By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — More postseason baseball at Disharoon Park?
Yes, please.
There’s only one place the Virginia Cavaliers would rather play than the Dish, and that’s Charles Schwab Field Omaha, home of the College World Series. If the Wahoos win an NCAA super regional next weekend, they’ll advance to Omaha, Neb., for the seventh time in Brian O’Connor’s tenure as head coach, and to their delight, that best-of-three series will be played in Charlottesville.
“We’ve been fortunate to host 11 regionals here, and by far this was the best crowd and the most electric that it has been in those 11 times hosting,” O’Connor said Sunday night after UVA, with its fans in full voice, scored six runs in the top of the ninth inning to pull away for a 9-2 win over Mississippi State.
“That team has a chance to play for awhile,” MSU head coach Chris Lemonis said of the Cavaliers.
HOOS ARE SUPER BOUND!
15 years, 9 Super Regionals Appearances
🔶⚔️🔷#GoHoos pic.twitter.com/jTwTuKvq4O
— Virginia Baseball (@UVABaseball) June 3, 2024
Starting Friday or Saturday, Virginia (44-15) will host Kansas State (35-24) in a best-of-three series at Disharoon Park, with the winner moving on to Omaha. The NCAA will announce the dates and times of the eight super regionals Tuesday.
An unexpected turn of events at the NCAA regional in Fayetteville, Ark., where K-State was the No. 3 seed, worked in the Cavaliers’ favor. Around 5 p.m. Sunday, Southeast Missouri State University recorded the final out in an elimination game, ending host Arkansas’ season in stunning fashion.
The Razorbacks were seeded No. 5 overall in the NCAA tournament, and had they won their four-team regional, they would have hosted the winner of the Charlottesville regional in the next round. But Arkansas’ loss created an opportunity for the Hoos, who are seeded No. 12 in the NCAA tournament, and they pounced on it.
Seeded No. 1 in the double-elimination Charlottesville regional, Virginia defeated fourth-seeded Penn 4-2 on Friday and then edged second-seeded Mississippi State 5-4 on Saturday night. The Bulldogs bounced back from that loss to oust third-seeded St. John’s on Sunday afternoon, setting up a rematch with UVA.
In front of a sellout crowd of 5,919, Mississippi State went up 2-1 on Dakota Jordan’s first-inning home run, and Virginia answered with two runs in the third to regain the lead.
It was still a one-run game after eight innings, and an MSU victory would have forced a winner-take-all finale on Monday. But UVA pitcher Jay Woolfolk never let the Bulldogs mount a late-game comeback.
In his first start in two-and-a-half months, the junior right-hander delivered an unforgettable performance. Woolfolk, who was a two-sport athlete during his first two years at Virginia, recorded seven strikeouts in eight innings, both career highs.
Control issues had marred Woolfok’s first season as a full-time baseball player, and he entered Sunday night’s game having walked 34 batters, the most of an UVA pitcher. Against the Bulldogs (40-23), though, he walked only one.
“He commanded the ball tonight,” Lemonis said. “He hadn’t commanded it that way all year.”
