Turley helps BU to lone weekend win vs. Texas

No. 16 junior Brooks Pinckard slides for home plate against Texas on Saturday at Baylor Ballpark. Pinckard was called out on the play, but Baylor won the game, 7-6. The Bears lost to the Longhorns on Friday and Sunday.
Nick Berryman | Lariat Photographer

Bears take one of three in series

By Chris Derrett
Sports Editor

Baylor starting pitcher Josh Turley wasn’t used to the media attention he got following the Bears’ 7-6 win over Texas Saturday. But if having a career day means pushing back postgame plans because of interviews, Turley welcomes it with open arms.

“I’d rather pitch well and get the win than pitch poorly and go eat dinner,” Turley said.

Turley tossed eight innings, holding the Longhorns (23-8, 8-3) to three runs on seven hits while striking out five and allowing just one walk. His innings thrown set a new career high, as did his 114 pitches.

“For us to have a chance, Josh had to be special today. And he was,” head coach Steve Smith said.

Turley’s win was sandwiched between two losses to the Longhorns, 11-3 on Friday and 5-2 on Sunday. The weekend brings Baylor to 18-15 overall and 5-7 in conference play.

Friday’s game featured a nine-run sixth inning that began with a fly ball lost in the lights and ended with fans from both Baylor and Texas filing out of the stadium. Sophomore Cal Towey hit two home runs in the game, and junior Dan Evatt added one as well.

On Sunday, Baylor held an early 2-0 lead but allowed a run each in the fifth and sixth innings and three runs in the seventh before falling 5-2.

Saturday was Baylor’s first win over Texas at Baylor Ballpark since 2005. Evatt gave the Bears the lead for good with a two-run home run that carried over the left field wall, soaring with the help of winds blowing upward of 25 miles per hour. The shot was the first allowed by Texas starter Hoby Milner this season and a game-changing play in Smith’s opinion.

“I think Evatt’s ball is the thing that really gave us some life and maybe put just a hair of doubt in [Texas’] mind,” Smith said.

Turley was particularly able to contain the Longhorns in the third inning, important against a Texas team outscoring its opponents 68-22 in the first three innings. With runners on second and third, Turley fanned Lucas Kephart and Tant Shepherd for his first and second strikeouts of the game.

“That was huge for us, because we’re fighting for everything we can get, and they’re fighting for everything they can get,” Smith said. “To get those punchouts like that was, at that point in time, pretty big.”

Baylor grabbed another four runs in the seventh with a two-RBI double from sophomore Max Muncy and a two-RBI single from junior Josh Ludy.

Baylor’s seventh inning insurance proved to be completely necessary for the win, because similar to its recent performances against Big 12 opponents, the Bears’ bullpen kept things interesting.

Junior Brooks Pinckard allowed four runners, one inherited, to score before Smith turned to sophomore Max Garner for a one-out save. Garner delivered, getting Lucas Kephart to ground out and end the game.

Considering Garner’s success thus far in the conference season, Smith said he was considering using Garner in Saturday’s game for a three-out save instead of turning to Pinckard first. The only concern was Garner’s elbow, which took a hard line drive last Tuesday in the Bears’ loss at Sam Houston State.

The injury did not seem to affect Garner on Saturday, as he threw a changeup for a first pitch strike before retiring Kephart. Such an effort has Smith reconsidering who he wants to close Baylor’s games.

“You can’t just say, ‘Pinckard’s our closer, so every time we get to the end of the game, he has to pitch,’” Smith said. “I think our best guy right now clearly at the end of the game is Max. But again, he’s not going to be perfect either.”