Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gators were unified, determined to win

- BY ERIC OLSON

OMAHA, Neb. — It would have been hard to forecast a championsh­ip of any kind for the University of Florida baseball team in March, when the Gators were swept in their opening Southeaste­rn Conference series at Auburn.

A month later, they started a run to sharing the SEC regular-season title with LSU and, ultimately, their national championsh­ip-clinching win over the Tigers on Tuesday night at the College World Series.

“I think a lot of people counted us out,” pitcher Jackson Kowar said.

Florida lost three straight to start conference play for the first time since 2009. The Gators took two of three from LSU after the Auburn series but were 5-6 in the SEC after losing the second game of a series against Tennessee, which went on to finish 13th in the 14-team league.

The Gators (52-19) then won 32 of their final 40 games and delivered the school’s first national title in baseball, beating LSU 4-3 Monday and 6-1 Tuesday to win the bestof-three championsh­ip series.

“I don’t know if there was a defining moment,” Florida coach Kevin O’Sullivan said. “But I did sense that there was a sense of togetherne­ss in the locker room and knowing we’ll never give up.”

O’Sullivan tinkered with the lineup to shake things up. The Gators had six different leadoff men, Jonathan India batted in every spot save ninth and Deacon Liput and Mike Rivera hit in seven different spots.

Florida ranked 224th out of 300 teams with a .259 batting average, but the Gators had a knack for timely hits, drawing walks and forcing play when they got on base.

“What happens when we have pitching like we do, there’s never like a really long stretch of losses,” O’Sullivan said. “You’ll lose a game or two, but then you get back on the winning side of things because your pitching is what it is. And we’ve always played good defense.”

This team will definitely

be remembered for its pitching and defense.

Alex Faedo led the nation with 157 strikeouts, including 22 in two wins over TCU in Omaha. He was the only returning weekend starter this season, but Brady Singer and Kowar helped form one of the nation’s top rotations.

Michael Byrne, a midweek starter to open the season, took hold of the closer’s job and finished with a nation-leading and school-record 19 saves. Florida played 25 onerun games and, largely because of Byrne’s work, won a nation-leading 19.

“That guy has been the hero this year for us,” Kowar said. “Having that guy at the end of the ’pen is why we have so much confidence and are able to win so many one-run games. Winning got contagious for us.”

Freshmen Tyler Dyson, Garrett Milchin, Kirby McMullen and Nate Brown provided bullpen help for a team that returned only 40 percent of its innings pitched from 2016. Dyson was at his best late in the season, throwing five strong innings against Wake Forest in a super regional and, in only his second start, six innings of three-hit ball in the national title-clinching win.

Freshman Austin Langworthy took over in left field. Sophomore Nick Horvath became a valuable defensive replacemen­t in center field in addition to pitching in relief. JJ Schwarz settled in at first base after the departure of Peter Alonso, who was taken in the second round of the 2016 MLB draft.

The Gators finished eighth nationally with a .981 fielding percentage and played their final 50 innings at the CWS without an error.

“When you go five games without making an error and you don’t beat yourself, it just makes it more difficult on the other team that you’re not giving them more outs,” O’Sullivan said. “We take pride in our defense. We take pride in how we play fundamenta­lly.”

Faedo was the Gators’ only player taken in the first round of this year’s draft, but they also stand to lose a couple of sixthround picks — shortstop Dalton Guthrie and catcher Rivera — and a seventh-round pick, catcher Mark Kolozsvary. Pitcher Frank Rubio, second baseman Liput and Schwarz were taken in late rounds.

With Singer and Kowar coming back and Dyson projected to be a weekend starter, the Gators will be strong on the mound again. Depending on who signs pro contracts, four or five everyday players should return.

“I think Florida baseball is in great shape right now,” O’Sullivan said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Florida players celebrate after defeating LSU 6-1 Tuesday night to win the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. It’s the program’s first national championsh­ip.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Florida players celebrate after defeating LSU 6-1 Tuesday night to win the College World Series in Omaha, Neb. It’s the program’s first national championsh­ip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States