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Georgia baseball's Joey Volchko ready for Texas in College World Series

· Yahoo Sports

OMAHA, Neb. —  Joey Volchko has geared up this week to face a Texas lineup that is the second highest scoring team at the College World Series, led the SEC in walks drawn and has two players with 22 or more homers.

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He also knows No. 3 seed Georgia baseball needs him to be on his game in Saturday‘s 8 p.m. matchup, considering that the starting pitcher on the other side, Dylan Volantis, is one of the top arms in the nation.

“Every game I go out there, I try to give my team a chance to win,” Volchko said. “I know at any moment they can explode for seven runs so for me just keeping the game close, especially game one against Mississippi State, I knew I had to keep the game because we were going to come back. That meant a lot to me to stay in and keep fighting. That’s the same mentality I’m going to carry into this one.”

Volchko and Georgia (51-12) trailed Mississippi State 7-0 in the fourth inning on June 6 in the Athens Super Regional before rallying back for a 13-12 win.

Volchko gave up seven runs (four earned) on seven hits with two walks and six strikeouts in five innings.

“He's that guy who doesn't want to be taken out of a game at any time, no matter what the score is or what's going on,” Georgia coach Wes Johnson said.

The sophomore lefty Volantis is 10-2 and is fourth in the nation with 2.03 ERA with 27 walks and 126 strikeouts for No. 6 seed Texas (45-13). He will face a Texas team that includes Aiden Robbins (24 homers) and Carson Tinney (22 homers).

“As a staff, we know our offense is really good so we try to treat every inning as a 0-0 ballgame regardless of if we’re up and down,” said Volchko, a senior transfer from Stanford who is 10-2 with a 4.07 ERA. “Especially with a guy on the mound like Volantis, he’s going to limit runs, he’s going to limit contact. He’s really good at what he does and so does their entire pitching staff. We’re going to have to pitch a complete game to get it done.”

The 6-foot-6 Volantis threw 5 1/3 scoreless innings in relief, with two hits allowed, one walk and nine strikeouts in Texas’ sweep of Georgia last season in Athens.

“He’s got a high release height,” Johnson said. “He does a really good job of tunneling his fastball and curve ball down in the strike zone which makes it tough. I think that’s why he gets so many chases. He’ll stick you the fast ball down at your knees and then start the curve ball right there. The hitters have, with that release height, a really, really hard time picking up the spin. He gets a lot chases on curve balls that bounce. That’s still pretty much his MO now. He’s moving the ball around a little bit more with his fastball trying to open up his curve ball.”

Volantis has given up just two homers in 88 2/3 innings this season.

Georgia leads the nation with 174 homers and is fourth in the nation with a .326 batting average.

“We've been preparing for him,” shortstop Kolby Branch said. “So it's just, it's a good arm. So you've got to go out there. You've got to take your offensive hacks. You've got to go out there and be confident in yourself and go out there and believe, or that's it. Just like we've done all year against any good arm.”

This article originally appeared on Athens Banner-Herald: Joey Volchko, Georgia gear up for Texas, Dylan Volantis in College World Series

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Proteas women crash to big Australia loss in first T20 World Cup match

· Citizen

The Proteas women crashed to a heavy 65-run loss against Australia in their opening match of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup at Old Trafford in Manchester on Saturday.

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It was a disappointing performance from the Proteas, as they produced an up and down bowling effort that allowed Australia to reach a decent 172/8 batting first, which proved more than enough as they could only respond with 107 all out.

It is a hammer blow of a start for the Proteas, as they are in the group of death, with India the other powerhouse side in there while Pakistan and Bangladesh are also tricky, and with the top two teams going through to the semis, it means they have no more wiggle room going forward.

What if

The Proteas will look back at the match and ask what if, after they did well to take regular wickets throughout the Aussie innings, when they won the toss and chose to bat first, but they could never back up one good over with another.

Australia’s total wasn’t a daunting one, but the previous highest score chase in a women’s T20 World Cup match was 164, so the Proteas knew they would have to make history if they were to claim a win, which they were unable to do.

Proteas strike bowlers Marizanne Kapp and Shabnim Ismail made sure they got off to a good start, as Gerogia Voll fell in the first over for a duck and Beth Mooney (7) departed in the fourth, leaving them in early trouble on 24/2.

But Phoebe Litchfield, 50 off 24 balls (9×4; 1×6), proved to be a one women army, as she dominated the rest of the powerplay in getting her side to 52/2 by the end of the sixth over.

Another quick double then set the Aussie back, as Ayabonga Khaka had Litchfield caught in the seventh, after being hit for back-to-back boundaries, and three balls later Nonkululeko Mlaba got Ash Gardner (1) cheaply, as they slipped to 62/4 in the eighth over.

Out of the hole

Ellyse Perry, 36 off 26 (4×4), and Georgia Wareham, 32 off 22 (6×4), dug them out of that hole with a 58-run stand off 38 balls, with them finding gaps in the field at will, but with a big score looking on they also fell, leaving them on 133/6 in the 16th over.

Despite the Proteas taking a few more wickets, Annebel Sutherland (21) and Nicola Carey (13no) produced decent cameos to get them to a solid score.

Mlaba was by far the pick of the Proteas bowlers with 2/22 in her four overs, while Nadine de Klerk, 2/35, also bowled well.

The Proteas batting effort never really got off the ground, as they lost regular wickets throughout their innings.

Sune Luus (1) was pinned LBW by Sophie Molineux in the first over and Annerie Dercksen (4) was bowled by Kim Garth in the second, and from 7/2 it was an uphill battle which they were unable to escape from.

Captain Laura Wolvaardt was initially starved of the strike first up, and then struggled to get going, with her eventually top scoring with 44 off 39 balls (2×4; 1×6), while De Klerk, 25 off 22 (1×4; 2×6), and Kapp (12), were the only other batters to reach double figures.

The Proteas next face Pakistan in a must-win match next week Wednesday.

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Liz and Lauren were born 30 years apart. This is how they became the best of friends

· The Age