Duke athletics conducting Father’s Day auction of autographed photos

Looking for the perfect gift for Dad for Father’s Day? Check out GoDuke.com’s 2012 Father’s Day Auction.

The 2012 Father’s Day Auction features 15 autographed photos signed by Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski and former Blue Devil greats, including Christian Laettner, Jason Williams, Kyrie Irving, Kyle Singler, Nolan Smith, Chris Duhon, Gerald Henderson, Mike Gminski, Jon Scheyer, Brian Zoubek, Gene Banks, Trajan Langdon and Kenny Dennard.

Items will end daily beginning on Monday, June 11 and the auction will close on Thursday, June 14.

Find the perfect gift for your favorite Blue Devil fan in the 2012 Father’s Day Auction.

2012 Father’s Day Auction

Monday, June 11
Autographed Kenny Dennard Photo – 3:00 PM
Autographed Trajan Langdon Photo – 3:30 PM
Autographed Nolan Smith Roster Card – 4:00 PM
Autographed Nolan Smith Photo – 4:30 PM

Tuesday, June 12
Autographed Mike Gminski Photo – 3:00 PM
Autographed Gene Banks Photo – 3:30 PM
Autographed Brian Zoubek Photo – 4:00 PM
Autographed Kyle Singler Photo – 4:30 PM

Wednesday, June 13
Autographed Jon Scheyer Roster Card – 3:00 PM
Autographed Jason Williams Sports Illustrated – 3:30 PM
Autographed Chris Duhon Photo – 4:00 PM
Autographed Kyrie Irving Photo – 4:30 PM

Thursday, June 14
Autographed Gerald Henderson Photo – 3:00 PM
Autographed Christian Laettner Photo – 3:30 PM
Autographed Coach K 2010 National Champions Photo – 4:00 PM

– News release

NC State takes on Florida in a best of three series

NC State challenges overall number one seed Florida, with the winner punching a ticket to Omaha, beginning Saturday at the Gainesville Super Regional.

The Wolfpack (43-18) chases its first trip to the College World Series since 1968, and made it through the initial step with a thrilling Monday night win over Vanderbilt. State scored a school record 56 runs over five games at the Raleigh Regional to advance.

In the deciding game on Monday, NC State pushed six runs across in the eighth and ninth to come back from a 7-3 deficit to advance. The feat was nothing new for the Pack, as State has outscored opponents 82-41 in the eighth and ninth innings this year.

Junior right-hander Ethan Ogburn (5-3, 3.23 ERA) takes the mound in the Wolfpack’s opener on Saturday at 2 p.m. on ESPNU. Ogburn comes off of the longest outing of his career, an 8 2/3 inning effort in an elimination game against UNC Wilmington.

Louisville Slugger National Freshman Pitcher of the Year Carlos Rodon (9-0, 1.61) has been tabbed the starter for Sunday’s game at 1 p.m. on ESPNU. Rodon will make his first start since being named a Golden Spikes Award finalist on Tuesday.

NC State has not yet named a starter for a potential game three on Monday at 1 p.m. on ESPN2.

During the Raleigh Regional, almost every player on the Wolfpack roster rose to the occasion, but none were more impressive throughout the regional than senior captain Andrew Ciencin, and junior reliever Ryan Wilkins.

Ciencin could not be stopped in Raleigh last week, hitting a team-leading .524 (11-for-21) in the NCAA Regional, second only to Vanderbilt’s Mike Yastrzemski (.533) in the four-team field. He led the regional in hits (11), was second in total bases (16) and was fourth in slugging percentage (.762) and RBIs (6).

Since May 4, spanning 11 appearances (all in relief), Wilkins has has put together a 3-0 record with a 2.37 ERA with 21 strikeouts in 19 innings pitched. He was the de facto closer in the last two victories over Vanderbilt, tossing 6 2/3 scoreless innings, while picking up wins in each game.

In addition to ESPNU and ESPN2’s coverage of the super regional, radio coverage will be provided by 88.1 WKNC, 102.3 WPTM in Roanoke Rapids, and 99.9 HD-3 The Ticket in the Triangle area. Live stats and streaming video will be linked on GoPack.com. Fans can also follow Twitter updates from @NCStateBaseball.

