
LSU headed to CWS finals after crazy walk-off rally beats Hogs
Luis Hernandez motions to teammates after his 2-run double tied the gaeme and set the stage for LSU's walk-off victory. Special to the American Press / Mitchell Scaglione
OMAHA, Neb. — LSU's Geauxmaha Magic is alive and well in the College World Series.
But this latest was as unlikely as any of the Tigers' past antics here — maybe even a touch of some of that Louisiana voodoo come north for June again.
The Tigers scored three in the bottom of the ninth, using a freakish 2-run double by Luis Hernandez, followed by a game-winning RBI single by Jared Jones that tipped just off the top of a leaping second baseman's glove for a walk-off 6-5 victory over Arkansas.
So the Tigers (51-15) are geauxing to the three-game CWS championship round, beginning Saturday when they'll face Coastal Carolina, which punched its ticket with a far-more routine 11-3 win over Louisville earlier Wednesday.
It's the second straight Omaha trip where LSU has walked-off into the finals. Two years ago it was Tommy White's 11th-inning home run to beat Wake Forest that sent the Tigers to the finals, where they beat Florida two of three for their seventh national championship.
Pretty cut and dry on that one, actually.
This time all three ninth-inning runs scored with two outs — in fact, five of the Tigers' six runs came with two outs, as have 10 of the 15 over the last two games.
The third out looked to be there for Arkansas' taking when Hernandez hit a sharp and twisting liner to leftfield, but just before it arrived Charles Davalan slipped, with the ball bouncing off his shoulder into the corner.
'He didn't grab it, I started running,' Hernandez said.
So did Steven Milam and Ethan Frey to easily circle the bases from second and first to tie the game at 5-5.
That brought up Jared Jones, whose eighth-inning game-tying homer looked for naught when the Razorbacks scored two runs in the top of the ninth.
He lined one the opposite way that Arkansas second baseman Cam Kozeal leaped as high as he could for, but it tipped off the very tip top of his glove and dribbled into centerfield.
'I thought he had caught, honestly, because it fell behind him,' Jones said. 'But once I saw it hit the grass, I just blacked out in the moment.'
'I was watching Hernandez chugging around third,' said LSU coach Jay Johnson afterwards, then looked over at his catcher to say 'I didn't know you could run like that.'
'Got no wheels,' Hernandez answered. 'But I was running as fast as I could.'
Perhaps it was just the spell LSU can put on games in Omaha.
'I had a straight-on view on it,' Arkansas coach Dave Van Horne said Hernandez' double. 'It was hit hard … It was kind of hooking and sinking. When (Davalan) slipped he probably lost sight of it.'
The game-winner was just hard enough — if it doesn't tip Kozeal's glove, it gets to the outfield cleaner and quicker and the Tigers probably have to hold Hernandez at third.
But this is LSU in Omaha, so …
'Two years ago to the day, the walk-off homer against Wake Forest,' Johnson remembered. 'I felt something in my body I've never felt before. Greatest moment of my life — now it's tied for first.'
It was a long haul.
LSU didn't score for the first five innings, but got all it could have hoped for in giving righthanded relief ace Zac Cowan just his second start of the season.
He got into the sixth inning allowing only one run, a solo homer by Ryder Helfrick in the fourth.
Cowan, who struggled at times late in the regular season, allowed four hits, didn't walk a batter and two of the baserunners he allowed were singles when LSU's infield shift backfired to open up holes. Another was on catcher's interference.
'Spectacular job by Zac,' Johnson said. 'He got us three more outs than I probably thought he would. Just pitching like a warrior and doing what he's done all year.'
LSU finally got on the board in the sixth, and took a 2-1 lead when Jake Brown came off the bench for a 2-run, pinch-hit single off of relief ace Gabe Gaeckle— with two outs, of course — that put the Tigers up 2-1.
That held up until the eighth when the game went haywire.
Jones' game-tying bomb in the eight atoned for a rare defensive miscue in the top of the inning. With the bases loaded with Razorbacks, LSU might have gotten out of the inning with no damage, but Jones couldn't snag a relay throw on an attempted double play and when the ball rolled away from him a second run scored for a 3-2 Arkansas lead.
