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Missing several players due to COVID-19 protocols, NC State falls to Vanderbilt in CWS

Playing without more than half its roster due to COVID-19 protocols, N.C. State pieced together a lineup and still pushed Vanderbilt to the edge before losing 3-1 in the College World Series Friday.

The Wolfpack hopes to have a deeper lineup and bench for Saturday’s rematch that will determine which of the two teams will play in the College World Series championship series starting Monday.

The COVID-19 situation kept four starting players out of N.C. State’s lineup and left only two players in their usual spots in the field. The Wolfpack had only 13 players available for Friday’s game, including just four pitchers.

“The other guys are getting tested right now,” N.C. State coach Elliott Avent said on the ESPN2 broadcast during an in-game interview. “Hopefully with negative tests they’ll be back tomorrow.”

The Wolfpack (37-18) and Commodores (47-16), both with one loss in CWS double-elimination bracket play, will meet at 2 p.m. Saturday on ESPN. The winner moves on to the finals, while the loser’s season will be over.

In his postgame news conference on Zoom, Avent said he didn’t yet know who would be available and who wouldn’t for Saturday’s game.

“When I get the information that the NCAA deems appropriate, then we’ll go from there,” Avent told reporters.

Wolfpack ‘gritty’ against Commodores

In Friday’s game, Vanderbilt standout right-handed pitcher Kumar Rocker kept the patchwork Wolfpack lineup quiet over the first six innings. He struck out 11 while allowing one run on five hits and one walk.

“I thought our guys fought him with everything they had,” Avent said. “When you are going against a guy like Kumar Rocker you can’t leave 12 men on base. I know it’s hard to get that hit because of his stuff and how good and competitive he is, followed up by some good arms behind him. But I just wish we could have found a way to scratch a hit there and maybe we have a different outcome.”

Facing Vanderbilt’s bullpen, N.C. State had chances to catch the Commodores in the late innings, bringing the lead run to the plate in the final three innings.

“They were tough,” Vanderbilt coach Tim Corbin said of the Wolfpack. “They’re gritty. They’ve got some magic with them. But I thought we certainly pitched well enough.”

Chris McElvaine started the seventh inning on the mound for Vanderbilt but pitcher Sam Highfill singled and Eddie Eisert reached on an error. Highfill, though, was picked off second base. After a strikeout for the second out, Austin Murr walked and Vanderbilt left-handed reliever Hugh Fisher hit Jonny Butler with a pitch to load the bases.

Luca Tresh worked the count to 3-1 against Luke Murphy, the Commodores’ third pitcher of the inning. But Tresh popped out to second to end the threat.

The Wolfpack put the tying runs on base against in the eighth inning when Devonte Brown singled and Carson Falsken drew a one-out walk.

But Highfill, who already had three hits in the game, took a called third strike on a 3-2 pitch. Eddie Eisert grounded out to second to end the inning.

Butler singled with two outs in the ninth and Tresh walked. But Brown grounded out to the game, stranding two more runners to bring N.C. State’s total of men left on base to 12 for the game.

NC State pitcher Garrett Payne on the mound

Despite not starting a game this season while pitching just 8 ⅔ innings, freshman Garrett Payne was the Wolfpack’s starting pitcher.

By striking out the first two batters he faced, he showed he was up to the task.

Payne kept the Commodores off the scoreboard in the first three innings before the Wolfpack’s reshuffled defense hurt it.

Vanderbilt’s Dominic Keegan hit a routine ground ball to shortstop to start the inning. N.C. State’s Vojtech Mensik, usually a third baseman who shifted to shortstop for the game, fielded it cleanly but his throw to first base hit the dirt.

Highfill, a freshman starting pitcher getting his first collegiate start at first base, couldn’t field the throw cleanly and Keegan reached first base on the error.

