Lugo, Lindsey lead Florida past Oregon State 7-1 in WCWS
By CLIFF BRUNT
AP Sports Writer
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Natalie Lugo pitched six innings of scoreless relief and Cheyenne Lindsey went 3 for 3 to help 14th-seeded Florida beat Oregon State 7-1 on Thursday night in the Women’s College World Series opener for both teams.
Lugo stepped in for starter Lexie Delbrey with the bases loaded and no outs in the second and got out unscathed.
“Get the ball on the ground, let the defense work, things that I already know — those are my goals when I go into situations like that,” Lugo said. “I have one of the best defenses behind me, and I know if I hit my spots, they’re going to get me out of it.”
Lugo (12-5) gave up one hit and struck out six.
“In particular, I felt like all my pitches were working pretty well,” she said. “When the off-speed is on, I feel like I can get a lot of outs pretty quickly, pretty easily, and let my defense work. So that was the game-changer for me personally and what helped.”
Florida (49-17) advanced to play seventh-seeded Oklahoma State — a 4-2 winner over Arizona in the late game — on Saturday. Oregon State (39-21) will face Arizona in an elimination game Friday.
Avery Goelz had two hits and knocked in three runs and Charli Echols hit a solo homer for the Gators (49-17).
Mariah Mazon, a third-team NFCA All-American, did not play. She’s Oregon State’s pitching ace and one of its best hitters.
“The big elephant in the room,” Oregon State coach Laura Berg said. “No, I cannot say why she was not here. She’s just unavailable today. Hopefully, we’ll have her tomorrow. It’s just some unfortunate circumstances out of her control that she was not able to be here today.”
Oregon State’s Sarah Haendiges (13-7) pitched 4 2/3 innings and gave up seven runs on 10 hits in the loss. Florida coach Tim Walton respects Haendiges, but he expected to see Mazon.
“When I didn’t see her in the starting lineup and pitching, I knew something was up,” he said.
Oregon State opened the scoring on an RBI single by Frankie Hammoude in the top of the first inning.
Florida took the lead in the second when Goelz hit one down the first base line that Hammoude couldn’t come up with. Two runs scored on the error.
Goelz knocked in two on a single in the fourth, then Echols’ blast in the fifth made it 5-1.
Oregon State, already without its star pitcher, committed four errors and left six runners on base.
“Obviously, you can’t have four errors and expect to win a ball game at this point in the season and leave bases loaded with nobody out,” Berg said. “You just are not going to win a lot of ball games that way.”
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