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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Plutko pitches Bruins to victory

UCLA tops Mississippi St. in opener of CWS finals

UCLA right fielder Eric Filia makes a leaping catch of a fly ball in the fifth inning Monday. (Associated Press)
Associated Press

OMAHA, Neb. – Adam Plutko limited Mississippi State to a run on four hits in six innings, and UCLA survived some anxious moments to beat the Bulldogs 3-1 in Game 1 of the College World Series finals Monday night.

Plutko retired nine straight to start, worked out of trouble twice and turned the game over to the bullpen in the seventh. The Bulldogs (51-19) left runners in scoring position four of the last six innings.

“We dodged some bullets, no doubt about it, but you have to give credit to our defense.,” UCLA coach John Savage said. “Kind of a Bruin game. Tight game, and at the end of the night we were fortunate to come out with the win.”

The Bruins (48-17) are one win from their first national championship in baseball and the school’s record 109th in a team sport.

“Not much to get excited about,” Savage said. “It comes down to tomorrow.”

Mississippi State must win Game 2 on Tuesday night to keep alive its hopes for its first NCAA title in any sport.

UCLA made it 3-0 in the fourth on Eric Filia’s two-out, two-run single off Chad Girodo, who replaced starter Trevor Fitts (0-1) in the second. That was the last of the Bruins’ six hits.

Plutko (10-3) walked in the Bulldogs’ run in the fourth.

UCLA is 40-0 when leading after seven innings. There was drama all the way to the end.

The estimated 8,000 Mississippi State fans at TD Ameritrade Park started the “Maroon and White” chant in the bottom of the ninth after C.T. Bradford and pinch-hitter Sam Frost singled to put runners on first and second with one out against closer David Berg.

Nick Ammirati flew out, and pinch-hitter Jacob Robson ended the game with his comebacker to Berg.

Berg, who was making his 50th appearance of the season, earned his NCAA-record 24th save with 1 2/3 innings of work.

“Records are meant to be broken, but titles are what matter,” Berg said. “So if we all win a national championship, I’ll enjoy that. But right now I don’t think about it at all.”