North Carolina State pitching coach Clint Chrysler, right, speaks with right handed pitcher Dalton Feeney (19) in the dugout during a delay due to health and safety protocols before their baseball game against Vanderbilt in the College World Series Friday, June 25, 2021, at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha.
North Carolina State pitching coach Clint Chrysler, right, speaks with right handed pitcher Dalton Feeney (19) in the dugout during a delay due to health and safety protocols before their baseball game against Vanderbilt in the College World Series Friday, June 25, 2021, at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha. Rebecca S. Gratz AP

After a sacrifice bunt and a groundout moved Keegan to third base, CJ Rodriguez lined a single to left field giving the Commodores a 1-0 lead.

Parker Nolan singled and Payne hit Spencer Jones with a pitch to load the bases. Payne uncorked a wild pitch, allowing Rodriguez to score for a 2-0 Vanderbilt lead.

Payne, who had only thrown more than 34 pitches in an outing once previously this season, lasted into the sixth inning before Avent went to the bullpen.

In five innings of work plus one batter in the sixth, Payne allowed two hits, with three walks, a hit batter and three strikeouts. He was charged with three runs, but two were unearned.

North Carolina State’s DeAngelo Giles (20) catches a foul ball hit by Vanderbilt’s Enrique Bradfield Jr. in the third inning of a baseball game in the College World Series, Friday, June 25, 2021, at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha.
North Carolina State’s DeAngelo Giles (20) catches a foul ball hit by Vanderbilt’s Enrique Bradfield Jr. in the third inning of a baseball game in the College World Series, Friday, June 25, 2021, at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha. Rebecca S. Gratz AP

NC State cuts its deficit

Rocker struck out the first six Wolfpack batters before Highfill, in his first collegiate at-bat, lined a third-inning single. Still, Rocker kept on rolling, striking out eight of the first nine batters he faced.

N.C. State cut its deficit in half in the fifth inning when Falsken and Highfill started the inning with singles. They moved up to second and third on a groundout before Falsken scored on DeAngelo Giles’ fly ball to left field that left Vanderbilt leading 2-1.

Vanderbilt starting pitcher Kumar Rocker (80) throws against North Carolina State in the first inning of a baseball game at the College World Series, Friday, June 25, 2021, at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha.
Vanderbilt starting pitcher Kumar Rocker (80) throws against North Carolina State in the first inning of a baseball game at the College World Series, Friday, June 25, 2021, at TD Ameritrade Park in Omaha. Rebecca S. Gratz AP

Austin Murr kept the rally going by reaching on an infield single to shortstop. But NC State RBI-leader Butler struck out to end the frame.

Vanderbilt pushed its lead back to 3-1 in the sixth inning when Javier Vaz drew a lead-off walk off Payne, stole second and scored on Nolan’s one-out single off NC State relief pitcher Dalton Feeney.

Shorthanded NC State couldn’t get the hit it needed the rest of the way to catch up but kept Vanderbilt in striking distance.

“It just shows how tough we are, these guys, and went out and played a heck of a game,” Highfill said. “And it didn’t go the way we ultimately wanted it to. But I think we showed a lot of fight today and we’re ready to go do it again tomorrow.”

This story was originally published June 25, 2021 at 6:45 PM with the headline "Missing several players due to COVID-19 protocols, NC State falls to Vanderbilt in CWS."

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Steve Wiseman
The News & Observer
Steve Wiseman was named Raleigh News & Observer and Durham Herald-Sun sports editor in May 2025. He covered Duke athletics, beginning in 2010, prior to his current assignment. In the Associated Press Sports Editors national contest, he placed in the top 10 in beat writing in 2019, 2021 and 2022, breaking news in 2019, event coverage in 2025 and explanatory writing in 2018. Before coming to Durham in 2010, Steve worked for The State (Columbia, SC), Herald-Journal (Spartanburg, S.C.), The Sun Herald (Biloxi, Miss.), Charlotte Observer and Hickory (NC) Daily Record covering beats including the NFL’s Carolina Panthers and New Orleans Saints, University of South Carolina athletics and the S.C. General Assembly. He’s won numerous state-level press association awards. Steve graduated from Illinois State University in 1989. 
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