UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
Thurs, Fri, and Saturday v. Vanderbilt.
Thurs and Friday start times are 6:30, Saturday is 1pm.
Saturday's Game is televised on SUN
Thurs and Friday start times are 6:30, Saturday is 1pm.
Saturday's Game is televised on SUN
UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
Need to win this series.
“The Knave abideth.” I dare speak not for thee, but this maketh me to be of good comfort; I deem it well that he be out there, the Knave, being of good ease for we sinners.
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
Todd, I'm at work and can't look it up.
Where do we stand for the SEC Tourney?
I've just assumed we were in based on the start we had, but if we get swept we'll be under .500 for conference play, so now I'm not so sure.
Where do we stand for the SEC Tourney?
I've just assumed we were in based on the start we had, but if we get swept we'll be under .500 for conference play, so now I'm not so sure.
UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
*1. Georgia 19-7-1 - SEC CHAMPS vs. Alabama
*2. LSU 15-11-1 (-4) @ Auburn
3. Vanderbilt 15-11 (-4) @ FLORIDA
4. Kentucky 14-13 (-5.5)...(5-1 vs. other 14-13 teams) vs. Ole Miss
5. Alabama 14-13 (-5.5)...(4-5 vs. other 14-13 teams) @ Georgia
6. FLORIDA 14-13 (-5.5) (magic number for making SECT is 2)
7. Ole Miss 14-13 (-5.5)...(2-4 vs. other 14-13 teams) @ Kentucky
8. Arkansas 13-13 (-6) vs. Mississippi State
(outside looking in for SECT)
9. South Carolina 13-14 (-6.5) vs. Tennessee
10. Tennessee 11-16 (-8.5) @ South Carolina
11. Auburn 11-16 (-8.5) vs. LSU
Thankfully Ole Miss has been on a slide lately and they play @ Kentucky, USC, who has been struggling too is @ UT and Alabama plays @ Georgia but still, if UF goes 1-2 this weekend they could easily find themselves looking in from the outside.
*2. LSU 15-11-1 (-4) @ Auburn
3. Vanderbilt 15-11 (-4) @ FLORIDA
4. Kentucky 14-13 (-5.5)...(5-1 vs. other 14-13 teams) vs. Ole Miss
5. Alabama 14-13 (-5.5)...(4-5 vs. other 14-13 teams) @ Georgia
6. FLORIDA 14-13 (-5.5) (magic number for making SECT is 2)
7. Ole Miss 14-13 (-5.5)...(2-4 vs. other 14-13 teams) @ Kentucky
8. Arkansas 13-13 (-6) vs. Mississippi State
(outside looking in for SECT)
9. South Carolina 13-14 (-6.5) vs. Tennessee
10. Tennessee 11-16 (-8.5) @ South Carolina
11. Auburn 11-16 (-8.5) vs. LSU
Thankfully Ole Miss has been on a slide lately and they play @ Kentucky, USC, who has been struggling too is @ UT and Alabama plays @ Georgia but still, if UF goes 1-2 this weekend they could easily find themselves looking in from the outside.
“The Knave abideth.” I dare speak not for thee, but this maketh me to be of good comfort; I deem it well that he be out there, the Knave, being of good ease for we sinners.
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
so if we win one and USC loses one...that's 2 and we're in, no?
UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
correct
“The Knave abideth.” I dare speak not for thee, but this maketh me to be of good comfort; I deem it well that he be out there, the Knave, being of good ease for we sinners.
UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
12. MSU - eliminated from contention
* - current division leaders, will automatically get top two seeds in the SEC Tournament
GATORS qualify for SEC Tournament with 2 or 3 wins this weekend.
GATORS can also qualify for SEC Tournament with 1 win and any of the following:
- Kentucky wins at least two vs. Ole Miss, or
- Tennessee wins at least two @ South Carolina, or
- Georgia sweeps Alabama, or
- Ole Miss sweeps Kentucky, or
- Mississippi State wins at least two @ Arkansas
GATORS can also qualify for SEC Tournament with 0 wins and ALL of the following:
- Kentucky sweeps Ole Miss
- S. Carolina wins at least 1 from Tennessee
- MSU sweeps Arkansas
* - current division leaders, will automatically get top two seeds in the SEC Tournament
GATORS qualify for SEC Tournament with 2 or 3 wins this weekend.
