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Monday, May 06, 2024

Munroe's walk-off single in ninth downs Seminoles

FSU's Tyler Holt yelled back at Buddy Munroe after running over UF's catcher to score the game-tying run in the top of the ninth. Munroe responded with his bat.

Munroe lined a single into right-center field to score Matt den Dekker, securing a 5-4 win for the Gators (10-7, 0-3 Southeastern Conference) in walk-off fashion on Tuesday night at McKethan Stadium.

"It was nice for it to come down to me, and for me to deliver," Munroe said.

Hitting a walk-off isn't all fun and games, though. Munroe caught a left hook from teammate Avery Barnes amid the celebration that left him with a bloody lip.

Not even the fat lip could take the smile off his face after hitting his first college walk-off.

His late-game heroics weren't his only contribution to the win, as he also had two hits and an RBI earlier in the game.

"Each at-bat is each at-bat, but (the two hits) gave me good confidence coming in there knowing I already hit the ball well today," he said.

He also kept busy behind the plate, handling seven UF pitchers and making a diving tag to nail a runner at the plate to end the fourth.

"I know the staff well, and I have confidence in them all," Munroe said. "It's always fun to see a lot of arms out there, especially the younger guys, who haven't gotten many innings, and I like to see who steps in certain times and see what they can do."

Usually the use of seven different pitchers indicates a struggling staff, but the Gators' hurlers limited a Seminoles team that entered the game averaging over 8 runs per game to just 4.

After Clint Franklin gave up the first 2 runs in the sixth in relief of starter Alex Panteliodis and a quick stint by Kevin Chapman, UF coach Kevin O'Sullivan handed the ball to freshman Greg Larson.

The newcomer looked like a veteran, forcing Ohmed Danesh to ground into an inning-ending double play with the bases loaded.

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"There were a lot of positives (out of the bullpen)," O'Sullivan said. "I don't want anything negative to creep into their minds."

All seven pitchers got the benefit of having a strong defensive effort behind them.

Two days after committing six errors, the Gators' defense made no blunders and converted on two inning-ending double plays with the bases loaded.

O'Sullivan said they must maintain that level of energy when his team isn't playing a rivalry game.

The Gators will get their chance tonight against Central Florida.

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