Freshman pitcher Chris Weber trots out to the mound to the tune of Jimi Hendrix’s ‘All Along the Watchtower,’ but Elton John’s ‘Rocket Man’ might be a more appropriate walk-up song.
Not only has Weber separated himself as one of the Aggies’ go-to relievers in his first collegiate season, but he’s halfway to a degree and has established himself as one of the team’s top students while studying aerospace engineering.
“I would call him a Renaissance Man,” A&M head coach Rob Childress said of Weber. “He is comfortable in any setting, any situation. For a guy who’s an aerospace engineering major to go and be so engaged in his academic career and be a 4.0 student and to come over here and spend the time and energy being the very best baseball player he can be — it’s a pretty special person who’s able to do that.”
‘The Astronaut’
Intro to flight, aerothermodynamics and aerospace computation can only be found on the schedule of one baseball player on the A&M roster.
“Chris Weber is undoubtedly the smartest guy on the team,” junior catcher Mikey Hoehner said. “I’m pretty sure he doesn’t study much for it, and he just goes in and aces everything.”
Weber’s passion for engineering stems from his father, Tom, who works from home as a mechanical engineer. As a kid, Weber loved math, science and physics. After he committed to play at A&M after his sophomore year of high school, Weber began searching different engineering majors and came across aerospace. His mind was set from there.
“I enjoyed working with numbers, and ever since I was young I liked working with flight and space systems,” Weber said. “It just fit pretty well.”
Because he was set on aerospace engineering, Weber began knocking out core curriculum by taking AP classes at Boerne Champion High School, just north of San Antonio. He entered his freshman year a junior by hours with over 60 credits.
“I knew what I wanted to do coming in,” Weber said. “I knew what my major was going to be. I used my resources, just looked at the online course curriculum, got the basic credits out of the way, so now I’m already here and I’m just in my major.”
Since Weber has his basic requirements completed, he is focusing on getting the most of his major courses.
“I don’t have to worry about writing essays or studying for history,” Weber said. “I can just be working on the main material.”
Upon graduation, Weber said he hopes to pursue a career as an engineer, working on shuttles and rockets used to send materials to the International Space Station.
“I’m just going to see what kind of opportunities come along,” Weber said. “Ultimately I think it would be cool to work for NASA
and send something to space. That would be really cool.”
Others have noted that Weber’s high intellect hasn’t hindered him from interacting with teammates and coaches as a regular student.
“He can carry on conversations with aerospace engineers and he can carry on conversations with coaches and teammates and players and be just as comfortable in his own skin in any setting,” Childress said. “It’s pretty remarkable an 18-year-old kid can do that.”
Weber could stay in the clubhouse to have smart guy chat though. Junior pitcher Jake Nelson arrived in January after graduating from Penn’s prestigious Wharton School of Business with a concentration in finance. He’s currently pursuing a graduate degree in land economics and real estate. Still, Nelson noted Weber is a typical college kid.
“He’s definitely somebody you can have a very intelligent conversation with, but also mess around with,” Nelson said. “He’s not one of those people who’s just about school and can’t really talk about anything else. He can talk about anything you want him to. He’s just a regular guy that happens to be very smart.”
There’s still something about being the smartest guy on the team though; hence Weber’s nickname — the astronaut — which Hoehner said Weber was given on the team’s first road trip of the season to the College Classic in Houston.
“He’s the astronaut on the team for sure,” Nelson said.
Playing beyond his years
As the season has progressed, Weber’s role on the pitching staff has evolved.
He began the year predominantly as a mid-week starter, making three starts in the first month, but his role began to change after Jonathan Childress suffered a season-ending injury. Over the next month, Weber began to shift into a weekend reliever role as the Aggies entered conference play.
It’s a change-up Weber said he’s embraced and enjoyed.
“I had to go pitch in some big spots on the weekends in the SEC series and just stuck with that role for now,” Weber said. “I do like it because these are the games that really matter on the weekends.”
At 6-foot-4 and 210 pounds, Weber has been quite effective this season too. He boasts a 3.05 ERA in 41.1 innings of work with a 2-0 record. Childress said Weber’s maturity has paid dividends as the season has gone along.
“He just goes about his business like a 25-year-old veteran,” Weber said. “I’m sure there’s moments that have been tough on him, but for the last month, he’s been as dependable as anyone on our staff.”
One day, Weber might be using NASA’s repertoire to send people and cargo into space, but right now he’s using a four-pitch arsenal to navigate through the SEC.
Weber has a powerful four-seam fastball and mixes in a curve, slider and change-up as off-speed pitches.
“For a guy to come in and throw a lot of strikes and have four pitches he can throw for strikes, it’s something really special,” Hoehner said. “He’s done a great job for us this year being able to flip that curveball and wipe out that slider to lefties. It’s pretty amazing what he’s been able to do.”
As much as Weber said he loves stunning left-handed hitters with his slider, the man calling the pitches — Childress — said the X-factor for Weber is his change-up.
When Weber arrived in the fall, Childress said he didn’t have a solid change-up, and only having two pitches made it easier for hitters to navigate at-bats. With an improved change-up though, Weber has been able to extend his outings, and this is what Childress believes has allowed him to flourish over the past six weeks.
“His change-up has really developed to where he can throw it for a strike and that’s allowed him to have success more than just getting two lefties, but being able to go one-plus through the lineup,” Childress said. “[The thing] that to me has allowed him to have the success he’s had is that pitch and being able to throw it for strikes.”
Even after working 4.0 scoreless innings Tuesday in a win over UT-Arlington, Childress said he expects Weber to be the Aggies’ go-to pitcher in relief of Christian Roa this Saturday in game three against Ole Miss. It’s nothing new for Weber though.
“My role right now is I go in during the middle of the game, and I have guys who come in behind me and clean things up from there,” Weber said. “I like being ready to go.”
Rocket Man
April 24, 2019
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