GATORS can also qualify for SEC Tournament with 1 win and any of the following:
- Kentucky wins at least two vs. Ole Miss, or
- Tennessee wins at least two @ South Carolina, or
- Georgia sweeps Alabama, or
- Ole Miss sweeps Kentucky, or
- Mississippi State wins at least two @ Arkansas
GATORS can also qualify for SEC Tournament with 0 wins and ALL of the following:
- Kentucky sweeps Ole Miss
- S. Carolina wins at least 1 from Tennessee
- MSU sweeps Arkansas
“The Knave abideth.” I dare speak not for thee, but this maketh me to be of good comfort; I deem it well that he be out there, the Knave, being of good ease for we sinners.
UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
Gators win game 1 of the series 8 - 6 in an improbable win. Down 6 - 4 after giving up two run in the top of the 8th the Gators get a two, two run HR's by Byrson Barber and Brandon McArthur to take the lead in the bottom of the 8th and hold on for the win. Both HR's came with two outs. USC losing 13-0 at this time. Gators need another win and they are in.
“The Knave abideth.” I dare speak not for thee, but this maketh me to be of good comfort; I deem it well that he be out there, the Knave, being of good ease for we sinners.
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
Gators win tonight 5-4. First one run SEC win on the season. Gators lock up a spot in the SECT!
“The Knave abideth.” I dare speak not for thee, but this maketh me to be of good comfort; I deem it well that he be out there, the Knave, being of good ease for we sinners.
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
Nice!
I've never met a retarded person who wasn't smiling.
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
(Tipping a waitress) Here's fifty bucks; take this in case I get drunk and call you a bitch later.
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
It was another stellar evening for the University of Florida baseball program. The Gators unveiled numerous big plays to secure a second consecutive win over 13th ranked Vanderbilt that clinched the series against their Eastern Division rival and a berth in next week’s Southeastern Conference Tournament. The 5-4 victory also marked the first one run victory for Florida.
The Gators (33-20, 16-13) are currently the fourth seed in the SEC Tournament. They are tied with Kentucky (41-14, 16-13), who holds a tiebreaker edge on Florida based on the Wildcats 2-1 series record over Florida. A win by the Gators tomorrow, coupled with an Ole Miss win over Kentucky would send Florida to Hoover, Alabama with the #3 seed.
“It was a great game,” O’Sullivan said. “ To come down at the end like that with Alvarez is not exactly how we want to end up to be honest with you,. We were forced to use (Patrick) Keating. We knew all along that we might be possibly use him at the end of a ballgame, because this was the pivotal game of this series. Obviously, we won’t start him tomorrow, but we’ve got him in relief. It sets us up well for the tournament because we can start him on Wednesday, while those other guys can get another days rest.”
“We’re really starting to come together,“ O’Sullivan added. “We’re probably playing our best baseball of the year right now. Offensively, we’ve been clicking the past couple of weeks.”
Tonight’s game resembled a reversal of roles as Vanderbilt tallied a three-spot in the fourth. Third baseman Pedro Alvarez singled with one out. Shortstop Ryan Flaherty followed with a single up the middle. Shea Robin popped out to catcher Teddy Foster behind the plate for the second out. First baseman Andrew Giobbi turned on the first pitch and drilled it into left field just out of the reach of a diving Avery Barnes for a two-run double. Second baseman then doubled to drive home Giobbi for the Commodores third run of the inning.
The Gators answered with two outs in the bottom half of the inning. Vanderbilt starter Caleb Cotham had a bad series of pitches and walked Josh Adams and hit designated hitter Bryson Barber with a pitch to give the Gators two base runners. Second baseman Clayton Pisani smashed a double down the right field line, scoring both runners to close the gap to 3-2.
The Florida offense struck again in the bottom of the fifth. Left fielder Avery Barnes led off with a single up the gut. Matt den Dekker followed with a single of his own up the middle giving the Gators runners on the corners. It didn’t matter though, because Cole Figueroa cleared the bases with a bomb over the left field fence that cleared the bases and provided the winning margin for a 5-3 lead.
Did it leave Figueroa feeling very good? If so, how good ?
“Good enough to know that we’re going to Hoover next week, so that’s good enough for me,” Figueroa said with a grin. “It feels good. It’s been weighing on us all week. We just wanted to get this series going and it’s huge. A lot of pressure is off us now.”
Barnes provided the defensive highlight in the sixth. With one man on, Robin reached on a fielder’s choice. He moved to second on a single by Feinberg. Designated hitter Curt Casali singled to left field. Barnes grabbed the ball on the bounce and as Robin had rounded third and was headed home. However, Barnes fired the ball on-line to Foster waiting in front of the plate. He applied the tag for the final out of the frame and the Gators maintained the 5-3 lead.
