Series Preview: Florida looking to pull off massive upset versus No. 1 Tennessee Volunteers

Florida’s chance to upset the Volunteers this weekend after Hunter Barco was ruled out with elbow discomfort.

Florida baseball and head coach [autotag]Kevin O’Sullivan[/autotag] received a devastating blow on Wednesday when Kendall Rodgers of D1Baseball reported that ace [autotag]Hunter Barco[/autotag] will be out indefinitely with elbow discomfort. The absence of its star pitcher will make the Gators’ attempt to pull a massive upset over the No. 1 Tennessee Volunteers much more difficult. The series kicks off Friday at 6:30 p.m. EDT at the newly named Condron Ballpark. Graham Hall of the Gainesville Sun reported that Florida Ballpark is renamed after Gary Condron, the largest donor in Gator Boosters history.

In Barco’s place, O’Sullivan announced that reliever [autotag]Ryan Slater[/autotag] will start Friday. Then [autotag]Brandon Sproat[/autotag] and [autotag]Brandon Neely[/autotag] will take the mound first on Saturday and Sunday.

The Volunteers are rolling currently and have only dropped one game so far in SEC play. They enter this weekend holding an outstanding 34-3 record. Tennessee also holds the NCAA lead for most dingers with 88.

Florida’s pitching staff will need to have its best stuff if it wants to pull off the series upset.

Florida falters down the stretch vs Vandy, drops weekend series

The Gators were swinging some mightly lumber early on led by BT Riopelle but the pitching completely sputtered.

Florida baseball continued to find ways to seize defeat from the jaws of victory in Southeastern Conference play on Saturday night, surrendering an early lead and ultimately losing in Nashville to the Vanderbilt Commodores, 8-6. The Gators brought the bats in the second game of the weekend series, crushing four dingers — including three by catcher [autotag]BT Riopelle[/autotag] — but simply did not have the pitching needed to keep the team buoyant during a middle-inning push by the opposition.

The first inning was quiet for both teams, but Riopelle led off the second with his first dinger of the day against starter Carter Holton for a 1-0 lead. Gators starter [autotag]Brandon Sproat[/autotag] kept the ‘Dores off the board for the opening three frames, going 1-2-3 in the first and third innings while escaping a leadoff hit and a follow-up walk in the second inning.

Florida struck again in the top of the third, landing three runs on a majestic opposite-field two-run Riopelle homer and a [autotag]Josh Rivera[/autotag] round-tripper a batter later; [autotag]Kendrick Calilao[/autotag] gave the ball a good run himself between the two. Vandy would answer in the bottom half with a leadoff solo home run by Dominic Keegan to get on the board and make it a 4-1 game, signaling the turning point for the Commodores.

The home team added another in the fifth inning and then exploded in the sixth, knocking Sproat out of the game after 5 2/3 innings having given up eight hits and six earned runs — thanks in large part to inherited runners scoring off [autotag]Tyler Nesbitt[/autotag] after his departure. Vanderbilt took a 6-4 lead into the seventh and would not trail again.

The Gators were able to tie things up in the top of the following frame thanks to Riopelle’s third dong — another two-run shot — that gave the Orange and Blue some hope. However, Nesbitt got in trouble, and [autotag]Kevin O’Sullivan[/autotag] turned to his most trusted reliever [autotag]Blake Purnell[/autotag] to put out the fire. My friends, I regret to tell you that this story does not end like you hoped, as the sidearmer allowed a runner across the plate and gave the ‘Dores a lead they would not relinquish.

Vanderbilt added an insurance run in the bottom of the eighth off [autotag]Ryan Slater[/autotag] before closing things out in the ninth for the win. The two teams meet tomorrow at 1 p.m. EDT on ESPN2 as the Gators try to prevent another SEC road sweep.

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Gators drop series opener to Vanderbilt in walk-off fashion

Florida’s pitching woes continue in a heartbreaking walk-off loss to Vanderbilt on Friday.

Florida baseball kicked off the Passover-Easter weekend series against the Vanderbilt Commodores in Nashville on Friday night with a heartbreaking 5-4 walk-off loss. The Gators held an early advantage but simply could not hold on for a full nine innings.

[autotag]Jud Fabian[/autotag] got things started early with a two-run homer following a lead-off full-count walk drawn by [autotag]Colby Halter[/autotag] to open the game. The round-tripper was the center fielder’s 14th of the season and fifth in SEC play, giving the Gators an early lead.

