By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — In the NCAA baseball tournament, a regional is sometimes a sprint. Other times it’s a marathon. The winner of a four-team, double-elimination regional can play as few as three games or as many as five.
Given that, the less stress put on a team’s pitching staff early in a regional, the better. And so the Virginia Cavaliers had reason to be pleased after the opening day of the NCAA regional at Disharoon Park.
Top-seeded UVA defeated fourth-seeded Penn 4-2 on Friday to advance to a much-anticipated showdown with second-seeded Mississippi State. The Cavaliers (42-15) will meet the Bulldogs (39-21) in the winners’ bracket at 6 p.m. Mississippi defeated third-seeded St. John’s 5-2 in 10 innings Friday night.
Against Ivy League champion Penn (24-24), Virginia used only two pitchers. Joe Savino, a graduate transfer from Elon, struck out eight batters in his 5.2 innings, both season highs, and junior Chase Hungate needed only 33 pitches to record the final 10 outs in front of an appreciative crowd of 5,802 on a picturesque late-spring afternoon.
“It’s always in the back of your head when you’re thinking of managing a game: Take care of what’s in front of you,” Virginia head coach Brian O’Connor said. “It takes what it takes, and we would have used whoever we needed to use to win today’s ball game, but you’re also [thinking] in the back of your mind that you’re in [the regional] to win it, and part of that is winning the first game, but it’s also knowing what you have in front of you as well.”
Savino, a 6-foot-4, 220-pound right-hander, was slowed by an elbow injury early in the season and didn’t make his debut as a Wahoo until April 2. His workload has steadily increased since then, and he allowed only three hits Friday.
“You gotta give him credit,” Penn head coach John Yurkow said. “He pitched today like a grad transfer. A lot of poise. He threw a ton of strikes and he really took advantage locating his fastball away early, and we just didn’t make enough adjustments.”
This marks the second straight year the Cavaliers’ pitching staff has included a graduate transfer from Elon. Last season it was Brian Edgington, who shined in the NCAA tournament and suggested to Savino, a good friend, that he seriously consider UVA. Savino couldn’t be happier with his decision.
“I can’t stop smiling,” Savino said. “This place is amazing. The crowd, the atmosphere, everything about it is amazing.”
