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College World Series

Win makes Fresno State top dog

Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Eric Olson
Associated Press / June 26, 2008

OMAHA - Fresno State was smashing in its final performance as college baseball's team of destiny, winning a championship that would have been impossible to predict.

With Steve Detwiler providing all the offense Justin Wilson needed, the Bulldogs captured their first national championship in a men's sport with a 6-1 victory over Georgia in Game 3 of the College World Series finals last night.

Detwiler homered twice and drove in all six runs, and Wilson allowed five hits in eight innings to cap Fresno State's wild ride.

Fresno State needed to win the Western Athletic Conference tournament just to make the NCAA field of 64, fought off elimination in regionals and super regionals, and became the first No. 4 regional seed to reach the CWS since the tournament expanded in 1999.

The Bulldogs (47-31) from California not only showed they belonged, they showed they were the best, even though no previous national champion had more losses. The national title was the second in school history. Fresno State won the 1998 women's softball title.

Fresno State third baseman Tommy Mendonca won the CWS most outstanding player. He hit four home runs and had 11 RBIs and also made a number of spectacular plays in the field. But in the finale, Detwiler was the star.

Playing with a torn ligament in his left thumb, he hit a two-run homer on Nathan Moreau's 3-2 pitch in the second inning barely clearing the right-field fence.

There was no doubt about Detwiler's second blast, a high drive that landed three-quarters of the way up the stands in left field. That three-run shot off Dean Weaver was Detwiler's third homer of the CWS and 12th of the season. It also marked the fourth time a player went deep twice in a championship game.

Detwiler, who also had an RBI double in the fourth, said he didn't let his thumb injury hinder him.

"It's mind over matter," he said. "It's just a little pain. The pain is temporary. Pride is forever."

Wilson (5-5) struck out nine, walked one, and held Georgia to three singles and a triple in seven shutout innings.

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