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Fox News
5 days ago
- Sport
- Fox News
Coastal Carolina coach torches umps after College World Series ejection
Coastal Carolina head coach Kevin Schnall slammed umpires at the Men's College World Series on Sunday following the Chanticleers' loss to the LSU Tigers. Schnall was ejected in the first inning after an argument with home plate umpire Angel Campos. He said his ejection wasn't justified and he was wrongly accused of bumping an umpire who appeared to trip and fall to the ground when he came over to break up the commotion. "If you guys watch the video, there was a guy who came in extremely aggressively, tripped over Campos' foot, embarrassed in front of 25,000, and goes, 'Two-game suspension' and says, 'Bumping the umpire,'" Schnall said. "There was no bump. I shouldn't be held accountable for a grown man's athleticism. Now it's excessive because I was trying to say I didn't bump him. "It is what it is. If that warranted an ejection, there would be a lot of ejections. As umpires, it's your job to manage the game with some poise and calmness and a little bit of tolerance." The NCAA said Schnall was arguing balls and strikes, which was heard on the broadcast. The NCAA added that the head coach was given a warning. Since LSU won Game 2 and the College World Series, Schnall's suspension would start in the 2026 season. The NCAA said Schnall and first-base coach Matt Schilling engaged in "prolonged arguing," which triggers a two-game suspension. Schilling is likely to be suspended for three games — one for the ejection and two for "prolonged arguing." Schnall said he couldn't hear Campos' initial warning when he was arguing balls and strikes. He added that he wasn't "sorry" for what transpired. "As a head coach, it's your right to get an explanation for why we got warned," Schnall said. "I'm 48 years old, and I shouldn't get shooed by another grown man. When I came out, I got told it was a warning issued for arguing balls and strikes, and I said it was because you missed three. At that point, ejected. If that warrants an ejection, I'm the first one to stand here like a man and apologize." Coastal Carolina athletic director Chance Miller said Sunday night the ejections "altered the trajectory of a must-win game for our team." "These decisions were made with an alarming level of haste, without an attempt at de-escalation, and deprived our student-athletes of the leadership they have relied on throughout a historic postseason run," Miller said. "This is not about a single call — it's about process and professionalism. In the biggest moment of the college baseball season, our program and its student-athletes deserved better." Miller implored the NCAA to re-evaluate its training methods and how it assigns and reviews umpires in championship settings. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Video: 'Insane' Ejection In Game 2 Of College World Series
Video: 'Insane' Ejection In Game 2 Of College World Series originally appeared on The Spun. Game 2 of the Men's College World Series between LSU and Coastal Carolina is underway. Unfortunately, Coastal Carolina will be without two coaches moving forward. We had an ejection just minutes into Game 2 in Omaha, Nebraska on Sunday afternoon. Both Coastal Carolina head coach Kevin Schnall and first base coach Matt Schilling have been ejected from the game. Advertisement The two Coastal Carolina coaches appeared to get ejected in the bottom of the first inning for arguing balls and strikes. Umpires say that arguing balls and strikes can lead to an automatic ejection. However, you would hope that in the College World Series, umpires would be more lenient. College World Series Coastal Carolina fell to LSU, 1-0, in a three-hit shutout in Game 1 on Saturday. Naturally, things are tense on Sunday. The umpires did not need to take it that far. ESPN MLB insider Jeff Passan is furious. "There are very few combinations of words in the English language that warrant ejecting a coach from an elimination game in the Men's College World Series finals. And yet Coastal Carolina's Kevin Schnall -- and first-base coach Matt Schilling -- just got run in the first inning," he wrote on X. Advertisement "'You missed three pitches' does not qualify as one of those combinations. If this is all it took for Kevin Schnall to get ejected, that is absurd." We'll have to wait and see what the umpires say following the game, if one of them speaks to the media. Game 2 of the Men's College World Series is airing live on ESPN. Video: 'Insane' Ejection In Game 2 Of College World Series first appeared on The Spun on Jun 22, 2025 This story was originally reported by The Spun on Jun 22, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
