Stanford eliminates 2002 CWS finalist South Carolina
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -- Stanford's Danny Putnam said he just wanted a
couple of hits in Tuesday's elimination game against South Carolina
at the College World Series.
He did a lot better than that.
Putnam went 4-for-5 with a homer, double and five RBIs as the
Cardinal stayed alive with a 13-6 victory.
"On those little questionnaires of what's your best baseball
experience, this might go down as one of them," Putnam said.
The Cardinal (48-16) will play unbeaten Cal State Fullerton on
Wednesday.
The Gamecocks (45-22), who lost to Texas in last year's national
championship game, were eliminated after going 1-2 at the CWS.
Stanford had 17 hits, the most allowed by the Gamecocks this
season.
Putnam drove in a run with a first-inning single, another with a
third-inning double, two more with a seventh-inning homer and yet
another with a single in the eighth.
Jonny Ash was 3-for-5 with a triple and three RBIs and Carlos
Quentin 3-for-3 with two RBIs as Stanford faced four South Carolina
pitchers.
Putnam, batting .363, said he has benefited all season from
hitting behind Carlos Quentin (.391) and Ryan Garko (.411).
"Those guys are a couple of the best in the country," Putnam
said.
Putnam also had a big day with his glove. The sophomore left
fielder made a tough catch on a ball hit by Justin Harris in the
third inning and took a hit away from Steve Tolleson to end the
sixth.
Putnam's work went a long way to support Stanford starter Ryan
McCally, who pitched six shutout innings and gave up one run before
leaving after the seventh. McCally allowed six hits, walked four
and struck out two in his first start since pitching a
complete-game victory against Illinois-Chicago on May 30 in the
NCAA regionals.
"He was fantastic today," Stanford coach Mark Marquess said.
"For not pitching for two weeks, he had great stuff."
McCally wouldn't necessarily agree.
"That was one of the toughest wins I've ever gotten," he said.
"I was fighting my control, which is usually my strong point. I
didn't have a real go-to pitch. A lot of times, I just said to
myself, 'That one worked last time. I'll throw it again.' "
The Gamecocks left nine runners on base through the first five
innings, largely because of the strong defense backing McCally.
The biggest defensive play was by shortstop Tobin Swope with
Stanford leading 1-0 in the second inning. South Carolina loaded
the bases with one out when Steven Tolleson sent a grounder to
Swope's left. Swope bobbled the ball while fielding it, then
flipped to second baseman Jed Lowrie, who relayed to first for a
double play.
"We hit 12 or 14 balls right on the screws, but they came up
with the plays to keep us off the board," Gamecocks coach Ray
Tanner said. "I wish we could have pushed a few across early. We
had our opportunities. They pushed them across, we didn't."
Stanford opened a 4-0 lead in the third against starter Chris
Hernandez (5-5). Ash and Quentin led off with singles. Putnam
doubled in Ash, then Quentin and Putnam scored on Chris Carter's
single up the middle.
Stanford made it 7-0 in the fourth on Ash's two-run triple and
Quentin's sacrifice fly, and it was 9-0 in the seventh after
Putnam's two-run homer.
In the seventh, South Carolina's Brian Buscher drove a pitch
over the right-center field wall, but the Cardinal scored four more
times in the eighth to make it a 12-run game.
"We really felt good about mounting a rally," Tanner said,
"but once it got to an eight- or nine-run game, that stretched us
out too far."
South Carolina scored four runs in the eighth against Jonny
Dyer, who took over for McCally. David O'Hagan finished, allowing
one run and one hit and striking out two.
The Gamecocks had come into the CWS with a team ERA of 3.27 that
ranked eighth in the nation and the school's best in 21 years.
Opponents were batting just .252 against them.
But South Carolina had a 10.04 ERA in three CWS games as
opponents scored 29 earned runs, 31 overall, and batted .373.
"We didn't pitch as well as we're capable," Tanner said, "and
we met some opponents who can swing the bats. That's going to
happen sometimes when you get to this point. Some people didn't
think we were a great team, but we reached the final six for the
second year in a row. I'm proud of what we accomplished."