No. 11 Heels get five shutout relief innings, finish unbeaten in home series

By R.L. Bynum

CHAPEL HILL — When a starter’s outing doesn’t go well, No. 11 North Carolina’s bullpen usually offers relief.

That was the case Saturday when the Tar Heels got their best bullpen performance in an ACC game in nearly a month. They clinched the weekend series with a 6–4 victory over Louisville on a beautiful spring day at Boshamer Stadium for their fifth consecutive win.

Four relievers combined for five shutout innings as UNC (38–11, 19–7 ACC) finished the regular season 7–0 in home series, including 5–0 against league opponents. The Tar Heels (31–2 at home) have the most ACC wins since the 2018 team went 22–8 in the league, finished 44–20 overall and made the College World Series.

Right fielder Anthony Donofrio went 3 for 4 with two RBI and left fielder Casey Cook hit a home run to pace the 11-hit attack for Carolina, which has clinched no worse than a tie for the ACC Coastal Division title and has a two-game lead over Clemson for best league record.

UNC coach Scott Forbes has recently switched up bullpen roles, with Matt Poston (winner, 3–2) coming on earlier in games and Dalton Pence taking the closer role. Both did their jobs well Saturday.

“We feel like with Poston and Pence, those have been our horses all year,” Forbes said. “But now we’ve started Poston in a little bit different role because he recovers a little bit better and we want to try to have Dalton out there if at all possible at the end.”  

Pence, who gave up two hits while striking out three over the last two innings,t pitched out of trouble in the ninth inning after giving up a double and hitting a batter.

“I just didn’t feel like I had my mechanics fine-tuned that last inning as I did in the eighth,” Pence said. “Just trying to work through that and felt better as the inning went on.”

Pence struck out Alex Alicea for the second out before picking up his team-high sixth save when J.T. Benson flew out to deep left field, representing the potential go-ahead run.

“A little worried when it got off the bat,” Pence said of the last out. “But I saw [left fielder] Casey [Cook] camp under it and had a little bit of relief.”

Senior right-hander Ben Peterson was the bridge between Poston and Pence. Poston pitched 2⅔ shutout innings with two strikeouts before coming out after giving up an Alex Alecia single with two outs in the seventh inning. Peterson elicited a flyout to get out of the innings.

“I thought Poston was outstanding,” Forbes said. “Peterson, who now is a big addition to our bullpen, came in and got a big out and Dalton finished it.”

UNC right fielder Anthony Donofrio, making a nice catch, became the fifth Tar Heel hitting over .300 with at least 40 RBI.
(Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics by Ainsley Fauth)

It was the best relief performance in an ACC game since UNC got 3⅓ shutout innings of relief against Notre Dame on April 13.

“I feel like everybody’s finally getting on the right track and kind of getting their routine fine-tuned, and that helped us out,” Poston said.

The Tar Heels showed they can win different ways, hitting only one homer Saturday after swatting seven in Friday’s victory.

Donofrio, hitting .307 with 40 RBI, became the fifth UNC player hitting at least .300 with at least 40 RBI, joining Cook (batting .340 with 63 RBI), Vance Honeycutt (.333, 55), Parks Harber (.374, 53) and Alberto Osuna (.306, 49).


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Just like Jason DeCaro on Friday, junior left-hander Shea Sprague was making his first start in 14 days because of the final exams break.

“I thought both teams played well,” Forbes said. “I felt like neither Sprague nor DeCaro had their A+ stuff. A little bit rusty from not pitching last weekend, but both competed.”

Sprague gave up five hits, four runs and two walks while striking out three in 4+ innings, coming out after issuing a leadoff walk in the fifth.

Donofrio’s drive off the glove of Louisville first baseman Ryan McCoy in the first inning drove in Honeycutt, who led off with a single up the middle. Louisville (29–21, 13–13) quickly tied it in the second when catcher Luke Napleton singled, took second on a sacrifice bunt and scored on center fielder Eddie King Jr.’s single to left.

Cook belted the first pitch he saw in the third inning just to the left of the right-field foul pole 414 feet for a home run, and Alex Madera’s groundout scored another run. But Napleton’s three-run homer in the fourth inning gave Louisville a 4–3 lead.

UNC retook the lead, 5–4, in the bottom of the fourth on Harber’s bases-loaded walk and Donofrio’s groundout.

The Tar Heels added a run on Honeycutt’s sacrifice fly in the seventh. They could have had more, but Louisville right fielder Isaac Humphrey made a spectacular play at the wall for the third out with the bases loaded.

NOTES — UNC goes for the series sweep at noon Sunday (ACC Network), with UNC junior right-hander Aidan Haugh (3–1, 3.29 ERA) opposing Cardinals freshman left-hander Colton Hartman (0-1, 5.09 ERA). … Honeycutt was caught stealing in the sixth inning for only the third time in 29 attempts when he overslid the second-base bag. … UNC, which is 31–2 at home and has won 35 of its last 37 home games, leads the all-time series with Louisville 11–7, including 8–2 in Chapel Hill.