– News release

Francis promoted by Hurricanes while Stillman re-joins organization

Jim Rutherford, President and General Manager of the National Hockey League’s Carolina Hurricanes, today announced changes and restructuring for the team’s hockey operations department.

Several staff members have received contract extensions and promotions. Ron Francis, who is entering his seventh season in the team’s front office, has been promoted to Vice President of Hockey Operations. Jason Karmanos, in his 15th year with the Hurricanes, is now Executive Vice President and Assistant General Manager. Rod Brind’Amour joined the team’s front office in 2010, and will serve as a full-time Assistant Coach in 2012-13. Assistant Coach Dave Lewis and Director of Defensemen Development Glen Wesley also each received contract extensions.

“We feel that the staff we have assembled in our hockey department is stronger than ever,” said Rutherford. “I am very fortunate to have Ron working with me on a day-to-day basis in the front office. With Rod coaching full time and Dave agreeing to an extension, our coaching staff is solidified with a tremendous amount of experience.”

Rutherford also announced several new hires in addition to the existing staff adjustments. Former Hurricane Cory Stillman has joined the organization, taking the position of Director of Forwards Development previously held by Brind’Amour. Stillman, 38, retired as a player in September 2011 after 16 NHL seasons, and spent the 2011-12 season working as player development assistant for the Florida Panthers. A first-round selection (6th overall) of the Calgary Flames in the 1992 NHL Entry Draft, Stillman totaled 278 goals and 449 assists (727 points) in 1,025 career games with the Calgary Flames, St. Louis Blues, Tampa Bay Lightning, Carolina Hurricanes, Ottawa Senators and Florida Panthers. Stillman won the Stanley Cup as a member of the Lightning in 2004 and the Hurricanes in 2006.

“We’re very happy to have Cory back in our organization,” said Rutherford. “He’s always had a mind for the game and is just a great hockey guy.”

Greg Stefan, 51, rejoins the Hurricanes’ coaching staff as Goalie Coach. A former NHL goaltender with the Detroit Red Wings, Stefan served as Carolina’s goaltending coach from 2005-2007, holding that role when the team captured its first Stanley Cup championship in 2006. Stefan worked as a pro scout for the Hurricanes in 2011-12. Tom Barrasso, who served as an assistant coach for the Hurricanes last season, will remain with the team as a pro scout.

Dave Hunter, who has worked as a part-time amateur scout for Carolina for the past four years, also joins the team as a pro scout. Born in Glasgow, Scotland, but raised in St. Catharines, Ont., Hunter played college hockey at Cornell from 1982-86. Hunter coached high school hockey in Reading, MA, for 13 years, and has served as the head coach at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for two seasons.

– News release

Improbable, late-inning comeback lifts Wolfpack to regional title

Down 7-3 to Vanderbilt in the eighth inning, it appeared that NC State’s baseball season would soon end. But, in front of a raucous sell-out crowd in Raleigh, the Wolfpack scored three runs in the eighth and three runs in the ninth to win the regional by a 9-7 score Monday night. The victory lifts the Pack into a Super Regional in Florida.

Tarran Senay drove in five runs in the miraculous Wolfpack comeback victory over Vanderbilt to advance to the Gainesville Super Regional, Monday night.

A sold out crowd of 3,018 witnessed the Pack (43-18) rally from a 7-3 eighth-inning deficit to eliminate Vanderbilt (35-28). The two teams played to a 1-1 tie through one inning before State grabbed a 3-1 lead in the top third. Vandy came back with five runs in the bottom half to take control, and added another in the fifth to stretch the lead to four. Then the Wolfpack scored three runs in the eighth, and another three in the ninth to secure the win.

NC State advances to its third NCAA Super Regional since 2003. The Wolfpack advanced from the 2003 Wilson (N.C.) Regional, and the 2008 Raleigh Regional with three-straight wins on both occasions.

