Austin American-Statesman

LSU TRIUMPHS IN COLLEGE SERIES WHILE TCU TRIES TO STAY ALIVE

Cubs draft pick helps end 23-game victory streak for Beavers.

- By Eric Olson

With a wave of his cap to the LSU fans, Alex Lange disappeare­d into the dugout after what very well could have been his last outing as a collegian.

It was one of his best, and most timely.

The Chicago Cubs’ firstround draft pick limited topseeded Oregon State to two hits over 7⅓ innings in a per- formance Friday that carried the Tigers to a 3-1 victory and ended the Beavers’ 23-game winning streak.

It also set up a winner-take-all Bracket 1 final at the College World Series on Satur- day, with the winner going to the best-of-three finals beginning Monday.

Lange (10-5) won a CWS eliminatio­n game for the second time in his career, and he said his experience pitching so many important games at home in Baton Rouge, Loui- siana, prepared him.

“I had a sense of calmness about me this morning when I woke up, and getting to the yard. I was expecting to be amped up and juiced up,” Lange said. “I was calm and relaxed. I think that goes back to pitching in Alex Box Stadium in front of 12,000 people every Friday night.”

The Tigers (51-18) avenged a 13-1 loss to the Beavers (565) on Monday and became the first team to knock them off since Southern California on April 29.

They did all of their scoring against national wins leader Jake Thompson (14-1). Max Engelbrekt relieved in the seventh after Josh Smith hit Thompson’s first pitch of the inning into the right-field seats for a two-run lead.

Oregon State was still sting- ing after the game from a call in the third inning when, with runners on first and second, Steven Kwan sliced a ball down the left-field line that bounced off the wall and was ruled foul. TV replays indicated it was a fair ball.

Oregon State coach Pat Casey said by the time some- one on his staff told him to ask for a video review, the next pitch had been thrown, clos- ing his window of opportunit­y.

NCAA national coordinato­r of umpires George Drouches said through an NCAA spokes- man that crew chief Danny Collins should have called for a video review. Collins, who was working third base, made the original foul call. Kwan ended up popping out to shortstop before Lange walked two straight to force in a run.

Had the ball been ruled fair, Casey said, “I do believe that it certainly would have changed that inning, that’s for sure.”

For Lange, there was a moment of anxiety.

“I’m looking, and you’re talking to it, kind of like a golfer talks to a ball,” he said. “I was like, ‘Get foul, get foul.’ Then they called it foul, and I thought it was foul. But what I heard in the dugout, it might have been fair. So I’m just glad they called it foul. Obviously, that’s a pretty big situation.”

Lange ran into trouble in the third when he walked three batters and gave up a double. Only one more batter advanced past first against him, and he retired eight in a row before he turned the game over to closer Zack Hess with one out in the eighth. Hess retired the last five batters, four by strikeout, for his fourth save.

LSU opened the second inning with a double and two singles and led 2-0 when Beau Jordan’s safety-squeeze bunt scored Zach Watson.

The Beavers’ two hits were their fewest since they had four in their season opener against Indiana.

 ?? NATI HARNIK / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? LSU’s Greg Deichmann exults after hitting a double as Oregon State’s Cadyn Grenier (right) reacts during Friday’s game in Omaha, Neb. The Beavers’ loss was their first since a defeat against Southern Cal on April 29.
NATI HARNIK / ASSOCIATED PRESS LSU’s Greg Deichmann exults after hitting a double as Oregon State’s Cadyn Grenier (right) reacts during Friday’s game in Omaha, Neb. The Beavers’ loss was their first since a defeat against Southern Cal on April 29.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States