Honeycutt dazzling in Bosh finale, sending Heels to College World Series

By R.L. Bynum

CHAPEL HILL — Vance Honeycutt made his likely Boshamer Stadium finale memorable from the first pitch.

The junior center fielder reminded North Carolina fans of a few of the many reasons they’ll miss him at The Bosh with his power, speed, fielding range and throwing arm.

On the plus side, they’ll be able to watch him in the College World Series after No. 4-seed UNC rode outstanding pitching to a 2–1 victory over West Virginia before a record crowd of 4,491 Saturday for a two-game sweep of the Chapel Hill Super Regional.

The team dogpiled in the infield and the smiles on all of the Tar Heels as well as their fans never went away, including through the entire postgame press conference.

“If this is the last one, then this was an awesome game,” said Honeycutt, who is expected to be a first-round draft pick in the draft later this month. “So many guys in this locker room besides me have just put us in a good spot and so far this season. To see the look on everybody’s faces was priceless. It’s what we’ve worked for since August. That’s very rewarding.”

It’s UNC’s first trip to Omaha since 2018 and the 12th in program history. UNC will face No. 12 overall seed Virginia (46–15) in a CWS opener either Friday or Saturday. The Cavaliers swept Kansas State in the Charlottesville Regional.

“The two words really that we talked about were love and unity,” UNC coach Scott Forbes said, “because we were going to have some talented players and they may work their way in the lineup and some guys that have played a lot may not be in the lineup. And the only chance we had to make it was if everybody was selfless and they sure were.”

Freshman right-hander Jason DeCaro (winner, 6–1) pitched a career-high 7⅓ innings for his sixth quality start and Dalton Pence threw 2⅔ shutout innings with two hits, three walks and six strikeouts for his eighth save, but only after some anxious moments in the ninth inning.

“I was trying to take it pitch by pitch, and you make more mistakes and put more pressure on yourself when you start thinking about the bigger picture, thinking if they’re gonna take you out or if you’re gonna leave you in,” Pence said.

Pence gave up a leadoff single in the ninth inning, but stuck out Reed Chumley — who had homered the night before — before walking Grant Hussey. He struck out pinch hitter Ellis Garcia before walking Kyle West on a 3–2 pitch to load the bases before Ben Lumsden grounded out to end the game.

Pence sprinted to first base to take the throw from first baseman Parks Harber and put his foot on the bag moments before Lumsden got there. That secured the Super Regional title and a wild celebration.

“I told the team [Friday] night,” Forbes said, “I said, ‘Hey, if you guys want to bridge the gap a little bit and make it a little bit easier on us coaches, go ahead.’ But it didn’t surprise me we were in that burner, and I just have to say like I’ve never seen it that good of an atmosphere.”

Vance Honeycutt rounds the bases after leading off the game with a home run.
(Photo by Smith Hardy)

Honeycutt hit home runs on consecutive pitches. After his two-run shot ended Friday’s Carolina win, he lined a 338-foot drive over the left-field wall on the game’s first pitch to break his program record for homers in a season with 26 with his UNC-record 63rd career home run.

Honeycutt’s speed gave UNC a 2–0 lead in the third inning when he laid down a perfect bunt with two outs on the first pitch and beat the throw at first base. He took third on Casey Cook’s single up the middle and scored on Harber’s RBI single to left.

In the fourth inning, Honeycutt caught a line drive from Reed Chumley, and his bullet throw doubled up Sam White at first base. In the eighth inning, Honeycutt sped well to his left to track down Skylar King’s liner.

“That just shows he changes the game,” said Forbes, saying Honeycutt is the best player in the country. “Obviously the unbelievable catch, but he just threw a BB to first base. Not many people can make that play, and starts us off with that home run. I’m just gonna keep jumping on hiss back while we head to Omaha.”

DeCaro had everything going, giving up two hits, two walks and no runs while striking out five.

“Here’s a kid that gave up a senior year in high school, trusted us and his family,” Forbes said. “We thought doing that would give us a better chance to get him here. Little do we know that it will get even more drafted attention because he pitched so well.”