Senay didn’t enter the game until the seventh, but made an incredible impression over the next three innings. The junior finished the game 2-for-2 with a three-run homer and five RBIs, chopping the Commodore lead to one in the eight, and supplying the game-winning hit in the ninth.

Reliever Ryan Wilkins (5-2) scored his second win of the weekend, this time on the longest outing of his career, shutting out Vanderbilt for 4 2/3 innings and striking out six.

Trea Turner went 3-for-6 with one RBI, one run, and a stolen base to improve to 56-for-60 on the season. Danny Canela drove in one and scored once in a 2-for-6 performance. Senior captain Andrew Ciencin continued his torrid regional performance with a 2-for-5 evening and an RBI. Logan Ratledge hit a double and scored twice in a 1-for-4 outing.

NC State grabbed a 1-0 lead in the top of the first. Turner led off the game with an infield single on a liner rocketed off of the pitcher’s hip. A bunt moved him to second, and a groundball pushed him to third with two away. Canela lifted a flare over the third baseman’s head that dropped fair to plate the game’s opening run.

Vanderbilt answered to tie the game 1-1 on Mike Yastrzemski’s one-out, solo shot to right center in the bottom first.

State managed a pair of runs in the third to jump ahead 3-1 thanks to some costly Commodore errors. Chris Diaz walked as the lead-off, but a swinging strikeout put one away. Canela singled to the left center gap, holding after Jack Lupo made a sliding play to save a double and a run. With runners on the corners, Ciencin hit a dribbler to the left side that the third baseman booted, scoring one. Fincher bunted and reached on a fielding error by the pitcher. Brett Austin grounded to short with the bases loaded, but beat the throw to break up a potentially inning-ending double play and drive in the third run.

The Commodores exploded for five runs in the third to leap in front 6-3. Tony Kemp doubled to left center as the lead-off, and Yastrzemski hit an RBI single up the middle before stealing second and moving to third on a groundout. Conrad Gregor drove him in with a single to center, then took second on a wild pitch. Spencer Navin walked to put two on with one out. Riley Reynolds singled to center to load the bases. Gregor scored and both runners moved into scoring position on a wild pitch. A grounder to short produced the second out as Diaz fired home in time to get the lead runner, but Connor Castellano drove in the next two with a double to the wall in center.

Vanderbilt added to the lead with a run in the fifth to make it 7-3. Navin took a pitch in the shoulder to start the inning, advanced to second on a wild pitch, and went to third on a sac bunt. Connor Harrell walked to put runners on the corners with one out. Castellano hooked a double into the right field corner to score Navin, but Harrell was gunned down on a relay from Austin to Bergquist to Canela, putting a stop to the rally.

The Pack electrified the crowd in the top eighth by cutting the lead to 7-6. Austin drew a lead off walk and Ratledge sent a laser down the left field line for a double to put two in scoring position. Senay came to the plate next, and put a charge into a 3-2 pitch, blasting it miles into the trees behind the right field fence for a three-run homer. Reliever Will Clinard entered after a two-out single by Ryan Mathews and ended the inning on the first batter he faced.

In the ninth, State triumphed with three runs to put the game away. Ciencin led off the inning with a single up the middle, and Bryan Adametz took his place as the pinch runner. Fincher laid down a sac bunt to push him to second, and reached when the throw to first hit him in the hand. A groundout to first advanced both runners into scoring position, and Ratledge was walked to load the bases. Senay took center stage once again, delivering the game-winning hit to score a pair with one out. Turner singled behind him to add the insurance run and set the final at 9-7.

NC State advances to the Gainesville Super Regional beginning Saturday, June 9 at 2 p.m. The Wolfpack will need to win a best-of-three series against host Florida to advance to its first College World Series since 1968. Games one and two will be aired on ESPNU, and if necessary game three will be carried by ESPN2. Radio coverage for the super regional will be provided by 88.1 WKNC, fans can follow Twitter updates from @NCStateBaseball, and live stats will be available at GoPack.com.

– News release

Tar Heels’ baseball season comes to a disappointing end

St. John’s came up with enough timely hits and solid pitching to win their first regional title in three decades.

The Red Storm also handed No. 6 national seed North Carolina a surprising early exit from the NCAA tournament.

