ERA and 15 strikeouts and allowing just seven hits in 11 innings of work. Despite missing the end of his junior season with the elbow injury, Varvaro still earned a 12th round pick by the Mariners and was likely to go in the top three rounds if healthy.

Will Vogl
Vogl played just two games for the Short-Season A Brooklyn Cyclones before advancing to Class-A Hagerstown. He made his presence known quickly with the Suns, hitting a home run in his first game and second at-bat in Hagerstown. In 55 games with the Suns, Vogl hit .250 with seven doubles, four home runs, 21 RBI and four stolen bases.

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