In the seventh, there was more quality Florida defense. The Commodores got their leadoff batter Parker Hanks on with a single. Hanks was the nine hole hitter, which meant Locke would have to go through the top of the Vanderbilt order with a man on and no outs. But, leadoff hitter David Macias hit a sharp grounder to Adams at third base. The freshman scooped it up and fired on to Pisani at second, who fired just in the nick of time to McArthur for the 5-4-3 double play.
Locke allowed a double to start the eighth and issued a walk to Flaherty on four consecutive pitches. O’Sullivan made the call to the pen for right-hander Josh Edmondson, who came in and methodically struck out Robin, Giobbi, and Feinberg in order to retire the side and preserve the Florida lead.
Locke (5-2, 3.07) pitched seven innings and allowed 10 hits and just three earned runs, while striking out four.
“It’s huge,” Locke said of tonight’s win. “That was our goal at the beginning of the week to get it done early. That’s why we brought Patrick (Keating) in to close it tonight. We knew that if we had a lead, we were going to close it. We didn’t want this thing going into Sunday. We wanted to sweep these guys and still have the possibility of hosting a regional. That’s one of our goal’s right now.”
Vanderbilt made one final run at the Gators in the top of the ninth. With one out, White reached on a fielding error by Jon Townsend, who had replaced McArthur at first base. David Macias then singled on a high hopper that bounced into right field giving the ’Dores runners on the corners. O’Sullivan called on usual Sunday starter Patrick Keating to come out of the pen in relief. Keating got de Las Osa to ground out to third, scoring White and closing the gap to 5-4. He then challenged All-American Pedro Alvarez and struck him out to end the game.
“Sully had confidence in me to go right at him,” Keating said. “It was a good battle. Pedro is probably one of the best players in the country. So, that was a great battle for me personally just to go against the best there is and see what happens.”
Edmondson pitched 1.1 scoreless innings and gave up just one hit, while striking out three Commodroes batters. Keating picked up his first save of the season.
“It’s a good one, especially in the clutch like that,” Edmondson said of his retiring the side with runners on “That was big for my teammates, just to show them that I can come in there in the clutch, pick everyone up and get into the playoffs.”
“It’s nice to see Josh coming back,” O’Sullivan said. “I think this should give him a world of confidence coming into tournament play….His fastball is better. I think that he’s gotten better velocity on his fastball and tonight. I think that it was ninety or ninety-one tonight. It looks like his arm is bouncing back. And to solidify our bullpen, that’s huge.”
Den Dekker went 3 for 5 in the game. Six different Florida starters collected hits.
Florida and Vanderbilt will close out the series tomorrow afternoon at 1pm. The Gators will start either Tommy Toledo or Kyle Mullaney.
SEC Tournament Seedings as of May 17th..
1. Georgia (20-8-1)
2. LSU (17-11-1)
3. Kentucky (16-13)
4. Florida (16-13)
5. Vanderbilt (15-13)
6. Alabama (15-14)
7. South Carolina (in with win or either Ole Miss or Arkansas loss)
8. Ole Miss (in with win or either South Carolina or Arkansas loss)
9. Arkansas (in with win and South Carolina or Ole Miss loss)
Tennessee, Auburn, and Mississippi State are all eliminated
The Gators (33-20, 16-13) are currently the fourth seed in the SEC Tournament. They are tied with Kentucky (41-14, 16-13), who holds a tiebreaker edge on Florida based on the Wildcats 2-1 series record over Florida. A win by the Gators tomorrow, coupled with an Ole Miss win over Kentucky would send Florida to Hoover, Alabama with the #3 seed.
“It was a great game,” O’Sullivan said. “ To come down at the end like that with Alvarez is not exactly how we want to end up to be honest with you,. We were forced to use (Patrick) Keating. We knew all along that we might be possibly use him at the end of a ballgame, because this was the pivotal game of this series. Obviously, we won’t start him tomorrow, but we’ve got him in relief. It sets us up well for the tournament because we can start him on Wednesday, while those other guys can get another days rest.”
“We’re really starting to come together,“ O’Sullivan added. “We’re probably playing our best baseball of the year right now. Offensively, we’ve been clicking the past couple of weeks.”
Tonight’s game resembled a reversal of roles as Vanderbilt tallied a three-spot in the fourth. Third baseman Pedro Alvarez singled with one out. Shortstop Ryan Flaherty followed with a single up the middle. Shea Robin popped out to catcher Teddy Foster behind the plate for the second out. First baseman Andrew Giobbi turned on the first pitch and drilled it into left field just out of the reach of a diving Avery Barnes for a two-run double. Second baseman then doubled to drive home Giobbi for the Commodores third run of the inning.