Frank Schwindel had five hits and pinch-hitter Robert Case had a two-run double in the seventh to help St. John’s beat North Carolina 9-5 on Sunday night to win the Chapel Hill Regional and advance to the super regionals for the first time.

Schwindel and regional MVP Jeremy Baltz scored three runs for the third-seeded Red Storm (40-21), who went unbeaten in the regional. That included a pair of wins against the host and No. 6 national seed Tar Heels (46-16), who entered the weekend with 15 straight wins as a regional host.

“This is unbelievable,” shortstop Matt Wessinger said. “I knew we had a good team to come to this point and win a regional. This is probably the biggest moment in my career here for the program. … We can play with about anybody in the country. I think we showed that today.”

St. John’s went ahead for good with a three-run third, advancing out of the regionals for the first time since reaching the College World Series in 1980 with a team that featured future big league All-Star pitchers Frank Viola and John Franco. The Red Storm hadn’t reached a super regional since the format began in 1999.

After beating East Carolina in Friday’s opener, St. John’s beat North Carolina on Saturday night on Danny Bethea’s walk-off three-run homer. The Tar Heels beat instate rival East Carolina 5-3 earlier Sunday to earn the rematch, but the Red Storm jumped on starter Shane Taylor (5-1) to build some early momentum.

They went ahead for good when Sean O’Hare hit a two-run single that took an odd hop and bounced over second baseman Tommy Coyle, then Baltz stole home on a double steal. In the seventh, Case’s RBI double pushed the lead to 7-4. And after North Carolina loaded the bases with one out in the seventh only to come away with a single run, St. John’s increased the lead with a pair of ninth-inning scores that essentially sealed the win.

“The ball bounced our way, no doubt about it,” St. John’s coach Ed Blankmeyer said. “It just wasn’t their weekend. The kids played their guts out, they made some mistakes, we took advantage. But we played well. We outplayed them this weekend.”

Matt Carasiti (7-5) earned the win, allowing four runs and six hits in 5 1/3 innings. Taylor lasted just two innings and gave up four runs on seven hits.

Chaz Frank drove in two runs to lead North Carolina, which had reached the College World Series in five of the past six seasons. The Tar Heels had opened the regionals at home each time they reached Omaha, but couldn’t repeat that success this time.

“Maybe now people will realize how hard it is to get to Omaha and realize what Coach (Mike Fox) and the program have done over the past seven years,” UNC senior catcher Jacob Stallings said. “I mean, I guess the other (UNC) teams have made it look easy, but it’s not easy.”

– News release

Wolfpack forces regional championship game Monday night

Matt Bergquist’s eighth-inning heroics propelled NC State to a 6-5 win over Vanderbilt Sunday night at Doak Field at Dail Park to stave off elimination and force a Monday night championship game at 7 p.m.

Ryan Mathews handed the Pack (42-18) a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the first with a solo shot, and State added two more on a Trea Turner home run in the third to build a 3-0 lead. Vanderbilt (35-27) broke the seal in the fourth with a run, but the Wolfpack responded with runs in the fourth and fifth to leap ahead 5-1. The Commodores chopped that lead in half with two runs in the sixth, then tied the game with two more in the seventh, but Bergquist came up with the pivotal hit in the eighth to set the final at 6-5.

Bergquist went 2-for-3 with a double, an RBI, and a run, putting a stamp on a huge day for the junior. In two games Sunday, Bergquist pieced together a 5-for-8 afternoon with a home run and seven RBIs. Danny Canela and Brett Austin had the Pack’s two other multi-hit games, each going 2-for-4 with Austin driving in one and scoring the game-winning run.

Mathews hit his 17th homer of the year to put the Wolfpack on top in the first, his ninth in the last 14 games and third of the Raleigh regional. Turner’s two-run shot represented his fifth of the season.

NC State starter Anthony Tzamtzis went 6 2/3 innings, the second-longest outing of his career, striking out five batters while allowing four earned for a no decision. Reliever Ryan Wilkins (4-2) scored the win with two shutout innings to seal the deal, holding the Commodores to one hit and striking out two in the ninth.

