Honeycutt blasts back LSU’s challenge with pair of mammoth homers

By R.L. Bynum

CHAPEL HILL — Vance Honeycutt’s prodigious power seized control of a pitcher’s duel to knock back the challenge of reigning champion LSU.

Honeycutt hit a pair of home runs to left field off likely high draft pick Luke Holman, powering No. 6 UNC to a 6–2 Chapel Hill Regional victory over the No. 22 Tigers before a raucous capacity Boshamer Stadium crowd Saturday night.

Sophomore left-hander Dalton Pence closed the door, pitching 2⅔ hitless innings, striking out two, to earn his seventh save.

UNC (44–13) plays at 6 p.m. Sunday against the winner of the noon Sunday elimination game between LSU (41–22) and Wofford (42–19), with junior right-hander Aidan Haugh (4–1, 4.07 ERA) starting for the Tar Heels. The Tar Heels can put away the regional title with a victory and would play a deciding game against that team on Monday with a loss on Sunday night.

“That was a huge swing of the bat for a no-doubter,” UNC coach Scott Forbes said of Honeycutt’s first homer. “Just an electric player. We’re fortunate to have him here, and then another big swing of the bat.”

The first was a towering 413-foot blast over the netting in the fifth inning, and the second went 428 feet on an off-speed pitch in the seventh inning to end Holman’s night after his 109th pitch. UNC has hit a school-record 109 home runs.

“He got me the first two times, and I wasn’t on the fastball,” Honeycutt said after Holman struck him out in his first two at-bats. “So, I went up there just committed to the fastball and got one.”

Carolina’s all-time home run leader, Honeycutt became the sixth player in ACC history to hit at least 60 home runs. He now has 61, including 24 this season. It was his fourth multi-homer game this season and program-tying seventh for his career.

Vance Honeycutt raises his arm in celebration afer hitting his home run in the fifth inning. (Photo by Smith Hardy)

Honeycutt, who ended a six-game home-run drought and was 0 for 6 with four strikeouts in the regional before the first blast, admitted that he may have been pressing too much.

“I guess for confidence, they’re big,” Honeycutt said.

The first homer was a boost and a momentum-changer.

“It’s incredible how hard he hits the ball and how far it goes,” said UNC starter Shea Sprague, who pitched 4⅓ strong innings. “So, it’s a lot of fun to watch and I’m glad he’s in our lineup.”

Honeycutt’s fifth-inning homer came after an Alex Madera single and a Colby Wilkerson double off of first baseman Jared Jones’ glove.

“Great ball game,” Forbes said. “Unbelievable crowd. That’s as good an atmosphere is we’ve had two nights in a row at the Bosh. I expect to be like that again on Sunday night.”


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UNC got three huge double plays to get out of jams, although one came with controversy.

Carolina got a big break in the top of the second when it got an inning-ending double play after a base umpire ruled that LSU baserunner Alex Milazzo interfered with shortstop Wilkerson. The hitter, Jake Brown, beat the throw at first but was ruled out. Even though it didn’t appear to be interference, the call stood after a reply review. The Tigers would have had runners at first and third with two out.

Sprague (four hits, two walks, three strikeouts) came out after giving up a leadoff walk and a one-out single in the fifth inning. The junior left-hander threw 93 pitches before giving way to senior right-hander Ben Peterson, who elicited a Tommy White inning-ending double play on the first pitch.

“Just going out with my best stuff,” Sprague said. “Just going out there with confidence and doing our thing. Myself, Ben picking me up there and DP shutting the door, it’s fun to watch.”

LSU coach Jay Johnson praised Sprague.

“He’s tough. He has a good change-up,” he said. “One of the better ones I’ve seen in a while, to be honest. I thought we did a great job of making him work. He was out of the game before the fifth inning, we just didn’t capitalize.”

Peterson (winner, 3–2) gave up three singles in the seventh and came out after a one-out walk that forced in LSU’s first run. Pence came on and walked in a second run before UNC got another inning-ending double play to keep the lead at 3–2.

That came off an off-speed pitch that Pence got over effectively against LSU.

“Our main focus was off-speed stuff and secondary pitches and that helps take pressure off the fastball,” Pence said. “The more I use it, the better it gets.”

Then came Honeycutt’s second homer in the seventh inning with two outs.

“I thought it was huge,” Forbes said. “[Holman] was about to have a really quick inning. They had the momentum after they scored those two. It was [an] 0-2 [count] and, boom, just a bazooka. That’s deflating. I thought that really gave us all the momentum back.”

Honeycutt said Holman didn’t really pitch him differently.

“Not necessarily,” Honeycutt said. “He just left it a little bit over the plate and [I was] just fortunate to get a pretty good pitch to hit. I think I fouled off a slider right before. Kind of pulled off a little bit, similar location but stayed down.”

UNC added two insurance runs in the eighth inning on Gavin Gallaher’s RBI single (after an intentional walk to get to him) and Madera’s groundout.

NOTES — The other ACC players with at least 60 home runs are Wake Forest’s Brock Wilken (71) Florida State’s J.D. Drew (69), Anthony Maisano of Georgia Tech and Wake Forest (69), N.C. State’s Pat Clougherty (61)  and Wake Forest’s Nick Kurtz (61). … Honeycutt tied Chris Maples’ UNC program record of seven multi-homer games. … The Tar Heels passed the previous school single-season homer record of 108 in 2002. … The stadium was packed and fans without a ticket were watching from many locations — outside the fence around the right-field foul pole, from the Karen Shelton Stadium camera platform and from the top of its stands. … UNC is 4–2 all-time against LSU, but Saturday’s win was the Tar Heels’ first outside of the College World Series. … The crowd was announced as 3,919.


No. 6 UNC 6, No. 24 LSU 2


Chapel Hill Regional

At Boshamer Stadium
Friday’s games

No. 1 North Carolina vs. No. 4 xxx
No. 2 xxx vs. No. 3 xxx
Saturday’s games
Friday’s losers
Friday’s winners
Sunday’s results
Winner of Saturday’s first game vs. loser of Saturday’s second game
Winner of Saturday’s first game vs. winner of Sunday’s first game
Monday’s result
Deciding game should winner of Sunday’s first game win Sunday’s second game.


UNC career home run leaders

PlayerSeasonsGamesHomers
Vance Honeycutt2022–2417665
Devy Bell1984–8720557
Chris Cox1990–9319249
Mac Horvath2021–2316047
Alberto Osuna2022–2417645
Chad Flack2005–0826742
Sean Farrell2000–0324040
Jarrett Shearin1996–9924140
Cookie Massey1993–9410840


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. 3
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. No. 24
Coastal Carolina
36–9–1
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. 3 Ga. Tech
45–11–1
NCAA tournament
Chapel Hill Regional
29Friday5 p.m.VCUESPN+
30SaturdayTBAECU or TennesseeTBA
31SundayTBATBATBA
June
1MondayTBA(if needed)TBA
5–7Fri.-Sun.Super Regionalsin Chapel Hill
(if UNC advances)
TBA
12–22Fri.-MonCollege World SeriesOmaha, Neb.TBA

Photos by Smith Hardy

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