UNC rolls to 9th ACC title with blowout of Clemson

By R.L. Bynum

DURHAM — If you are going to be locked into a bullpen game for the ACC championship, it helps to have one of the best relievers in the country.

No. 3 North Carolina started fireballing right-handed freshman Ryan Lynch, pitching for the first time in eight days, hurled four shutout innings with seven strikeouts as the Tar Heels rode an eight-run fifth inning to a 14–4 victory Sunday at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in the ACC tournament championship game.

There was no dogpile when the title was put away, as this UNC team has bigger goals.

No. 4-seed and No. 14-ranked Clemson (44–16), playing for the fourth consecutive day, ran out of pitching and UNC (42–12) took full advantage in securing its ninth league title. Leading the 13-hit attack with three hits each were Alex Madera and Gavin Gallaher, who hit two off the Blue Monster in left field, and two hits, a home run and five RBI from Jackson Van De Brake.

Clemson scored 20 runs in its first three tournament games but was held to only three.

Clemson center fielder Cam Cannarella lost a two-out first-inning fly ball in the sun from tournament MVP Luke Stevenson, and the sophomore catcher ended up at second base. Gallaher sent home with a drive off the left-field wall off Clemson starter B.J. Bailey (loser, 2–5).

Bailey came out with one out in the second inning after loading the bases with two hit by pitches and a walk. The first two pitches from reliever Nathan Dvorsky produced runs: Kane Kepley’s sacrifice fly to left and Van De Brake’s line single to left field, and UNC led 3–0.

Another Gallaher double off the Blue Monster, this one to lead of the third, pushed Carolina’s lead to four on Madera’s single to center field.

Lynch gave up two singles and a walk to load the bases with nobody out in the fourth. He struck out Jacob Jarrell on a 93 mph fastball, fanned Jack Crighton on an 83 mph slider and induced a 2–2 groundout to get out of the inning on his career-high 83rd pitch.

Olin Johnson (2⅔ innings, 4 hits, 2 runs, 2 walks, 1 strikeout) took over in the fifth inning in his first outing since April 29.

Clemson went through four pitchers in the 41-minute, 12-batter eight-run bottom of the fifth inning when UNC swatted three home runs.

— Hunter Stokely launched a drive into the seats in right field off Nathan Dvorsky, Clemson’s second pitcher, with one out in the fifth.
— Hudson Lee came on for the Tigers and lasted three batters, giving up a Madera double and Tyson Bass’ two-run homer to left center.
—  Chance Fitzgerald took the mound and gave up back-to-back singles and Van De Brake’s three-run home and left after giving up a two-out single to Gallaher.
— Noah Samol finally got Clemson out of the inning when Stokely lined out to first base.

UNC tacked on two runs in home half of the sixth, thanks to two walks and a throwing error.

During that long inning, Johnson threw some warmup pitches in the bullpen, but only gave up a walk in the top of the sixth inning. Johnson was rolling in the seventh inning and one out away from ending the game when he gave up a walk and a two-run homer to Cannarella. Folger Boaz came on after Johnson gave up a single to Jarren Purify and struck out Collin Priest to escape further damage.

Cameron Padgett, who relieved Boaz after hit hit a batter with a pitch, gave up an RBI single to Jack Crighton with one out in the eighth inning but struck out two to get out of the inning. Clemson added a run off Camron Seagraves in the ninth inning.

NOTES — The NCAA will announce host sites at 8:30 Sunday night, with the field and the likely Chapel Hill Regional announced at noon Monday (ESPN). The latest D1 Baseball projection, released Sunday, has UNC as the No. 4 overall seed, hosting Oklahoma, Rhode Island and Ivy League champion Columbia in the Chapel Hill Regional. .… It was UNC’s third championship game appearance in six seasons and the 13th overall. … Lynch’s previous high was 67 pitches at Virginia Tech on April 20 when he gave up two runs and struck out three. … Six of Stokely’s 13 home runs have come in nonconference games. … UNC is 15–17 against Clemson in the ACC tournament. … For the second time in three years, UNC’s women’s lacrosse team won a national title on the same afternoon that the baseball team won an ACC title. The Tar Heels beat Northwestern 12–8.


No. 3 UNC 14, No. 14 Clemson 4


ACC tournament

At Durham Bulls Athletic Park
Buy tickets at durhambulls.com or theacc.com/tickets
Tuesday’s first round

No. 16 California 12, No. 9 Miami 2, 8 innings
No. 12 Virginia Tech 7, No. 13 Stanford 4
No. 15 Pittsburgh 13, No. 10 Louisville 11
No. 14 Boston College 5, No. 11 Notre Dame 4, 10 innings
Wednesday’s second round

California 14. No. 8 seed Wake Forest 12
No. 5 Clemson 6, Virginia Tech 1
No. 7 Duke 4, Pittsburgh 3
Boston College 12, No. 6 Virginia 8
Quarterfinals
Thursday’s results
No. 1 seed Georgia Tech 10, California 3
Clemson 7, No. 4 seed N.C. State 6
Friday’s results
No. 2 seed Florida State 14, Duke 7
No. 3 seed North Carolina 7, Boston College 2
Saturday’s semifinals
Clemson 9, Georgia Tech 4
North Carolina 7, Florida State 5
Sunday’s championship
North Carolina 14, Clemson 4


Date(s)Day/
month
Time/
score
Opponent
(current rank)
TV/
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. No. 22 N.C. State37–11, 16–10
15–17Thurs.-Sat.W, 8–3;
W, 11–1 (7); L, 5–4
at No. 6 Florida State39–12, 18–11
ACC tournamentDurham Bulls
Athletic Park
23FridayQuarterfinal: W, 7–3Boston College40–12
24SaturdaySemifinal: W, 7–5No. 6 Florida State41–12
25SundayFinal: W, 14–4No. 14 Clemson 42–12
30–31Fri.–Sat.Likely
Chapel Hill Regional
TBA
June
1SundayLikely
Chapel Hill Regional
TBA
6–8Fri.–Sun.Super RegionalsCampus sites
18–30Wed.–Mon.College
World Series
Omaha, Neb.

Photo courtesy of the ACC

Leave a Reply