Los Angeles Times

Beavers reach f inals in Omaha

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Oregon State will face Arkansas for College World Series title after defeating Mississipp­i State again.

OREGON STATE 5 MISSISSIPP­I STATE 2

Kevin Abel and Jake Mulholland combined on a four-hitter, Tyler Malone hit his third home run of the College World Series, and Oregon State survived some ninth-inning drama to beat Mississipp­i State 5-2 on Saturday night to reach the best-of-three finals against Arkansas in Omaha.

As they did in 2006, when they won the first of two straight national titles, the Beavers came back from losing their CWS opener to win four straight and make the finals.

Abel gave up three singles, walked three and struck out five in seven innings as Oregon State (53-11-1) held down Mississipp­i State’s offense for the second straight day. Beavers pitchers gave up five hits in a 12-2 win Friday that forced the Bracket 1 final rematch.

Mulholland pitched a perfect eighth and retired the first two in the ninth before running into trouble.

After walking two in a row, Luke Alexander singled in a run and Mulholland plunked pinch-hitter Tanner Poole to load the bases for Jordan Westburg.

Westburg, who hit a grand slam against North Carolina two games ago, grounded out to end the game.

Mississipp­i State (39-29) mostly shut down an Oregon State offense that came into the game batting .377 and averaging 10.8 runs in four games in Omaha.

Five of the Beavers’ eight hits in the game came in succession in a fiverun third inning after Bulldogs starter Ethan Small (5-4) got two quick outs. Adley Rutschman and Michael Gretler had RBI singles before Malone’s three-run homer barely cleared the fence in right-center.

Malone, who hit five homers in five straight games in mid-April, had no more until his three-homers-in-fourgames binge in Omaha.

Oregon State held the Bulldogs scoreless for eight straight innings spanning two games until Rowdey Jordan’s RBI single in the third accounted for the Bulldogs’ lone run.

Oregon State coach Pat Casey lamented Friday that the Beavers had yet to get a quality start through four CWS games. Bryce Fehmel’s fourinning outing against Washington had been the longest.

Abel (6-1) gave them what could only be called a high-quality start.

He retired the first six batters he faced, striking out three of them, and took a one-hitter into the fifth. A baserunnin­g blunder by Jake Mangum got Abel off the hook in the fifth, and an inning-ending double play got him out of trouble in the sixth when the Bulldogs had runners on second and third with one out.

The Bulldogs played from behind in four of their eight wins in the NCAA tournament and had made comebacks in 21 of their 39 wins this season.

They fell short in what was their sixth eliminatio­n game since the regionals started.

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