By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
Heroes emerge and legends are made in the postseason, and to a list that includes such luminaries as Chris Taylor, Brandon Waddell, Josh Sborz, Ernie Clement and Kenny Towns at the University of Virginia, Devin Ortiz added his name Tuesday in Columbia, S.C.
If he’d done nothing except pitch in the final game of this NCAA regional, Ortiz would have earned plaudits for his performance at Founders Park. In his first start as a Cavalier, the 6-2, 207-pound senior struck out six and allowed only one hit in four scoreless innings. But Ortiz, facing top-seeded Old Dominion, did much more on the biggest stage of his college career.
In the bottom of the 10th inning, he ended a marathon game by crushing a 1-1 pitch from ODU reliever Aaron Holiday over the left-field fence. Ortiz’s solo home run lifted the third-seeded Cavaliers to a 4-3 victory and sent them to an NCAA super regional for the first time since 2015, when they went on to win the College World Series.
“What an amazing college baseball game,” UVA head coach Brian O’Connor said. “I’ve said it the last few games, that it’s tournaments like these, postseason time, where players emerge and step forward to help their team accomplish something great.”
For Ortiz, his eighth home run of the season was unquestionably the biggest of his life. It was also UVA’s first-ever walk-off homer in an NCAA tournament game.
“I think it’s an honor, really,” Ortiz said. “This program and its legacy is something like no other. This is what I came here to do. I wanted to come to Virginia, I wanted to play in these big situations, and I wanted to help my team win, most important. Something like today is something you dream about.”
UVA (33-24) won’t have to travel far for its super regional with Dallas Baptist (40-16), which on Monday won the NCAA regional in Fort Worth, Texas. The best-of-three series will be held at Founders Park, and the Wahoos plan to remain in Columbia until the super regional starts.
The Hoos are scheduled to meet the Patriots at noon Saturday, at noon Sunday and, if necessary, at 1 p.m. Monday.
This marks the seventh time in O’Connor’s 18 season as their head coach that the Hoos have advanced to a super regional. Never before, however, had they followed such an arduous path to the round of 16.
“They’re all different,” O’Connor said. “They’re all special. This one’s just incredibly special.”
After losing Friday to second-seeded South Carolina, UVA had no margin for error. The Hoos had to win four straight games to emerge victorious from this double-elimination regional, and they did so, with improbable heroes stepping forward along the way, from Matt Wyatt to Griff McGarry to Brandon Neeck.
The Hoos ousted fourth-seeded Jacksonville 13-8 on Saturday and eliminated South Carolina 3-2 on Sunday afternoon. Then they knocked off ODU 8-3 on Sunday night to force a winner-take-all rematch.
Rain washed out the scheduled finale Monday night, but the teams finally took the field the next morning for the first NCAA regional game played on a Tuesday since 2016. It started at 9:06 a.m. It ended 4 hours and 10 minutes later with Ortiz’s blast.
