O'FALLON — A battle of the bullpens worked out in Mizzou baseball's favor against the Fighting Illini.
The Tigers traveled to O'Fallon on Tuesday and tossed eight shutout innings in route to a 5-1 win over Illinois in the Braggin' Rights game at CarShield Field.
It appeared that Mizzou would be in for a bumpy ride when right-hander PJ Green, making his first career start, walked the first two batters he faced. When he eventually loaded the bases, Missouri coach Kerrick Jackson made a mound visit.
"I basically told him, 'Hey, pull yourself together,'" Jackson said. "'Be aggressive. You've gotten yourself into a bases loaded situation. It is what it is. However you can manage it, manage it. We need you to go and be aggressive right now.'"
Green followed the talk with three outs and then settled in for two more scoreless innings after. He put the Illini down in order in the second and walked one batter in the third.
A four-run first aided Mizzou to its win and helped settle Green. After a walk to lead-off hitter Kam Durnin, Illinois starter Ben Plumley was pulled for Sam Reed. Reed gave up a single to Pierre Seals and a walk to Jase Woita before an error on a hit from Cameron Benson allowed two runners to score.
Then, a two-RBI double from freshman second baseman Blaize Ward made for a 4-0 first inning.
The Tigers offense struggled after and was able to score just one more run in the sixth off of a sacrifice fly from catcher Jamal George that brought in Benson.
"I think we missed too many opportunities," Jackson said.
While the hitting was lacking, the pitching kept Mizzou ahead. Reliever Keyler Gonzalez, who followed Green out of the pen, earned the win for the game and tossed 2⅓ innings. Gonzalez gave up the lone Illini run in the sixth inning after a double, and a wild pitch brought Illinois' Kyle Schupmann to third. He scored on a passed ball from George.
Reliever Kadden Drew followed with one scoreless inning before O'Fallon product Eli Skidmore took over on the mound. Skidmore recorded the final two outs in the seventh and added yet another scoreless inning in the eighth.
The Tigers roster includes 10 players from the St. Louis area.
"(We have) a bunch of guys from the St. Louis area, even from the St. Peters, St. Charles area specifically, that played in the stadium when they were younger," Jackson said. "It was really cool for them."
Mizzou will return to the field at 6 p.m. Wednesday in St. Charles to face in-state foe Lindenwood.
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