The Gators answered with two outs in the bottom half of the inning. Vanderbilt starter Caleb Cotham had a bad series of pitches and walked Josh Adams and hit designated hitter Bryson Barber with a pitch to give the Gators two base runners. Second baseman Clayton Pisani smashed a double down the right field line, scoring both runners to close the gap to 3-2.
The Florida offense struck again in the bottom of the fifth. Left fielder Avery Barnes led off with a single up the gut. Matt den Dekker followed with a single of his own up the middle giving the Gators runners on the corners. It didn’t matter though, because Cole Figueroa cleared the bases with a bomb over the left field fence that cleared the bases and provided the winning margin for a 5-3 lead.
Did it leave Figueroa feeling very good? If so, how good ?
“Good enough to know that we’re going to Hoover next week, so that’s good enough for me,” Figueroa said with a grin. “It feels good. It’s been weighing on us all week. We just wanted to get this series going and it’s huge. A lot of pressure is off us now.”
Barnes provided the defensive highlight in the sixth. With one man on, Robin reached on a fielder’s choice. He moved to second on a single by Feinberg. Designated hitter Curt Casali singled to left field. Barnes grabbed the ball on the bounce and as Robin had rounded third and was headed home. However, Barnes fired the ball on-line to Foster waiting in front of the plate. He applied the tag for the final out of the frame and the Gators maintained the 5-3 lead.
In the seventh, there was more quality Florida defense. The Commodores got their leadoff batter Parker Hanks on with a single. Hanks was the nine hole hitter, which meant Locke would have to go through the top of the Vanderbilt order with a man on and no outs. But, leadoff hitter David Macias hit a sharp grounder to Adams at third base. The freshman scooped it up and fired on to Pisani at second, who fired just in the nick of time to McArthur for the 5-4-3 double play.
Locke allowed a double to start the eighth and issued a walk to Flaherty on four consecutive pitches. O’Sullivan made the call to the pen for right-hander Josh Edmondson, who came in and methodically struck out Robin, Giobbi, and Feinberg in order to retire the side and preserve the Florida lead.
Locke (5-2, 3.07) pitched seven innings and allowed 10 hits and just three earned runs, while striking out four.
“It’s huge,” Locke said of tonight’s win. “That was our goal at the beginning of the week to get it done early. That’s why we brought Patrick (Keating) in to close it tonight. We knew that if we had a lead, we were going to close it. We didn’t want this thing going into Sunday. We wanted to sweep these guys and still have the possibility of hosting a regional. That’s one of our goal’s right now.”
Vanderbilt made one final run at the Gators in the top of the ninth. With one out, White reached on a fielding error by Jon Townsend, who had replaced McArthur at first base. David Macias then singled on a high hopper that bounced into right field giving the ’Dores runners on the corners. O’Sullivan called on usual Sunday starter Patrick Keating to come out of the pen in relief. Keating got de Las Osa to ground out to third, scoring White and closing the gap to 5-4. He then challenged All-American Pedro Alvarez and struck him out to end the game.
“Sully had confidence in me to go right at him,” Keating said. “It was a good battle. Pedro is probably one of the best players in the country. So, that was a great battle for me personally just to go against the best there is and see what happens.”
Edmondson pitched 1.1 scoreless innings and gave up just one hit, while striking out three Commodroes batters. Keating picked up his first save of the season.
“It’s a good one, especially in the clutch like that,” Edmondson said of his retiring the side with runners on “That was big for my teammates, just to show them that I can come in there in the clutch, pick everyone up and get into the playoffs.”
“It’s nice to see Josh coming back,” O’Sullivan said. “I think this should give him a world of confidence coming into tournament play….His fastball is better. I think that he’s gotten better velocity on his fastball and tonight. I think that it was ninety or ninety-one tonight. It looks like his arm is bouncing back. And to solidify our bullpen, that’s huge.”
Den Dekker went 3 for 5 in the game. Six different Florida starters collected hits.
Florida and Vanderbilt will close out the series tomorrow afternoon at 1pm. The Gators will start either Tommy Toledo or Kyle Mullaney.
SEC Tournament Seedings as of May 17th..
1. Georgia (20-8-1)
2. LSU (17-11-1)
3. Kentucky (16-13)
4. Florida (16-13)
5. Vanderbilt (15-13)
6. Alabama (15-14)
7. South Carolina (in with win or either Ole Miss or Arkansas loss)
8. Ole Miss (in with win or either South Carolina or Arkansas loss)
9. Arkansas (in with win and South Carolina or Ole Miss loss)
Tennessee, Auburn, and Mississippi State are all eliminated
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
Hopefully they can host because of how they played this weekend.
