Rice escapes Bears in opener, 4-2

Defending champion Horns hand Miami worst series loss in school history

? Working on a one-hitter through eight innings, Jeff Niemann ignored cramps in his legs and went out for the ninth.

But after giving up back-to-back home runs, the big Rice right-hander was just happy to walk away with the victory as the Owls held on to beat Southwest Missouri State, 4-2, in the College World Series Saturday.

“I wanted to have a no-hitter, and then I wanted to have a shutout,” Niemann said. “I didn’t do that too well, I guess.”

David Aardsma came on in relief and got the last three outs after Greg Mathis and Jacob Hilgendorf homered off Niemann to open the inning.

“There’s no quit in Southwest Missouri,” Owls coach Wayne Graham said. “They scared me to death that last inning.”

Niemann (17-0) won his school-record 18th straight decision over two seasons.

Through eight innings, the 6-foot-9, 260-pound sophomore allowed only Mathis’ bunt single in the third.

Niemann walked one and struck out 10. He went to a three-ball count against one batter and threw only 87 pitches.

“Jeff came to the big show and was as good as he’s been all year,” Graham said. “I don’t think he can pitch better than that.”

Southwest Missouri State's Brooks Colvin, left, tags out Rice's Chris Kolkhorst at third base in the eighth inning. Rice won, 4-2, Saturday in the College World Series in Omaha, Neb.

Rice (54-11) advanced to a Monday meeting against Texas, which routed Miami, 13-2, Saturday night. SMS (40-25) will play the Hurricanes Monday.

Rice and SMS combined for only eight hits, tying the fewest in a CWS game.

SMS pitcher Chad Mulholland (10-4) settled down after struggling in the first inning. He hit two batters, walked one and threw a wild pitch — all against the first three batters.

After loading the bases, Rice picked up two runs on Enrique Cruz’s single and Craig Stansberry’s sacrifice fly.

Mulholland gave up only four hits the rest of the way, but two were solo homers by Vincent Sinisi in the third and Austin Davis in the sixth.

It was only the 50th and 51st home runs in Rice’s 65 games.

“I’ve always said we have a little bit of power,” Graham said, “even though it’s not reflected in the stats.”

Before Shaun Marcum walked in the eighth, Mathis was the only SMS batter to reach base. His third-inning bunt forced Niemann to come off the mound to his right and try to barehand the ball. But he couldn’t get a grip, and scorekeeper Lou Spry ruled it a hit.

“I would have scored it a hit,” Graham said.

“I’ll take an error,” Niemann deadpanned.

Niemann said he started getting cramps in his calves and hamstrings in the seventh inning.

“I gave it all I got,” Niemann said. “I was trying to get ahead, throw strikes and get lucky.”

But Mathis lofted a ball into the left-field bleachers leading off the ninth, and Hilgendorf’s liner cleared the wall near the same spot.

Aardsma then came on and picked up his 12th save.

SMS catcher Tony Piazza said he and his teammates were impressed with Niemann.

“It’s hard to hit when you’re down 0-2 or 1-2 in the count all the time,” Piazza said. “We figure that’s the best pitcher we’ll see here.”

Texas 13, Miami 2

Texas converted three of Miami’s five errors into eight unearned runs, and J.P. Howell pitched six solid innings as the Longhorns cruised.

Defending national champion Texas (49-18) advanced to a Monday game against intrastate rival Rice (54-11).

Miami (44-16-1) will play Southwest Missouri State (40-25) in a Monday elimination game. The Hurricanes have gone two games and out only once in 19 previous CWS appearances.

Saturday’s 11-run loss was the Hurricanes’ worst in their 74-game CWS history. Their previous most-lopsided loss was a 12-2 defeat to Texas in 1989.