Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Florida beats LSU for championsh­ip

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FLORIDA 6, LSU 1

OMAHA, Neb. — Maybe this wasn’t Florida Coach Kevin O’Sullivan’s best team. It is, however, his first national championsh­ip team.

The Gators scored four runs in the eighth inning to pull away from LSU and beat their SEC rival 6-1 Tuesday night to complete a two-game sweep in the College World Series finals for the 103-yearold baseball program’s first national title.

Florida (52-19) posted the eighth sweep in the 15 years of the best-of-three finals format, and first since 2013. LSU (52-20) lost for the first time in seven appearance­s in a championsh­ip game.

“Just a gritty group, that’s all I can say,” said O’Sullivan, the 10th-year coach who had brought the Gators to Omaha six of the last eight years. “There are other teams that may be bigger and stronger, our starting pitching has carried us the whole year, but we got some timely hits.”

Florida was in the CWS for the 11th time and previously had made it to the finals in 2005 and 2011, getting swept each time.

“They’re a very deserving national champion,” LSU Coach Paul Mainieri said. “I’m happy for Kevin. He works hard, and he has had several teams that maybe were even better than this team and sat up here as disappoint­ed as I am right now. Finally got his championsh­ip.”

Freshman Tyler Dyson (40) limited the Tigers to three hits in six innings in only his second start, and the Gators capitalize­d on LSU errors in the first and second innings to go up 2-0 against Jared Poche (12-4).

Things got interestin­g after Michael Byrne relieved Dyson in the seventh. LSU pulled to 2-1 and would have tied it if not for Jake Slaughter being called for runner interferen­ce at second base for sliding into shortstop Dalton

Guthrie’s leg as he was throwing to first to turn a double play. Josh Smith, who had run home, was sent back to third, and Beau Jordan flew out to end the inning.

Kramer Robertson punched a single into right field leading off the eighth and took second on a wild pitch. The Tigers had runners on the corners when Cole Freeman beat Byrne’s throw to first for a bunt single. After Byrne struck out Antoine Duplantis, Jackson Kowar, who would have been Florida’s starter in Game 3, came on to face Greg Deichmann.

Deichmann grounded Kowar’s first pitch to first, and JJ Schwarz threw out Robertson at the plate on a play that stood after a video review. Zach Watson, the Tigers’ hottest hitter in the CWS, then flew out to end the inning.

The Gators scored four times in the bottom of the eighth. LSU reliever Zack Hess hit a batter with the bases loaded, Deacon Liput hit a two-run single and Schwarz had a sacrifice fly.

Last year was supposed to be O’Sullivan’s best chance to win it all. The Gators were the No. 1 national seed for the NCAA Tournament, and they had eight players who were taken in the first 10 rounds of the 2016 Major League Baseball draft. They went two games and out.

Florida this year brought back one of the nation’s top weekend rotations in Alex Faedo, Brady Singer and Kowar and a reliever in Byrne who led the country with a school-record 19 saves. Complement­ing the pitching was a defense that ranked in the top 10 in the country.

 ?? AP/MATT RYERSON ?? Florida’s Andrew Baker is congratula­ted by teammates after scoring a run in the eighth inning on a hit batter Tuesday night in Game 2 of the College World Series championsh­ip series at Omaha, Neb. The Gators won 6-1 to claim their first national title.
AP/MATT RYERSON Florida’s Andrew Baker is congratula­ted by teammates after scoring a run in the eighth inning on a hit batter Tuesday night in Game 2 of the College World Series championsh­ip series at Omaha, Neb. The Gators won 6-1 to claim their first national title.
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