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College World Series 2022: Ole Miss Sweeps Oklahoma to Win Program's 1st Title

Jun 26, 2022
Mississippi's Jacob Gonzalez (7) celebrates his home run against Oklahoma with teammates in the sixth inning in Game 2 of the NCAA College World Series baseball finals, Sunday, June 26, 2022, in Omaha, Neb. (AP Photo/John Peterson)
Mississippi's Jacob Gonzalez (7) celebrates his home run against Oklahoma with teammates in the sixth inning in Game 2 of the NCAA College World Series baseball finals, Sunday, June 26, 2022, in Omaha, Neb. (AP Photo/John Peterson)

Ole Miss completed a sweep of Oklahoma in the men's College World Series to earn its first-ever national championship.

The Rebels took down the Sooners 4-2 in Game 2 of the 2022 CWS in Omaha, Nebraska. Brandon Johnson struck out the side in the ninth inning to secure the victory.

The result caps off quite a Cinderella run for Mike Bianco's squad.

One of the last four teams in the NCAA tournament field, Ole Miss was seeded third in the Coral Gables regional and fought off No. 6 Miami before upsetting No. 11 Southern Miss in the super regional. The Rebels got the College World Series underway with wins over No. 14 Auburn and Arkansas before a loss to the Razorbacks set up a winner-take-all semifinal rematch.

Having successfully staved off elimination, Ole Miss didn't mess around in the CWS final, notching a 10-3 win over Oklahoma in Game 1.

Through five innings, the Rebels and Sooners were deadlocked in a scoreless tie. Then Jacob Gonzalez hit a solo home run to right field in the bottom of the sixth.

Oklahoma immediately responded with an RBI double from Jackson Nicklaus and a bases-loaded walk to Kendall Pettis.

The Sooners' 2-1 lead didn't hold up for long as the Rebels plated three runs in the eighth. Gonzalez was the man of the moment again, tying the contest with an RBI single and capping off the scoring when he came home on a wild pitch. Justin Bench had scored the go-ahead run on a wild pitch earlier.

ESPN.com noted Ole Miss was the first team since LSU in 2000 to win a championship game despite trailing after the seventh inning.

It was a fitting conclusion for a program that was playing the role of the underdog from the moment the tournament began.

College World Series 2022: Ole Miss vs. Oklahoma Set for Men's Final

Jun 23, 2022
Mississippi staring pitcher Dylan DeLucia (44) throws a pitch in the first inning against Arkansas during an NCAA College World Series baseball game Thursday, June 23, 2022, in Omaha, Neb. (AP Photo/John Peterson)
Mississippi staring pitcher Dylan DeLucia (44) throws a pitch in the first inning against Arkansas during an NCAA College World Series baseball game Thursday, June 23, 2022, in Omaha, Neb. (AP Photo/John Peterson)

Ole Miss took down Arkansas with a 2-0 shutout victory on Thursday to advance to the Men's College World Series final for the first time in program history.

It's just the sixth appearance in the MCWS for the Runnin' Rebels and second since 1972. Ole Miss is now 8-1 in this year's tournament after amassing just five all-time MCWS wins.

The Rebels will take on the Oklahoma Sooners in the MCWS final, which is a best-of-three series beginning on Saturday.

Here's a deeper look at how things played out on Thursday.


Thursday Results

Ole Miss 2, Arkansas 0

College World Series Finals Schedule - Oklahoma vs. Ole Miss

Game 1: Saturday, June 25, at 7 p.m. ET

Game 2: Sunday, June 26, at 3 p.m. ET

Game 3 (if necessary): Monday, June 27, at 7 p.m. ET

Full bracket available at NCAA.com


Ole Miss 2, Arkansas 0

Rebels starting pitcher Dylan DeLucia powered Ole Miss on Thursday, pitching a complete-game shutout with seven strikeouts, no walks and just four hits allowed. The junior right-hander punctuated the day with a strikeout to end the game:

DeLucia kept the stress level at a minimum for Ole Miss, as Arkansas managed only one player to make it into scoring position when Cayden Wallace reached second base in the first inning. DeLucia's performance earned him some substantial praise online:

With DeLucia pitching the way he did, one run was all the Rebels needed to earn a victory. Kevin Graham got Ole Miss on the board in the fourth inning with a double that brought home Justin Bench.

