As Game Three of the Oxford Super Regional came to a end Sunday afternoon, the floodgates opened on the message boards, text messages, and the blogosphere.
I was as frustrated as anyone, but after a few Fat Tires, some yard work, and a good night’s sleep, I can pen my thoughts with a clear head, instead of one fresh from the heat of the moment.
Nothing said here should cheapen what Virginia did last weekend or what they’ve accomplished all season.
The Cavaliers played a very solid brand of baseball and gutted out two win-or-go-home games to punch their ticket to Omaha. They’re a very solid team top to bottom.
This is an indictment of the way the Rebels played. Certain things jump out at you after the series this weekend.
The painful aspect of the weekend was how poorly the Rebels fared executing mundane fundamentals. The team struggled all weekend with bunting, making the easy play (seven errors?), hitting cut off men, turning double plays, stringing hits together, etc.
The poor execution coupled with UVA’s nearly flawless Saturday and Sunday performances equated to an easy series win for the ‘Hoos.
Here’s what I’ve come up with. Feel free to dispute, agree, ignore, or patronize.
There is no excuse for not winning this Super Regional.
Against Texas in 2005, fans said, “Oh it’s Texas, they always win, and it’s our first Super Regional ever.”
Against Miami in 2006, Miami rolled into town and won. Fans said, “Oh, it’s Miami, they always win.”
Against Arizona State in Tempe in 2007, fans said, “It’s Arizona State, they always win. Plus, we’re on the road.”
None of that applied to Virginia this year. The Cavaliers had never been to a Super Regional before this weekend. They started seven freshmen/sophomores. They almost dropped baseball to a club team several years ago.
The only one of those four losses I can truly stomach is the ASU one. But given how the team lost Game One because Bianco ran Kline back out for the ninth, even that one’s tough to take.
The Miami series in 2006 was inexcusable as well. That was a mediocre Hurricanes team that had no business winning Games Two and Three in Oxford that season.
Firing Mike Bianco is not the answer—at least not yet.
The Ole Miss baseball team has experienced unparalleled success under Bianco’s direction.
The late years of Don Kessinger’s tenure paired with Pat Harrison’s very existence left a very bad situation that Bianco has turned into one of the most successful regular season programs in the country.
To dismiss that as something anyone could step in and emulate is foolish.
Yes, the four super regional losses are tough to swallow, but, quite frankly, Miami is really the only clearly inferior team that the Rebels lost to.
Above all the others, that's














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