Boston College Athletics

Photo by: Tim Cowie
Following Loss, Birdball Returns Home To Await Fate
May 22, 2026 | Baseball, #ForBoston Files
A quarterfinal loss in the ACC Championship sent BC home with an early exit.
The hype surrounding Boston College's first game at the 2026 ACC Baseball Championship reached feverish highs in the hours preceding the first pitch against No. 5 Miami. Top-seeded Georgia Tech badly trailed No. 8 Virginia as their game wore into its later innings, a previously impermissible thought given the strength of a Yellow Jacket roster ranked third in the country. The batting order devoid of hitters below .300 struggled mightily against Virginia starter John Paone, and a four-run inning against Dylan Loy and Brett Barfield chased into a poor outing by a normally-lockdown backend spearheaded by Mason Patel, a reigning NCBWA Stopper of the Year finalist.
Insurance runs flowed through the sixth and seventh, but the dormant lineup ranked No. 1 nationally found its breakthrough after loading the bases after folks at Truist Field stopped stretching. Bags were loaded, and a seven-spot produced by two home runs revived the dormant Yellow Jackets. A Vahn Lackey two-run homer in the eighth and a Kent Schmidt two-run homer added security for reliever Justin Shadek, and the thought of facing the Wahoos in the semifinals ended with the mighty blue-and-gold wave flushing its way into Charlotte's weekend forecast.
BC and Miami anxiously awaited the previous game's hour-long overrun, but the anticipatory drama from Virginia's upset bid curiously sucked the air out of the Charlotte afternoon. Hours later, the upstart team from Chestnut Hill, an expected underdog against the hard-charging Hurricanes, lost their own game despite starting the week as a top-4 seed and left North Carolina with an angst-filled defeat now expected to linger in the clubhouse until Monday's national tournament selection.
"All of the credit is to Miami," said BC head coach Todd Interdonato after his team's 8-2 loss. "If you look at what they did, from the start that they got, [it] seemed like any time we had a threat, their guys out of the bullpen were able to make pitches. They played elite defense with a play in center, a play in right, a double play turned in the eighth. They just played a complete game, and I just give a ton of credit to them."
For the Hurricanes, reaching the semifinal round stemmed from a two-day strategy that began when J.D. Arteaga started Rob Evans in Wednesday's Second Round matchup against Stanford. Stretching him through 90 pitches across seven innings, the clubhouse manager openly courted the free-swinging Cardinal for a matchup against a power-pitching arm that sat in the low-90s with a high-end slider. Stanford later keyed on the slider, but an adjustment to move to direct heat allowed the southpaw to pitch from ahead of all but three hitters and two full counts.
Shortening the bullpen's work therefore allowed Miami to enter Thursday with a full complement of arms behind starting pitcher Lazaro Collera. A heavy-armed righty, his overhand delivery tailored perfect to BC's one-through-nine mentality, and the Eagles failed to generate more than a single hit after back-to-back base knocks drove two runs across the top of the first inning.
"I thought they were on the attack," Interdonato explained, "and it felt like they were in control of our bats. When this game started, our whole objective was to get in control - put up the first zero, score the first run - which is what we did. But they answered with that four-spot in the second, [and] that gave them control. Even with the hit-by-pitch on [Nick] Wang [in the sixth], they immediately turned a double play. They were just in control for the whole time and landed multiple pitches for strikes to [consistently] get ahead."
Collera notably entered the game with control statistics warranting an eyebrow raise, but he avoided big innings by inducing outs with his pitch selection. He chased a Julio Solier single in the third inning with Ty Mainolfi's fly ball before striking out Nick Wang and later worked out of a potential fourth inning jam when Luke Gallo was caught stealing and Gunnar Johnson grounded out after a one-out walk.Â
Yielding to Nick Robert in the sixth, BC put a runner in scoring position with back-to-back singles, but the preceding double-play allowed the former starter to punch Gunnar Johnson into an inning-ending grounder to short. As that unfolded, a pitching staff that began with AJ Colarusso watched the Hurricanes take advantage of individual mistake pitches in a game where its aggregate arguably threw better outside of those outliers.
"We just have to continue our uphill climb," said Interdonato. "Our worst offensive game in the last handful of weeks came in [the first game] against Georgia Tech, and I feel like we've had this slow climb out of it. What our offense is missing - everybody kind of waits for the big swing or the big hit or somebody clearing the bases with a double, and that's never been my way of thinking. I feel that our offensive is predicated on aggressiveness and creating a rhythm, putting pressure on people. In order for us to play at our best, we need 3-4-5 plate appearances in a row, and one swing, one home run, one bases-clearing double is not who we are. We are really good, one-through-nine, and that's when we're at our best."
Heading back home after their loss to the Hurricanes, BC now faces an elongated wait until Monday's national selection show. An expected-No. 2 seed, the team once entrenched within the national polls is still a virtual lock for the NCAA Tournament, but its destination remains unknown. Prior to that, practices and hitting sessions await a lineup seeking to pull out of its ACC slump while the bullpen can enter a neutral site matchup with guaranteed rest.
