Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Louisville makes big lead hold up

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LOUISVILLE 8, TEXAS A&M 4

The Cardinals (53-10) used six singles and a walk to build a 5-0 lead in the second inning against Corbin Martin (7-4). Texas A&M chipped away against McKay (11-3) to make it 5-4 before Bordner entered and continued to flash his postseason dominance. The sophomore has given up no runs and one hit in his last 11 innings over four appearance­s.

“I think Sam’s been the X factor, a little under the radar,” McDonnell said. “When you’re in that first out-of-the-bullpen or middle relief role, it’s just not as sexy, and you don’t get as much attention. But clearly Sam’s been hot all year.”

With Bordner doing his thing, the Cardinals added two runs in the bottom of the sixth and another when Colby Fitch doubled in the eighth for his fourth RBI.

Louisville had gone 0-5 over its last three appearance­s in Omaha. The Aggies (41-22) have lost seven consecutiv­e CWS games and face going two-and-out for the third consecutiv­e time.

“It’s about going out there and playing the game like it’s your last one because now it could be,” Nick Choruby said.

The Cardinals knocked Martin out of the game in the second, and the Aggies called on season-long ace Brigham Hill to settle things down.

Hill gave up no runs until the sixth, but the Aggies’ offense couldn’t overcome the big lead Louisville built. No team has overcome a fiverun deficit to win at the CWS since the event moved to TD Ameritrade Park in 2011.

“Very proud of our guys finding themselves down 5-0 after two,” Texas A&M Coach Rob Childress said. “From that point on you have to be perfect to have a chance to beat McKay and to beat a team like Louisville, and we certainly had a shot.”

McKay lasted five innings, matching the shortest outing of the season by the first college player taken in the draft. The No. 4 overall pick by Tampa Bay allowed four runs on eight hits. He walked two and struck out six.

“I worked out of a lot of jams,” McKay said. “It’s hard to pitch effectivel­y when you’re in jams like that.”

Louisville’s five runs in the second inning marked the 26th time this season it has scored four or more in an inning this season.

FLORIDA 3, TCU 0

OMAHA, Neb. — Alex Faedo limited TCU to 2 singles and struck out 11 in 7 innings, and Florida posted its first College World Series shutout since 1991.

Faedo, the Detroit Tigers’ first-round draft pick last week, retired 10 in a row before turning the game over to closer Michael Byrne to start the eighth.

Faedo (8-2) has been part of seven of the Gators’ nine shutouts this season. The shutout was Florida’s second in its 36 all-time CWS games and first in Omaha since a 5-0 victory over Florida State 26 years ago.

Jared Janczak (9-1) took the loss, and Byrne earned his 17th save.

JJ Schwarz, Christian Hicks and Nelson Maldonado each drove in runs for the Gators (48-18), who will play Louisville in a winners’ game Tuesday night. The Horned Frogs (47-17) play Texas A&M in an eliminatio­n game Tuesday.

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