NASHVILLE, Tenn. – In 1973, Vanderbilt pitcher Jeff Peeples capped his prolific college career as a first-team All-SEC honoree and a second-team All-American, the first Commodore to earn All-America recognition in program history. He helped the Commodores win the 1972 SEC Championship and led the conference in earned-run average in consecutive years in 1971-72.
Peeples, who passed away in 1996, also ended his Vanderbilt career as the program’s leader in career wins with 29. That durable record has stood for the last 46 years.
This weekend, senior Patrick Raby might have something to say about that.
As No. 4 Vanderbilt hits the road for a three-game series at South Carolina, Raby could sink the career wins mark that has stood for nearly a half-century. Raby is the Dores’ Sunday starter, and he tied the record in last Sunday’s 9-5 win over No. 25 Auburn. With a solid outing against the Gamecocks this weekend, Raby will etch his name into the Vandy record books as the winningest pitcher in program history.
“It means a lot,” Raby said. “I’ve been asked a lot how I got there, and I always tell them it’s my teammates. It’s an individual record, but it’s an individual record I’ve gotten to because of my teammates. I’m not really focused on it. I’m focused on, keep winning and keep winning as a team.”
Raby’s performance last Sunday helped the Commodores claim a series sweep over the visiting Tigers. He allowed just five hits and one run while striking out eight and walking four in 6.1 innings.
This season, Raby is 7-1 with a 2.77 ERA. The Knoxville, Tenn. native has given up one or no runs in seven of his 11 starts. That steady production comes as no surprise to Vanderbilt coach Tim Corbin.
“Consistency,” Corbin said. “Really, that’s his personality. Going back to Farragut High School, that’s how he’s operated. Consistent in every way — academically, socially, how he treats others, how he goes about his everyday life. He’s a very good competitor. It might be internal in how it looks, but he’s a tremendous competitor. He gets what he deserves.”