After DeCaro gave up a one-out single to Chumley in the seventh inning, Pence relieved him. After striking out Grant Hussey, he walked Spencer Barnett on a 3–2 pitch before West’s RBI single to left field cut UNC’s lead to 2–1. He struck out Lumsden to prevent further damage.

West Virginia starter Tyler Switalski (loser, 5–3) nearly matched DeCaro, giving up five hits, two runs and walking one with four strikeouts. He came out after Luke Stevenson walked and Alberto Osuna singled with one out in the seventh inning.

His relief, Carson Estridge, loaded the bases by hitting Colby Wilkerson with a two-out out pitch but struck out Honeycutt swinging on an inside 2–2 pitch to get out of the inning.

NOTES — Carolina is 8–3 all-time in Super Regionals with 17 wins, the ninth most all-time. It was UNC’s sixth Super Regional sweep (also in 2006, 2008, 2009, 2011 and 2018) … Honeycutt’s eight NCAA tournament home runs are a program record. … UNC is 16–2 when allowing two runs or fewer. … Pence’s eight saves are tied for the 13th-most in a season in program history. … West Virginia second baseman Brodie Kessler, whose second-inning single was its only hit in the first six innings, came out in the third inning after injuring a finger on his glove hand while stealing second base. … Virginia won two of three in an early-April series in Charlottesville. … Carolina finished 37–3 at Boshamer Stadium, the highest winning percentage in stadium history at 92.5%. … UNC is 10–2 all-time against West Virginia, with every game at Boshamer Stadium. … Carolina’s 47 wins are the most wins since the 59–12 Tar Heels in 2013 went to the College World Series. … UNC is 7–4 in Game 2s of Super Regionals. … The crowd included former UNC chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz, Coby White, RJ Davis, Elliot Cadeau, Zayden High, Seth Trimble, Jalen Washington, Alyssa Ustby and Indya Nivar.


UNC 2, West Virginia 1


Chapel Hill Super Regional

Top-ranked and No. 5-seed North Carolina (46–14) vs. No. 21-ranked Arizona (43–19)
Best-of-3 series
Boshamer Stadium

Game 1 Friday: North Carolina 18, Arizona 2
Game 2 Saturday: Arizona 10, North Carolina 8; series tied at 1
Game 3 Sunday: Arizona 4, North Carolina 3; Arizona wins series 2–1


Arizona meets No. 11-ranked and No. 13-seed Coastal Carolina (53–11), which finished off a sweep of the Auburn Super Regional, beating No. 9-ranked and No. 4-seed Auburn 7–6 in 10 innings on Friday and 4–1 on Saturday.


Men’s College World Series

At Charles Schwab Field Omaha in Omaha, Neb.
Bracket 1

No. 1 Tennessee (3–0), No. 8 Florida State (2–2), No. 4 North Carolina (1–2), No. 12 Virginia (0–2)
Bracket 2
No. 3 Texas A&M (3–0), Florida (2–2), No. 2 Kentucky (1–2), No. 10 N.C. State (0–2)
Pool play
(All listed times are EDT)
Friday’s results
Game 1: No. 4 North Carolina 3, No. 12 Virginia 2
Game 2: No. 1 Tennessee 12, No. 8 Florida State 11
Saturday’s results
Game 3: No. 2 Kentucky 5, No. 10 N.C. State 4, 10 innings
Game 4: No. 3 Texas A&M 3, Florida 2
Sunday’s results
Game 5: No. 8 Florida State 7, No. 12 Virginia 3; Virginia eliminated
Game 6: No. 1 Tennessee 6, No. 4 North Carolina 1
Monday’s results
Game 7: Florida 5, No. 10 N.C. State 4; N.C. State eliminated
Game 8: No. 3 Texas A&M 5, No. 2 Kentucky 1
Tuesday’s result
Game 9: No. 8 Florida State 9, No. 4 North Carolina 5; North Carolina eliminated
Wednesday’s results
Game 10: Florida 15, No. 2 Kentucky 4; Kentucky eliminated
Game 11: No. 1 Tennessee 7, No. 8 Florida State 2; Florida State eliminated
Game 12: No. 3 Texas A&M 6, Florida 0; Florida eliminated
MCWS Finals
(Best-of-3 series)

