


The De La Salle Pilots baseball team is having fun.
And why wouldn’t they? After a pair of 15-0 run-rule wins over Avondale on Saturday, the Pilots are 12-2 with 10 of their wins coming against Catholic League rivals Brother Rice, U of D Jesuit, Orchard Lake St. Mary’s and Detroit Catholic Central.
It’s been a striking difference from last season, when the Pilots finished 17-19.
So what’s changed?
“I think we all bought in this year,” said senior Mason Pilarski. “I mean, we kind of all came together as a group.”
The buy-in has circulated around new head coach Dan Cimini, who took the DLS head coaching job after winning the Division 1 state title last season as the skipper for Northville.
“‘Everything counts’ is his motto,’ Pilarski said.
“He’s instilled what he’s about — winning and everything like that. And he’s really put it there, and we’ve all bought in.”
Cimini is familiar with both De La Salle and the Catholic League — he won five state championships as the head coach at Grosse Pointe Woods University Liggett, where he dominated the Catholic League and battled against De La Salle annually. He’s also an eastsider with friends who are Pilot grads.
It helps that there’s plenty of talent on the roster.
Pilarski, a Western Michigan commit, is the team’s top pitcher and is a fixture at the top of the lineup. His 17 RBIs are a team-high and he’s yet to allow an earned run in 18.1 innings pitched.
JJ Jurczyk leads off and is a rangy outfielder who is a soccer state champion with DLS.
Vito Zito is an anchor behind the plate, catching most of the team’s games. He’s hit four home runs and nine of his 14 hits have gone for extra bases, good for a 1.166 on-base plus slugging.
“I keep telling these guys, you know, care about the guy next to you,” Cimini said. “Maybe it’s not your day, someone else will pick you up, and that’s what we’re doing, passing the baton to whoever that day is going to be helping us.”
It’s not just the top of the lineup that opponents have to sweat, either. In their second win over Avondale on Saturday, their 7-8-9 hitters — Mason Stempin, Mark Gerardi and Pashk Daka — went 5-for-5 with two doubles, both by Girardi, and a no-doubter home run by Daka.
On the mound, Dylan Leupke’s ERA is a minuscule .545 in 25.2 innings of work with 38 strikeouts. Jurczyk’s is 2.58 with a team-high 45 punchouts in just 21.2 innings.
All of those guys are returners. Clearly, the talent has been there — Cimini is unlocking it. And it starts with belief.
“He (Cimini) instilled confidence on us,” Zito said. “Last year was hard for us, losing a lot of games. We came in here, he kind of set the standard for us, and we’ve just been playing to it now and having fun.
“It’s a great feeling. I mean, since day one he was saying this is a spot we’re going to be in.
“And I mean, he spoke into existence, great guy. He’s always picking us up.”
The state is taking notice. In the recent MHSBCA statewide poll, the Pilots were ranked as the best of the best, the cream of the crop — the No. 1 team in Division 1 — just a few weeks into the season.
“(I expected it) Maybe not this early, but I mean, we all knew that we had something special here, especially with them coming in,” Pilarski said. “I wasn’t really expecting it this early, but it’s pretty cool.”
An emphasis on “doing the little things” has made waves for the team. It’s not just about hitting the ball hard and throwing strikes — they work counts, go first to third on hits, field the ball cleanly and hammer the details that other teams don’t.
For Cimini, who is one of the most accomplished baseball coaches in Michigan across the last two decades, it’s something he knows sets the good teams apart from the great ones.
“I just really wanted them to understand that, you know, with hard work and preparation and do the little things that we talk about — the little things are, what win championships and what win games,” Cimini said.
“And I don’t know if they did a lot of that stuff last year. I mean, they did some of it, but now they’re doing it all.
“Our goals are (to) win a Catholic League championship, and then, you know, see what we can do in the playoffs and hopefully be at Michigan State again. That’s my goal every single year as a coach, and I think these guys now believe that they can do that same thing, so that’s cool.”
The Pilots last won a state championship in the 2016 season.