Arkansas got the lead again the ninth, 5-3, on Justin Thomas' 2-run single.
The Razorbacks were one out from forcing another game Thursday night.
But, as Jones said, 'There's no clock in baseball. There's 27 outs (and) with our offense, it's a tough task to do.
'Happy Luis got the job done — and I'm happy I was able to drive him in.'
NOTEBOOK
WEIRD PLAY: LSU was denied the third out of the second inning when, upon further review, catchers' interference was ruled against catcher Luis Hernandez on a fly ball to centerfield.
Instead of the third out, Justin Thomas was awarded first base, and Cam Kozeal went to second.
LSU, which was already in the dugout before being called back out for the review, did get the third out on the next batter.
It went in the scorebook as an error.
PLAY OF THE GAME: LSU shortstop Steven Milam went deep into the hole on the game's second batter, went to his knees to stop Wehiwa Aloy's ground ball on the outfield grass, then made the one-hop throw to first while bouncing to feet to get the out.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Live Updates: LSU baseball storms back to take lead vs. Arkansas in College World Series
LSU baseball is one game away from a trip to the College World Series final. The Tigers are slated to face Arkansas on Wednesday night for the second time in five days. LSU began its run in Omaha with a 4-1 win vs. the Razorbacks last Saturday. On the year, it's the fifth time the programs have met with LSU taking two of three from Arkansas in May. LSU followed up the Arkansas win with a 9-5 victory over UCLA to capture the all important 2-0 start in Omaha. Historically, 74% of teams to reach the final won their first two games. It leaves LSU with some room for error now as Arkansas would have to beat LSU twice to win the bracket. Advertisement The weather threw a wrench into LSU's pitching plans vs. UCLA. Anthony Eyanson got the start, but only pitched three innings before the game was suspended and had to be completed the next morning. LSU needed the bullpen to win the game and got clutch outings from Casan Evans and Chase Shores. Arkansas bounced back after the initial loss to LSU. Gage Wood threw a no-hitter vs. Murray State, and Arkansas kept it rolling, sending UCLA home on Tuesday night. Stay tuned here for LSU Wire's live coverage throughout the game. LSU baseball vs Arkansas time today Date: Wednesday, June 18 Start time: 6:00 p.m. CT The LSU baseball vs Arkansas game starts at 6:00 p.m. CT from Charles Schwab Field in Omaha, Nebraska. What channel is LSU baseball vs Arkansas on today? TV Channel: ESPN Advertisement Livestream: Fubo (free trial) or ESPN+ (Subscriber Only) Watch LSU baseball vs Arkansas live on Fubo (free trial) LSU baseball vs Arkansas will be broadcast nationally on ESPN in the 2025 College World Series. Streaming options for the game include FUBO, which offers a free trial to new subscribers. Chase Shores enters the game Jay Johnson is going back to the bullpen as Chase Shores enters the game for Jaden Noot. Shores has been dynamite in the postseason and will look to keep it rolling here. LSU leads 2-1. Jake Brown delivers. LSU leads. After a Luis Hernandez bunt moved the LSU runners to second and third, Jared Jones struck out. Jake Brown entered the game as a pinch hitter and put LSU in front with a two-out, two-run RBI single. Advertisement It's 2-1 LSU in the bottom of the sixth. Arkansas makes a pitching change After 5+ innings, Landon Beidelschies' day is done. LSU will be glad to see Arkansas go to the pen after Beidelschies was in cruise control. Gave Gaeckle is in the game. He threw 90 pitches vs. LSU on Saturday. Ethan Frey leads off with a double, Milam hit by pitch Ethan Frey starts LSU with a double in the bottom of the sixth and Steven Milam was hit by a pitch. LSU has runners at first and second with no outs. Can the Tigers finally capitalize? Noot strikeout gets LSU out of the inning Arkansas stranded a runner at third and a Jaden Noot strikeout ended the half-inning. Advertisement Arkansas leads 1-0 as we move to the bottom of the sixth. On Jaden Noot Noot enters the game with one out and a runner on first in the sixth inning. Noot's last appearance was a start vs. Little Rock in the regional. He only made it through 1.1 innings, allowing two earned runs. On the year, Noot has a 4.26 ERA in 31.2 innings. In those 