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Mihos vs Louisville — 2025 MCWS
3
Louisville LOU 43-24
11
Winner Coastal Carolina CCU 56-11
Louisville LOU
43-24
3
Final
11
Coastal Carolina CCU
56-11
Winner
Score By Periods
Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 R H E
Louisville LOU 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 10 0
Coastal Carolina CCU 6 0 0 0 2 2 0 1 X 11 11 1

W: Eikhoff, Riley (7-2) L: Colton Hartman (2-1)

Game Recap: Baseball |

CCU IN THE CHAMPIONSHIP!: Baseball Advances To Final With 11-3 Win

OMAHA, Neb. — Coastal Carolina advanced to the Men's College World Series finals with a 11-3 victory over Louisville on Wednesday, scoring five of its six first-inning runs before making an out and extending its win streak to 26 games.

The Chanticleers (56-11) will play LSU or Arkansas in the best-of-three finals starting Saturday. They are going for their second national championship in two all-time appearances in Omaha. They won their first in 2016.

Since the College World Series championship became a best-of-three series in 2003, the longest win streak entering the finals is 13 games held by LSU in 2009, according to ESPN Research.

"To do what we did today versus that team, as well coached as that team is, is really amazing," coach Kevin Schnall said. "The Chanticleers are one of two teams in the entire country still playing. It's incredible, but it's not unbelievable. And it's not unbelievable because we've got really good players, really good players."

Louisville (42-24) started left-hander Colton Hartman, primarily a reliever who hadn't appeared in a game since May 17. He didn't last long.

Caden Bodine singled leading off and Sebastian Alexander and Blake Barthol were hit by pitches to load the bases. Walker Mitchell punched a ball into right field to bring in two runs, and then Hartman issued a four-pitch walk.

Out went Hartman (2-1) and in came Jake Schweitzer. Colby Thorndyke greeted him with his second bases-clearing double in two games to make it 5-0. Thorndyke came home on Ty Dooley's one-out single and finished 3 for 4 with five RBI.

"We always preach when the bases are loaded, the pressure is on the pitcher," Thorndyke said. "It's not on the hitter. He's got to throw three strikes. If he throws four balls then it's a run. So we always preach the pressure is on the pitcher."

The Chanticleers padded their lead with Pete Mihos' two-run triple in the fifth and two more runs in the sixth. Coastal Carolina is 43-0 when leading after six innings.

The Chanticleers made an impressive run through their bracket, beating Arizona 7-4 and Oregon State 6-2 before eliminating the Cardinals. They led or were tied all the way through except for a half-inning against Arizona.

"These guys, ooh, they've done it in the last half of the season, in the conference tournament, in the regionals, in supers, in Omaha, against, as we say, the best teams," Louisville coach Dan McDonnell said. "It's impressive what they've done."

Riley Eikhoff (7-2), making his second start in the MCWS, held the Cardinals scoreless until Tague Davis drove an RBI double into the right-center gap in the sixth. Matthew Potok, Hayden Johnson and Dominick Carbone combined for 3 2/3 shutout innings of relief.

"Offense goes out there gives you a big lead, it's big pressure off yourself," Eikhoff said. "You go out there, just do your thing, try and make pitches. I made quite a few pitches today, and the defense made great plays behind me. Without them, the score wouldn't be the same today."

Cardinals ace Patrick Forbes, who pitched 5 1/3 innings in a 4-3 loss to Oregon State on Friday, had asked to be the starter against the Chanticleers on four days' rest, according to ESPN.

Coach Dan McDonnell planned to hold him back for a possible second bracket final against the Chanticleers on Thursday or use him for one inning if needed Wednesday. Hartman's disastrous start all but ended Louisville's hopes of forcing a winner-take-all game.

NOTEBOOK

Early Outburst: Coastal's six-run first was its highest-scoring inning of the MCWS. The first five batters reached safely, and Thorndyke's three-run double capped the rally.

Thorndyke Keeps Rolling: The junior first baseman now has 15 RBIs in the NCAA Tournament and is batting .417 over the MCWS. He has driven in runs in four straight games.

Eikhoff Delivers Again: Eikhoff improved to 7-2, delivering his second strong outing of the postseason. He has allowed three runs or fewer in eight of his last nine starts.

Balanced Attack: All nine Coastal starters reached base at least once. Mihos' triple was his first of the year, and Dooley added his 37th RBI of the season.

Bullpen Locks It Down: Johnson retired all seven batters he faced, and Carbone worked around a walk and a single to close it out. Coastal's bullpen has allowed just two earned runs in 13 MCWS innings.

History Repeating? Coastal returns to the MCWS Final for the first time since its 2016 national championship, when it also won the Conway Regional, swept its Super Regional and won its opening MCWS games before clinching a championship berth.

Next Up: The Chanticleers await the winner of bracket two — Arkansas or LSU. Game 1 of the championship series is set for Saturday at 7 p.m. ET on ESPN.

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