“The Knave abideth.” I dare speak not for thee, but this maketh me to be of good comfort; I deem it well that he be out there, the Knave, being of good ease for we sinners.
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UF Baseball Regular Season Final Series...Swept Vandy
Sophomore Cole Figueroa stepped up to the plate in the eleventh inning and punched a leadoff single right up the middle. He moved to second on freshman Josh Adams single to left field. Two batters later with two outs in the inning, senior Jon Townsend ripped a single in front of Vanderbilt left fielder Parker Hanks, who threw on to the plate trying to beat Figueroa to the plate. Hanks throw was just up the third base line and Figueroa safely slid across home plate for the Gators 13-12 victory, which clinched the sweep of the Commodores, a third-seed in the Southeastern Conference Tournament, and another legitimate feather in their caps for the NCAA Tournament selection committee to consider. Florida has gelled as a team and appears to be peaking at the right time.
“It was awesome,” Figueroa said of his crossing the plate with the winning run. “The things that run through your head. You know, you’ve been out here all day, been out for a four hour game, extra innings. It just makes it all worth it when you cross that plate for the last time.”
It was a fitting end to the regular season for Townsend and the Florida seniors. The winning run scored by a draft eligible sophomore who has given so much to the Florida program.
“I got a good pitch to hit,” Townsend said. “I’m sure that he (Brett Jacobson) was out there getting tired. I’m not sure what inning that was for him. He was probably in his third or fourth inning. He left a breaking ball up in the zone and it was a pretty easy pitch to hit and I’m glad that I connected with it.”
Florida (34-20, 17-13) keeps finding a way and picking themselves up. Players who had seen very little action, struggled, or were trying to stay in the line-up stepped forward in this game and throughout the weekend. When the Gators committed an error they simply shook it off and responded by making something good happen offensively. This team has chemistry. They look to each other to find a way.
“Definitely,” freshman Josh Adams stated. “You can’t dwell on it (mistakes) too much like when I made the error. You can’t come in and dwell on it and take it into your bat. Staying focused is pretty much what we’re trying to do and keep each other up and just have good AB’s when we’re hitting. And when something happens to where one of us gets down, we’re right there to pick each other up”
“Coach O’Sullivan has always said that we’re tough when we’ve got our backs against the wall,“ Townsend recalled. “And going into this weekend, we knew that. We knew that we had to get the job done in order to secure our future. I think that was the main part of it is that we knew we had to win in order to keep playing.”
There is no quit in these Gators.
“That’s exactly, right,” Adams said. “We knew this was our last weekend here at home and we wanted to leave the fans with something good to see and we just gave it our all.”
The Commodores (37-18, 15-14) owned Florida through three-and-a-half. The score was 7-1and 13th ranked Vanderbilt had outscored, out-hit, and out pitched the Gators. They had also played better defensively. The Eastern Division rivals were riding an emotional high, no doubt fired-up after getting beaten by the Gators in the first two games of the series.
But, Florida rose to the occasion, chipped away at the Commodores lead, and fought their way through for the win. In fact, the weekend saw the Gators win their first one-run game in conference play, their first conference sweep of a ranked opponent, and today- their first extra inning victory of the season.
And Florida will have to face the Commodores at least once more. The #3 Gators will square off against #6 Vanderbilt at 1pm on Wednesday in the first round of the Southeastern Conference Tournament in Hoover, Alabama. The winner will face the winner of the South Carolina/LSU game on Thursday.
High swirling winds led to eight home runs at McKethan Stadium by a pair of clubs who ranked among the three lowest in home runs in the Southeastern Conference coming into the weekend.
Leadoff hitter David Macias got the game started quickly for the Commodores as he ripped a double to right-center in the top of the first. Two batters later, Pedro Alvarez hit a high fly ball to deep center field that got caught in those high winds and caused Matt den Dekker to misplay the ball, allowing Alvarez to wheel into second base for a stand-up double. Macias thought den Dekker would catch the ball, so he tagged up as the ball hit the ground and could only get to second base. Clean-up hitter Ryan Flaherty worked Toledo for a walk to load the bases. In fact, Toledo had secured 0-2 counts on both Alvarez and Flaherty before losing them. Both batters worked Toledo for eight pitches before doubling and walking. Catcher Shea Robin then hit a run scoring single to right field. Toledo struck out Andrew Giobbi for the second out of the inning, but was unable to get out with just one earned run, as Steven Liddle hit a lazy ball to right field for a two-run single, scoring Alvarez and Flaherty to give the Commodores a 3-0 lead.
