Orlando Sentinel

Gators eliminated from World Series

- By Cliff Brunt

OKLAHOMA CITY — UCLA pitcher Holly Azevedo said her teammates created an “iced moment” by dumping water on her after Sunday’s victory.

She was pretty cool during the game, too. She threw a two-hit shutout and the fifth-seeded Bruins beat No. 14 Florida 8-0 in six innings Sunday to reach the Women’s College World Series semifinals and eliminate the Gators.

Azevedo (21-2) threw just 88 pitches, struck out two and walked one.

“I couldn’t do it without the people behind me,” she said. “Our defense was really, really on point today, and obviously we had a really good outing with offense.”

Kelli Godin, Maya Brady and Briana Perez each had two hits for the Bruins.

UCLA played No. 1 seed Oklahoma in the semifinals Monday, winning 7-3 before getting clobbered 15-0 as the Sooners reached the best-ofthree championsh­ip series.

The teams met in the championsh­ip series in 2019, with UCLA winning both games to claim the title. Oklahoma beat UCLA in an eliminatio­n game last year.

Florida (49-19) won its opener Thursday against Oregon State, but the Gators did not score in a loss to Oklahoma State on Saturday.

The struggles continued against UCLA.

“I think there was a lot of hits that we had that were hit hard, but it was right at people,” Florida’s Cheyenne Lindsey said. “You can’t really control where the ball goes, only your contact. I think that was a big part of it.”

Elizabeth Hightower (17-9) got the loss for the Gators after giving up two runs on three hits in 3⅓ innings. Florida was the only Southeaste­rn Conference team in the World Series field.

UCLA opened the scoring in the bottom of the second when Godin singled to score

Savannah Pola.

UCLA looked like it might add some runs in the third. With one on and two outs, Alyssa Garcia lifted one deep to left field. Florida’s Katie Kistler leaped up against the wall and snagged it above the fence to end the inning.

The Bruins had runners on the corners with one out in the fourth when Florida shortstop Skylar Wallace — a second-team NFCA All-American — committed an error on a ground ball that allowed Pola to score.

Wallace failed to come up with another ground ball later in the inning. Briana

Perez’s contact was ruled a single, and two runs scored to make it 4-0.

A single by Brady in the sixth knocked in two runs and gave UCLA a 6-0 lead. Pola then singled and scored two more to end the game.

UCLA coach Kelly Inouye-Perez said the Bruins figured things out as the game progressed.

“Those Florida pitchers were throwing some nasty stuff, and the strike zone started to be a little different,” she said. “You know, it was just a little different, so we had to make an adjustment. Super proud.”

 ?? ALONZO ADAMS/AP ?? Florida’s Cheyenne Lindsey celebrates after reaching second base before UCLA infielder Briana Perez could make a tag during the fifth inning of their Women’s College World Series game on Sunday.
ALONZO ADAMS/AP Florida’s Cheyenne Lindsey celebrates after reaching second base before UCLA infielder Briana Perez could make a tag during the fifth inning of their Women’s College World Series game on Sunday.

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