31.2 innings, Noot has missed 43 bats. The strikeout stuff is there. LSU makes a pitching change Jaden Noot is entering the game for Zac Cowan. Cowan gave LSU exactly what it was looking for. He struck out six in 5.1 innings and limited Arkansas to just one run. 5.1 innings was Cowan's longest outing of the year. Cowan is getting the best of Wehiwa Aloy Wehiwa Aloy is one of the best hitters in the country, but LSU starter Zac Cowan is winning the matchup tonight. Aloy is 0-3 with two strikeouts. Can the LSU offense figure it out? Cowan is doing his part, but LSU needs something from the offense. LSU only has two hits, and the Tigers are 0-4 with runners in scoring position. LSU and Zac Cowan continue to limit Arkansas LSU pitcher Zac Cowan is commanding it and the LSU defense continues to do its job behind him. Three up, three down for the Razorback batters in the fifth. Advertisement Cowan has allowed a homer, but Arkansas has just three hits. Cowan has struck out five without issuing a walk. He's thrown first pitch strikes to 16 of 19 batters. LSU still isn't on the board Another inning, another blank frame for the Tigers' offense. Through four innings, LSU has just two hits. LSU gets out of the fourth without any more damage Cowan settled back in after the home run and made quick work of the next three Arkansas hitters. The Razorbacks lead 1-0 as we move to the bottom of the fourth. Arkansas strikes first Ryder Helfrick got enough of one, and it carried over the centerfield wall. Arkansas leads 1-0. Cowan continues to roll Through three innings, LSU starter Zac Cowan is yet to allow a run. Advertisement In his last five appearances entering the night, Cowan allowed a combined nine runs. LSU needed a pitcher to step up tonight, and so far, Cowan has delivered. LSU strands two runners With runners on first and second, Michael Braswell struck out and the game remains scoreless. Arkansas starter Landon Beidelschies has struck out two and walked one. The pitch count is at 33 with 20 strikes. LSU ends the inning After the catcher's interference put a second Arkansas runner on, a ground out to short ended the inning. Cowan is at 40 pitches. Catcher's interference keeps Arkansas alive Zac Cowan thought he was out of the second inning, but an Arkansas challenge led to catcher's interference and Cowan is back out there. The Razorbacks have runners on first and second with two out. The game remains tied 0-0. LSU strands Curiel at third Derek Curiel led off the bottom of the first with a double and later advanced to third on a sac fly. LSU couldn't take advantage and its 0-0 after one. Good first inning for Zac Cowan Zac Cowan got help from the defense with Steven Milam and Michael Braswell making nice plays, but it was a scoreless first. Advertisement That's a strong sign after Cowan's recent struggles. LSU lineup: Curiel leads off, Pearson starts Jay Johnson occasionally mixes up the lineup when LSU faces a lefty. In the postseason, Derek Curiel has hit in the bottom half of the order vs. a lefty starter. Not tonight, though. Curiel remains in the leadoff spot. Josh Pearson is getting a start in the No. 6 hole. Report: Zac Cowan will start for LSU Per reports, Zac Cowan will get the start for LSU. The right-hander transferred to LSU for the 2025 season from Wofford. For most of the year, he was one of the SEC's best relievers. His ERA is 3.09 and he has 54 strikeouts in 46.2 innings. Advertisement But Cowan has struggled in his recent appearances. Against Little Rock in the regional, he allowed five runs in just 1.1 innings. What is LSU's pitching plan? Lineups will be released soon and we'll get an idea of how LSU baseball head coach Jay Johnson plans to deploy the Tigers' pitching staff. The big question right now: Will Anthony Eyanson get the start? Eyanson threw 48 pitches on Monday and has shown he's capable of pitching on short rest this season. Eyanson is one of the best pitchers in the country, and if he's capable of going, it makes sense to give him the ball. If it's not Eyanson, then Chase Shores, Zac Cowan, and Jaden Noot are in the mix. Shores is pitching the best of that group right now, but Johnson may want to save the big righty for a high-leverage opportunity with Casan Evans unavailable. Who is starting for Arkansas? The Razorbacks are starting Landon Beidelschies. The left-hander began his career at Ohio State in 2023 before transferring to Arkansas after two seasons with the Buckeyes. In 2025, Beidelschies has a 4.92 ERA in 56.2 innings. He has some swing and miss stuff, notching 61 strikeouts. Advertisement Beidelschies started vs. LSU earlier this year and only made it through two innings, allowing four hits and three earned runs. His last time out, he pitched two scoreless innings vs. North Dakota State. Don't expect a ton of length from Beidelschies, but Arkansas will count on two or three solid innings. This article originally appeared on LSU Wire: Live Updates: LSU baseball vs. Arkansas in College World Series
