By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — They left Disharoon Park on Saturday night not knowing which team they would face in what might be the final game of this NCAA baseball regional. That hasn’t caused any anxious moments for the Virginia Cavaliers.
“You feel great,” head coach Brian O’Connor said after his team improved to 2-0 in the double-elimination Charlottesville regional.
The top-seeded Wahoos (47-12) will sit back Sunday afternoon and watch second-seeded East Carolina (46-18) battle third-seeded Oklahoma (32-27) in an elimination game at the Dish. The Hoos will meet the winner at 6 p.m. Sunday.
A victory in that game would send Virginia to a best-of-three NCAA super regional for the second time in three seasons. If the Cavaliers lose Sunday night, there will be a winner-take-all rematch Monday at Disharoon Park.
“Every tournament is different,” O’Connor said, “but obviously there’s an advantage to being 2-0.”
A team coming out of the losers’ bracket would have to play five games to win the regional. The Cavaliers will play no more than four games, and that puts less stress on their pitching staff.
Virginia, the No. 7 overall seed in the NCAA tournament, is hitting .335 this season with a lineup that includes such All-ACC selections Griff O’Ferrall, Ethan O’Donnell, Jake Gelof and Kyle Teel, all of whom made the first team, and Ethan Anderson, a third-team selection. The Cavaliers’ pitchers weren’t as dominant as the offense during the regular season, but you wouldn’t know that from watching them this weekend.
In UVA’s 15-1 win over fourth-seeded Army on Friday afternoon, right-hander Brian Edgington, a graduate transfer from Elon, had a perfect game going when O’Connor chose to rest him after the fifth inning.
Another right-hander, Nick Parker, followed Edgington’s gem with a tour de force of his own Saturday night. Parker, a graduate transfer from Coastal Carolina, scattered five hits, struck out five and walked only one in UVA’s 2-1 victory over ECU at sold-out Disharoon Park.
“To think that somebody will go out this time of the year against a great offensive opponent in East Carolina and pitch through the seventh inning, you can’t script that,” O’Connor said.
At this time last year, the Cavaliers were in Greenville, N.C., playing in an NCAA regional hosted by the Pirates. So was Parker, who pitched eight scoreless innings (and struck out 10 batters) in Coastal’s win over East Carolina.
O’Connor and UVA pitching coach Drew Dickinson watched Parker that day, and when he entered the transfer portal after the season, they didn’t hesitate to pursue him.
“To do what he did last year in [ECU’s] ballpark is tough to do,” O’Connor said, “and it showed the grit and the poise that he has to win at this level.”