No. 11 UNC 6, Louisville 4


ACC standings

LeagueGBOverall
No. 3 Georgia Tech25–545–9
No. 2 North Carolina22–8343–10–1
No. 11 Florida State19–11638–15
No. 23 Boston College17–13836–20
Wake Forest16–14938–18
Miami16–14936–17
Virginia Tech15–151029–23
Virginia14–161135–20
N.C. State14–161132–21
Stanford13–171227–25
Notre Dame13–171230–21
Louisville13–171230–26
California12–181329–25
Pittsburgh11–191430–23
Clemson10–201531–25
Duke10–201524–29

Thursday-Saturday series
Notre Dame at Pittsburgh — Pitt, 6–3; ND, 6–4; ND, 21–10 (7)
Virginia at Louisville — Va., 8–3; UL, 12–2; UL, 10–5
Miami at No. 11 Florida State — FSU, 7–6 (11); FSU, 11–1; Miami, 7–4
Wake Forest at Duke — WF, 7–2; WF, 7–2; Duke, 7–3
Clemson at Virginia Tech — VT, 5–1; VT, 2–1; Clemson, 10–7
No. 3 Georgia Tech at No. 23 Boston College — GT swept 9–0, 14–1, 15–2 (7)
No. 2 North Carolina at N.C. State — UNC, 9–4; UNC, 17–7 (8); State, 7–2
Stanford at California — Stanford, 7–6; Cal, 4–3; Cal, 2–1
End of regular season
ACC tournament
Tuesday through May 24
Truist Field in Charlotte


Date(s)Day/
month
Times/
scores
Opponent
(current rank)
Record/
TV *
February
13–14Fri., Sat.W, 9–4; W, 12–2 (7);
W, 4–3 (11)
vs. Indiana3–0
17TuesdayW, 10–0 (7)vs. Richmond4–0
18WednesdayW, 5–3vs. Longwood5–0
20–22Fri.-SunW, 10–0 (8);
L, 10–3; T, 3–3
vs. East Carolina6–1–1
24TuesdayW, 9–1vs. N.C. A&T7–1–1
25WednesdayW, 13–3 (7)vs. VCU8–1–1
27–28Fri., Sat.W, 16–3 (7);
W, 12–2 (7)
vs. Le Moyne10–1–1
March
1SundayW, 21–1 (7)vs. Le Moyne11–1–1
3TuesdayW, 5–1vs. Elon12–1–1
6–7Fri., SatL, 13–3 (7); L, 9–2;
W, 8–7 (12)
vs. Virginia13–3–1,
1–2 ACC
10TuesdayW, 13–3 (7)vs. Bucknell14–3–1
13–15Fri.-Sun.W, 8–1; W, 6–2;
W, 10–2
at California17–3–1, 4–2
18WednesdayW, 8–2vs. UNCG18–3–1
20–22Fri.–Sun.W, 11–1 (8); L, 2–0;
W, 7–6
vs. Louisville20–4–1, 6–3
24TuesdayW, 9–1vs. South Carolina
in Charlotte
21–4–1
28, 29Sat., SunW, 6–5; W, 13–7;
W, 15–10
at Notre Dame24–4–1, 9–3
31TuesdayW, 5–4 (14)vs. Campbell25–4–1
April
2–4Thur.-Sat.L, 6–1; W, 5–2;
W, 8–7
vs. Boston College27–5–1, 11–4
7TuesdayW, 8–4vs. Charlotte28–5–1
10–12Fri.–Sun.L, 9–5;
W, 6–4 (14); W, 12–5
at Clemson30–6–1, 13–5
14TuesdayW, 14–5vs. UNCW31–6–1
17–19Fri.-Sun.W, 5–2; W, 14–4 (8);
L, 5–2
vs. No. 2
Georgia Tech
33–7–1, 15–6
21TuesdayW, 9–2vs. High Point34–7–1
23–25Thur.–Sat.W, 3–1; L, 3–1;
W, 22–5 (7)
at Duke36–8–1, 17–7
28TuesdayL, 12–2vs. Coastal Carolina36–9–1
May
3SundayW, 13–0 (7)
(non-conference game)
vs. Duke37–9–1
8–10Fri.-Sun.W, 4–1; W, 12–2 (8);
W, 7–3
vs. Pittsburgh40–9–1, 20–7
12TuesdayW, 13–7at UNCW41–9–1
14–16Thur.-Sat.W, 9–4; W, 17–7 (8);
L, 7–2
at N.C. State43–10–1, 22–8
ACC tournamentCharlotte
22FridayW, 10–4Quarterfinal vs.
Virginia Tech

44–10–1
23SaturdayW, 13–5Semifinal vs.
Pittsburgh
45–10–1
24SundayL, 13–6Championship
vs. No. 2 Ga. Tech
45–11–1
NCAA tournament
Chapel Hill Regional
29FridayW, 8–0VCU46–11–1
30–31Sat.–Sun.W, 7–5, W, 9–3East Carolina48–11–1
June
Chapel Hill
Super Regionals
5–7Fri.–Sun.L, 9–5, W, 4–0,
W, 4–3
Southern Cal50–12–1
College World SeriesOmaha, Neb.
12 Friday7:06 p.m.No. 18 Ole MissESPN
14Sunday2:06 p.m. (with loss)
or 7:06 p.m. (with win)
Troy or
West Virginia
ESPN

Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics by Ainsley Fauth

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