LSU wins NCAA baseball title: Winners and losers from College World Series
After winning a mesmerizing pitching duel in Saturday night's College World Series opener, LSU took advantage of Coastal Carolina's sloppy start and won, 5-3, on Sunday, June 22 to capture the eighth national championship in program history. The two-game sweep solidifies the Tigers' place among the very upper crust of college baseball. Only one program has won more: Southern California has won an even dozen, though none since 1998. Advertisement For Coastal Carolina, it's a heartbreaking and disappointing end to what had been a dream run to the doorstep of the Chanticleers' second championship, following the 2016 team that came out of relative anonymity and defeated Arizona in the finals. Coastal Carolina head coach Kevin Schnall and first-base coach Matt Schilling were ejected in the first inning of Sunday's clincher for 'continued arguing about balls and strikes,' the NCAA said in a statement. Given where they started the year, though, and the lower expectations after an offseason coaching change, the appearance in Omaha opposite LSU establishes Coastal as maybe the best program outside the non-major conferences. Looking back at the entire tournament, here are the winners and losers from this year's CWS: WINNERS LSU Talent eventually won out. That was apparent on Saturday night, when LSU sophomore Kade Anderson put together the first complete-game shutout in the CWS finals since 2018 and just the third since the championship series was added into the tournament format in 2003. What the Tigers had was room for error — and more than enough athleticism and MLB-level ability to take advantage of any opportunity provided by the Chanticleers' missteps. Handed that opportunity on Sunday afternoon, LSU plated a run in the third and four in the fourth on a pair of two-run singles. Coastal Carolina The Chanticleers will always have that 23-game winning streak heading into Omaha, Nebraska, which passed the previous record heading into the College World Series set by Oregon State in 2017. They added three more to push that run to 26 games before meeting LSU. That the magic ran out in the best-of-three finals is the biggest source of disappoint from Coastal, which felt like a team of destiny in overcoming several big-name programs in the regional and super regional rounds before breezing through the double-elimination section of the World Series. The SEC LSU gives the SEC five national championships in a row: Vanderbilt in 2019, Mississippi State in 2021, Mississippi in 2022, the Tigers in 2023 and Tennessee last season. It hadn't been a picture-perfect tournament for the conference, which placed a record-setting 13 teams in the tournament but had just four reach the super regionals. The Tigers' win this weekend erases the league's inept run through the first two weekends and cements the SEC as the top baseball conference in the country. Murray State The Racers were the feel-good story of the tournament after making the program's CWS debut. Beyond a distinct lack of national success, Murray State simply wasn't expected to reach that stage even after booking a spot in the 64-team field: Underdogs in the Oxford regional against Mississippi, the Racers beat the Rebels to reach the program's first super regional and then rallied out of another hole with a pair of wins against Duke to become just the fourth regional No. 4 seed to reach Omaha. Gage Wood While Arkansas was unable to mount a winning streak and reach the finals, Wood had the tournament's defining moment with his epic 19-strikeout no-hitter against the Racers. The no-no was the first in Omaha since 1960 and his strikeout total set a new record for a nine-inning game. Before that performance, Wood had gone more than five innings in a start just once all season with just one start with double-digit strikeouts. LOSERS Arkansas The long dry run continues for the Razorbacks. Arkansas has now made 12 CWS appearances with two trips to the finals, tying North Carolina and Clemson for the second-most trips to Omaha without a national championship. This most recent exit stands among the most painful in program history, bested by the 2018 loss to Oregon State defined by a misplayed fly ball in foul ground. After scoring two runs in the top of the ninth to take a 5-3 lead in a must-win game against LSU on Wednesday, June 18, the Razorbacks allowed a two-run double that tied the score and then a walk-off single to loss 6-5. North Carolina The Tar Heels