Vanderbilt starter Kevin Ziomek lasted 3 1/3 innings and left with the loss, but came away with a no decision. Ziomek surrendered four earned on five hits and two walks while striking out four. Reliever Drew VerHagen pitched the next four innings, giving up two earned on five hits. Will Clinard shut out the Pack over the final 2/3.

The Wolfpack improved its run total to 47 for the regional, good for a school record in NCAA postseason play. State scored in 10 of its first 13 innings at bat in the two games Sunday.

For the second time Saturday, NC State scored in the bottom of the first. Mathews granted the Pack a 1-0 lead with a solo shot to left, his 17th of the year and third of the Raleigh regional. Vanderbilt threatened to answer with a run in the second, but Tzamtzis gunned a 3-2 pitch past Connor Castellano to end the inning with runners on second and third.

The Pack added two more in the third on Turner’s two-run blast. Bergquist led off the inning with a walk, then Turner sent a 1-1 pitch sailing over the left field wall with a towering shot that seemed to hang for a lifetime. State put two on with one out, but Ziomek killed the rally by striking out a pair to end the threat.

Vanderbilt broke through in the fourth to cut the lead to 3-1. Conrad Gregor doubled to the wall in right center with one away, then advanced to third on a passed ball. Spencer Navin’s sac fly brought in the Commodores first run of the game.

The Wolfpack came back with one run in the fourth and fifth. Logan Ratledge came aboard with a one-out double in the fourth. Bergquist followed him with a double that fell in front of the charging right fielder, and an errant relay throw allowed Ratledge to score. In the fifth, Austin hit an RBI single with two outs, bringing Andrew Ciencin home from second.

The Commodores cut the lead in half with two runs in the sixth. Tony Kemp drew a walk as the lead-off, and scored one batter later when Mike Yastrzemski tripled on a screamer down the right field line that just missed Ciencin’s glove on the way out of the infield. Yastrzemski scored on a groundout by the next batter. Vandy kept the pressure up, putting two in scoring position with one away, but Tzamtzis induced a foul pop and a fly out to preserve the 5-3 lead.

Vanderbilt tied the game 5-5 with another two in the seventh. Castellano led off with a single to left, moved to second on a groundout, and took third on a wild pitch. Kemp walked, then stole second to put two in scoring position with one out. Yastrzemski grounded out to score the first run, and Anthony Gomez doubled down the left field line to tie it. Reliever Travis Orwig entered after the double and induced a grounder from the only batter he faced, ending the inning.

In the eighth, the Commodores looked to take the lead, but a key defensive play kept the score deadlocked. Navin singled through the left side as the lead-off, and Riley Reynolds pushed him into scoring position with a bouncer to second. With one out, Turner fielded a grounder at third and fired across the diamond to get the second out. On the throw, Navin made his move for third, but Ciencin picked Turner’s throw and winged the relay back to third in time for a 5-3-5 double play.

The Pack carried that momentum into the bottom half to secure the win. Austin reached on a single up the middle, and a hit batsman to put Ratledge on behind him. Bergquist came up with the clutch RBI single to left, Austin beat the throw home, and Ratledge wheeled into third. Ratledge tried to score on a chopper to the right side during the next play, but was tagged out at the plate.

That insurance run turned out to be moot, as Wilkins rolled through the ninth in order, striking out the first and last batters of the inning.

NC State returns to the diamond Monday night at 7 p.m. for the Raleigh regional championship game. The winner of tomorrow’s contest will advance to the super regionals in Gainesville, Fla. against the homestanding Gators. Streaming coverage of Monday’s game will be linked to GoPack.com. Radio will be provided by 88.1 WKNC, fans can follow Twitter updates from @NCStateBaseball, and live stats will be available at GoPack.com.

Pack, Heels win elimination games against in-state teams

Both North Carolina and NC State won elimination games against non-ACC in-state teams.

NC State survived its first elimination game Sunday at Doak Field at Dail Park, racing past UNC Wilmington 17-5 with seven runs in the fourth inning and six RBIs from Matt Bergquist.