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Play by play: LSU baseball gets walk-off win vs. Arkansas to earn trip to CWS final
LSU baseball is on its way to the College World Series Final. Neither team had their ace on the mound, but we got a pitchers' duel anyway. LSU gave the ball to Zac Cowan to start, and Cowan delivered. In 5.1 innings, Cowan allowed just one run, struck out six, and didn't walk a single hitter. For much of the year, Cowan was among the best pitchers in the SEC, but he's struggled in the last month. Wednesday marked a return to form. Arkansas went with Landon Beidelschies, who pitched five innings, striking out nine and allowing just two runs. Advertisement Cowan and Beidelschies then gave way to the pens. LSU carried a 2-1 lead into the eighth inning, but Arkansas loaded the bases vs. LSU reliever Chase Shores. A chopper gave LSU the chance to get out of the inning. LSU got the out at second, but the ball got past Jared Jones, and two runs scored on the play to give Arkansas a 3-2 lead. Jones made up for the error in the bottom half of the inning, tying the game with a solo homer. We entered the ninth inning tied at 3-3. Arkansas kicked off a rally with a Reese Robinett single and followed it up with a Brent Iredale double. Justin Thomas took the lead back with a two-run single and made it 5-3 Razorbacks. Advertisement Then the LSU magic arrived. Down two in the bottom of the ninth, Luis Hernandez lined a ball to left field. Arkansas LF Charles Davalan got a bad read, and the ball went all the way to the wall. Two runs scored. Moments later, Jared Jones came through with a walk off single. Below is our live blog coverage from the contest. LSU walks it off Jared Jones delivers, and the Tigers get the walk-off win and earn a trip back to the College World Series Final. Questionable Arkansas defense puts LSU right back in it Arkansas' defense has offered LSU some help this inning. With a chance to end the game on a double play, shortstop Wehiwa Aloy opted to get the lead runner at third, passing up the two outs. Advertisement Then, LF Charles Davalan had a chance to end the game with a catch in left field but got a bad read. It was too late to recover. Davalan made a diving attempt and the ball rolled to the corner. LSU ties the game Luis Hernandez hit a liner to left field, and the ball got past left fielder Charles Davalan. Ethan Frey and Steven Milam scored. LSU ties the game 5-5. Two-run single puts Razorbacks back in front On Jacob Mayers' first pitch, a single to left scored both Arkansas runners and it's 5-3 Razorbacks. LSU makes pitching change Jacob Mayers enters the game for LSU. The hard-throwing righty will look to get LSU out of a jam and preserve the tie. Arkansas has a rally going With one out in the 9th, Robinett singled and Brent Iredale doubled. The Razorbacks have runners on second and third with one out. We're tied 3-3. Due up for LSU in the 9th Michael Braswell Derek Curiel Ethan Frey Advertisement Depending on the matchup, Jay Johnson could use John Pearson or Ashton Larson as a pinch hitter for Braswell. Tied after the 8th The Jared Jones home run was all LSU got in the eighth, but it was a big one. The game is tied at three as we head to the ninth inning. Jared Jones homers. Tie Game. A big swing from Jared Jones makes it 3-3 in the bottom of the eighth. It was Jones' 22nd homer of the year and second in as many games. LSU ends the inning After Arkansas took the lead, LSU didn't allow anything else. It's still 3-2 Razorbacks. We head to the bottom of the eighth. LSU has two innings to capture the lead again. Arkansas takes the lead LSU came within inches of an inning-ending double-play, but the Tigers couldn't get the second out, and the