
OMAHA, Neb.—Getting to the College World Series requires winning a bunch of games against very good opponents. The eight qualifiers have shown their ability to navigate two weekends’ worth of tough competition with little or no blemishes.
But once the CWS starts, someone has to lose. Arizona was one of the vanquished, falling 7-4 to Coastal Carolina in Friday’s series opener, dropping it into the loser’s bracket and one setback away from elimination.
“It’s a familiar feeling being at the bottom,” shortstop Mason White said.
Arizona (44-20) will play Louisville (40-23) at 11 a.m. PT Sunday, the first step in what would be a tremendously steep climb to stay alive in the series. The Wildcats would have to win four in a row to reach the championship series, with three of those on consecutive days.
It’s not impossible, as several CWS teams have accomplished this feat. Oregon State won the 2018 national title after losing its opener, as did South Carolina in 2010 and a pair of UA national champions. The 1976 and 1980 squads started 0-1 only to run off five in a row to earn the program’s first two titles.
None of those were this year’s Arizona team, but the current squad has shown the ability to “flush” losses quickly. Last weekend the Wildcats were thumped 18-2 at North Carolina in the first game of the Super Regionals and then came back to win the next two, both of which they trailed in the 7th inning or later.
That was the most recent example, while there were several during the regular season.
“They’ve done it all year,” UA coach Chip Hale said. “We’ve lost Fridays and won the series.”
The Wildcats lost 13-4 at Houston on May 15, a fifth loss in six games that eliminated any chance to host a regional and got them close to the NCAA Tournament bubble. But a day later they won 14-6, the start of an 8-game win streak that included perfection at the Big 12 Tournament (which was a trio of single-elimination games) and the Eugene Regional.
Arizona also won series against Oklahoma State and BYU after dropping the opener.
“I think this is a group we want to do it with,” sophomore pitcher Owen Kramkowski said. “This is all the guys we feel most confident doing it with. We’ve done it before, so it’s just taking it pitch by pitch and knowing it can happen. If we trust it it will happen. So just trusting everyone we’ve got with us is the biggest part right now.”
Arizona has lost its College World Series opener nine previous times, most recently in 2021. The Wildcats went 0-2 that year, but in four of the previous instances they’ve won at least one game after that initial loss.
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