Orlando Sentinel

Seminoles fall, Martin in limbo

- By Safid Deen

TALLAHASSE­E – After 109 pitches and a lengthy weather delay, Florida State pitcher Drew Parrish took the mound in the bottom of the ninth inning to help his team get the final three outs needed to stay alive in the NCAA Tournament.

Unfortunat­ely for longtime head coach Mike Martin and the Seminoles, keeping Parrish in turned out to be the wrong decision.

Down to the final out, Elijah MacNamee hit a three-run, walk-off home run to give Mississipp­i State a 3-2 victory that sent Bulldogs fans into a wild “SEC” chant and ended FSU’s season after two games in the Tallahasse­e Regional at Dick Howser Stadium on Saturday afternoon.

“They hadn’t made contact on his changeup all day long — [Parrish] had dominated,” said Martin, who finished his 39th season as Seminoles coach and extended his NCAA career wins record with 1,987 victories.

“[Parrish] made a great pitch, and the guy hit it out of the ballpark. It’s something you have to look at and say, ‘That’s baseball.’ … The great game we play can be cruel and that was cruel.”

After the game, Martin was hesitant to discuss his future with his current contract set to expire.

Martin did say he would meet with FSU athletics director Stan Wilcox after Wilcox returns from supporting the Seminoles softball team at the Women’s College World Series in Oklahoma City.

“We’ll see what the future is,” Martin added.

The Seminoles, on the brink of eliminatio­n after a 7-6 upset loss to Samford on Friday night, held a 2-0 lead after eight innings before rain and lightning forced a weather delay lasting 2.5 hours.

Parrish, an All-ACC first team selection who was undefeated this season, pitched an eight-inning shutout, giving up only three hits with six strikeouts before the delay.

Martin insists there was no other player he and the Seminoles wanted on the mound to re-enter the game, adding pitching coach Mike Bell had Parrish pitch every 15 minutes during the delay to ensure he would remain in top form.

“When I was leaving the clubhouse, not one, but at least five guys asked, ‘Is Parrish going back out?’” Martin said.

“They had the person that they wanted. We had the person that we wanted. And if we had to do it over again, we’d have the same person back on that mound.”

The game delay certainly re-energized Mississipp­i State, which used it to watch the movie “Grown Ups” in the FSU weight room. The rest helped the Bulldogs recover from a 20-10 loss to Oklahoma that lasted four hours and 42 minutes in daytime heat on Friday afternoon.

Facing the top of the MSU order, Parrish gave up a leadoff walk to Jake Mangum, made Rowdey Jordan pop out to second base, struck out Tanner Allen and gave up a walk to cleanup hitter Hunter Stovall.

With two on and two outs, Parrish left his 133rd pitch of the game over the plate and MacNamee launched it to left field, ending FSU’s season in its own regional.

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