The University of Virginia Cavaliers arrived in Omaha, Nebraska, with the goal of winning the College World Series for the second time in program history, and they’ll leave town without a championship trophy.
That doesn’t diminish what they accomplished this season, and head coach Brian O’Connor told his players as much early Friday at TD Ameritrade Park. At 1:59 a.m. EST, the No. 2 national seed University of Texas recorded the final out in a 6-2 victory over UVA, ending an elimination game that had been delayed for nearly four hours by bad weather. A few minutes later, O’Connor met in the outfield with his team and delivered an impassioned message.
“It was just to keep our heads up,” sophomore center-fielder Chris Newell said. “We just talked about the position we were in in April and where we were at, and I completely agree with him. There’s no reason that we should come out of here with our heads down, because we really did do something special as a group … and it really says a lot about this club this year.”
Incredible display of will, fight, heart and skill. These Hoos believed in themselves and we believed in them. Battled to the very end.
— Carla G. Williams (@ADWilliamsUVA)
This is O’Connor’s 18th season at UVA, and the story of his latest team has become the stuff of legend. After losing to Georgia Tech in Atlanta on April 1, the Wahoos were 11-14 overall and 4-12 in ACC play, and their postseason prospects looked dim. But they rallied to win that series and continued gathering momentum throughout the second half of the season.
The Cavaliers followed their strong finish to the regular season by advancing to the semifinals of the ACC tournament. That assured them of extending their season, and they entered the NCAA tournament seeded No. 3 in the four-team regional in Columbia, South Carolina.
Then the real drama kicked in. After losing their opener in Columbia, the Hoos won four straight elimination games – two of them over top-seeded Old Dominion University – to advance to the NCAA tournament’s round of 16. There, they encountered more adversity.
In its best-of-three super regional, also in Columbia, Virginia again found itself with no margin for error after dropping the series opener to Dallas Baptist University. Once again, though, the Hoos refused to panic, and with back-to-back wins they clinched one of the eight spots in Omaha.
UVA opened the College World Series with a 6-0 win over No. 3 national seed University of Tennessee on Sunday afternoon. Two nights later, UVA lost 6-5 to No. 7 Mississippi State University, and that set up an elimination game with Texas on Thursday.