Calvin Harris added an insurance run in the seventh with an RBI single that plated Tim Elko.

Razorbacks starter Connor Noland did his best to keep up with DeLucia, pitching eight innings with two earned runs and seven strikeouts. But Arkansas' bats fell silent against DeLucia, who was supported by some strong defense behind him.

Ole Miss had a brief stint as the No. 1 team in the nation this spring until a steep fall from grace due to injuries and a tough run in SEC play. The Rebels were bounced from the SEC Tournament after just one game and were the last team added to the NCAA tournament field.

Now, Ole Miss will have the chance to complete its improbable Cinderella run with a national title.

SEC Baseball Tournament 2012: Ole Miss vs. LSU Elimination Game Huge for Rebels

Gary Davenport
May 23, 2012

The ongoing SEC baseball tournament in Hoover, Alabama features some of the top teams in all of college baseball, and after two days of action the tournament's top seed is surprisingly looking at elimination while one of the last teams to get in has a chance to bolster their resume for the upcoming NCAA tournament significantly.

LSU, the top seeded team in the tournament and the second ranked team in the nation according to Baseball America, was upset 3-2 on Wednesday by seventh-seeded Mississippi State, who rode six solid innings and eight strikeouts from pitcher Chris Stratton to an unlikely victory that sets up a Thursday matchup for the Bulldogs with Kentucky.

The somewhat shocking loss sends the Tigers into an elimination game with ninth-seeded Ole Miss Thursday morning, who LSU played three times during the regular season, winning twice.

The Rebels played sub-.500 baseball in the SEC this season and were blanked 2-0 by Kentucky on Tuesday. Ole Miss bounced back, eliminating Arkansas from the tournament Wednesday by the same score thanks to a sterling outing from sophomore pitcher Mike Mayers and a very timely save by Junior right-hander Brett Huber, who tied the career saves record at Ole Miss with his 26th.

Granted, a loss for LSU on Thursday would be virtually meaningless (albeit slightly embarrassing) in the grand scheme of things, as not only are the Tigers a shoo-in for the NCAA tournament but they're also a virtual lock to play host during both the regional and super-regional rounds.

However, a victory by the Rebels (and deep run in the SEC tournament) would be a huge boost to the Rebels' resume so far as inclusion in the field of 64 is concerned. ESPN college baseball analyst Jeremy Mills stated Monday that "Ole Miss is safely in the NCAA tournament",

On the other hand, every year there are snubs in baseball just as in basketball, and a huge win over the nation's second-ranked team in the country would go a long way towards insuring such a shocker doesn't occur when the tournament's field is announced.

The Rebels have some reason to feel optimistic that they can pull off the upset. LSU took two of three from Ole Miss during a series earlier this month in Oxford, and while one of those games was a 12-3 pasting the other loss was a 13-inning 4-3 affair and the Rebels did down the Tigers 7-4 in the middle game of the set.

Ole Miss will surely need everything they can get and then some from likely starter R.J. Hively, who posted a 2.88 ERA in 11 starts this year while striking out 89 batters in 75 innings.

The Rebels could also use a surge from their offense, led by senior Matt Snyder, who led Ole Miss in RBI and total bases while finishing second in home runs and slugging percentage.

Even then it may take a lucky bounce or two for the Rebels to down the Tigers and advance towards what they hope will be an NCAA tournament bid. However, even with the biggest game of the season less than 24 hours away Ole Miss head coach Mike Bianco was more focused Wednesday on his team's hard-fought win according to Kim Allen of WTHY-TV.

“We played terrific today in a real grind-it-out game,” said Ole Miss head coach Mike Bianco. “Mike (Mayers) was tremendous for us and then Huber just shut the door on them the final two innings. It’s been a tough 10 days. We’re glad to win one.”

Now tomorrow they just have to do it again.

A (somewhat) level-headed look at Mike Bianco, Ole Miss baseball

Jun 8, 2009

As Game Three of the Oxford Super Regional came to a end Sunday afternoon, the floodgates opened on the message boards, text messages, and the blogosphere.

I was as frustrated as anyone, but after a few Fat Tires, some yard work, and a good night’s sleep, I can pen my thoughts with a clear head, instead of one fresh from the heat of the moment.

Nothing said here should cheapen what Virginia did last weekend or what they’ve accomplished all season.

