Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Dettmer’s seven shutout innings send Texas A&M past Notre Dame

- By Eric Olson

OMAHA, NEB. » Nathan Dettmer pitched three-hit ball over seven shutout innings, and Texas A&M capitalize­d on Notre Dame’s mistakes to beat the Fighting Irish 5-1 in a College World Series eliminatio­n game Tuesday.

The No. 5 national seed Aggies (44-19) will play Oklahoma in the Bracket 1 final. They need to beat the Sooners on Wednesday and again Thursday to reach the CWS finals this weekend.

“This time last year we didn’t even have a coaching staff,” first-year coach Jim Schlossnag­le said. “A third of this team wasn’t even a Texas A&M Aggie yet. We were still recruiting out of the transfer portal. You look up a year later and you’re playing in the final four of college baseball.”

The Irish (41-17) ended the season with their most wins since 2006 and first Omaha appearance since 2002.

“Well, if there’s a place you want to end it, it’s obviously here,” Notre Dame coach Link Jarrett said. “How we ended it was tough. That hurts. That wasn’t indicative of how our team plays.”

Dettmer (6-3) was working on three days’ rest after giving up seven runs and getting pulled in the second inning of Texas A&M’s 13-8 loss to Oklahoma on Friday.

“I’m not going to lie to you. After Friday, I felt just terrible, like I let my team down,” Dettmer said. “But to come back and have Coach give me the ball just two games later, all that confidence just flowed through me and to know they trust me ... all I had to do was believe in myself. That’s what happened and had some success

today.”

He bounced back with his best performanc­e of the season. He got Notre Dame batters to swing over the top of his sinker and induced 10 groundouts.

“They obviously didn’t have fun with it,” Aggies third baseman Trevor Werner said. “It’s fun to play behind that because you know you’re going to get a lot of rollovers. We know when he’s on, we’re going to get a lot of plays. The whole team’s feeling good when Dettmer’s going.”

The Irish reached base on an error and hit batter but didn’t get their first hit until David LaManna singled with one out in the fourth.

Dettmer, who struck out six and walked none, had his longest outing since he went seven innings against Vanderbilt on April 28. He threw 99 pitches, 68 for strikes.

“His pitches had depth,” Notre Dame’s Brooks Coetzee

said. “He had the sinker going. He had the fastball’s run going. Had the changeup going. Nothing was going straight, and he was pitching everybody differentl­y. He didn’t fall into tendencies.”

The Aggies converted two walks, a balk, two singles and a throwing error into three runs in the third, the first two off starter Liam Simon (2-1).

Werner homered leading off the fifth against Jack Findlay and Dylan Rock later had an RBI single, ending his 0-for-14 spell and making it 5-0.

Findlay, the Irish’s star freshman left-hander, had allowed only one earned run over his 14 1/3 innings in the NCAA Tournament before giving up the two in the fifth.

Brad Rudis took over for Dettmer starting the eighth inning, and Coetzee drove Rudis’ second pitch more than 400 feet over the left-field fence for his 12th homer.

 ?? JOHN PETERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Texas A&M starting pitcher Nathan Dettmer throws a pitch against Notre Dame in the first inning on Tuesday in Omaha, Neb.
JOHN PETERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Texas A&M starting pitcher Nathan Dettmer throws a pitch against Notre Dame in the first inning on Tuesday in Omaha, Neb.

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