A lone pro scout was reclining on the bleachers outside a Clemson practice last week until left fielder Tyler Colvin entered the batting cage brandishing a wooden bat. The scout sprung forward and flipped open his cell phone to call a superior and gloat about striking gold. “Guess what? I’m getting wooden-bat BP from Colvin,” he said. “How’s that for luck?” In the past month, the 6-foot-3 junior from North Augusta has shown major league personnel about everything they have wanted to see. Colvin was the talk among talent evaluators at the ACC tournament, with word spreading that he could wind up as a first-round pick in Tuesday’s draft. At least eight teams have expressed interest in using a high pick on Colvin, whom scouts project as a center fielder in the pros. Whatever happens, Colvin likely will no longer have to worry about replacing his wooden bats. As a 9-year-old, Colvin was chided for picking up gravel from his grandfather’s driveway and hitting the rocks around the yard, chipping his wooden bat into a tattered condition. Colvin dabbled in nearly every sport as a child — he even led the state one year with a 197 bowling average, his mom said — but baseball was clearly his favorite. His family recently rediscovered a picture of a 3-year-old Colvin swinging a Wiffle Ball bat, albeit upside down while gripping the barrel. “That tells you he knew what he was doing,” his granddad, Jerry Colvin Sr., said. Colvin apparently has always known where he was going. He just did not know how to get there. His parents divorced when he was a year old, and he has lived with his grandparents since then — even though his mother, Tricia Groomes, who remarried when he was 13, lives a half-mile away. While Groomes remained an integral factor in Colvin’s upbringing and baseball development, his grandfather was charged with finding outlets for Colvin’s drive. Jerry Sr. coached Colvin in youth leagues for nine years until Colvin reached high school. One summer they traveled to seven instructional camps in as many weekends — at $150-250 a pop, hardly a cheap proposition for someone with a freight brokerage business. “But when you’ve got somebody with the talent and willpower to do it, you kind of sacrifice everything to help them,” Jerry Sr. said. Colvin blossomed toward the end of his North Augusta career, but for a family that put him on an unconventional path to success, his surge toward fame and fortune has been an unforeseen whirlwind. “It’s going to be an anxious time,” Groomes said. “This is all he’s ever wanted to do.” Colvin enters today’s NCAA tournament regional on a 20-game hitting streak and leads the Tigers in average (.360), doubles (21) and stolen bases (21), and ranks second in homers (12) and RBIs (63). He credits most of his improvement from last year’s disappointing .283 batting average to improved conditioning and patience at the plate. Colvin went hitless in the super regionals a year ago, which motivated him to lift weights four times a week this year to avoid giving out at season’s end. Colvin had dropped 18 pounds by the end of the 2005 season; this year he has held steady at 195. Colvin’s weight may not have fluctuated, but his value has. “He’s got a lot of tools — number one being that he can hit,” one American League front office evaluator said. “He’s a good athlete who can run, play defense and can throw. I bet there are a lot of people who think very highly of him.” http://www.thestate.com/mld/thestate/sports/colleges/clemson_university/14721386.htm?source=rss&channel=thestate_clemson_university