With Sdao, the Aggies’ second-most effective starter, out of commission, head coach Jim Schlossnagle went with a 3-3-3 plan in the CWS opener against Florida. Lamkin was masterful in his first start since May 11, striking out six of the 10 batters he faced in 3.0 scoreless frames. Chris Cortez was a little wobbly in his 3.0 innings, yielding two runs, but the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Evan Aschenbeck held the Gators at bay in the 3-2 win.
“Lamkin was awesome,” Schlossnagle said. “It was tempting to run him back out there as well he was pitching. But we felt like if we let him go any longer – even if we won and then won the second game – we’d be creating a problem in the third game.”
In the Aggies’ second game, a 5-1 victory over Kentucky, it was Stewart’s turn to make an impact. Prager took a no-hitter into the seventh inning, but he was touched up for a pair of hits giving the Wildcats two runners in scoring position.
With Aschenbeck handling a heavy workload in the opener, A&M turned to Stewart to slam the door and then hopefully close out the game. The right-hander stepped up to the challenge with an electric three-pitch strikeout to end the threat in the seventh. He worked in and out of a jam in the eighth and gave up a cosmetic solo homer in the ninth, keeping the bullpen fresh.
“Josh did an incredible job,” Schlossnagle said. “First getting out of that spot in the seventh, as a relief pitcher your first job is always getting the first guy out and he did that. And then giving us length so we didn’t have to use Evan in that spot puts us in a great spot going forward.”
After Tennessee made quick work of Florida State in an earlier game Wednesday to advance to the CWS Final, it was imperative Texas A&M was not only efficient on the mound, but also walked away with the victory as playing Thursday would give the Volunteers a huge advantage.
The ‘other guys’ came to the forefront to accomplish the task as Texas A&M weaved its nation-leading 12th shutout of the season.
Lamkin got another start. This time he stymied the Gators over 5.0 innings to improve to 3-2 on the season. He scattered three hits and one walk while striking out nine – the most-ever for an Aggie in a College World Series game. The win marked the first for the sophomore since March 23 against Mississippi State.