UCLA beats Miss. St. in Game 1 of CWS finals

UCLA beats Miss. St. in Game 1 of CWS finals

Published Jun. 24, 2013 8:54 p.m. ET

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- UCLA followed its script yet again.


The Bruins churned out a few early runs
and let their pitching and defense take care of the rest in a 3-1
victory over Mississippi State on Monday night in the opener of the
College World Series finals.


ADVERTISEMENT

They're one win from their first national championship in baseball and their school's record 109th in a team sport.


"We dodged some bullets, no doubt about
it, but you have to give credit to our defense," UCLA coach John Savage
said. "Kind of a Bruin game. Tight game, and at the end of the night we
were fortunate to come out with the win."


The Bruins (48-17) know it won't be easy
to finish off a Mississippi State team that had an estimated 8,000 fans
migrate from the Magnolia State to be at TD Ameritrade Park to see
their team play for the school's first national title in any sport.


Adam Plutko limited the Bulldogs
(51-19) to a run on four hits in six innings and turned the game over to
his bullpen. The Bulldogs left runners in scoring position in four of
the last six innings.


"They're great hitters, they grind it
out every at-bat, and they're not going away," UCLA closer David Berg
said. "They want to win this thing as bad as we do. They're not going to
give it up."


Bulldogs second baseman Brett Pirtle
said he and his teammates can't give the Bruins any openings because
they're so capable of capitalizing on them.


"Nobody that's extra special," Pirtle
said of the Bruins. "They're just small ball. They bunt and put pressure
on the defense, and that's what helped them out, and that's the kind of
ballclub they are. So keeping runners off base and just catching the
ball and putting pressure on them will help us win the game tomorrow."


The Bruins can play some defense, too.
Eric Filia ran in to catch Trey Porter's line drive to right with two
outs and the bases loaded in the fourth, and he robbed Nick Ammirati of
extra bases with a catch on the warning track in the fifth. Second
baseman Cody Regis made a couple diving stops and also started both of
UCLA's double plays.


UCLA is 40-0 when leading after seven innings. There was drama all the way to the end.


The Bruins made it 3-0 in the fourth on
Filia's two-out, two-run single off Chad Girodo, who replaced starter
Trevor Fitts (0-1) in the second. That was the last of the Bruins' six
hits.


Mississippi State's fans started the
"Maroon and White" chant in the bottom of the ninth after C.T. Bradford
and pinch-hitter Sam Frost singled to put runners on first and second
with one out against Berg.


Nick Ammirati flew out, and
pinch-hitter Jacob Robson ended the game with his comebacker to Berg,
who sprinted toward first base before under-handing the ball to Pat
Gallagher.


Berg, making his 50th appearance of the season, earned his NCAA-record 24th save for 1 2-3 innings of work.


"Records are meant to be broken, but
titles are what matter," Berg said. "So if we all win a national
championship, I'll enjoy that. But right now I don't think about it at
all."


The loss spoiled a splendid performance
by Girodo, who pitched the last 7 2-3 innings. He allowed three hits,
walked two and struck out nine. Both runs against him were unearned.


Plutko (10-3) walked in Mississippi
State's only run in the fourth. He wasn't overly sharp, but he continued
his impressive run in postseason play. In eight career NCAA tournament
games, he's 7-0 with an 0.94 ERA.


The Bruins brought a .248 season batting average into the finals, and a .182 average through their first three CWS games.


They eked out enough offense to win
again. In the first three innings, they had batters reach on a dropped
third strike, infield single, two hit batsmen and a throwing error.


But there were big hits, too.


Filia, who came in 1 for 9 in the CWS,
doubled after Kevin Kramer struck out but reached because strike three
was in the dirt. Pat Valaika's single to center drove in Kramer for a
1-0 lead.


"First baserunner of the game kind of
spells it out," Bulldogs coach John Cohen said. "I really wish that kid
hadn't swung at that pitch. I'm not saying it to be a smart aleck, but
that kid doesn't swing at that pitch, it lands in front of the plate, I
think the ballgame could be different. But crazy things happen in
sports."


The Bruins added two more in the
fourth. Brenton Allen singled and Brian Carroll reached when he bunted
and catcher Ammirati made a bad throw to first.


Carroll ran into the Bulldogs'
6-foot-5, 272-pound first baseman Wes Rea while running through the bag.
Rea stayed down after the knee-to-knee contact but was able to keep
playing after an athletic trainer attended to him. Allen and Carroll
came home on Filia's base hit to right.


Alex Detz and Brett Pirtle produced
Mississippi State's first and second hits against Plutko with one out in
the fourth. Rea was hit by a pitch to load the bases.


That got the "Maroon and White" chant
started as Bradford came up to face Plutko. Bradford fouled off three
straight pitches before the count ran full. Plutko walked him with a
high changeup, scoring Detz. Plutko's 30-pitch inning ended when Trey
Porter lined out.


Plutko had to endure more stress in the
fifth. Filia made his big catch on Ammirati, and Demarcus Henderson
reached when Plutko misplayed a comebacker, and moved to second on a
balk. The inning ended with Detz's line out to second.


Freshman reliever James Kaprielian came
on in the seventh with a man on and none out. After he walked Ammirati,
Henderson, the team leader in sacrifice bunts, fouled off two bunt
tries and then grounded to second for the first of UCLA's two double
plays.


"Not much to get excited about," Savage said. "It comes down to tomorrow."

share