By DOUG ALDEN
AP Sports Writer
OMAHA, NE (AP) — A team from South Carolina will play
in the College World Series championship game.
South Carolina beat Georgia Tech 9-5 in an elimination
game Tuesday, setting up a semifinal showdown with state rival
Clemson.
``If you live in South Carolina you know when South
Carolina and Clemson match up, even if it's equestrian horse racing,
there's going to be a lot on the line,'' Gamecocks designated hitter
Trey Dyson said. ``Everybody knows about the two schools. It's just
crazy.''
Steve Thomas and Justin Harris hit home runs as the
Gamecocks (55-17)
avenged an 11-0 loss to Georgia Tech in the opening game and earned at
least one more shot at the Tigers, who beat them three out of four
times this season.
The Tigers (54-15) and Gamecocks will play Wednesday
night. Clemson is unbeaten in the CWS and needs just one win to
advance to Saturday's
championship, while South Carolina would need to win Wednesday and
again on Friday.
``The governor will probably have to come out and shut
everything down tomorrow afternoon,'' Gamecocks coach Ray Tanner said.
``It's a tremendous statement for the state of South Carolina that
we're now guaranteed that one of our teams will play in the national
championship game.''
Landon Powell and Drew Meyer each drove in two runs
and Aaron Rawl pitched a complete game after struggling in a brief
relief appearance against Tech in the CWS opener.
``On Friday they beat me around a little bit. You've
just got to shake that off,'' Rawl said.
Rawl (7-1), who allowed three runs on two hits in
one-third of an inning in the opener, allowed 14 hits, 12 of them
singles. Rawl also got Tech to ground into three double plays.
``I thought he pitched pretty well. He got us to chase
some bad pitches a few times,'' said Wes Rynders, who had two singles
for Tech. ``We let him off the hook a couple of times when we had
runners on base.''
The Yellow Jackets (52-16) didn't have an extra-base
hit until Jeremy Slayden's two-run homer in the eighth made it 9-4.
Tech set a school record for wins this season, topping
its 51-14 finish in 1987.
``We hit the ball hard. I don't think we can be
disappointed in that. Overall it's been a great season,'' said Matthew
Boggs, who was 2-for-4 with an RBI. ``It's just been a great
experience for me, playing with all of these guys
and finally making it out here.''
Matt Murton also drove in two runs for Georgia Tech,
which fell behind early and could not recover for the second straight
game.
The Yellow Jackets were in the elimination round after
a 9-7 loss to Clemson on Sunday, with the Tigers scoring eight runs in
the second inning. On Tuesday, it was South Carolina's four-run fourth
that forced Tech to try to rally.
``They kind of distanced themselves enough from us to
where we couldn't muster enough offense to get back at them,'' Tech
coach Danny Hall said.
Powell broke a 1-1 tie in the fourth with a two-run
single, then Meyer added an RBI single with two outs and scored on a
throwing error by third baseman Boggs.
Brian Burks (10-7) was lifted after Boggs' error. He
pitched 3 2-3 innings, allowing five runs and five hits.
``We only got eight hits today, but they were all
pretty big,'' Dyson said.
Thomas hit his 12th homer of the season in the seventh
and the Gamecocks pulled away with three more in the eighth, including
Harris' homer to left that made it 9-2.
Harris was suspended for the opener after his arrest
on disorderly conduct and public drunkenness charges following a win
over Miami in the super regionals.