Tuesday, June 5, 2012

SCarolina tops Clemson, returns to super regionals

Clemson's Steve Wilkerson is safe at home plate as South Carolina catcher Dante Rosenberg reacts to the call by the umpire during the sixth inning of an NCAA college baseball tournament regional game in Columbia, S.C., Sunday, June 3, 2012. South Carolina won 4-3. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)

Clemson's Steve Wilkerson is safe at home plate as South Carolina catcher Dante Rosenberg reacts to the call by the umpire during the sixth inning of an NCAA college baseball tournament regional game in Columbia, S.C., Sunday, June 3, 2012. South Carolina won 4-3. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)

South Carolina coach Ray Tanner, left, talks to his players after defeating Clemson 4-3 in their NCAA college baseball tournament regional in Columbia, S.C., Sunday, June 3, 2012. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)

South Carolina's Jordan Montgomery delivers a pitch during their NCAA college baseball tournament regional game against Clemson in Columbia, S.C., Sunday, June 3, 2012. South Carolina won 4-3. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)

South Carolina's Joey Pankake, left, and Christian Walker (13) celebrate his score in the first inning of an NCAA college baseball tournament regional game against Clemson in Columbia, S.C., Sunday, June 3, 2012. South Carolina won 4-3. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)

Clemson coach Jack Leggett, right, disputes the call with home plate umpire Steve Mattingly during their NCAA college baseball tournament regional game against South Carolina in Columbia, S.C., Sunday, June 3, 2012. South Carolina won 4-3. (AP Photo/Mary Ann Chastain)

(AP) ? Adam Matthews is finally in the middle of things during South Carolina's latest NCAA tournament run.

The Gamecocks' senior outfielder had an RBI single in a three-run first as South Carolina won its NCAA regional and its 19th straight tournament game with a 4-3 victory over Clemson on Sunday.

Matthews, who missed last year's run to the Gamecocks' second straight College World Series title with a hamstring problem, caught the final out on Brad Felder's flyball to the warning track in right center and was voted regional MVP.

South Carolina (42-17) won its third straight regional and, as the tournament's No. 8 national seed, will host the winner of the Charlottesville Regional in next weekend's best-of-three super regional series.

And Matthews hopes to keep playing as well as he has as the Gamecocks try for their third consecutive national title.

He played 64 games as a sophomore, but wasn't among the team's established stars that won the 2010 title in Omaha.

"The past couple of years have been frustrating not being able to be part of the postseason," Matthews said. "This year, it's an honor to play in front of our fans at home and be able to contribute in a big way."

Matthews has contributed plenty in the regional. He drove in three runs in a 7-0 win over Manhattan on Friday. He had a two-run homer against the rival Tigers in South Carolina's come-from-behind, 12-inning 5-4 victory Saturday.

This time, Matthews helped the Gamecocks jump on tiring starter David Haselden (4-2) in a three-run first. Joey Pankake opened with a triple and scored on Evan Marzilli's sacrifice fly. Matthews hit brought home Christian Walker before Connor Bright's double scored Matthews as South Carolina moved in front 3-0. Chase Vergason's RBI single in the sixth made it 4-0 before Clemson rallied to make it close.

Thomas Brittle had an RBI double and Phil Pohl a run-scoring groundout to third to cut South Carolina's lead to 4-2 in the sixth. The Tigers made things interesting in the ninth when Spencer Kieboom's single to right brought home Jay Baum and sent up Felder, who hammered a ball out of the stadium on Saturday. He drove this one a long way, too, but not so that Matthews couldn't run it down.

"I couldn't hear Evan (Marzilli), saying, 'You got it. You got it. You got it.' It would've been bad if he was saying, 'I got it. I got it. I got it.'"

Freshman Jordan Montgomery (5-1) went 6 2/3 solid innings, retiring 12 straight during one stretch. Tyler Webb, called "soft" by a Clemson player last year, got the final seven outs for his third save.

Webb brushed off last year's insult by former Tiger Will Lamb as motivation. Still, South Carolina coach Ray Tanner knew this was a game Webb wanted to finish.

"I'm good. Don't come get me," Tanner said Webb told him before the ninth.

Clemson hoped Felder might have enough on the last out, but knew it would come up short.

"It's a pretty deflating feeling," said Clemson third baseman Richie Shaffer, a junior likely to go in the first round of Monday's MLB draft. "You watch it sailing through the air and hope he trips on a rock or something."

South Carolina's celebration was simple and without too much emotion despite it being the fourth win in five games with Clemson this season.

"It was another one of those great baseball games we tend to have with Clemson," Tanner said.

The Gamecocks were a whisker away from the loser's bracket, trailing the Tigers 4-2 entering the eighth inning on Saturday's game. But a run each in the eighth and ninth send that contest to extras and LB Dantzler's RBI single off the wall gave them the 5-4 win.

South Carolina appeared ready to blow this one open after its first inning outburst until the Tigers, who needed a 5-3 victory over Coastal Carolina earlier Sunday simply to stay alive, settled down under reliever Jonathan Meyer, who limited the Gamecocks to five hits the final 8 1/3 innings.

It was just enough to prevail against Clemson (35-28), again. The Gamecocks have won 18 of the last 25 in the series with their state rivals.

"We've got to get one hit better, one pitch better, one more piece of execution better," Clemson coach Jack Leggett said. "That's the difference."

That seems to be what all of South Carolina's postseason opponents need to do. The Gamecocks haven't lost an NCAA tournament game since their opener to Oklahoma at the 2010 College World Series. They haven't lost a home tournament game since the 2002 super regional series against Miami, a string of 22 consecutive wins.

It's quite an edge, both the Clemson and South Carolina sides agreed, for the Gamecocks to play at home, where they enjoyed their 13th sellout of the season and second against Clemson in as many days.

"Being able to play at home, the fans are great," Matthews said. "It's been a heck of a weekend and hopefully we can continue."

Associated Press

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