The Cavaliers played a very solid brand of baseball and gutted out two win-or-go-home games to punch their ticket to Omaha. They’re a very solid team top to bottom.

This is an indictment of the way the Rebels played. Certain things jump out at you after the series this weekend.

The painful aspect of the weekend was how poorly the Rebels fared executing mundane fundamentals. The team struggled all weekend with bunting, making the easy play (seven errors?), hitting cut off men, turning double plays, stringing hits together, etc.

The poor execution coupled with UVA’s nearly flawless Saturday and Sunday performances equated to an easy series win for the ‘Hoos.

Here’s what I’ve come up with. Feel free to dispute, agree, ignore, or patronize.

There is no excuse for not winning this Super Regional.

Against Texas in 2005, fans said, “Oh it’s Texas, they always win, and it’s our first Super Regional ever.”

Against Miami in 2006, Miami rolled into town and won. Fans said, “Oh, it’s Miami, they always win.”

Against Arizona State in Tempe in 2007, fans said, “It’s Arizona State, they always win. Plus, we’re on the road.”

None of that applied to Virginia this year. The Cavaliers had never been to a Super Regional before this weekend. They started seven freshmen/sophomores. They almost dropped baseball to a club team several years ago.

The only one of those four losses I can truly stomach is the ASU one. But given how the team lost Game One because Bianco ran Kline back out for the ninth, even that one’s tough to take.

The Miami series in 2006 was inexcusable as well. That was a mediocre Hurricanes team that had no business winning Games Two and Three in Oxford that season.

Firing Mike Bianco is not the answer—at least not yet.

The Ole Miss baseball team has experienced unparalleled success under Bianco’s direction.

The late years of Don Kessinger’s tenure paired with Pat Harrison’s very existence left a very bad situation that Bianco has turned into one of the most successful regular season programs in the country.

To dismiss that as something anyone could step in and emulate is foolish.

Yes, the four super regional losses are tough to swallow, but, quite frankly, Miami is really the only clearly inferior team that the Rebels lost to.

Above all the others, that's the Super Regional that the Bianco haters should point to.

As great as the 2005 team was, Texas was clearly better, as was Arizona State. With Bittle on the shelf, it's easy to make the argument that UVA was a better team than Ole Miss was before the weekend series.

The problem lies in Bianco’s salary, by some accounts the highest in the SEC. Yearly failures on the second biggest stage in college baseball should not be a characteristic of the highest paid coach in the league.

That said, there need to be changes, either in philosophy of existing coaches or in the actual assistants

The common thread in the four Super Regional losses is they’ve been under Mike Bianco’s watch.

The four Supers in five seasons is certainly nothing to sneeze at, but the growing grumblings of Bianco taking the Rebels as far as he can are starting to gain much more traction with another failure.

Bianco’s teams are now 0-6 in home games that would send them to Omaha. Whatever approach he is taking to loosen guys up is obviously not working.

This team—with all their antics and carefree attitude—played tight yesterday, even with an early lead.

Bianco’s typical stubbornness with starting pitchers cost the Rebels yesterday as he stuck with Nathan Baker far too long.

Baker wasn’t pitching poorly, but his painfully slow delivery plus UVA’s speed on the basepaths and Kyle Henson’s “arm” was a recipe for disaster.

UVA’s starter was pulled early because he was struggling. Bianco should’ve taken the hint and pulled Baker as well.

The small ball he tried this season doesn’t work well unless the players are skilled at sacrifice bunting.

It’s tougher than looks—keeping the head of the bat up, coming back at just the right time to deaden the ball, and placing it just right—but practice makes perfect. Something needs to improve in that skill-set or the small ball just won’t work.

They say once is an accident, twice is a coincidence, and three times is a trend. It’s hard to not feel that way watching another Oxford Super Regional go the way of the visitors.

Next year’s Rebels will be another top 10 quality team and will have a legitimate shot at another Super Regional. Will it finally be the year Bianco and his Rebels break through? Or will be just another disappointment for Rebel fans?

Oxford Super Regional: Can the Third Time Be the Charm for Ole Miss?

Jun 5, 2009

When the first pitch in the Oxford Super Regional is thrown this afternoon around 1:10 or so, it will mark the Rebels' fourth Super Regional in five years, which is a run of success that few teams across the country can point to.

