
Kyle Johnson drives in 5 in Duke's 7-4 win over Murray State; Blue Devils seek first CWS since 1961
Associated Press
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) — Kyle Johnson drove in five runs to power Duke's 7-4 victory over Murray State on Saturday in the first game of the Durham Super Regional.
The Blue Devils are one win from reaching the College World Series for the first time since 1961. Game 2 is Sunday.
Johnson, a .228 hitter in 57 at-bats coming in, had two doubles and a home run among his four hits and scored twice.
Trailing 2-0 in the third inning, Duke tied it when Jake Berger drew a leadoff walk and scored on Johnson's two-run home run to center field.
Johnson and Berger figured in the Blue Devils' three-run fourth inning. Johnson drove in two with a bases-loaded double that sent Berger to third base. Berger then scored on a wild pitch by Nic Schutte (8-4).
In the sixth, Johnson doubled to drive in one run and later scored on a double by Ben Rounds.
Duke managed only six hits — four by Johnson — but the Blue Devils benefited from eight walks.
Dom Decker had four of Murray State's nine hits and drove in two runs.
Duke starter Owen Proksch (4-3) went 5 2/3 innings, allowing two runs on six hits with seven strikeouts. Reid Easterly pitched three scoreless innings for his fifth save.
Duke (42-19) is playing in the super regionals for the fourth time. The Racers (42-15) are making their fourth NCAA Tournament appearance and first in the super regionals. ___
AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports
recommended
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
35 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
US coach Mauricio Pochettino says ‘We're going to have the possibility to win the World Cup'
EAST HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — A third straight loss didn't prevent Mauricio Pochettino from thinking big. 'We need to believe. We need to compete like today and for sure we're going to have the possibility to win the World Cup,' the U.S. coach said after the Americans lost their third straight game, wasting an early lead in a 2-1 defeat to Turkey in a friendly on Saturday. Jack McGlynn scored 59 seconds in for the U.S., which was missing many regulars as Pochettino revamped his roster following a dismal performance at the CONCACAF Nations League final four in March . Turkey took advantage of a sloppy defense as Arda Güler and Kerem Aktürkoğlu scored in a 2-minute, 20-second span midway through the first half. While the U.S. had 60% possession and outshot Turkey 13-11, the Americans dropped to 5-4 under Pochettino , who took over after first-round elimination at last year's Copa America led the U.S. Soccer Federation to fire coach Gregg Berhalter . They have lost three straight for the second time in a year . 'Today, who is going to tell me, oh, we showed lack of, we showed lack of — lack of what today?' said Pochettino, a 53-year-old from Argentina who coached Tottenham, Paris Saint-Germain and Chelsea. 'The team showed what (it) needed to show. ... Playing in this way, they are going to win most of the games.' Coaching a nation that hasn't reached the World Cup semifinals since 1930 or the quarterfinals since 2022, Pochettino changed eight starters from the Nations League loss to Canada in March and kept only left back Max Arfsten, winger Diego Luna and forward Patrick Agyemang. 'Some guys that are coming in — and they're not thinking twice about taking someone on. It's not playing safe. It's like, let's take risks and try to go after this thing,' said midfielder Tyler Adams, who entered at the start of the second half. 'I think having fresh faces, guys that aren't fearless, young guys, that's going to help us.' With a year to go before co-hosting the World Cup, the U.S. plays Switzerland on Tuesday at Nashville, Tennessee, in another friendly, then opens the CONCACAF Gold Cup against Trinidad and Tobago on June 15. 'I am really sad because I think this group of players are working so hard and I think we deserve (a) better result today,' Pochettino said. 'I think we performed well. I think we're brave enough. I think the attitude was: Go and press, match in every single aspect a team like Turkey that is one of the best teams in the last year in Europe.' Defender Alex Freeman, a 20-year-old son of former NFL All-Pro receiver Antonio Freeman, started in his U.S. debut. Matt Freese, a starter at Major League Soccer's New York City, made his debut in goal. Matt Turner, the usual starter since 2022, didn't play for Crystal Palace after March 1. Midfielder Quinn Sullivan and defender Nathan Harriel made debuts as 65th-minute substitutes. McGlynn scored when he ran onto a pass from Malik Tilman, took several touches, cut inside and curled a left-footed shot from just outside the penalty area inside the far post for his second goal in five international appearances. It was the earliest U.S. goal since Shaq Moore scored 20 seconds in against Canada during the 2021 CONCACAF Gold Cup. Turkey tied it in the 24th minute when Freese tapped the ball to Johnny Cardoso, whose pass ricocheted off a leg and past Freese for Güler's fifth international goal. Then in the 27th, Miles Robinson tried to clear Oğuz Aydın's shot and the ball went to Aktürkoğlu, who one-timed a bouncing shot past Freese for his 12th international goal and sixth in eight games. 'Of the goals that we concede, that created a big mess on the team,' Pochettino said. ___ AP soccer:


San Francisco Chronicle
35 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Alert: Sovereignty has crossed the finish line first at the Belmont Stakes
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (AP) — Sovereignty has crossed the finish line first at the Belmont Stakes.


