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Tennessee Cruises Past South Carolina 11-6 Behind Six-Run Third, Sets Up SEC Tournament Showdown with Arkansas

HOOVER, Ala. — Tennessee blew the game open with a six-run third inning, weathered two three-run rallies from South Carolina, and rode a freshman lefty starter and a freshman lefty closer to an 11-6 win over the Gamecocks on Tuesday night at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium. The No. 10-seeded Volunteers advanced to a Wednesday second-round date with No. 7 Arkansas. For South Carolina, seeded No. 15 and 22-35 on the season, Tuesday was the final day of 2026.

Tennessee improved to 38-19 overall and 15-15 in conference play. The Vols are scheduled to face Arkansas on Wednesday, May 20 at 5:30 p.m. ET on the SEC Network — the third of four second-round games packed into a single day at the Hoover Met, the kind of nonstop bracket grind that defines what the SEC’s expanded 16-team single-elimination format demands of every program still standing.

For a 16-seed Missouri team that’s been here once already this week, or a Tennessee team chasing a top-eight finish, every game means another flight back to campus avoided. Single-elimination means no Mulligans — beat the team in front of you, or go home.

The fans showed up for it. The Vols took their place in front of a crowd that, by night three of tournament baseball at the same field, was settling into the rhythm of four-games-a-day, six-days-running baseball. Same field, same vendors, same heat, same humidity. The crowd at the Hoover Met has watched the Tigers, the Rebels, the Commodores, the Wildcats, the Volunteers, the Gamecocks, the Sooners, and the LSU Tigers all flow through the same gates and dugouts in the span of about 10 hours. By Game 3, the early-evening crowd was a mix of fans who’d been at the venue since 10:30 a.m. and fresh arrivals just stretching their legs. Some had switched colors three times during the day.

The third inning

The game looked, for a moment, like it might tilt toward Columbia. South Carolina’s Patrick Evans tripled to right-center in the top of the third, scoring Dawson Harman and Luke Yuhasz to put the Gamecocks ahead 2-2. Talmadge LeCroy followed with a sacrifice-bunt RBI that brought Evans home and gave South Carolina a 3-2 lead.

Then Tennessee answered with a six-spot in the bottom of the inning.

Trent Grindlinger started it with an RBI single through the right side, scoring Blake Grimmer to tie the game 3-3. Manny Marin singled to right, advancing to second on the throw and scoring Henry Ford to make it 4-3. Nate Eisfelder followed with a two-run double to right-center that scored Marin and Grindlinger to extend the lead to 6-3. Leadoff hitter Garrett Wright capped the inning with a two-run single through the right side that scored Eisfelder and Jay Abernathy — both runs unearned — to push the lead to 8-3.

Six runs. Three doubles in the inning between Tennessee and South Carolina. By the time the Gamecocks recorded the third out, the game was a Tennessee runaway.

Wright ties the program record

Wright finished 4-for-5 with a home run, three RBI, two runs, and a stolen base — a four-hit performance that, per Tennessee Athletics, tied the program record for the most hits by a player in an SEC Tournament game. He became the eighth player in Tennessee history to do it, and the first since Hunter Ensley had four hits in the 2024 SEC Championship game against LSU.

Wright’s solo home run to right field in the bottom of the eighth, alongside a solo blast from third baseman Henry Ford to left field one batter later, served as the exclamation point on the win.

“It’s been a bit of a grind, but you know, we still have more season left,” Wright said. “We just gotta stack good at-bats. I thought we did that pretty well tonight.”

Eight different Tennessee players recorded a hit. Beyond Wright, Ford went 3-for-4 with three RBI, a double, a home run, and a sacrifice fly. Levi Clark added two hits and an RBI while catching for the game. Grimmer also had two hits and scored twice.

Appenzeller delivers in his first SEC start

The bigger story for Tennessee’s tournament trajectory may have happened on the mound. Freshman left-hander Cam Appenzeller — the SEC All-Freshman Team selection World Baseball Network flagged as a name to know in our No. 9-12 preview — made his first start against an SEC opponent and earned the win to improve to 6-1. Across 5.0 innings, he allowed three runs on six hits and three walks, striking out five on 84 pitches.

“I was feeling pretty good. I mean, I was a little bit slow today, but I was excited to get out there and pitch,” Appenzeller said. He acknowledged he hadn’t pitched at his peak — “I don’t think it was very close to my best stuff” — but Elander pointed to the freshman’s competitive instinct.

“He’s a very humble, hardworking kid,” Elander said. “He is talking about not having his best stuff but the guy is 5-1. Maybe his ERA’s not as pretty as it was a month or two ago, but the last two games — and here tonight — he gave us a chance to win an SEC game. To be able to do that as a true freshman and grind through and just take the ball, again, he’s been amazing for us all year long.”

Fellow freshman left-hander Will Haas closed it out. The Rockford, Minnesota, native earned his first career save with 2.1 shutout innings, allowing one hit and striking out six on 33 pitches — six of his seven outs recorded via the strikeout.