ball got past Jared Jones. Two runs scored, and Arkansas leads 3-2 in the top of the eighth. Arkansas loads the bases In the top of the eighth, Arkansas has loaded the bases. Jay Johnson made a visit to the mound, but Chase Shores is remaining in the game with the tying run 90-feet away from scoring. Advertisement LSU leads 2-1. Chase Shores. Electric. Shores enters the game and shows why MLB teams can't wait to get their hands on him. Back-to-back strikeouts to end the top half of the seventh. LSU leads 2-1. Chase Shores enters the game Jay Johnson is going back to the bullpen as Chase Shores enters the game for Jaden Noot. Shores has been dynamite in the postseason and will look to keep it rolling here. LSU leads 2-1. Jake Brown delivers. LSU leads. After a Luis Hernandez bunt moved the LSU runners to second and third, Jared Jones struck out. Jake Brown entered the game as a pinch hitter and put LSU in front with a two-out, two-run RBI single. Advertisement It's 2-1 LSU in the bottom of the sixth. Arkansas makes a pitching change After 5+ innings, Landon Beidelschies' day is done. LSU will be glad to see Arkansas go to the pen after Beidelschies was in cruise control. Gave Gaeckle is in the game. He threw 90 pitches vs. LSU on Saturday. Ethan Frey leads off with a double, Milam hit by pitch Ethan Frey starts LSU with a double in the bottom of the sixth and Steven Milam was hit by a pitch. LSU has runners at first and second with no outs. Can the Tigers finally capitalize? Noot strikeout gets LSU out of the inning Arkansas stranded a runner at third and a Jaden Noot strikeout ended the half-inning. Advertisement Arkansas leads 1-0 as we move to the bottom of the sixth. On Jaden Noot Noot enters the game with one out and a runner on first in the sixth inning. Noot's last appearance was a start vs. Little Rock in the regional. He only made it through 1.1 innings, allowing two earned runs. On the year, Noot has a 4.26 ERA in 31.2 innings. In those 31.2 innings, Noot has missed 43 bats. The strikeout stuff is there. LSU makes a pitching change Jaden Noot is entering the game for Zac Cowan. Cowan gave LSU exactly what it was looking for. He struck out six in 5.1 innings and limited Arkansas to just one run. 5.1 innings was Cowan's longest outing of the year. Cowan is getting the best of Wehiwa Aloy Wehiwa Aloy is one of the best hitters in the country, but LSU starter Zac Cowan is winning the matchup tonight. Aloy is 0-3 with two strikeouts. Can the LSU offense figure it out? Cowan is doing his part, but LSU needs something from the offense. LSU only has two hits, and the Tigers are 0-4 with runners in scoring position. LSU and Zac Cowan continue to limit Arkansas LSU pitcher Zac Cowan is commanding it and the LSU defense continues to do its job behind him. Three up, three down for the Razorback batters in the fifth. Advertisement Cowan has allowed a homer, but Arkansas has just three hits. Cowan has struck out five without issuing a walk. He's thrown first pitch strikes to 16 of 19 batters. LSU still isn't on the board Another inning, another blank frame for the Tigers' offense. Through four innings, LSU has just two hits. LSU gets out of the fourth without any more damage Cowan settled back in after the home run and made quick work of the next three Arkansas hitters. The Razorbacks lead 1-0 as we move to the bottom of the fourth. Arkansas strikes first Ryder Helfrick got enough of one, and it carried over the centerfield wall. Arkansas leads 1-0. Cowan continues to roll Through three innings, LSU starter Zac Cowan is yet to allow a run. Advertisement In his last five appearances entering the night, Cowan allowed a combined nine runs. LSU needed a pitcher to step up tonight, and so far, Cowan has delivered. LSU strands two runners With runners on first and second, Michael Braswell struck out and the game remains scoreless. Arkansas starter Landon Beidelschies has struck out two and walked one. The pitch count is at 33 with 20 strikes. LSU ends the inning After the catcher's interference put a second Arkansas runner on, a ground out to short ended the inning. Cowan is at 40 pitches. Catcher's interference keeps Arkansas alive Zac Cowan thought he was out of the second inning, but an Arkansas challenge led to catcher's interference and Cowan is back out there. The Razorbacks have runners on first and second with