Meanwhile, North Carolina staved off elimination with a 5-3 victory over East Carolina as freshman righthander Benton Moss held ECU to one run and six hits over six-plus innings.

State loses big lead and faces elimination game vs. UNC-W

NC State took an 8-3 lead into the bottom of the eighth, but saw it evaporate over the final two innings, dropping a 9-8 heartbreaker in walk-off fashion to Vanderbilt in the winners’ bracket of the Raleigh Regional, Saturday at Doak Field at Dail Park.

The Wolfpack (40-18) was designated the visiting team on a coin flip on Friday night. Vanderbilt (35-26) grabbed a 1-0 lead in the second before falling behind 6-1 heading into the bottom seventh after three-straight run-producing innings from the Pack. The Commodores made it 6-3 in the bottom seventh, then lost those two runs on Ryan Mathews’s two-run homer in the top eighth. Trailing 8-3, Vanderbilt tied the game at 8-8 with a five-run eighth, before walking off with the win on a run in the ninth.

Mathews scored twice and drove in two with a monstrous 3-for-5, one home run, one double performance. The redshirt senior sits 6-for-10 with two homers, six RBIs, and five runs through two games at the Raleigh Regional. Starter Carlos Rodon (9-0) ended up with a no decision after three earned over 6 2/3 innings with six strikeouts. Rodon’s 132 strikeouts for the season represents the fourth-most in program history.

Jake Fincher went 3-for-5 with an RBI triple and a run scored. Fincher’s triple marked his sixth of the season, which breaks the NC State freshman record previously held by Louie Meadows (1980) and Tom Sergio (1994).

Brett Austin plated two runs and scored once in a 2-for-4 outing with a double. Andrew Ciencin doubled as well for an RBI in his 2-for-4 game. Danny Canela went 0-for-1 at the plate, but drew four walks and scored twice. Logan Ratledge hit the Pack’s other double in a 2-for-4 evening with one run.

Commodore starter Sam Selman pitched 5 1/3 innings, allowing four earned on six hits for a no decision. Reliever Jared Miller (3-0) claimed the win on 1 1/3 scoreless innings to finish the game.

Vanderbilt took a 1-0 lead in the bottom of the second, moments after Selman worked his way out of a bases loaded, one-out jam in the top half. Jack Lupo hit a one-out double to the wall in right center and advanced to third on a passed ball. Andrew Harris legged out a bunt single to squeeze Lupo home. Rodon escaped with the bases loaded two batters latter by inducing a pop up to short.

The Wolfpack tied the game 1-1 in the fifth. Ratledge led off the inning with a single to left. Matt Bergquist walked behind him to push the tying run to second. Trea Turner bunted the pair over, and Chris Diaz grounded to short to plate Ratledge.

State grabbed a 4-1 lead with three runs in the sixth. Canela led off his second inning of the game with a walk, then moved to second on Ciencin’s sac bunt. Austin lifted a fly to shallow right center, which dropped in for a double to score Canela. Fincher followed with his sixth triple of the year, a bullet to the wall in left center to drive in Austin. One pitch later, a balk brought in Fincher to grant the Pack a three-run lead.

The Pack added a pair in the seventh to make it 6-1. Mathews got the inning going with a one-out double down the left field line. After a free pass to Canela and a wild pitch, State had runners on the corners with one out. A dropped foul ball by the catcher gave Ciencin another chance, and he took advantage by driving an RBI single to left. Austin followed with an RBI single to right to push the lead to five. Vanderbilt limited the damage by tagging out Ciencin at the plate one batter later on an attempted squeeze.

Vandy narrowed the margin to 6-3 in the bottom seventh. Tony Kemp took a pitch in the elbow to lead off, then stole second. Mike Yastrzemski doubled down the right field line to score him one batter later. A pair of groundouts to the right side brought Yastrzemski home. Rodon left the game after walking Spencer Navin in the next at-bat, but reliever Ryan Wilkins struck out the first batter he faced to put a cork in the inning.

State recouped those two runs in the eighth on a two-run homer from Mathews. Turner set the table with a one-out single through the right side, then Mathews stepped on a 2-2 pitch, depositing it over the left field fence for his 16th of the year and second of the regional.

