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Baseball scores early and often to Top Presbyterian, 22-5 -UCF light athletics

Orlando – Andrew Sundean led Grand Slam and a career high in which six runs had arrived when the UCF baseball on Tuesday evening in John Euliano Park and often scored on the way to 22: 5 against Presbyterian.

The Knights posted in the first and sixth innings with the seven-run and an 11-run sixth crooked numbers. Eleven different players recorded hits in the competition for black and gold, and eight of them recorded several appearances. The starting jug Grant Siegel also gave the black and golden 7.0-solid innovations of the work when the UCF recorded the victory in what its last game of the week and the non-conference game of the year marked.

UCF switches to 28-24 with the victory, while the Big South Conference PC falls to 17-33. The Black and Gold will close your regular season with an important three-game Big 12 series at home against Baylor this weekend.

“I was proud of our offensive production and Grant Siegel was excellent for us tonight. It was also nice to see how Hartley has a clean inning and farmer outside for the first time in a long time,” said head coach Rich Wallace. “Our pitch selection was better offensive, and the plans also looked a little better. We saw how the additional basic hit appears here in this case and obviously helps a lot.”

After 2: 0, the black and gold offensive reacted with seven runs to seven goals at the bottom of the first. With the invited bases and nobody, the Senior Sundean was his first career grand Slam to the left field to give the knights a 4-2 advantage. After a single from Antonio Jimenez, Dylan King doubled him at home. Braden Calse then did a RBI single 6-2 and the last run came home on a Groundout from Mateo Gray.

The Knights added a run in the second in the second in a victim fly by Sundean and thanks to a deep solo homeres to the right field of King to make it 9-3. King's Round Tripper drove 414 feet and was driven by the racket with 107 miles per hour.

Sundean drove the game with 11 runs in the last of the sixth in his sixth game with an RBI single and UCF. In an inning where 15 batters came on the plate, Edian Espinal, Jimenez, Calisene, Gray, Deaamez Ross, Chase Kewson and Robbie Demetree came in runs. Espinal performed with an RBI single and an RBI double. The 11 runs came 10 goals and marked a high season for Runs, which were achieved in an inning a year.

Since Siegel Nullen put on the table and retired the side in the fifth, sixth and seventh inner rings, the knights came with an RBI double from the Freshman Gray at the bottom of the seventh place. Senior Wiley Hartley then entered the hill and hinted out the blue hose to complete it in the eighth and fellow human beings, Spencer Bauer, with the ninth value.

Siegel got the victory to switch to 5: 2 after achieving a high season high with 7.0 Inning. He only resulted in two deserved runs with four goals while he hit three and only went one dough. Presbyterian sent nine different jugs to the hill and the starter Mason McDaniel was marked with the loss to 1: 2.

Sundean led the pioneers out of the plate at UCF by making a perfect 2-against-2 plate, two runs and one career best Six RBIS with a Grand Slam, while King went 3: 4 with a double, a home-two run and two RBIs. Calse also had a three hits and drove in three runs, while Espinal and Matt Prevesk added three goals each. Andrew Williamson scored four runs. In total, UCF recorded season height in both runs and hits at night with 22 runs on 23 goals.

The game was the first of one last four-game home for the knights and the fourth win of Black and Gold in the last five games.

UCF will close his regular season by welcoming Baylor in the city for an important Big 12 conference from three games from Thursday to Saturday in John Euliano Park. A trip to the 2025 Phillips 66 Big 12 Baseball Championship 2025 will be for both teams in the management, since the UCF is currently entering 11th place for the 12th place and Baylor. The top -12 teams qualify for the conference tournament. The games on Thursday and Friday are set up for 6 p.m., while the final begins on Saturday at 1 p.m.

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