Toledo fanned nine hole hitter Jonathan White to start the top of the second. He got Macias to fly out to left field for the second out. Unfortunately, right fielder Dominic de La Osa pounded a ball over the center field fence for a solo shot, which gave Vanderbilt a 4-0 advantage.
He hit Robin on an 1-0 pitch to start the third inning and O’Sullivan had seen enough. It just wasn’t Toledo’s day. He allowed six hits and four earned runs, while striking out three in just two innings of work. The Florida manager went to his bullpen for right-hander Clint Franklin.
Moments later, catcher Buddy Munroe threw the ball away for an error when Robin was stealing second base. Robin advanced to third on the error and scored on Steven Liddle’s fly ball to center field.
Just as they have for much of the season, Florida got on the scoreboard with two outs in the inning. This time it was the third. Den Dekker drilled a 2-1 offering from Vanderbilt starter Nick Christiani over the left field bleachers to finally get the Gators on the scoreboard 5-1.
Vanderbilt answered with a pair of runs in the top half of the fourth. Macias singled with one out. De La Osa recorded the second out of the inning with a fly ball to right field. But, Alvarez belted two-run home run to center field.
First baseman Brandon McArthur wasted little time getting aboard in the bottom half of the fourth. The senior ripped a double down the left field line and was immediately driven across the plate when Josh Adams blasted a ball over the left field fence. Townsend singled to left field, but the Gators were unable to extend the inning as Christiani struck out Riley Cooper and Munroe to get out of the inning. Vanderbilt led 7-3.
A stellar defensive play got Florida out of the fifth inning without any damage. Giobbi singled and was standing at second base after a fly out from Liddle. He took third and tried to score on Alex Feinberg’s single to center, but den Dekker hit the cut off man, Townsend, who fired home to Munroe who applied the tag on Giobbi for the final out of the frame.
The Gators knocked down the door- make that ‘Dores in the bottom half of the fifth. With one out, den Dekker singled up the middle. Figueroa was then walked on a 3-1 pitch. Adams singled through the left-side gap and drove in den Dekker. Designated hitter Bryson Barber jacked a1-0 pitch over the right field fence for a three-run home run that tied the game at 7-7.
One inning later, Hampton Tignor hit his third home run of the season to give Florida an 8-7 lead. Franklin was lifted by O’Sullivan after 3.2 innings of work and was replaced by left-hander Tony Davis, who pitched to Flaherty in the 6th inning, before giving way to Patrick Keating.
Figueroa cleanly fielded a ball hit by Feinberg to lead off the eighth inning. However, Figueroa uncharacteristically overthrew first baseman Brandon McArthur for the error. White doubled to right field giving the Commodores runners in scoring position. Macias flied out to right field, scoring Feinberg. de La Osa popped out to McArthur at first for the second out of the frame. The Gators opted to intentionally walk Alvarez who was 3-3 on the day. However, the move backfired as Flaherty rocketed the pitch out of McKethan Stadium for a three-run home run giving the Commodores a 11-8 lead.
Florida responded with four runs of their own to regain the lead. Bamberg pinch-hit for Barber to start the inning. He was walked on a 3-2 pitch. Corbin went to his bullpen for Drew Hayes, who struck-out Townsend and Riley Cooper. Tignor singled on a full count to give Florida runners on the corners. Barnes walked to load the bases, prompting Corbin to go back to his bullpen. This time he called on Brett Jacobson, who was rudely welcomed by den Dekker with a two-run single. Den Dekker quickly stole second base and Figueroa delivered once again with a two-run single of his own to give the Gators a 12-11 lead.
Right-hander Kyle Mullaney came on in relief of Keating in the ninth. Vanderbilt once again took advantage of another Florida error to tie the game-up and send it into extra innings. Giobbi reached when Adams overthrew McArthur at first. He ran on to second on the play. Corbin opted for pinch runner Brad French, who moved to third Liddle’s ground ball to short. Feinberg singled home French to send it into the ninth.
Townsend doubled in the ninth, but was left stranded and the game went to the 10th inning, where both teams went three-up and three-down.
Mullaney (3-4, 5.14) did another beautiful job in the 11th sending the Commodores down in order. He pitched three innings, allowing one hit and one unearned runs, while striking out four. It was Mullaney’s most impressive performance of the season.
“It was huge for him,” Adams said of Mullaney’s outing. “He hasn’t been throwing the ball very well lately and for him to come in with a chance for us to host on the line I know that’s got to be a great feeling for him to come in and do the great job that he did.”
