The Palm Beach Post

Gators streaking toward CWS

Defending champs have won 17 straight weekend series in ’18.

- By Mark Long

GAINESVILL­E — What the Florida baseball team is doing this season is downright ridiculous, even for a defending national champion that looks primed to repeat.

The top-ranked Gators (3610, 16-5 Southeaste­rn Conference) have won every weekend series they’ve played in 2018, stretching their eye-popping streak to 17 in a row. Throw in a sweep of rival Florida State in three games played weeks apart and series victories against Wake Forest (NCAA super regional) and LSU (College World Series championsh­ip series) in 2017, and Florida has claimed 20 consecutiv­e best-of-three events.

It’s an impressive streak, for sure.

It’s somewhat meaningles­s, too.

The Gators have been so good for so long — they’re even better than they were in 2017 — that anything short of another trip to Omaha, Nebraska, and another national title would be a disappoint­ment.

“The expectatio­ns that everybody is putting on this team are fair,” coach Kevin O’Sullivan said this week. “But if we don’t win it, I’d never say it was a failure. There are more than 300 Division I teams and only eight get a chance to go to Omaha. We’ve gone six out of the last eight years; it’s not easy. People on the outside might take it for granted. I certainly don’t, but my expectatio­n is to get there.”

That much seems like a given.

The Gators have improved on the mound and at the plate this season, all while playing with huge targets on their backs.

O’Sullivan deserves credit for keeping players hungry, humble and healthy. He’s really only been dealt one minor hiccup.

O’Sullivan pulled righthande­r Tyler Dyson, who started and won the 2017 finale, late last month after the sophomore failed to get through the fifth inning in five of his last six starts.

Freshman Jack Leftwich stepped in and won his first weekend start. If Leftwich becomes a reliable starter the rest of the way, the Gators could be difficult to catch in the powerhouse SEC.

Florida enters this weekend’s series at Texas A&M (33-12, 11-10) with a threegame lead over second-place Arkansas and four games up on Georgia in the Eastern Division.

Aces Brady Singer and Jackson Kowar have set the tone, picking up where firstround draft pick Alex Faedo left off last year. Singer is 9-1 with a 2.63 ERA and won a head-to-head showdown against Auburn standout Casey Mize. Kowar has been nearly as good, going 7-2 with a 2.91 ERA. Jackson and Kowar are considered first-round locks in next month’s Major League Baseball draft.

Leftwich and fellow freshmen Tommy Mace and Jordan Butler have been solid out of bullpen, bridging the gap between starters and All-American closer Michael Byrne. Byrne has 11 saves and a 1.53 ERA.

The biggest difference between the title team and the one trying to make two in a row is in the batter’s box. The Gators are hitting 30 points higher this season, up from .259 to .289, and already have 15 more homers.

Jonathan India is hitting .401 with 14 homers and a team-leading 50 runs. India also had a 24-game hitting streak.

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