two out. The game remains tied 0-0. LSU strands Curiel at third Derek Curiel led off the bottom of the first with a double and later advanced to third on a sac fly. LSU couldn't take advantage and its 0-0 after one. Good first inning for Zac Cowan Zac Cowan got help from the defense with Steven Milam and Michael Braswell making nice plays, but it was a scoreless first. Advertisement That's a strong sign after Cowan's recent struggles. LSU lineup: Curiel leads off, Pearson starts Jay Johnson occasionally mixes up the lineup when LSU faces a lefty. In the postseason, Derek Curiel has hit in the bottom half of the order vs. a lefty starter. Not tonight, though. Curiel remains in the leadoff spot. Josh Pearson is getting a start in the No. 6 hole. Report: Zac Cowan will start for LSU Per reports, Zac Cowan will get the start for LSU. The right-hander transferred to LSU for the 2025 season from Wofford. For most of the year, he was one of the SEC's best relievers. His ERA is 3.09 and he has 54 strikeouts in 46.2 innings. Advertisement But Cowan has struggled in his recent appearances. Against Little Rock in the regional, he allowed five runs in just 1.1 innings. What is LSU's pitching plan? Lineups will be released soon and we'll get an idea of how LSU baseball head coach Jay Johnson plans to deploy the Tigers' pitching staff. The big question right now: Will Anthony Eyanson get the start? Eyanson threw 48 pitches on Monday and has shown he's capable of pitching on short rest this season. Eyanson is one of the best pitchers in the country, and if he's capable of going, it makes sense to give him the ball. If it's not Eyanson, then Chase Shores, Zac Cowan, and Jaden Noot are in the mix. Shores is pitching the best of that group right now, but Johnson may want to save the big righty for a high-leverage opportunity with Casan Evans unavailable. Who is starting for Arkansas? The Razorbacks are starting Landon Beidelschies. The left-hander began his career at Ohio State in 2023 before transferring to Arkansas after two seasons with the Buckeyes. In 2025, Beidelschies has a 4.92 ERA in 56.2 innings. He has some swing and miss stuff, notching 61 strikeouts. Advertisement Beidelschies started vs. LSU earlier this year and only made it through two innings, allowing four hits and three earned runs. His last time out, he pitched two scoreless innings vs. North Dakota State. Don't expect a ton of length from Beidelschies, but Arkansas will count on two or three solid innings. This article originally appeared on LSU Wire: Play by play: LSU baseball beats Arkansas on walk-off, massive 9th


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Former Clemson, South Carolina player in transfer portal commits to third different team
Former Clemson, South Carolina player in transfer portal commits to third different team Former Clemson Tigers infielder Nolan Nawrocki is set to make it three different college baseball programs in as many seasons. Nawrocki, primarily the Tigers' third baseman in 2024 who transferred to rival South Carolina after that season and then entered the portal again this summer, announced his latest transfer destination on Wednesday. Nawrocki will play for the Tulane Green Wave and coach Jay Uhlman, he said in a post to social media. Nawrocki committed to Clemson in 2022 and redshirted with the Tigers in 2023 before splitting time between third base and DH in 2024. Nawrocki batted .264 for the Tigers with four home runs and 24 RBIs in 36 games. With South Carolina and coach Paul Mainieri this past season, Nawrocki appeared in 14 games and hit .200 (8-for-40) with one home run and seven RBIs. The Gamecocks finished 6-24 in SEC play, placing ahead of only 3-27 Missouri in the conference standings. Nawrocki was involved in a rather intense moment this season when Clemson and South Carolina met to open the annual Palmetto State series on Feb. 28 at Doug Kingsmore Stadium, receiving a memorable stare-down from Tigers starter Aidan Knaak after striking out to end the top of the first. Clemson won the game, 5-3, and swept the Gamecocks for the second straight season. The Tigers finished 45-18 overall this past season, falling to West Virginia and Kentucky at the Clemson Regional of the NCAA Tournament. Contact us @Clemson_Wire on X, and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news and notes, plus opinions.