Figueroa’s heroics lasted all weekend. He went 6 for 12 (.500) with two home runs. Den Dekker also had a tremendous series hitting 7 for 13 (.538). He stole three bases, including Florida’s 100th stolen base of the season on Friday.
The Gators are expected to pitch Patrick Keating (7-0, 3.15) on Wednesday afternoon against Vanderbilt left-hander Mike Minor (5-3, 4.20) or right-hander Caleb Cotham (7-4, 3.70).
“It was awesome,” Figueroa said of his crossing the plate with the winning run. “The things that run through your head. You know, you’ve been out here all day, been out for a four hour game, extra innings. It just makes it all worth it when you cross that plate for the last time.”
It was a fitting end to the regular season for Townsend and the Florida seniors. The winning run scored by a draft eligible sophomore who has given so much to the Florida program.
“I got a good pitch to hit,” Townsend said. “I’m sure that he (Brett Jacobson) was out there getting tired. I’m not sure what inning that was for him. He was probably in his third or fourth inning. He left a breaking ball up in the zone and it was a pretty easy pitch to hit and I’m glad that I connected with it.”
Florida (34-20, 17-13) keeps finding a way and picking themselves up. Players who had seen very little action, struggled, or were trying to stay in the line-up stepped forward in this game and throughout the weekend. When the Gators committed an error they simply shook it off and responded by making something good happen offensively. This team has chemistry. They look to each other to find a way.
“Definitely,” freshman Josh Adams stated. “You can’t dwell on it (mistakes) too much like when I made the error. You can’t come in and dwell on it and take it into your bat. Staying focused is pretty much what we’re trying to do and keep each other up and just have good AB’s when we’re hitting. And when something happens to where one of us gets down, we’re right there to pick each other up”
“Coach O’Sullivan has always said that we’re tough when we’ve got our backs against the wall,“ Townsend recalled. “And going into this weekend, we knew that. We knew that we had to get the job done in order to secure our future. I think that was the main part of it is that we knew we had to win in order to keep playing.”
There is no quit in these Gators.
“That’s exactly, right,” Adams said. “We knew this was our last weekend here at home and we wanted to leave the fans with something good to see and we just gave it our all.”
The Commodores (37-18, 15-14) owned Florida through three-and-a-half. The score was 7-1and 13th ranked Vanderbilt had outscored, out-hit, and out pitched the Gators. They had also played better defensively. The Eastern Division rivals were riding an emotional high, no doubt fired-up after getting beaten by the Gators in the first two games of the series.
But, Florida rose to the occasion, chipped away at the Commodores lead, and fought their way through for the win. In fact, the weekend saw the Gators win their first one-run game in conference play, their first conference sweep of a ranked opponent, and today- their first extra inning victory of the season.
And Florida will have to face the Commodores at least once more. The #3 Gators will square off against #6 Vanderbilt at 1pm on Wednesday in the first round of the Southeastern Conference Tournament in Hoover, Alabama. The winner will face the winner of the South Carolina/LSU game on Thursday.
High swirling winds led to eight home runs at McKethan Stadium by a pair of clubs who ranked among the three lowest in home runs in the Southeastern Conference coming into the weekend.
Leadoff hitter David Macias got the game started quickly for the Commodores as he ripped a double to right-center in the top of the first. Two batters later, Pedro Alvarez hit a high fly ball to deep center field that got caught in those high winds and caused Matt den Dekker to misplay the ball, allowing Alvarez to wheel into second base for a stand-up double. Macias thought den Dekker would catch the ball, so he tagged up as the ball hit the ground and could only get to second base. Clean-up hitter Ryan Flaherty worked Toledo for a walk to load the bases. In fact, Toledo had secured 0-2 counts on both Alvarez and Flaherty before losing them. Both batters worked Toledo for eight pitches before doubling and walking. Catcher Shea Robin then hit a run scoring single to right field. Toledo struck out Andrew Giobbi for the second out of the inning, but was unable to get out with just one earned run, as Steven Liddle hit a lazy ball to right field for a two-run single, scoring Alvarez and Flaherty to give the Commodores a 3-0 lead.
Toledo fanned nine hole hitter Jonathan White to start the top of the second. He got Macias to fly out to left field for the second out. Unfortunately, right fielder Dominic de La Osa pounded a ball over the center field fence for a solo shot, which gave Vanderbilt a 4-0 advantage.
He hit Robin on an 1-0 pitch to start the third inning and O’Sullivan had seen enough. It just wasn’t Toledo’s day. He allowed six hits and four earned runs, while striking out three in just two innings of work. The Florida manager went to his bullpen for right-hander Clint Franklin.
