For the first time in school history, West Virginia baseball will advance to the Super Regional round, sweeping through the NCAA Tournament's Tucson Regional at Hi Corbett Field in rather dominant fashion.

Behind 17 hits, the third-seeded Mountaineers defeated fourth-seeded Grand Canyon 10-6 in the regional finale Sunday night, capping off a six-game showcase on the diamond that also included Dallas Baptist and host Arizona.

“Winning here (at West Virginia) means a lot to a lot of people,” WVU head coach Randy Mazey said following the win. “We’re not blessed with pro teams in our state.

“To win a regional like this, we represent a ton of people, not just our university and our community, but 1.8 million people in the state of West Virginia that I know are really, really proud of all of these guys right now and what they accomplished.”

The Mountaineers victory ensures that Randy Mazey, who announced that he will retire following the season, will have at least another round to coach his team. Mazey himself throughout his coaching career has been to Super Regional rounds, but said that he wants to make sure his team gets to experience something that they haven’t experienced before, including the College World Series.

“I’m motivated by them,” Mazey said about his team.

Sophomore catcher Logan Suave led West Virginia in the regional-clinching victory, logging three hits and three RBIs.

WVU (36-22) came out with their bats on fire Sunday night, scoring eight runs off of 10 hits in the first three innings to take a convincing 8-3 advantage early.

Right-handed pitcher Aidan Major, who replaced righty starter Hayden Cooper early in the first inning after Cooper ran into trouble allowing two runs, helped steady the ship in relief, only allowing one earned run in 4.2 innings. Major, along with righty Carson Estridge, excelled for the Mountaineers, combining for six strikeouts and only allowing two earned runs through 8.1 innings.

After struggling to find his groove offensively the past two games, WVU star JJ Wetherholt, a projected top MLB draft pick, showed up with his bat when it mattered most, recording three hits to help secure the victory.

In the bottom of the 8th inning, the shortstop Wetherholt, as he did a great deal throughout the weekend, showcased his elite fielding prowess, diving for a ground ball before pirouetting his body to make an impressive throw for an out at first.

“That’s the best play I’ve ever seen him make,” Major said. “In my opinion, that play, being able to make that at that time, really sealed the game. It took the last wind out of the sails for (the Antelopes). There’s only a few guys that can make that play and he’s one of them.”

GCU was able to make some noise late in 9th inning, with sophomore first basemen Zach Yorke hitting a two-run home run to cut the lead to four, prompting the Mountaineers to insert lefty Derek Clark. Clark threw 101 pitches two days prior and was never supposed to be able to be put in Sunday, according to Mazey, but he delivered in the clutch to close out the regional.

“We rolled all the cards out on the table,” Mazey said. “(Derek) was ready, and he’s a guy that can throw a lot of pitches.”

West Virginia will play the winner of the still to-be-decided regional in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Top seed North Carolina and second-seed LSU, the defending national champion, play Monday at 3 p.m. to determine which team will advance.

Despite the loss for GCU (36-25), which also made program history this weekend by winning its first NCAA Tournament Division I regional game, the Lopes are holding their heads high following what was an historic season for the program.

“To thinking our season was done and then to be able to come to a regional and kind of do what we do," senior Tyler Wilson said. "I know we didn’t end on the best note but I’m just so proud of my team and the way we fought all tournament.

"There was no quit in us.”

With the monumental feat for the school, head coach Gregg Wallis and his team will take the strides made from this year and try to build off of it heading into next season.

“These guys have set a new standard for us, so we know what it feels like to be playing in a regional championship and hopefully that’s the standard that lives on at Grand Canyon in the future,” Wallis said.

Grand Canyon baseball coach Gregg Wallis and Tyler Wilson, Cade Verdusco speak on June 2, 2024, after the Antelopes fell 10-6 to West Virginia in the final game of the 2024 NCAA Baseball Tournament Tucson Regional at Hi Corbett Field. (Video courtesy Arizona Athletics)

West Virginia baseball coach Randy Mazey looks on from the WVU dugout early on in his team’s 10-6 win over Grand Canyon Sunday at Hi Corbett Field as part of the NCAA Tournament’s Tucson Regional. WVU went 3-0 in the regional and advances to the NCAA Super Regionals for the first time in program history.


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