“I believe he hit 96 tonight for the first time since post-surgery,” Elander said of Haas. “The guy’s gonna compete. Objectively, it’s really good stuff. It’s a unique slot that’s hard to prepare for. It’s three pitches. We’re pretty fortunate to have, you know, Appy and Haas, those two young freshmen lefties that are gonna be good here for us for a while.”

That’s the kind of pitching depth that can change a tournament. Tennessee won’t have to throw Tegan Kuhns — MLB Pipeline’s No. 43 draft prospect — in their first round. Kuhns is now lined up to start against Arkansas Wednesday. As one Texas fan on r/collegebaseball noted with relief, watching the bracket implications unfold in real time: “Is Kuhns starting tomorrow? That’s good. As long as it’s not on Friday.”

South Carolina’s last day

For Monte Lee, the postgame conversation pivoted from the loss to a coaching future that remains uncertain. Lee took over the Gamecocks on an interim basis when Mark Kingston was removed during the season. He grew up 25 miles from Columbia, played and coached his way through Clemson and the College of Charleston, and was asked point-blank why he should be the next permanent head coach.

“Look, I’ve talked enough about myself,” Lee said. “I got into coaching 26 years ago to serve players and to be a good mentor, role model, coach the players to the best of my ability. Like Patrick said, I’ve always had the players back. I’ve had a lot of success as a head coach. You can look at my track record. Now that being said, the administration has to make a decision as to who they think is the best leader for the program moving forward.”

His message about how to rebuild South Carolina from here was direct.

“Whoever the next leader of this program is needs to build a program,” Lee said. “We need to get back to recruiting kids in the state of South Carolina and kids closer to home. Like a Pat Evans who will run through a brick wall for the program. We need more guys like him where it’s personal to them, the success of the program.”

Evans, the second baseman who finished 3-for-5 with three RBI including a triple in the third and a solo home run to left in the seventh, was the day’s South Carolina bright spot. His response when asked about Lee: “I would run through a brick wall for him, or at least die trying.”

Asked what the program needs to get back to the NCAA Tournament, Evans deflected: “I don’t really think that’s kind of my decision to kind of say what we need to improve on. I mean, this guy deserves a job next year and he’s our leader, man. We’re his soldiers.”

The Gamecocks also got a two-run home run from first baseman Will Craddock in the seventh — a shot that scored Jake Randolph and briefly cut Tennessee’s lead before the Vols answered with the two solo homers in the eighth.

Reese update

Tennessee was without one of its catchers Tuesday. Asked at the start of his postgame, Elander explained.

“We were just running outta practice here at the Met, getting the guys ready,” Elander said. “Outfield is running around. It was just kind of a freak accident. A ball got hit and it just clipped him in the right spot, and we were with him last night over at UAB. The staff here did a phenomenal job making sure he was in the best of hands. He’s back in Knoxville tonight, and he’s gonna get that thing worked on. As far as the actual timeline of what we’re looking at, I’m just glad Reese is in good spirits and we’ll see how it plays out over the next few days.”

Catcher Levi Clark started for Reese on Tuesday and caught the entire game, finishing 2-for-5 with an RBI.

The reaction

College baseball Reddit was loud on this one — and for South Carolina, it ran through gallows humor. “Just end this dogshit ass pathetic season already I’m so goddamn tired boss,” one Gamecocks fan posted as Tennessee’s lead grew.

Another South Carolina fan offered what may be the most telling line of the night, looking past Tuesday’s score to what the program needs to confront: “Tennessee, please end the suffering. I want a cleaning-house announcement tomorrow.” The “cleaning-house announcement” reference cuts to the South Carolina coaching search that Monte Lee has been auditioning for in his interim role.

A Tennessee fan offered an apology mid-game: “Trying our best.” When the South Carolina fan responded that Tennessee’s six-run third inning was “pretty f—ing nice,” the Vols fan deadpanned: “I said we are trying our best.”

Arkansas fans, watching their Wednesday opponent crystallize, were less subtle. “The things I would do for a Carolina win,” one wrote. Another, also a Razorback fan: “Y’all are the last non-bye team I want to play right now.”

The defensive struggles dominated the running commentary. South Carolina committed three errors; Tennessee one. A Texas fan summed up the early going: “This game is a defensive ‘masterclass.'”

The grind

The Hoover Met crowd has now seen four games in 11 hours on the same field. Single-elimination tournament baseball in the SEC, especially with the format expanded to 16 teams, is unlike anything else in college sports — six days, 15 games, one stadium. Five-and-a-half-hour days for the fans wearing two team colors. Pitchers stretching at 9 a.m. for a 10:30 a.m. start. The grounds crew working in shifts.

Bianco called it “the bright side.” Mingione said the league has “moved the needle” in just about every direction it could. Corbin remarked on the joy of watching it unfold: “I never thought I’d be part of something like this growing up in New Hampshire.” Lee, with his program’s season over, said: “It’s just been a wonderful experience.”

For the next 96 hours, the calendar at Hoover doesn’t blink. Four games tomorrow, all on SEC Network. Two on Thursday. Two on Friday. Two on Saturday. One — the championship — on Sunday at 2 p.m. ET on ABC.

Tennessee’s place in that calendar is now etched: Wednesday, 5:30 p.m. ET, vs. No. 7 Arkansas. The Razorbacks have spent the day resting in their hotel.