[autotag]Hunter Barco[/autotag] took the rubber for Florida and could not keep the ‘Dores off the board in the bottom of the first frame, allowing three straight singles that plated a run after striking out the first two batters he faced. He escaped further damage by sending down the sixth batter he saw swinging.

The second inning went quietly for the Gators, as [autotag]Josh Rivera[/autotag] drew a walk after a leadoff lineout by [autotag]Kendrick Calilao[/autotag] that was erased by a double play grounded into by [autotag]Mac Guscette[/autotag]. Vandy, however, tied things up in a 1-0 count with a deep drive to left by Calvin Hewett. Barco buckled down afterward to get the next two outs before a walk and an error on a pickoff attempt put the pitcher in peril but he escaped the jam with a groundout.

[autotag]Kevin O’Sullivan[/autotag] said that Barco was coming off being sick and looked “a little run down” early, so he put [autotag]Nick Ficarrotta[/autotag] in to start the third. A harmless single was all the Commodores could muster, and Florida reclaimed the lead in the top of the fourth. Calilao drove in [autotag]Wyatt Langford[/autotag], who opened the inning up with a double and moved over to third on a [autotag]BT Riopelle[/autotag] fly ball to right.

Vanderbilt’s starter, Chris McElvain, was pulled after a [autotag]Deric Fabian[/autotag] single in the top of the fifth for sophomore right-hander Patrick Reilly. Langford eventually brought Fabian home on a single, but Reilly kept Florida quiet through the remainder of the frame.

Ficarrotta came back out for the sixth but four innings of relief was too much to ask for. A four-pitch walk was followed by a single and a sacrifice bunt, and then O’Sullivan brought in [autotag]Phillip Abner[/autotag] to face a single batter. A sac fly to center brought the score to 4-3, and in came [autotag]Ryan Slater[/autotag] to close things out with a strikeout. Unfortunately, Riopelle let a ball go under his legs and to the backstop allowing the tying run to come in without a base hit.

Each team left two runners on base in the seventh, and Florida made yet another pitching change. This time it was the Gators’ ace-in-the-hole [autotag]Blake Purnell[/autotag] for his 20th appearance of the season. The Commodores brought in junior Thomas Schultz in the eighth to counter.

The game threatened to go into extras, but Sully once again leaned too hard on one of his best relievers. Purnell didn’t get single out in the bottom of the ninth thanks to a throwing error by Rivera. An intentional walk loaded the bases, and Jack Bulger sent the fans home happy with a game-winning single into right-center.

The loss isn’t Purnell’s fault and it’s not the first time he’s been left stranded on the mound with no options to bail him out. Pitching depth continues to be a huge problem for this club and Sully continues to misjudge the stamina of his top bullpen arms.

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Gators baseball drops series opener to Georgia in walk-off fashion

Well… Florida almost came back and held on to win this one. Dawgs take Game 1 on a walk-off double.

Everything fell apart for Florida in the ninth inning against Georgia on Thursday night.

The Gators entered the final frame of the evening with a two-run lead courtesy of a Jud Fabian two-run homer in the top of the inning, but that lead would be short-lived. [autotag]Kevin O’Sullivan[/autotag] turned to [autotag]Blake Purnell[/autotag] for the final out of the game and Georgia’s bats came to life. Garrett Blaylock singled home a run to cut the lead to 6-5 before Josh McAllister ripped a double down the left-field line that brought in the winning run. Gators lose, 7-6.

UF played catch-up all night after Hunter Barco allowed two first-inning runs on four consecutive hits, including a leadoff home run. He settled down after surrendering the early lead and managed to rack up six strikeouts before turning the ball over after five innings. Barco was in line for the loss but wound up getting a no-decision after [autotag]Mac Guscette[/autotag] lifted his own two-run shot over the fence — the first homer of his career.

[autotag]Ryan Slater[/autotag] took over for Barco in relief and went 3 2/3 innings. He was charged with two of the three runs that scored in the ninth, but Purnell eats the loss on the stat sheet.

The Orange and Blue have now dropped three-straight games against conference opponents dating back to the LSU series and it’s clear that UF’s pitching is being stretched thin right now. Purnell threw 44 pitches against FSU on Thursday, which would normally earn him two days of rest at a minimum. Florida found itself in a jam late against Georgia and called his name one too many times.

It was good to see the Gators fight back from being down 2-0 and 4-2, but they couldn’t hold on to a series-opening win that would have meant a lot to the program. On Friday, the Bulldogs have Jonathan Cannon on the mound, a top-75 MLB draft prospect, so things aren’t going to get any easier for the Gators.

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