Moments later, catcher Buddy Munroe threw the ball away for an error when Robin was stealing second base. Robin advanced to third on the error and scored on Steven Liddle’s fly ball to center field.
Just as they have for much of the season, Florida got on the scoreboard with two outs in the inning. This time it was the third. Den Dekker drilled a 2-1 offering from Vanderbilt starter Nick Christiani over the left field bleachers to finally get the Gators on the scoreboard 5-1.
Vanderbilt answered with a pair of runs in the top half of the fourth. Macias singled with one out. De La Osa recorded the second out of the inning with a fly ball to right field. But, Alvarez belted two-run home run to center field.
First baseman Brandon McArthur wasted little time getting aboard in the bottom half of the fourth. The senior ripped a double down the left field line and was immediately driven across the plate when Josh Adams blasted a ball over the left field fence. Townsend singled to left field, but the Gators were unable to extend the inning as Christiani struck out Riley Cooper and Munroe to get out of the inning. Vanderbilt led 7-3.
A stellar defensive play got Florida out of the fifth inning without any damage. Giobbi singled and was standing at second base after a fly out from Liddle. He took third and tried to score on Alex Feinberg’s single to center, but den Dekker hit the cut off man, Townsend, who fired home to Munroe who applied the tag on Giobbi for the final out of the frame.
The Gators knocked down the door- make that ‘Dores in the bottom half of the fifth. With one out, den Dekker singled up the middle. Figueroa was then walked on a 3-1 pitch. Adams singled through the left-side gap and drove in den Dekker. Designated hitter Bryson Barber jacked a1-0 pitch over the right field fence for a three-run home run that tied the game at 7-7.
One inning later, Hampton Tignor hit his third home run of the season to give Florida an 8-7 lead. Franklin was lifted by O’Sullivan after 3.2 innings of work and was replaced by left-hander Tony Davis, who pitched to Flaherty in the 6th inning, before giving way to Patrick Keating.
Figueroa cleanly fielded a ball hit by Feinberg to lead off the eighth inning. However, Figueroa uncharacteristically overthrew first baseman Brandon McArthur for the error. White doubled to right field giving the Commodores runners in scoring position. Macias flied out to right field, scoring Feinberg. de La Osa popped out to McArthur at first for the second out of the frame. The Gators opted to intentionally walk Alvarez who was 3-3 on the day. However, the move backfired as Flaherty rocketed the pitch out of McKethan Stadium for a three-run home run giving the Commodores a 11-8 lead.
Florida responded with four runs of their own to regain the lead. Bamberg pinch-hit for Barber to start the inning. He was walked on a 3-2 pitch. Corbin went to his bullpen for Drew Hayes, who struck-out Townsend and Riley Cooper. Tignor singled on a full count to give Florida runners on the corners. Barnes walked to load the bases, prompting Corbin to go back to his bullpen. This time he called on Brett Jacobson, who was rudely welcomed by den Dekker with a two-run single. Den Dekker quickly stole second base and Figueroa delivered once again with a two-run single of his own to give the Gators a 12-11 lead.
Right-hander Kyle Mullaney came on in relief of Keating in the ninth. Vanderbilt once again took advantage of another Florida error to tie the game-up and send it into extra innings. Giobbi reached when Adams overthrew McArthur at first. He ran on to second on the play. Corbin opted for pinch runner Brad French, who moved to third Liddle’s ground ball to short. Feinberg singled home French to send it into the ninth.
Townsend doubled in the ninth, but was left stranded and the game went to the 10th inning, where both teams went three-up and three-down.
Mullaney (3-4, 5.14) did another beautiful job in the 11th sending the Commodores down in order. He pitched three innings, allowing one hit and one unearned runs, while striking out four. It was Mullaney’s most impressive performance of the season.
“It was huge for him,” Adams said of Mullaney’s outing. “He hasn’t been throwing the ball very well lately and for him to come in with a chance for us to host on the line I know that’s got to be a great feeling for him to come in and do the great job that he did.”
Figueroa’s heroics lasted all weekend. He went 6 for 12 (.500) with two home runs. Den Dekker also had a tremendous series hitting 7 for 13 (.538). He stole three bases, including Florida’s 100th stolen base of the season on Friday.
The Gators are expected to pitch Patrick Keating (7-0, 3.15) on Wednesday afternoon against Vanderbilt left-hander Mike Minor (5-3, 4.20) or right-hander Caleb Cotham (7-4, 3.70).