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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, June 15, 2008

Georgia capitalizes late to knock off Miami, 7-4

By Eric Olson
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Georgia's bench celebrates after teammate Lyle Allen (11) scored against Miami in the ninth inning. The Bulldogs scored four runs in the ninth to knock off the top-seeded Hurricanes.

ERIC FRANCIS | Associated Press

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OMAHA, Neb. — For Miami, it was just bad timing.

Georgia coach David Perno said so over and over.

Perno also was unashamed to say, "I'll take it," after his Bulldogs capitalized on a ninth-inning Miami meltdown that produced Georgia's 7-4 College World Series victory over the top-seeded Hurricanes last night.

Georgia scored four runs in the ninth — two on Miami closer Carlos Gutierrez's throwing error — as the Bulldogs came from behind to win.

"That was a big mistake they made at the wrong time," Perno said. "We took advantage and were very lucky."

Gutierrez, the Minnesota Twins' first-round draft pick, came on to start the ninth to protect Miami's one-run lead. He couldn't do it, and Miami lost for the first time in 46 games in which it led after eight innings.

"Truthfully, that's one of the best wins I've been a part of," said Ryan Peisel, who went 3 for 5 and drove in four runs on his 22nd birthday. "For us as a team, we've been doing it all year. It's not over until the last run is recorded. For us to get that first win under our belt, that's huge."

Georgia (42-23-1), which went two games and out in its last CWS appearance in 2006, advanced to play Stanford tomorrow. Miami (52-10) will try to stay alive in Bracket 1 when it meets Florida State in an elimination game, also tomorrow.

The Bulldogs' winning rally started when Bryce Massanari singled up the middle leading off the ninth. Pinch-runner Adam Fuller moved over on Matt Cerione's sacrifice, and Robbie O'Bryan reached when he swung at Gutierrez's wild pitch on strike three, putting runners at the corners.

Lyle Allen singled in the tying run before David Thoms grounded to Gutierrez (5-4), who threw far wide of first baseman Yonder Alonso. Two runs scored as the ball rolled into the Georgia bullpen. Thoms ended up on third and scored on Peisel's single to left.

"The first batter gets a base hit on the first pitch, and it gets a little intense at that point," Miami coach Jim Morris said. "That's happened with every closer I've had at some point. It's not the best timing right here to give up a couple runs."

Joshua Fields (3-2) pitched 1 1/3 innings of shutout relief to get the win.

Alonso, Jemile Weeks and Blake Tekotte homered, accounting for all of Miami's runs.

Alonso, the Cincinnati Reds' first-round draft pick, ended Georgia reliever Alex McRee's night by launching a 1-1 pitch into the seats in left-center field with two outs in the seventh. The shot broke a 3-3 tie and was his third in three games, his 18th in his last 32 games and 24th of the season.

"It felt like we had the momentum right there when I hit the home run, but to be honest, I thought we had momentum the whole game," Alonso said. "Things happen. That's why you play the game. Hopefully we get ready for Monday and take care of business."

Weeks homered off Trevor Holder in the first, but Georgia got that run back in the third on Peisel's two-out single.

Tekotte's two-run homer in the third moved Miami ahead 3-1, but it was tied again in the sixth after Peisel's two-run shot.

Georgia threatened to go ahead in the seventh. But with runners on second and third, Miami reliever Kyle Bellamy struck out Thoms when third-base umpire Mitch Mele ruled Thoms went too far on his check swing.

"What?" the stunned Thoms yelled, shaking his head and glaring at Mele as he walked back to the dugout.

McRee got Tekotte to line out and caught Weeks looking at strike three before giving up Alonso's go-ahead home run in the seventh.

National freshman of the year Chris Hernandez worked the first 6 1/3 innings for the Hurricanes, allowing three runs on seven hits and a walk. He struck out five of the first six batters he faced.

Holder lasted four innings for the Bulldogs, allowing three runs on four hits. He walked four and struck out five.

"Miami's the best team we played all year," Perno said. "It's the toughest game we've ever been in. Our kids fought like there was no tomorrow. We played close to our identity and put the big inning together when we needed to."

STANFORD 16, FLORIDA STATE 5

Stanford coach Mark Marquess would have been happy to score one run in the ninth inning against Florida State.

How about 11?

"That's one of those things that happen. You don't know why it happens," Marquess said after the Cardinal's record-tying 11-run outburst broke open a tie game in yesterday's College World Series opener.

"Luckily, it happened for us," he said. "We got a couple big hits and broke it open."

Yes, they did.

Brent Milleville's three-run homer highlighted Stanford's biggest inning of the year and the biggest in a CWS game since Cal State Fullerton scored 11 runs against LSU in the first inning in 1994. Sean Ratliff added a two-run single and Cord Phelps a two-run double.

"We're as comfortable hitting in the late innings as in the first few," Ratliff said. "We love to hit in those spots, get a couple hits and it starts to get contagious. We're as good as anybody at stringing hits together."

Stanford (40-22-2) will play tomorrow against Georgia (42-23-1). The Seminoles (54-13) will try to stay alive tomorrow against top-seeded Miami (52-10).

The Cardinal went into the ninth tied at 5 after FSU's Jason Stidham hit a two-out, three-run homer off Drew Storen in the eighth.

"They're a great offensive team, and you don't keep those people down very long," Marquess said. "I would have settled for one run in the ninth after they came back and tied it in the dramatic fashion they did."