The Commodores roared back with five runs in the eighth to knot the score 8-8. Pinch hitter Connor Castellano got the inning starting by being hit by a pitch with one out. Another pinch hitter, Riley Reynolds doubled to right center to score him. A fly ball represented the second out, then the flood gates opened. A wild pitch on a third strike helped Yastrzemski keep the inning alive. Anthony Gomez hit an RBI single up the middle. Conrad Gregor hit a ground-rule double into the Wolfpack bullpen to score another. With two in scoring position, a wild pitch scored Gomez, and an error on the flip to home let Gregor across to tie the game.

In the decisive ninth, Castellano reached with a one-out single, then advanced to second on a wild pitch. Reynolds grounded out to the right side to push him closer with two away. Kemp hit the walk-off, RBI single to center on an 0-1 pitch.

NC State faces a do-or-die situation beginning tomorrow with a 1 p.m. elimination game against UNC Wilmington. If the Pack prevails, it will return to the field at 6 p.m. for a rematch with Vanderbilt. Streaming coverage for the entire Raleigh regional will be linked from GoPack.com. Radio coverage will be provided for the Wolfpack’s games by 88.1 WKNC, fans can follow Twitter updates from @NCStateBaseball, and live stats will be available on GoPack.com.

UNC hosts ECU in elimination NCAA tournament game

Danny Bethea hit a walk-off three-run homer to help St. John’s stun North Carolina 5-4 on Saturday night.

Bethea’s shot sent Red Storm players spilling onto the field to celebrate at home plate. St. John’s (39-21) can reach the NCAA tournament’s super regionals with a win Sunday night.

North Carolina (45-15), the No. 6 national seed, appeared on its way to its 17th straight win as a regional host thanks to a two-run homer from Shell McCain and a strong performance from starter Kent Emanuel. But Jeremy Baltz had a leadoff double against reliever Michael Morin (6-4) in the ninth, then Sean O’Hare reached on an infield hit to set up Bethea’s homer.

Emanuel allowed five hits and two runs in eight innings for the Tar Heels, the top seed in the Chapel Hill Regional. St. John’s starter Sean Hagan allowed eight hits and four runs in 8 1/3 innings.

The third-seeded Red Storm led 2-1 until McCain followed a double from Tommy Coyle by knocking Hagan’s first pitch over the left-field wall in the sixth. The Tar Heels increased the lead to 4-2 in the ninth when Parks Jordan sent an RBI double down the right-field line.

North Carolina opted to pull Emanuel after 102 pitches for Morin, who had tied a school single-season record with his 18th save Friday against Cornell.

The Tar Heels face second-seeded East Carolina in an elimination game Sunday.

– News release

West Chester shuts out Delta State to win Division II tourney in Cary

Tournament Most Outstanding Player Joe Gunkel tossed his second complete game shutout of the National Finals as West Chester University captured its first-ever NCAA Division II Baseball National Championship with a 9-0 victory over Delta State University in the Championship Game of the 2012 NCAA Division II Baseball National Finals Saturday at USA Baseball National Training Center in Cary.

The Rams gave Gunkel all the run support he needed with a five-run first inning as the Rams went unbeaten in the NCAA Tournament and ended the season with 12 consecutive wins. The NCAA II Baseball National Finals are co-hosted by Town of Cary and Mount Olive College.

A crowd of 2,663 was on hand for the championship game, the largest NCAA II Baseball National Finals attendance since the tournament came to Cary in 2009.

West Chester (46-10) placed five players on the All-Tournament Team. Joining Gunkel were infielders Joe Wendle and Josh Heyne, along with outfielders Jack Provine and Mike Raimo. Delta State (49-15) was represented by infielder Tyler Aldridge and outfielders Jordan Chovanec and Michael Vinson. Rounding out the All-Tournament Team were outfielder Mike Eckhart and pitcher Tyler Ockuly of Minnesota State, and Catawba infielder Julio Zubillaga.

