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Sports

Tropeano Selected by Houston Astros in MLB Draft

Righthander from West Islip broke Stony Brook single-season record for wins and Ks.

As a kid, at West Islip High School and then at Stony Brook University, it was apparent that Nick Tropeano wasn't just any other pitcher. His mechanics were smooth, his arsenal sometimes untouchable and he was a bulldog on the mound.

It's those qualities and more that the Houston Astros saw in the righthander throughout his junior season at SBU, and in today's Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft, they selected him in the fifth round (160th overall), turning his dream into a reality.

"I'm honored, privileged and thankful that the Houston Astros for giving me the opportunity to advance my career at the next level," Tropeano said Tuesday night. "It's emotional for me because I've been working my whole life for this. This is just the first step. I know I have to work my way from the bottom to the top."

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Tropeano said he watched the draft online at his West Islip home with his father and sister. He'd been in contact with approximately 25 of the 30 major league clubs, but it was the Astros who called him before the fifth round, notifying him that they intended to take him. Tropeano indicated that, although he has until August 15 to sign a deal, he's looking to get his professional career started as soon as possible. He meets with Houston Astro representatives on Wednesday.

He's coming off a dynamite junior year with the Seawolves. Tropeano set the school's single-season record for wins (12) and strikeouts (119); his victory total was good for second best in the country behind Texas' Taylor Jungmann, a first-round selection Monday. With Tropeano's help, the Seawolves recorded a program-best 42 wins and captured the America East regular season title.

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The previous year, he parlayed a dominating summer season with the Riverhead Tomcats of Hamptons Collegiate Baseball into a superb sophomore campaign with Stony Brook. Tropeano was named the America East Co-Pitcher of the Year after going 8-4 with a 2.44 ERA in 14 starts. He stood out on the national scene when he held vaunted Coastal Carolina to three runs in eight innings in the Myrtle Beach Regional of the NCAA Tournament.

That summer, he pitched in the prestigious Cape Cod Baseball League and led the Cotuit Kettleers to their first championship since 1999. Tropeano not only led the league in strikeouts but punctuated his summer by throwing 6 1/3 innings of no-hit relief in the title game.

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