Dominion Post
38 minutes ago
- Dominion Post
LSU routs WVU 16-9 in Game 1 of super regional
BATON ROUGE, La. — Even on a day with a heat index of 103 degrees, it snowballed quickly for the 24th-ranked West Virginia baseball team. The Mountaineers led 1-0 in the fourth inning of Game 1 of the Baton Rouge Super Regional, but seven runs in the span of as many batters turned the series opener into a 16-9 LSU rout. BOX SCORE LSU (47-15) scored three runs in the fourth and seven in the fifth to take a 1-0 lead in the series, forcing WVU (44-15) to win the next two days if it is to reach its first College World Series in program history. 'We played competitive baseball,' WVU head coach Steve Sabins said. 'The game slipped away from us out of the bullpen. We asked a lot of guys to compete at a high level, quite a few kids that hadn't been in a scenario like that before.' WVU starter Griffin Kirn battled through the first three innings and even had a 1-0 lead thanks to Jace Rinehart's second inning RBI single, but the warning signs were there. Kirn hit a batter and fell behind 3-0 in another count in the second, walked the lead-off man in the third and hit two of the first three batters in the fourth. Finally, the bill came due for his command issues. LSU freshman Derek Curiel served a three-run homer out to left field, igniting the 12,093 strong home crowd and starting West Virginia's rapid unraveling. 'I didn't think Kirn was quite as sharp,' Sabins said. 'And it probably had something to do with the fact that he threw twice in a week for the first time all season last weekend. He started game one of the regional and closed out the regional, and then obviously the conditions today being so hot, so humid, a little bit shorter rest for him, he wasn't quite as crisp.' Kirn made it through the fourth inning without further damage, but allowed a lead-off single in the fifth. The single came around to score, and a combination of three relievers — JJ Glasscock, Cole Fehrman and Tyler Hutson — allowed six more runs in the inning as the Tigers put the game out of reach. Back-to-back walks set the table for shortstop Steven Milam, who shot a grand slam out to right field. 'We have a really good team,' Sabins said. 'It takes our depth and it takes everybody if we're going to win at the highest levels. We didn't think that he [Kirn] was the best option there.' Milam's slam was actually the first of two on the day for the Tigers. One inning later, another procession of walks teed up Josh Pearson for a grand slam of his own with all three runners in front of him reaching on free passes. West Virginia pitchers issued a season-high tying 13 free bases between eight walks and five hit batters, and LSU scored 10 of them in. All of it laid waste to the only real positive of the day for the Mountaineers, a strong offensive outing against Kade Anderson. The Mountaineers pounded out seven runs on nine hits against the likely top-10 overall pick in next month's MLB Draft, Anderson's career-high allowed in both departments. Skylar King and Chase Swain provided the biggest blows of a four-run sixth inning, and Gavin Kelly hit West Virginia's first home run of the game, a two-run shot in the seventh. Kyle West added a towering two-run homer of his own off LSU reliever William Schmidt in the ninth, giving the Mountaineers their third consecutive game with at least nine runs. 'Working a pitch count is one thing,' designated hitter Sam White said about the approach against Anderson. 'But if he gives you something to hit you're not trying to foul it off, you're trying to hit it.' The score looked a little closer at the end, but the reality of the day was one of the nation's most talented teams overwhelmed West Virginia. The only positive for the Mountaineers is unlike a regional where a loss in game one requires you to win four straight elimination games to survive, this is a standard three-game series. West Virginia had two series this season, BYU and Texas Tech, where it lost game one and responded to win the next two. This challenge will be much greater, but the mentality is the same. 'They could have beat us 40-0 and tomorrow it's going to be 0-0 at one pitch,' White said. 'There's nothing to it. It's a series.' Game 2 of the series is set for 6 p.m. Sunday. Neither side confirmed a starting pitcher, but it will almost certainly be West Virginia's Jack Kartsonas to the mound for the against LSU's Anthony Eyanson. — Story by Alan Cole