suffered maybe the most brutal loss of the super regionals in giving away the elimination game against Arizona. Ahead 3-1 heading into the eighth inning thanks to a three-run homer from senior Jackson Van De Brake, UNC coughed away the lead with a pair of errors on the infield. The first, on a grounder booted by Van De Brake, cost the Tar Heels a possible double play. After a pitching change, UNC committed a throwing error on the Wildcats' bunt attempt to move runners over, allowing a run to score. Another pitching change resulted in a two-run single that gave Arizona the lead and eventually the World Series berth. Kevin Schnall The former Coastal assistant pushed all the right buttons in piloting the Chanticleers to a record-setting win streak and to the doorstep of another national championship. But his ejection on Sunday threatens to overwrite his deft touch in reaching that point. Was he trying to motivate his team and raise the Chanticleers' energy after a tough-to-swallow defeat in the opener? While that might have been his intent, Coastal continued to play listlessly the rest of the way, especially at the plate. Advertisement The biggest stories, every morning. Stay up-to-date on all the key sports developments by subscribing to USA TODAY Sports' newsletter. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College World Series winners and losers: LSU takes NCAA baseball title


USA Today
6 days ago
- Sport
- USA Today
LSU wins NCAA baseball title: Winners and losers from College World Series
After winning a mesmerizing pitching duel in Saturday night's College World Series opener, LSU took advantage of Coastal Carolina's sloppy start and won, 5-3, on Sunday, June 22 to capture the eighth national championship in program history. The two-game sweep solidifies the Tigers' place among the very upper crust of college baseball. Only one program has won more: Southern California has won an even dozen, though none since 1998. For Coastal Carolina, it's a heartbreaking and disappointing end to what had been a dream run to the doorstep of the Chanticleers' second championship, following the 2016 team that came out of relative anonymity and defeated Arizona in the finals. Coastal Carolina head coach Kevin Schnall and first-base coach Matt Schilling were ejected in the first inning of Sunday's clincher for 'continued arguing about balls and strikes,' the NCAA said in a statement. Given where they started the year, though, and the lower expectations after an offseason coaching change, the appearance in Omaha opposite LSU establishes Coastal as maybe the best program outside the non-major conferences. Looking back at the entire tournament, here are the winners and losers from this year's CWS: WINNERS LSU Talent eventually won out. That was apparent on Saturday night, when LSU sophomore Kade Anderson put together the first complete-game shutout in the CWS finals since 2018 and just the third since the championship series was added into the tournament format in 2003. What the Tigers had was room for error — and more than enough athleticism and MLB-level ability to take advantage of any opportunity provided by the Chanticleers' missteps. Handed that opportunity on Sunday afternoon, LSU plated a run in the third and four in the fourth on a pair of two-run singles. Coastal Carolina The Chanticleers will always have that 23-game winning streak heading into Omaha, Nebraska, which passed the previous record heading into the College World Series set by Oregon State in 2017. They added three more to push that run to 26 games before meeting LSU. That the magic ran out in the best-of-three finals is the biggest source of disappoint from Coastal, which felt like a team of destiny in overcoming several big-name programs in the regional and super regional rounds before breezing through the double-elimination section of the World Series. The SEC LSU gives the SEC five national championships in a row: Vanderbilt in 2019, Mississippi State in 2021, Mississippi in 2022, the Tigers in 2023 and Tennessee last season. It hadn't been a picture-perfect tournament for the conference, which placed a record-setting 13 teams in the tournament but had just four reach the super regionals. The Tigers' win this weekend erases the league's inept run through the first two weekends and cements the SEC as the top baseball conference in the country. Murray State The Racers were the feel-good story of the tournament after making the program's CWS debut. Beyond a distinct lack of national success, Murray State simply wasn't expected to reach that stage even after booking a spot in the 64-team field: Underdogs in the