UNC has pitching depth and potentially valuable flexibility as the top seed

By R.L. Bynum

CHAPEL HILL — It takes plenty of pitching depth to win the ACC tournament, and No. 7-ranked North Carolina has a quality mix of three solid starters, several good bullpen arms and a potent offense to pull it off.

Being the top seed in the event, which started Tuesday at Charlotte’s Truist Field, could also give the Tar Heels (41–12) options for Friday’s 7 p.m. game against No. 22-ranked and No. 8-seed Wake Forest (36–19).

“Because of the format and the higher you’re seeded, it gives you the ability to potentially make some different decisions,” said UNC coach Scott Forbes, whose team leads the ACC and is 14th in the country in ERA at 4.19.

Forbes will start freshman right-hander Jason DeCaro (4–1, 3.93 ERA; top photo) in UNC’s 3 p.m. Thursday opener against No. 12 seed Pittsburgh (26–27).

Junior left-hander Shea Sprague (3–1, 4.03 ERA) is penciled in to face the Demon Deacons. If a semifinal berth is already secured, Forbes said he might put a usual mid-week starter on the mound so that Sprague could start in Saturday’s 1 p.m. semifinal.

“We would consider that,” said Forbes, who has talked with pitching coach Bryant Gaines about the options. “We’ll think about it after the game on Thursday and make a decision in the morning.”

Plan A, though, is to start junior right-hander Aidan Haugh (4–1, 3.13) in the semifinals if UNC advances that far, but Forbes is open to adjustments.

Pitching depth becomes particularly valuable when a team advances to Sunday’s championship game after already using all three of its usual weekend starters. If Forbes can’t bump Sprague to pitching on Saturday, he still has plenty of good options.

Assuming three quality starts ahead of a potential championship game have allowed UNC not to overwork its bullpen, the Tar Heels probably won’t deal with the challenges they faced in 2013.

With only two pitchers available for the ACC tournament championship game at Durham Bulls Athletic Park, Coach Mike Fox gave little-used 6–8 right-handed freshman Taylore Cherry his first career start. After pitching only five innings all season, Cherry was outstanding for five innings in a 4–2 Tar Heels victory as they won the title.

“I feel like we have more depth, and I feel like that fourth starter will be good, whoever we end up rolling out there,” Forbes said. “The goal for us is we hope that we can get our three starters out there for sure. And then, depending on what happens with the other games, we might push a guy [later]. For all I know, it could be Aidan Haugh throwing in the championship game.”

The Sunday candidates would likely be sophomore right-hander Cameron Padgett (1–0, 5.40 ERA), senior right-hander Ben Peterson (2–1, 3.86 ERA) and freshman right-hander Olin Johnson (1–0, 4.96 ERA).

Those might also be the candidates to start Friday against Wake Forest if UNC has already earned a semifinal berth. That would happen if Pittsburgh beats Wake Forest at 3 p.m. Wednesday and Carolina knocks off the Panthers on Thursday.

All three had their best starts in mid-week non-conference games that ended after seven innings under the 10-run rule.

Padgett started twice, giving up four hits and one run and struck out three in a 13–1 win against Charlotte on April 30 after a rough outing on April 23 against Gardner-Webb (2⅔ innings, five hits, two runs, two strikeouts). Peterson, 1–1 in three starts, threw five three-hit shutout innings with five strikeouts in his last start, a 19–2 win on May 1 over William & Mary. Johnson started seven times, with his best outing being four two-hit shutout innings in an 11–0 win on March 19 against UNCW.

The stalwarts of UNC’s bullpen are redshirt sophomore left-hander Dalton Pence (3–1, 1.77 ERA, 6 saves), senior right-hander Matt Poston (3–2, 5.34 ERA, 4 saves) and sophomore right-hander Matthew Matthijs (12–4, 3.83 ERA), with senior right-hander Connor Bovair (1–0, 3.52 ERA) and sophomore left-hander Kyle Percival (4–0, 1.69 ERA) also able to throw big innings.

