Just put them in pressure situations and great things seem to happen.
For the sixth time this postseason, the University of Virginia’s baseball team found itself in an NCAA Tournament elimination game, in which a loss would spell the end of the Cavaliers’ season. And for the sixth time, they came out on top.
Playing in a do-or-die game Super Regional game on Monday afternoon in Columbia, South Carolina, UVA – thanks to a go-ahead grand slam by Kyle Teel in the seventh inning and stellar relief pitching from Matt Wyatt – defeated Dallas Baptist University, 5-2, to advance to the College World Series for the first time since 2015. That was the year the Cavaliers won their only baseball national championship.
The College World Series will begin Saturday in Omaha, Nebraska, with the first round of double-elimination play. UVA will play the University of Tennessee in the first round.
Believe. LET’S GOOOOOO!!!
— Carla G. Williams (@ADWilliamsUVA)
dog-piles in a Super Regional for the fifth time in 12 seasons.
— Andrew Ramspacher (@ARamspacher)
Congrats to . What a resilient, never quit squad. Ticket punched indeed!
— bill hofheimer (@bhofheimer_espn)
The game started slowly. With the exception of a young fan catching a Dallas Baptist University two-run home run in the bleachers – as he filmed the entire thing on his phone – the first few innings were somewhat uneventful.
S/o to the kid that made the catch while filming it on his phone
— Baseball Bros (@BaseballBros)
The Hoos still trailed 2-0 in the fourth inning when Nic Kent pulled a fastball over the left-field fence to cut the lead in half.
There he goes again, this time at the plate! Nic Kent cuts the DBU lead in half!
His 8th of the year!
:— Virginia Baseball (@UVABaseball)
With two outs that inning, Dallas Baptist starting pitcher Luke Eldred was forced to leave the game with an injury.
In the fifth, UVA outfielder Chris Newell reached on an infield single, stole second and moved to third on a fly out, but was left stranded.
When a pair of defensive gems by Dallas Baptist infielders robbing the Cavaliers of two likely hits in the sixth inning, it seemed like getting back to Omaha might not be in the cards.

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