After loss, Flashes believe they’ll be back


Associated Press

omaha, neb.

Kent State’s first appearance in the College World Series is over.

The Golden Flashes don’t think it will be their last.

South Carolina’s Michael Roth pitched a two-hitter on Thursday, retiring the last 22 batters he faced in a 4-1 victory over the Flashes.

Kent State finished with 23 wins in 26 games after going 1-2 at the CWS.

“I believe it will just motivate us to get back here and just push us, make us better ballplayers,” first baseman George Roberts said. “That’s all you can ask for.”

The Flashes (47-20) thought they missed their best chance to reach the CWS last year when they lost to Texas in regionals with a roster full of draft picks.

But they won the Mid-American Conference championship, swept through their regional and won a three-game super regional at Oregon to become the first MAC team to make it to Omaha since Eastern Michigan in 1976.

“We have a lot of guys returning next year, and with all of this experience under their belts, it will help them out a lot,” said freshman pitcher Tyler Skulina. “We have a really good class coming in next year for our freshmen. So that’s going to motivate them to want to beat us out for spots and be able to play, so that’s just going to make our team better.”

Kent State lost its CWS opener to Arkansas and eliminated No. 1 national seed Florida before succumbing to Roth, one of the most dominant pitchers in CWS history.

“I think we made a statement that we belong here, and we made a statement that we’re a program that should be recognized nationally, not just regionally,” Kent State coach Scott Stricklin said. “That’s what I’m really proud of.”

The loss to the two-time defending national champion Gamecocks came in a game that had been postponed by rain Wednesday.

Arizona 10, Florida St. 3

OMAHA, Neb.

Arizona converted three Florida State errors into a six-run first inning and advanced to the College World Series finals.

Freshman starter Brandon Leibrandt was pulled after he recorded just one out for the Seminoles, who used eight pitchers to tie a CWS record for a nine-inning game.