Unfortunately, the other three have ended poorly for the Rebels. Perennial powers Texas, Miami, and Arizona State have all dispatched the Rebels with different levels of ease over the past few years, causing different levels of heartbreak for the Rebel Nation.

This year looks to be a different story. Instead of facing one of college baseball’s storied franchises, the Rebels will square off against Virginia.

The Cavaliers are a very good team, having the second best winning percentage in the country, as well as the third best ERA. Their pitching staff gave up exactly two runs in last weekend’s Irvine Regional, which is the lowest run total any team has surrendered since the format switched in 1999.

The Cavs also bat at a solid .331 clip and steal a lot of bases—104 on the season.

All that said, I like this matchup for the Rebels. The similarities between the teams, as well as the schools (posts like this are why blogs were created), are eerie. And while the Cavs have an edge in every statistical category, other than ERA, none really jumps out at you.

The Cavaliers pose a better matchup than a team that wants to come in and play 10-9 games all weekend.

Virginia’s projected starting rotation looks like this:

Freshman LH Danny Hultzen (8-1, 2.01)
Sophomore RH Robert Morey (3-0, 2.91)
Senior RH Andrew Carraway (7-1, 4.30)

Phillip Irwin gets the nod this afternoon, but after that, Bianco says the rotation is not set, on which I call shenanigans.

Anyone who honestly believes that Drew Pomeranz is not going to take the mound late Saturday morning—a game that a win would either propel the Rebels to Omaha or stave off the end of the season—is just not paying attention.

Pom’s performance Monday night was the greatest single pitching performance in Ole Miss history…no way he’s not out there Saturday with the season on the line. As expected, Scott Bittle is not pitching this weekend.

This is not the most talented team Bianco has taken to a Super Regiona—not even close. But this is the scrappiest, and the most fun group of guys he’s been around. Their camaraderie has been a key component of their success this year, and they’ll need to be extra loose this weekend as they face a very talented UVA team.

The Cavs are streaking now, winners of eight straight games.

For the first time in a Super Regional, there is no reason to be intimidated by the team name on the front of the jersey. The Cavaliers are playing in their first Super Regional in school history. And despite their win streak, they’re still the team that finished sixth in the ACC.

That’s not to undermine what the ‘Hoos have accomplished this year, but to emphasize the fact that this UVA team can be beat.

The time has come for the Rebels to make it back to Omaha. And this might just be the team to do it.

College Baseball Brackets: SEC teams and the College World Series

May 27, 2008


The baseball regionals were announced yesterday and 9 of 12 (75 percent) of the league will be playing postseason baseball. While the conference was not as strong this year as it has been in the past, No. 7 LSU and No. 8 Georgia both managed to secure National Seeds and seem to represent the best SEC chances to reach Omaha. The nine teams in the tournament were far and away the most of any conference, but the two No.1 seeds were only half the ACC's four. Get a copy of the bracket here.

Speaking of LSU, their current winning streak is absolutely ridiculous. For those not into college baseball, the Bayou Bengals have pieced together an unbelievable 20-game winning streak, and have not lost a game since April 19, when they dropped a game in Athens to fall to 6-11 in conference. After tying UGA 10-10 in 12 innings on April 20, they’ve won their midweek games and swept conference series from USC, Kentucky, Mississippi State, and Auburn. If they beat a 16-32 Texas Southern team, they’ll set a new conference record for consecutive wins.

Other SEC schools still playing:
Ole Miss: Headed to Coral Gables, FL as a No. 3 to be fed to the Miami Hurricanes
Kentucky: An 18-0 start turned into a No. 3 seed in Ann Arbor
South Carolina: I like the Gamecock’s chances in Raleigh
Arkansas: The Palo Alto Regional consists of No. 1 Stanford, No. 2 Pepperdine, No. 4 UC-Davis, and the No. 3 Hogs. Losing that season-ending series to the last place MSU Bulldogs really put a damper on the season
Florida: Gators are visiting their good friends in Tallahassee in what should be a not-so-friendly atmosphere as the Noles’ p*nis envy tends to shine in matchups with the Gators
Alabama: The Tide head to an overlooked and underrated Coastal Carolina Regional that could get ugly
Vanderbilt: The ‘Dores have enough talent to play with anyone in the country. Tempe should be one of the most entertaining Regionals this year