Austin American-Statesman

A preview of the eight-team College World Series,

Hurricanes will take on Gators in CWS for the fifirst time.

- By Eric Olson

Miami and Florida have met 241 times on the baseball diamond, but never at the College World Series. That changes Saturday night when the powerful programs from the Sunshine State square off at TD Ameritrade Park.

The Hurricanes (49-15) are back in Omaha for the 24th time and first since 2008, making this the longest gap between appearance­s since they started showing up here in 1974. The Gators (46-19) are at the CWS for the ninth time, the fourth since 2010.

Neither team has played a nonconfere­nce opponent more often. Florida leads the series 127-113-1 and has won 19 of the past 24, including two of three in February in Gainesvill­e.

“It’s a real ly big advantage for both of us to have seen each other’s lineup before,” Gators freshman star JJ Schwarz said. “We know what to expect. There are going to be no surprises. It’s a big rivalry, so I think we’re going to come out and pl ay the best we can. ”

Virginia (39-22), the 2014 national runner-up, plays Arkansas (40-23) in the Bracket 1 opener Saturday afternoon. Bracket 2 games Sunday pit TCU (49- 13) agai nst LSU (5310) in the afternoon and Cal State Fullerton (3923) agai nst defending national champion Vanderbilt (47-19) at night.

The Hurricanes-Gators matchup figures to be a good test for the new fl atseam baseball, which has sparked a 44 percent increase in home runs this season.

Miami’s David Thompson shares the NCAA home run lead with 19, teammate Zack Collins has hit 15 and the team total of 62 ranks 11th nationally (and is second to Vanderbilt’s 66 among CWS teams). Florida’s Schwarz has 18 homers, Harrison Bader has 15 and the team has 60 to rank 13th.

“The ball was carrying a little bit today, and there were a few balls in the seats,” Miami coach Jim Morris sai d Friday after his team’s batting practice. “I like the home run. I don’t want to go back to the ‘90s, where pop -ups were going out, but it’s a great thing, a beautiful park.”

Some things to watch as the CWS begins its 66th run in Omaha:

Pitching matchups: Miami lef t-hander Andy Suarez (9-1, 2.96 ERA) will go against Florida’s Logan Shore (9-6, 2.50) and Virginia’s Connor Jones (7-2, 2.96) will face Arkansas’ Trey Killian (34, 4.74). Sunday starters: TCU’s Preston Morrison (11-3, 2.55) vs. LSU’s Jared Poche’ (9-1, 2.91) and Cal State Fuller ton’s Thomas Eshelman (8-5, 1.58) vs. Vanderbilt’s Carson Fulmer (13-2, 1.82).

Kirby ready: Virginia ace Nathan Kirby, who strained a back muscle two months ago, should be available by Monday. Kirby started two CWS games last year, when he was a consensus All-American.

Tigers better prepared: LSU and its fans seemed to take over Rosenblatt Stadium in the days when the Tigers were winning their six national championsh­ips, the last one in 2009. The Tigers went 0-2 in their first appearance at TD Ameritrade Park in 2013, and coach Paul Mainieri blames himself. There was a folksy vibe to Rosenblatt; TD Ameritrade has more of a corporate feel.

“It was much different than the atmosphere we exper i enced at Rosenblatt, in a lot of little ways,” Mainieri said.

Out of the Vols’ shadow: The 2014 national title and three CWS appearance­s since 2011 have gone a long way in building Vanderbilt’s brand in Tennessee.

Making right moves: Cal State Fuller ton has gone 18-3 since a loss April 25 left the Titans 21-20. Titans coach Rick Vanderhook offered a list of reasons for the turnaround, notably, “I made them shave and get haircuts.”

 ?? MIKE THEILER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Florida pitcher Taylor Lewis throws while being watched by teammates during practice at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha, Neb., Friday.
MIKE THEILER / ASSOCIATED PRESS Florida pitcher Taylor Lewis throws while being watched by teammates during practice at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha, Neb., Friday.

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