Rice wins 1st national title

Published 12:00 am Tuesday, June 24, 2003

OMAHA, Neb. - Wayne Graham told his players before the College World Series championship game that this Rice team was the best ever.

The Owls then went out and proved it - in emphatic fashion.

Rice scored three runs in the first inning, then added a record-tying seven in the sixth as the Owls won the school's first NCAA title in any sport with a 14-2 victory over Stanford on Monday night in the CWS' most-lopsided championship game.

Email newsletter signup

''He'll always remember this team, just like all of us will,'' catcher Justin Ruchti said of Graham. ''But this one will stand out for him. This was his first national championship team. It's been an amazing run.''

Philip Humber pitched a five-hitter, Enrique Cruz drove in four runs and Paul Janish knocked in three as Rice (58-12) battered Stanford (51-18) pitching for 14 hits.

''Everyone played his best game, and Phil did a good job,'' said Graham, who won five junior college national championships and completed his 12th season at Rice. ''We were fortunate to have better-rested pitching.''

The performance capped a season during which the Owls put together a school-record 30-game winning streak and had one of the nation's top pitching staffs and defenses.

Rice finished the CWS with a 2.83 ERA in six games, and it was the Owls' pitching that carried them to the national title.

''We got some good breaks and some bad breaks here, but you have to overcome the bad breaks,'' Graham said. ''We have a lot of pitching depth and a lot of those guys will be back next year.''

And that includes all three of Rice's top starters: Jeff Niemann, Wade Townsend and Humber. That prospect has the 67-year-old Graham thinking about a repeat, not retirement.

''I feel like I could go 20 more,'' Graham said. ''I'm not going out. We're starting to think tomorrow morning about winning another one. We want to come back and do it again.''

Stanford's Ryan Garko, who batted .402 and became the first Cardinal to hit over .400 since 1991, was 3-for-11 against Rice.

''I think the thing that really impressed me was they are three real big guys, but they're finesse pitchers,'' Garko said. ''They mixed up their pitches well. They weren't afraid to throw a 1-0 curve or a 2-0 change. They have three good arms.''

Stanford, which overcame a second-round CWS loss to reach the final series and then forced a third game against Rice, lost in the championship game for the third time in four years.

In their last title game appearance, the Cardinal lost 12-1 to Miami in 2001. That loss tied the previous record for largest margin of deficit in the CWS championship.

''We haven't made much of a game of it the last two times,'' Stanford coach Mark Marquess said.

Freshman left-hander Mark Romanczuk gave up the three runs in the first inning. Five innings and five pitchers later, the Owls led 11-0.

Humber (11-3) retired the first seven batters he faced before Brian Hall doubled in the third. He then set down 10 of the next 12 before Garko doubled in the seventh and later scored to end the shutout bid.

Humber walked two and struck out four in the first championship game complete game since Louisiana State's Brett Laxton beat Wichita State in 1993.

Humber worked largely in the shadows of Niemann and Townsend most of the postseason. He lasted just 3 2-3 innings in Rice's 5-4 win over Texas last Wednesday.

''I went into my last start thinking about what bad could happen,'' Humber said. ''This time, I just focused on the game and getting the ball over the plate.''

While Humber hummed along, Romanczuk (12-2) struggled from the start. He threw 46 pitches and walked five as Rice sent nine men to the plate in the first.

''If you can't throw strikes, you can't win games,'' said Romanczuk, who threw only 19 of his 50 pitches for strikes.

The Owls, who had six hits and two walks against four pitchers in the sixth, tied a championship game record with their seven-run inning. It was the biggest outburst since Southern California had a seven-run inning while beating Missouri 8-7 in 1958.

Kolkhorst, who doubled twice in the inning, drove in two runs with his second one. Janish also had a two-run double, and Cruz hit a two-run single. Bubela drove in another run with his base hit.

''We were intense the whole game and never let up,'' Janish said.

Stanford's Sam Fuld set the CWS record for career hits with 24. His RBI-single in the eighth broke a tie with Keith Moreland, who had 23 hits for Texas from 1973-75.

The Cardinal's John Hudgins, who tied a College World Series record with three wins, was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. He is the 16th player to win it from the losing team, and first since Florida State's Marshall McDougall in 1999.

Graham lamented the Owls' lack of success in Omaha during their previous three trips when they went a combined 1-6.

''He's been waiting for this his whole life,'' first baseman Vincent Sinisi said. ''He got the junior college championship, but he's been waiting for this for 13 years and we finally gave it to him.''