NOTES — UNC practiced at Boshamer Stadium on Tuesday morning and arrived in Charlotte on Tuesday afternoon. The team will practice on Wednesday at UNC Charlotte, with players having the option of attending tournament games on Tuesday and Wednesday. … Carolina won the ACC tournament the last time it was played in Charlotte in 2022, beating N.C. State 9–5 in the championship game before a record crowd of 11,392, with then-freshman Vance Honeycutt earning MVP honors. … Carolina led the ACC in run differential in league games (+95, well ahead of second-place Clemson’s +54) and in ACC home games (+74, bettering second-place Clemson’s +46), but were third for road league games at +21 (Virginia was at +44 and Duke was at +23) … In a small sample size, Forbes’ 77.8% winning percentage in ACC tournament games (7–2) is the highest of the four UNC coaches, with Mike Roberts second at 60.2% (50–33). Forbes doesn’t have the minimum of four seasons to qualify for the best percentage in the league, currently held by Clemson’s Bill Willheim (69.6%; 64–28). … UNC is second in the ACC in runs (480) and stolen bases (81) and third in slugging percentage (.544). … UNC swept a three-game series March 8–10 against Pittsburgh 2–1, 7–4 and 6–5 (10 innings) and swept a three-game series March 29–31 at Wake Forest 6–5, 10–6 and 14–10.


ACC tournament

At Truist Park in Charlotte
Link to buy tickets
Pool play
Tuesday’s results

No. 11 Miami 8, No. 7 Louisville 5; Louisville eliminated
No. 5 Florida State 12, No. 9 Georgia Tech 9; Georgia Tech eliminated
No. 6 Duke 11, No. 10 Virginia Tech 8; Virginia Tech eliminated
Wednesday’s results
No. 4 Virginia 13, No. 9 Georgia Tech 0, 7 innings, 10-run rule
No. 8 Wake Forest 8, No. 12 Pittsburgh 1; Pittsburgh eliminated
No. 3 N.C. State 19, No. 10 Virginia Tech 9, 8 innings, 10-run rule
Thursday’s results
No. 11 Miami 8, No. 2 Clemson 7; Miami wins Pool B; Clemson eliminated
No. 1 North Carolina 12, No. 12 Pittsburgh 2
No. 6 Duke 8, No. 3 N.C. State 1; Duke wins Pool C; N.C. State eliminated
Friday’s results
No. 5 Florida State 12, No. 4 Virginia 7; Florida State wins Pool D; Virginia eliminated
No. 2 Clemson 8, No. 7 Louisville 7
No. 8 Wake Forest 9, No. 1 North Carolina 5, 12 innings; Wake Forest wins Pool A; North Carolina eliminated
Saturday’s semifinals
No. 5 Florida State 9, No. 8 Wake Forest 6
No. 6 Duke 8, No. 11 Miami 2
Sunday’s championship
No. 6 Duke 16, No. 5 Florida State 4

Pool A
No. 1 North Carolina (No. 7 ranked)1–1
No. 8 Wake Forest (No. 22 ranked)2–0
No. 12 Pittsburgh0–2
Pool B
No. 2 Clemson (No. 3 ranked)1–1
No. 11 Miami2–0
No. 7 Louisville0–2
Pool C
No. 3 N.C. State (No. 12 ranked)1–1
No. 6 Duke (No. 17 ranked)2–0
No. 10 Virginia Tech0–2
Pool D
No. 4 Virginia (No. 16 ranked)1–1
No. 5 Florida State (No. 10 ranked)2–0
No. 9 Georgia Tech0–2

