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Northridge Slips Out of Gear : College baseball: North Carolina scores 12 unanswered runs to beat Matadors, 15-8, in 10 innings in Carolina Invitational.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

In high gear and pulling away with each at-bat, the Cal State Northridge baseball team shifted into cruise control only to have its high-powered offense misfire, sputter and eventually die.

North Carolina, trailing by five after four innings, scored 12 unanswered runs--including seven in the final inning--to shock the eighth-ranked Matadors, 15-8, in 10 innings Saturday in the Carolina Invitational.

And so the host Tar Heels will have at least one pleasant memory from an otherwise forgettable season. North Carolina, a playoff team a year ago, suffered through an 8-16 Atlantic Coast Conference campaign this season.

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“We knew going in this was going to be special for them. It was something they were looking forward to, playing us and Long Beach on back-to-back days, and they were ready for us,” Northridge Coach Bill Kernen said. “They teed it up on us.”

Indeed, the Tar Heels (31-26) knocked off 10th-ranked Cal State Long Beach, 7-6, on Friday.

Against Kevin Kloek, John Bushart and Jason Van Heerde, North Carolina had 19 hits--four more than the previous high Matador pitchers had allowed in a game this season. The 15 runs also marked a season-high for an opponent.

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“We pretty much got our butts kicked tonight,” said Scott Mowl, Northridge’s first baseman. “When we scored that eighth run, I think we might have sat back a little bit.”

Mowl provided most of the Matadors’ punch, slugging home runs in his first two at-bats to account for four of the runs. His three-run homer on a full-count pitch in the first gave Northridge a jump-start against Tar Heel starter Jay Johnson.

In the third, Mowl led off the inning with his 12th homer, high and far over the fence down the right-field line. A two-run single by Chris Olsen staked Kloek and the Matadors to a 6-1 lead.

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Then unusual things started happening.

With one on and two out in the fourth, Scott Hughes, a .253 hitter who had not hit a home run in 91 at-bats, took Kloek deep over the right-field fence to cut North Carolina’s deficit to three.

Northridge answered with a pair of unearned runs in the bottom of the inning--in the tournament format, the Matadors were the home team--but the Tar Heels scored a run in the fifth, three in the seventh and another in the eighth to force extra innings.

And it was Hughes who struck a second key blow, muscling up for a three-run homer off Kloek with two out in the seventh.

Bushart came on in the eighth with Northridge clinging to an 8-7 lead, but North Carolina tied it on a walk, an error by Matador third baseman Mike Solar and a run-scoring single by Doug Merritt.

Northridge (37-13-1) committed three errors and second baseman Scott Richardson failed to convert two double-play chances--the second of which led to Hughes’ seventh-inning homer.

Given new life, North Carolina took advantage in the 10th against Bushart. The first six batters reached base safely in the inning on a walk, Solar’s second error and four consecutive singles.

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After a groundout and a line drive that was caught by center fielder Greg Shockey, Bushart (5-2) allowed two more hits before he was lifted in favor of Van Heerde.

Van Heerde was greeted by yet another single, but the inning came to a merciful end when Keith Grunewald was tagged out rounding third.

“Hopefully, they taught us something out there today,” said Kernen, whose team will conclude regular-season play against Wake Forest at 9 a.m. today. “In the regionals, a lot of things can happen. There’s a lot of not-normal stuff that goes on--guys who haven’t hit all season go off, et cetera.”

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