"There's a lot of anger in that dugout," said Interdonato. "There's a lot of angst in that dugout, and I know you can look at the totality of this year and feel really good about it, but there are 40 competitors in the dugout that are kind of getting it taken to them. They're [angry]. I don't think I'm going to have to motivate them at practice this week."
The 2026 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament Selection Show airs on Monday, May 25, at 12 p.m., on ESPN2. The broadcast will reveal the full 64-team field, the 16 regional sites and the national seeds, to which the bracket will then unfold with regional games beginning on Friday, May 29.Â
Insurance runs flowed through the sixth and seventh, but the dormant lineup ranked No. 1 nationally found its breakthrough after loading the bases after folks at Truist Field stopped stretching. Bags were loaded, and a seven-spot produced by two home runs revived the dormant Yellow Jackets. A Vahn Lackey two-run homer in the eighth and a Kent Schmidt two-run homer added security for reliever Justin Shadek, and the thought of facing the Wahoos in the semifinals ended with the mighty blue-and-gold wave flushing its way into Charlotte's weekend forecast.
BC and Miami anxiously awaited the previous game's hour-long overrun, but the anticipatory drama from Virginia's upset bid curiously sucked the air out of the Charlotte afternoon. Hours later, the upstart team from Chestnut Hill, an expected underdog against the hard-charging Hurricanes, lost their own game despite starting the week as a top-4 seed and left North Carolina with an angst-filled defeat now expected to linger in the clubhouse until Monday's national tournament selection.
"All of the credit is to Miami," said BC head coach Todd Interdonato after his team's 8-2 loss. "If you look at what they did, from the start that they got, [it] seemed like any time we had a threat, their guys out of the bullpen were able to make pitches. They played elite defense with a play in center, a play in right, a double play turned in the eighth. They just played a complete game, and I just give a ton of credit to them."
For the Hurricanes, reaching the semifinal round stemmed from a two-day strategy that began when J.D. Arteaga started Rob Evans in Wednesday's Second Round matchup against Stanford. Stretching him through 90 pitches across seven innings, the clubhouse manager openly courted the free-swinging Cardinal for a matchup against a power-pitching arm that sat in the low-90s with a high-end slider. Stanford later keyed on the slider, but an adjustment to move to direct heat allowed the southpaw to pitch from ahead of all but three hitters and two full counts.
Shortening the bullpen's work therefore allowed Miami to enter Thursday with a full complement of arms behind starting pitcher Lazaro Collera. A heavy-armed righty, his overhand delivery tailored perfect to BC's one-through-nine mentality, and the Eagles failed to generate more than a single hit after back-to-back base knocks drove two runs across the top of the first inning.
"I thought they were on the attack," Interdonato explained, "and it felt like they were in control of our bats. When this game started, our whole objective was to get in control - put up the first zero, score the first run - which is what we did. But they answered with that four-spot in the second, [and] that gave them control. Even with the hit-by-pitch on [Nick] Wang [in the sixth], they immediately turned a double play. They were just in control for the whole time and landed multiple pitches for strikes to [consistently] get ahead."
Collera notably entered the game with control statistics warranting an eyebrow raise, but he avoided big innings by inducing outs with his pitch selection. He chased a Julio Solier single in the third inning with Ty Mainolfi's fly ball before striking out Nick Wang and later worked out of a potential fourth inning jam when Luke Gallo was caught stealing and Gunnar Johnson grounded out after a one-out walk.Â
Yielding to Nick Robert in the sixth, BC put a runner in scoring position with back-to-back singles, but the preceding double-play allowed the former starter to punch Gunnar Johnson into an inning-ending grounder to short. As that unfolded, a pitching staff that began with AJ Colarusso watched the Hurricanes take advantage of individual mistake pitches in a game where its aggregate arguably threw better outside of those outliers.
"We just have to continue our uphill climb," said Interdonato. "Our worst offensive game in the last handful of weeks came in [the first game] against Georgia Tech, and I feel like we've had this slow climb out of it. What our offense is missing - everybody kind of waits for the big swing or the big hit or somebody clearing the bases with a double, and that's never been my way of thinking. I feel that our offensive is predicated on aggressiveness and creating a rhythm, putting pressure on people. In order for us to play at our best, we need 3-4-5 plate appearances in a row, and one swing, one home run, one bases-clearing double is not who we are. We are really good, one-through-nine, and that's when we're at our best."
Heading back home after their loss to the Hurricanes, BC now faces an elongated wait until Monday's national selection show. An expected-No. 2 seed, the team once entrenched within the national polls is still a virtual lock for the NCAA Tournament, but its destination remains unknown. Prior to that, practices and hitting sessions await a lineup seeking to pull out of its ACC slump while the bullpen can enter a neutral site matchup with guaranteed rest.
"There's a lot of anger in that dugout," said Interdonato. "There's a lot of angst in that dugout, and I know you can look at the totality of this year and feel really good about it, but there are 40 competitors in the dugout that are kind of getting it taken to them. They're [angry]. I don't think I'm going to have to motivate them at practice this week."
The 2026 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament Selection Show airs on Monday, May 25, at 12 p.m., on ESPN2. The broadcast will reveal the full 64-team field, the 16 regional sites and the national seeds, to which the bracket will then unfold with regional games beginning on Friday, May 29.Â
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