The dramatic beauty of baseball
June 3, 2024
The
beauty of baseball was on full display at Foley Field Sunday evening.
Georgia
rallied for an 8-6 10-inning win over rival Georgia Tech to win the Athens
Regional. The Bulldogs will host a super regional next weekend against North
Carolina State.
The
nature of competition in any sport results in moments of drama that bring
spectators back. But with the one-on-one matchup of pitcher and batter in
baseball, its ability to manufacture drama is enhanced.
Before
Sunday’s game, I remarked to my bride, Jan, “How about a nine-inning party?”
Let’s score early and enjoy the day.
By the
end, I had changed my tone. “I’ll settle for a ninth-inning party,” I said.
The
first exhilarating moment of the ninth inning came when Georgia shortstop Kolby
Branch hit a solo homer to tie the game.
Even
though Branch is the No. 9 hitter in the lineup, it was not totally unexpected
that he would hit a homer. He’s hit 17 of them, a total surpassed only by two
teammates (more about them later).
Seventy
years from now when Kolby Branch is buried, they should put on his tombstone, “Mr.
Grand Slam.” He’s hit four of them this year, including one in Saturday’s win
over UNC-Wilmington.
Given
that he led off the ninth inning, we will forgive him for hitting only a solo
shot, particularly since it made the rest of the night’s dramatics possible.
Georgia
skipper Wes Johnson put Charlie Goldstein on the mound to start the ninth.
Slated to be one of “the arms” this year, his season has been riddled with
injuries. It has been a month since he had pitched at all. He lasted all of five pitches in the ninth
before he exited, betrayed by his arm again.
Matthew
Hoskins, boasting a hideous 24.00 ERA, got two out, but eventually walked the
bases loaded.
Enter
Chandler Marsh to pitch.
Bases
loaded. Two outs. Tie game. That is the definition of do or die.
Hey, why
not ratchet up the drama with a full count?
That’s
where it stood when Tech shortstop Payton Green hit a high hopper between first
and second. First baseman Corey Collins ranged to his right to field it. His
only play was for the putout at first, if the pitcher got there in time.
I can’t
do justice to Marsh’s athleticism in making the play. Collins did not make the
most artful throw, but it was timely. Marsh had to go low to field it. He slid
feet first into the bag as he simultaneously stretched to catch the throw.
The pump
fist by the umpire: out!
Oh, the
glory of it all.
Of
course, there was a review. Why would Georgia Tech not review it? The umpires
signaled the Georgia players back onto the field. Why? If the call stands, they
bat. If it does not, the game is over.
It
stood. Glory, glory, again.
In the
10th, Georgia scored three times. The first came when Tech’s third baseman, a
defensive replacement, threw high on a sacrifice bunt.
Then
Collins doubled on an 0-2 count to drive in two more runs.
Collins
is not the quintessential leadoff man. But goodness, does he ever get on base.
He’s second on the team in homers with 19. He’s walked 54 times. He may have
the most disciplined batter’s eye I’ve ever seen. If there is a stat for lowest
chase rate, he is the world leader. He swings at the good ones and watches the
bad ones.
There
was more drama yet to come.
A
three-run lead is nice, but it means that a grand slam can undo it all with one
swing.
Well,
wouldn’t you know it, Tech loaded the bases, with no outs, in the 10th. At bat,
Drew Burress.
Every
team has an alpha dog. Georgia is fortunate to have the alpha dog of alpha dog
in Charlie Condon, whose metrics compare to Barry Bonds.
No
kidding.
The man
is a national treasure.
He had
two hits against Tech before they gave up and went to walking him
intentionally. That has become a familiar strategy. Avoid the pain. Kind of
like when football teams use to throw to whichever side of the field cornerback
Champ Bailey was not on.
Anyway,
Burress is Tech’s version of Charlie Condon. In a pinch, he is the player
Yellow Jacket fans most desire at the plate.
Marsh
had failed to get an out, and Leighton Finley had relieved him. He had yielded
a single that loaded the bases. He fell behind to Burress, two balls and no
strikes.
Called
strike. Called strike. Swinging strike. Air escapes from Tech’s balloon.
A
sacrifice fly and a groundout, and it was over. Count it as perhaps the best
relief outing by a Georgia starter since Dave Fleming saved the 1990 College
World Series title clincher against Oklahoma State.
The
super regional starts this weekend, against North Carolina State. Oddly enough,
the last time Georgia advanced to the College World Series, 2008, it was at the
expense of North Carolina State, which included among its participants second
baseman Russell Wilson. You may recognize his name from NFL exploits.
As I
recall, Georgia scored a boatload of runs in the first inning of the decisive
super regional game to advance to the College World Series. That was fun too, but
not nearly as dramatic.