Oxford regional against Mississippi, the Racers beat the Rebels to reach the program's first super regional and then rallied out of another hole with a pair of wins against Duke to become just the fourth regional No. 4 seed to reach Omaha. Gage Wood While Arkansas was unable to mount a winning streak and reach the finals, Wood had the tournament's defining moment with his epic 19-strikeout no-hitter against the Racers. The no-no was the first in Omaha since 1960 and his strikeout total set a new record for a nine-inning game. Before that performance, Wood had gone more than five innings in a start just once all season with just one start with double-digit strikeouts. LOSERS Arkansas The long dry run continues for the Razorbacks. Arkansas has now made 12 CWS appearances with two trips to the finals, tying North Carolina and Clemson for the second-most trips to Omaha without a national championship. This most recent exit stands among the most painful in program history, bested by the 2018 loss to Oregon State defined by a misplayed fly ball in foul ground. After scoring two runs in the top of the ninth to take a 5-3 lead in a must-win game against LSU on Wednesday, June 18, the Razorbacks allowed a two-run double that tied the score and then a walk-off single to loss 6-5. North Carolina The Tar Heels suffered maybe the most brutal loss of the super regionals in giving away the elimination game against Arizona. Ahead 3-1 heading into the eighth inning thanks to a three-run homer from senior Jackson Van De Brake, UNC coughed away the lead with a pair of errors on the infield. The first, on a grounder booted by Van De Brake, cost the Tar Heels a possible double play. After a pitching change, UNC committed a throwing error on the Wildcats' bunt attempt to move runners over, allowing a run to score. Another pitching change resulted in a two-run single that gave Arizona the lead and eventually the World Series berth. Kevin Schnall The former Coastal assistant pushed all the right buttons in piloting the Chanticleers to a record-setting win streak and to the doorstep of another national championship. But his ejection on Sunday threatens to overwrite his deft touch in reaching that point. Was he trying to motivate his team and raise the Chanticleers' energy after a tough-to-swallow defeat in the opener? While that might have been his intent, Coastal continued to play listlessly the rest of the way, especially at the plate. The biggest stories, every morning. Stay up-to-date on all the key sports developments by subscribing to USA TODAY Sports' newsletter.
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Sport
- Yahoo
Social media reacts to Coastal Carolina's manager getting ejected in first inning of CWS
Coastal Carolina baseball head coach Kevin Schnall was ejected in Game 2 of the College World Series against LSU. Schnall came out of the dugout to argue with home plate umpire Angel Campos about balls and strikes. He was promptly thrown out along with first base coach Matt Schilling. Advertisement Schnall left the dugout and continued to argue after being tossed, which earned him an extra suspension. That means if Coastal Carolina forces a Game 3, it will be without its head coach on Monday. The Chanticleers struck out twice and had a runner on second base at the time, but Anthony Eyanson induced a groundout to end the frame. One inning later, he gave up a solo home run to Dean Mihos to put Coastal Carolina up 1-0. The Tigers knotted the score in the third. Daniel Dickinson led off with a single and advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt by Michael Braswell. Ethan Frey delivered an RBI double to left field with two outs. Here's how social media reacted to the first inning chaos. What are LSU fans saying about the ejections? The exchange came as a surprise to some X users. Schnall emerged from the dugout to have a word with the home plate umpire one pitch into the at-bat. His frustrations with calls for the previous hitters boiled over. The reasoning for the ejections wasn't clear for game attendees at first. Some raised concerns on social media about the handling of the situation, considering the stakes of Sunday's contest. Coastal Carolina will play without its head coach and first base coach for potentially its final game of the season. The Tigers found themselves on the wrong side of a challenge during Saturday's game that concluded Dickinson leaned into a pitch to get hit. Head coach Jay Johnson "showed restraint" to ensure he remained in the dugout. This article originally appeared on LSU Wire: Social media reacts to Coastal Carolina manager being ejected in CWS