Three walks and three hits enabled West Chester’s first six batters to reach base in the bottom of the first. Raimo drew a leadoff walk and Provine followed with a double down the left field line. Wendle drew a four-pitch walk to load the bases.

Chris Pula lifted a fly ball to shallow right field that dropped in between the Delta State first baseman, second baseman and right fielder to drive in the first run of the game. Justin Lamborn drew a bases loaded walk to make it a 2-0 game.

Matt Baer followed with a looper just over the third baseman as both Provine and Wendle scored to extend the Rams’ lead to 4-0. Delta State reliever Ricky Winters took over for starter Colton Mitchell and struck out the first batter looking for the first out of the inning. Heyne followed with a single to left and Lamborn scored from second to give West Chester a 5-0 lead.

Winters retired the next two batters as the Rams sent 11 batters to the plate in the inning.

One-out doubles led to single runs in the second and third innings as West Chester extended its lead to 7-0. Wendle doubled down the right field line in the second and scored on Dula’s single up the middle. In the bottom of the third, Matt Kirchner doubled down the left field line and beat the throw to the plate on Raimo’s line single down the right field line.

The Rams completed the scoring in the bottom of the fifth as Kirchner scored from second on Heyne’s single through the right side. Heyne came all the way home when the ball was misplayed in right field and went all the way to the wall.

Gunkel (10-1) withstood two hit batsmen and a walk in the first two innings before allowing a leadoff single to Chovanec in the top of the third. Gunkel had taken a no-hitter into the ninth inning in West Chester’s tournament opener against Chico State one week earlier.

Gunkel allowed baserunners in each of the first five innings before recording his first 1-2-3 inning in the sixth. Delta State stranded seven runners in the first five innings and West Chester turned an inning-ending 4-6-3 double play in the fourth. The Rams also turned a double play in the eighth when Raimo caught a fly ball near the warning track in center and the relay from Heyne to Wendle got the Delta State runner trying to tag and advance to second.

In the top of the ninth, Gunkel retired the first two batters on groundouts before Brent Kakwitch singled to delay the West Chester celebration. But Gunkel ended the game on a fly out to right field and Rams players “dogpiled” on the infield grass.

Gunkel finished with a five-hitter, all singles. He recorded one strikeout and threw 116 pitches.

The shutout was the eighth in the national championship game in the 44-year history of the NCAA II Baseball National Finals and the first since 1996.

West Chester becomes the northernmost school to win the national championship. Eastern Illinois set the previous geographical record in 1969, the second year of the championship.

Including the Atlantic Regional, West Chester posted a perfect 8-0 record in the 2012 NCAA Division II Baseball Championship. The Rams outscored their four opponents in the National Finals by a margin of 28-8.

Post-Game Quotes
“Getting that five spot changes the course of the game. It limits some of the things they want to do and like to do a little bit. We had some mishit balls that fell and when you play one single baseball game, if you get some of those things, good things can happen to you.”
West Chester head coach Jad Prachniak

“All year we’ve been talking about shutdown innings after our team scores. You want to go out there and throw the ball so they can hit it to our defense. All the credit should go to them. I was just the one throwing the ball, they were the ones making the plays.”
West Chester pitcher and National Finals Most Outstanding Player Joe Gunkel

“My face hurt a little bit after getting slammed into the ground. Being on the bottom of the dogpile was probably one of the most painful but best feelings ever in the world.”
West Chester pitcher Joe Gunkel

“I don’t know if anything went right for us, right from the very start. And they took advantage of that. Down 5-0 in the first, down 7-0 in the third against the guy they had on the mound is not where you want to be. I’m very aware we only had one strikeout, but that’s what he (West Chester pitcher Joe Gunkel) does, he pounds the strike zone. We were just plagued too much here by hitting too many balls in the air, too many routine outs. But credit to him, that’s what he does. He fills the strike zone up, he’s big and strong, he challenges you with the fastball, and he was very good in this tournament and well deserving of the MVP.”
Delta State head coach Mike Kinnison

“You’ve got to give credit to West Chester. They played well throughout the whole game. We’ve had luck all year coming back from behind, but it just ran out.”
Delta State catcher Jon Carnahan