Saturday May 24th, 2025 10:30AM

Despite struggles, veteran Canes looking for 5th title in Omaha

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CORAL GABLES, FLORIDA - The Miami Hurricanes made a triumphant return to Omaha&#39;s College World Series last season, a year after the program&#39;s worst record in more than 30 years.<br> <br> The stay lasted three games. Miami leaves for Omaha again Wednesday and plans to stay a bit longer this time.<br> <br> ``Going out there last year, it was kind of like our season was a success just making it there,&#39;&#39; said Miami first baseman Jim Burt, who was on Miami&#39;s last title team in 2001. ``But this year, nothing less than the championship is going to be a successful season for us.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> The Hurricanes (49-11) have reason for optimism, with Saturday&#39;s opener against LSU (46-17) just days away. Nearly the entire roster is back, including seven starters in the field and all three starting pitchers from last year&#39;s team.<br> <br> Miami&#39;s veteran squad cruised through most of the season, losing just one three-game series before continuing its dominance in the postseason. The Hurricanes routed their regional competition by a combined score of 44-14 before sweeping archrival Florida in the super regionals last weekend.<br> <br> ``We&#39;re peaking at the right time,&#39;&#39; left-hander J.D. Cockroft said.<br> <br> Last year&#39;s Omaha struggles aren&#39;t far from the team&#39;s thoughts, however. Miami entered last year&#39;s World Series looking for the school&#39;s fifth title, but were instead humbled twice by defending champ Texas, which outscored Miami 18-3.<br> <br> Outfielder Richard Giannotti, a sophomore on last year&#39;s team, remembers the feeling in the locker room following their elimination.<br> <br> ``That&#39;s when we first started saying that we can&#39;t let that happen again,&#39;&#39; Giannotti said. ``We knew we were pretty much gonna have the same exact team back. We knew we had a chance to come back and win it.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Even with the veteran lineup, injuries and suspensions threatened to turn Miami&#39;s season sour.<br> <br> In April, Morris kicked reliever Shawn Valdes-Fauli and closer George Huguet, the schools all-time saves leader, off the team for still undisclosed rule violations. The move could have crippled the bullpen, but the Hurricanes prospered despite the losses.<br> <br> Freshman Danny Gil picked up for Huguet, going 8-0 with a 3.11 ERA out of the bullpen, including five saves.<br> <br> ``That was a big blow,&#39;&#39; Gil said of the suspensions. ``But everybody&#39;s seemed to pick it up in a time of need.&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Injuries caused five starters to miss time during the season but two freshmen left fielder Jon Jay and shortstop Roger Tomas stepped in and the Hurricanes hardly missing a beat.<br> <br> Jay is hitting .364 as Miami&#39;s leadoff man while Tomas is hitting .305 and has just five errors in 30 starts on the left side of the infield.<br> <br> ``Our freshmen aren&#39;t playing like freshmen, they&#39;re playing like veterans out there,&#39;&#39; Burt said. ``Roger and Jon Jay pretty much carried us (in the super regionals).&#39;&#39;<br> <br> Another first-year player, right-handed starter Cesar Carrillo (11-0, 2.73 ERA) carries a perfect record to Omaha. He teams with Cockroft (9-4, 3.41), Brandon Camardese (6-2, 3.86) and Dan Touchet (5-1, 3.69) in a talented rotation.<br> <br> With players like Burt who tops the team with a .373 average, 14 homers and 72 RBIs leading the Hurricanes&#39; lineup, Miami is ready to prove that last year&#39;s Omaha appearance was just a warmup.<br> <br> ``A lot of the guys are confident and saying that that if we don&#39;t win it&#39;s going to be a disappointment,&#39;&#39; catcher Erick San Pedro said. ``We expect to win.&#39;&#39;
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