Forty nine outs of baseball were played at Taylor Stadium on Saturday.
The Tigers finished one game from the night before and played their regularly scheduled game, with both heading into extra innings. Mizzou took a Game 1 victory, but lost Game 2.
Game 1: Mizzou 8, Vanderbilt 7
After the first pitch of the Friday game was pushed back three times due to rain, the game finally began at 8:55 p.m.
The Tigers were held to just one run through the first seven inning, before they exploded for a six-run eighth for an improbable comeback. This put Mizzou on top 7-6 heading into the ninth.
Mizzou needed just three outs out of Sam Rosand to send the Tigers home with a win. But immense fog that had began rolling in during the eighth now made Kaden Peer seem like a ghost in center field.
A single and a walk put two runners on for the game-defining controversial call. Braden Holcomb, already with one home run in that game, hit a deep ball that got lost in the fog.
After Donovan Jordan put his hands up, it was ruled a ground-rule double. Trackman data on the exit velocity and launch angle suggested a home run, but the umpires could not make a conclusive call with the field conditions. Replay also did not offer any help for the decision.
The umpires put the runners back on second and third, then suspended the game at 12:10 a.m. with two outs in the ninth.
The game proceed at 4 p.m. Saturday and Juan Villarreal took over on the mound, quickly shutting down the inning.
With the game tied at seven, Mizzou needed just one run to walk it off.
The Tigers failed to produce a run in the bottom half of the inning, stranding runners at second and third. Villarreal came back out for the tenth, gave up a double, but muted the Commodores again.
Kam Durnin earned a pivotal lead-off walk to begin the 10th, then was pushed to second on a groundout. This put Durnin in position to score off of the single up the middle from Jordan.
Yes, the same Jordan who raised his hands to call a ground-rule double on what might have been a three-run homer to give Vanderbilt the lead.
He walked it off in the 10th inning. Jordan was 1-for-4 in the game coming into the final at-bat.
That was the Tigers’ second Southeastern Conference home win of the season and fifth overall.
Game 2:
The second game between Mizzou and Vanderbilt began with a surefire ground-rule double. No debate about that one.
The Commodores had a hot start, stalled, then made a late comeback against Mizzou. A three-run 11th inning sealed Mizzou’s fate in its 11-8 loss in Game 2.
The Tigers pushed ahead early, aided by seven runs in the first three innings.
Three free bases put a man at each station for the first free run of the game. The Commodores opted to switch pitchers in the second, but Brennan Sieber balked to push Eric Maisonet home. Mizzou responded with a bases-clearing double from Kam Durnin to tie the game.
Blaize Ward singled to score Durnin and give Mizzou an early lead. That was just the beginning.
With three runs in the third inning, the Tigers gave themselves a four-run divide from the Commodores. Two of the runs scored on wild pitches and the other on a sacrifice fly from Jase Woita. Mizzou scored another in the fourth as a double from Jordan followed a walk from Mateo Serna, bringing the Tigers’ lead to 8-3.
The Commodores finally forced starter Brady Kehlenbrink out of the game before the sixth inning, tagging him for two earned runs on five hits. He struck out six in his outing and held Vanderbilt scoreless in three of his five frames.
After Kehlenbrink, Mizzou couldn’t find a solution to Vanderbilt’s resurging offense. It took two pitchers to get through the sixth inning. Three runs scored on a solo homer, RBI groundout and a single before Eli Skidmore forced the final out of the inning.
After the top of the sixth, the game entered into a weather delay. Vanderbilt came out of it and cut the deficit to one with an RBI groundout in the seventh. It was tied with a solo shot in the eighth.
The Commodores and Tigers locked horns through the ninth and 10th, each not plating a run.
Then Vanderbilt’s Ryker Waite broke the tie in the 11th, swatting a two-out homer that there was no doubt of the ball leaving the stadium.
A two-out double added some late insurance runs for the Commodores and pushed the score to 11-8.
Mizzou will return against Vanderbilt at 1 p.m. Sunday in Columbia. Keyler Gonzalez is set to make his second start of the season for the Tigers.
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