No. 1 Tennessee (60–13) vs. No. 3 Texas A&M (53–15)
Game 1: Texas A&M 9, Tennessee 5
Game 2 Tennessee, 4, Texas A&M 1
Game 3: Tennessee 6, Texas A&M 5; Tennessee wins national champinship


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


UNC scores

Date(s)Day/
month
ScoresOpponent
(current rank)
Record
February
14–15Fri.-Sat.W, 5–1; W, 8–3;
W, 4–2
vs. Texas Tech3–0
18TuesdayW, 12–9vs. Kansas State4–0
22–24Sat.-Mon.W, 2–0; W, 11–6;
W, 6–4
vs. East Carolina
(DBAP, CH, G’ville)
7–0
25TuesdayW, 7–4vs. VCU8–0
26WednesdayW, 13–4vs. N.C. A&T9–0
28FridayW, 16–2vs. Stony Brook10–0
March
1–2Sat.-Sun.W, 6–1; W, 9–5vs. Stony Brook12–0
4TuesdayW, 6–4 (11)vs. No. 11
Coastal Carolina
13–0
7–9Fri.-Sun.L, 13–9;
W, 11–1 (7); L, 7–0
vs. Stanford14–2,
1–2 ACC
11TuesdayW, 7–3 (10)at UNCW15–2
14, 16Fri., Sun.L, 8–7; W, 6–4;
L, 5–0
at Louisville16–4, 2–4
19WednesdayL, 5–1vs. UConn16–5
21–23Fri.-Sun.W, 5–1; L, 3–2;
W, 10–0 (7)
at Boston College18–6, 4–5
25TuesdayW, 13–8vs. South Carolina
in Charlotte
19–7
28–30Fri.-Sun.W, 2–0; W, 4–2;
L, 4–2
vs. Miami21–7, 6–6
April
1TuesdayW, 11–1 (7)vs. Gardner-Webb22–7
3–5Thur.-Sat.W, 4–3; L, 9–5;
W, 8–7 (14)
vs. Duke24–8, 8–7
8TuesdayW, 12–10at Elon25–8
11–13Fri.-Sun.W, 11–1 (7);
W, 17–1 (7); W, 3–2
vs. Wake Forest28–8, 11–7
15TuesdayW, 14–4 (8)vs. Charlotte29–8
18–20Fri-Sun.W, 9–6; L, 10–6:
W, 7–5
at Virginia Tech31–9, 13–8
25–27Fri.-Sun.W, 15–5; L, 4–2;
W, 6–0
at Pittsburgh33–10, 15–9
29TuesdayW, 13–4vs. George Mason34–10
30WednesdayW, 14–3vs. Queens35–10
May
6TuesdayW, 10–1vs. Campbell36–10
8–9Thurs.-Fri.W, 8–1; L, 8–5vs. N.C. State37–11, 16–10
15–17Thurs.-Sat.W, 8–3;
W, 11–1 (7); L, 5–4
at No. 7 Florida State39–12, 18–11
ACC tournamentDurham
23FridayQuarterfinal: W, 7–3Boston College40–12
24SaturdaySemifinal: W, 7–5No. 7 Florida State41–12
25SundayFinal: W, 14–4No. 14 Clemson 42–12
Chapel Hill Regional
30FridayW, 4–0Holy Cross43–12
31SaturdayW, 11–5Oklahoma44–12
June
1SundayL, 9–5Oklahoma44–13
2MondayW, 14–4Oklahoma45–13
Chapel Hill
Super Regional
Best-of-3 series
6FridayW, 18–2No. 21 Arizona 46–13
7SaturdayL, 10–8No. 21 Arizona46–14
8SundayL, 4–3No. 21 Arizona46–15

Photos by Smith Hardy

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