UNC results

DateDay/
month
ScoreOpponent/event
(current ranks)
Record
February
16FridayW, 10–3vs. Wagner1–0
17SaturdayW, 16–5vs. Wagner2–0
18SundayW, 20–6vs. Wagner3–0
20TuesdayW, 8–7vs. Elon4–0
23FridayW, 2–1vs. No. 14 East Carolina5–0
24SaturdayL, 7–4vs. No. 14 East Carolina
in Fayetteville
5–1
25SundayL, 10–9at No. 14 East Carolina5–2
27TuesdayW, 8–2vs. VCU6–2
28WednesdayW, 12–3vs. Longwood7–2
March
1FridayW, 12–2vs. Princeton8–2
2SaturdayW, 11–2vs. Princeton9–2
3SundayW, 13–6vs. Princeton10–2
5TuesdayW, 7–3at Campbell11–2
8FridayW, 2–1vs. Pittsburgh12–2,
1–0 ACC
9SaturdayW, 7–3vs. Pittsburgh13–2,
2–0 ACC
10SundayW, 6–5,
10 innings
vs. Pittsburgh14–2,
3–0 ACC
12TuesdayW, 13–7vs. Rutgers15–2
13WednesdayW, 9–8vs. Rutgers16–2
15FridayL, 14–1at Miami16–3,
3–1 ACC
16SaturdayL, 2–1at Miami16–4,
3–2 ACC
17SundayW, 18–6,
7 innings
(10-run rule)
at Miami17–4,
4–2 ACC
19TuesdayW, 11–0,
7 innings
(10-run rule)
vs. UNCW18–4
22FridayW, 5–4vs. Georgia Tech19–4,
5–2 ACC
23SaturdayW, 11–5vs. Georgia Tech20–4,
6–2 ACC
24SundayW, 9–2vs. Georgia Tech21–4,
7–2 ACC
26TuesdayW, 10–8vs. N.C. A&T22–4
29FridayW, 6–5at No. 19 Wake Forest23–4,
8–2 ACC
30SaturdayW, 10–6at No. 19 Wake Forest24–4,
9–2 ACC
31SundayW, 14–10at No. 19 Wake Forest25–4,
10–2 ACC
April
4ThursdayL, 14–11at No. 18 Virginia25–5,
10–3 ACC
5FridayL, 7–2at No. 18 Virginia25–6,
10–4 ACC
6SaturdayW, 12–7at No. 18 Virginia26–6,
11–4 ACC
9TuesdayL, 2–1vs. South Carolina
in Charlotte
26–7
12FridayW, 13–0,
6½ innings
(10-run rule)
vs. Notre Dame27–7,
12–4 ACC
13SaturdayW, 7–2vs. Notre Dame28–7,
13–4 ACC
14SundayW, 10–3vs. Notre Dame29–7,
14–4 ACC
16TuesdayL, 5–4vs. Coastal Carolina29–8
18ThursdayL, 9–8at No. 11 N.C. State29–9,
14–5 ACC
19FridayL, 5–4at No. 11 N.C. State29–10,
14–6 ACC
20SaturdayW, 14–3at No. 11 N.C. State30–10,
15–6 ACC
23TuesdayW, 5–2vs. Gardner-Webb31–10
26FridayW, 8–1vs. Virginia Tech32–10,
16–6 ACC
27SaturdayW, 6–3vs. Virginia Tech33–10,
17–6 ACC
28SundayL, 4–3vs. Virginia Tech33–11,
17–7 ACC
30TuesdayW, 13–1,
6½ innings
(10-run rule)
vs. Charlotte34–11
May
1WednesdayW, 19–2,
6½ innings
(10-run rule)
vs. William & Mary35–11
7TuesdayW, 16–10vs. Campbell36–11
10FridayW, 13–4
8 innings
(10-run rule)
vs. Louisville37–11,
18–7 ACC
11SaturdayW, 6–4vs. Louisville38–11,
19–7 ACC
12SundayW, 16–7vs. Louisville39–11,
20–7 ACC
16ThursdayL, 5–3at No. 12 Duke39–12,
20–8 ACC
17FridayW, 6–4at No. 12 Duke40–12,
21–8 ACC
18SaturdayW, 14–6at No. 12 Duke41–12,
22–8 ACC
ACC tournamentin Charlotte
23ThursdayW, 12–2Pittsburgh42–12
24FridayL, 9–5,
12 innings
No. 19 Wake Forest42–13
NCAA tournament
Chapel Hill Regional
31FridayW, 11–8Long Island43–13
June
1SaturdayW, 6–2No. 24 LSU44–13
2SundayL, 8–4No. 24 LSU 44–14
3MondayW, 4–3,
10 innings
vs. No. 24 LSU45–14
Chapel Hill
Super Regional
7FridayW, 8–6vs. West Virginia46–14
8SaturdayW, 2–1vs. West Virginia47–14
College World Series
Omaha, Neb.
14 Friday W, 3–2vs. No. 18 Virginia48–14
16 Sunday L, 6–1No. 1 Tennessee 48–15
18 Tuesday L, 9–5No. 9 Florida State48–16

Photo courtesy of UNC Athletics by Ainsley Fauth

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