What’s next

Tennessee will face No. 7 Arkansas in the second round on Wednesday, May 20 at 5:30 p.m. ET on the SEC Network. The Razorbacks are 36-19 overall and 17-13 SEC under 24th-year head coach Dave Van Horn, ranked No. 12 in the D1Baseball Top 25, and feature the deepest collection of MLB Pipeline draft prospects in the conference per our No. 5-8 preview: catcher Ryder Helfrick (No. 16), LHP Hunter Dietz (No. 18), RHP Carson Wiggins (No. 83), and RHP Gabe Gaeckle (No. 86).

Elander said the Vols will start right-hander Evan Blanco against Arkansas. “Blanco and I were talking about it off of, again, how he threw it out. He feels really, really good. The guy’s an elite competitor.”

Asked broadly about the importance of the SEC Tournament for a team like Tennessee, Elander framed it the way the Vols clearly approached Tuesday’s win.

“For a theme around here a long time is, you’ve got a chance to win a ball game, let’s go play ball. I know our players are excited to be here. We have some returning guys but a lot of these guys, it’s their first time they’ve been here because they’re fresh transfers, and these kids in other conferences watch this tournament on TV and want to play in it. One more day with your guys, with your team, we might as well take advantage of it.”

For South Carolina, the season is over. The roster will reconvene with Lee in Columbia for one-by-one exit meetings, with the administration’s coaching search now in public view.

By the Numbers

Score: Tennessee 11, South Carolina 6 (FINAL)
Hits: Tennessee 15, South Carolina 11
Errors: Tennessee 1, South Carolina 3
Left on base: Tennessee 6, South Carolina 9

Tennessee pitching: Cam Appenzeller (W, 6-1) 5.0 IP, 6 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 3 BB, 5 K, 84 pitches. Brayden Krenzel 1.2 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, 28 pitches. Will Haas (S, 1) 2.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 6 K, 33 pitches.

South Carolina pitching: Brandon Stone (L, 5-5) 2.2 IP, 9 H, 8 R, 5 ER, 0 BB, 4 K, 53 pitches. Zach Russell 2.1 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, 42 pitches. Alex Philpott 2.1 IP, 3 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 0 BB, 4 K, 32 pitches. Parker Marlatt 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, 9 pitches.

Tennessee hitting leaders: Garrett Wright 4-for-5, HR, 3 RBI, 2 R, 1 SB (ties program SEC Tournament record for hits). Henry Ford 3-for-4, HR, 2B, 2 RBI, 1 SF, 3 R. Blake Grimmer 2-for-5, 2 R. Levi Clark 2-for-5, 1 RBI. Nate Eisfelder 1-for-4, 2B, 2 RBI. Trent Grindlinger 1-for-5, 1 RBI.

South Carolina hitting leaders: Patrick Evans 3-for-5, HR, 3B, 3 RBI, 2 R. Jake Randolph 2-for-4, 1 R, 1 BB. Will Craddock 1-for-4, HR, 2 RBI. Talmadge LeCroy 1-for-3, 1 RBI (sacrifice bunt).

For More on the 2026 SEC Tournament

2026 SEC Baseball Tournament Schedule

All times Eastern. Second game of each session begins approximately 30 minutes after the conclusion of the first.

Tuesday, May 19 — First Round (SEC Network)
Game 1: No. 9 Ole Miss vs. No. 16 Missouri — 10:30 a.m. (Missouri 10, Ole Miss 8 — FINAL)
Game 2: No. 12 Vanderbilt vs. No. 13 Kentucky — 2 p.m. (Vanderbilt 8, Kentucky 5 — FINAL)
Game 3: No. 10 Tennessee vs. No. 15 South Carolina — 5:30 p.m. (Tennessee 11, South Carolina 6 — FINAL)
Game 4: No. 11 Oklahoma vs. No. 14 LSU — 9 p.m.

Wednesday, May 20 — Second Round (SEC Network)
Game 5: Missouri vs. No. 8 Mississippi State — 10:30 a.m.
Game 6: Vanderbilt vs. No. 5 Florida — 2 p.m.
Game 7: Tennessee vs. No. 7 Arkansas — 5:30 p.m.
Game 8: Winner Game 4 vs. No. 6 Auburn — 9 p.m.

Thursday, May 21 — Quarterfinals (SEC Network)
Game 9: Winner Game 5 vs. No. 1 Georgia — 4 p.m.
Game 10: Winner Game 6 vs. No. 4 Alabama — 8 p.m.

Friday, May 22 — Quarterfinals (SEC Network)
Game 11: Winner Game 7 vs. No. 2 Texas — 4 p.m.
Game 12: Winner Game 8 vs. No. 3 Texas A&M — 8 p.m.

Saturday, May 23 — Semifinals (SEC Network)
Game 13: Winner Game 9 vs. Winner Game 10 — 1 p.m.
Game 14: Winner Game 11 vs. Winner Game 12 — 5 p.m.

Sunday, May 24 — Championship (ABC)
Game 15: Winner Game 13 vs. Winner Game 14 — 2 p.m.

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