OKLAHOMA CITY — Laura Mealer's RBI single in the ninth inning gave Tennessee a 5-4 win over UCLA on Sunday that lifted the Volunteers into the Women's College World Series semifinals and eliminated the Bruins.
The game nearly had a controversial finish.
UCLA's Megan Grant hit a two-run blast with two outs in the top of the seventh inning that appeared to tie the score at 4-all. There was an umpire review to determine whether Grant touched home plate.
Tennessee coach Karen Weekly said Tennessee noticed that Grant's teammates touched her and helped her back to home plate. Weekly believed that was illegal, which she thought would have turned Grant's homer into the third out, so the Volunteers notified the umpires. Had Grant been called out, the game would have ended with Tennessee winning 4-2.
''I think everybody but four people (the umpires) saw the play at the plate,'' Weekly said. ''We saw in the dugout that she missed the plate, and then we saw that her teammates had kind of pushed her back. And by rule, that (home run) should have been nullified.''
After a nearly 15-minute delay, the home run ruling was upheld. The NCAA pool report after the game said assisting a runner is not reviewable. The report also said had it been reviewable, a warning would have been issued on a first offense, which would not have affected the score.
Grant said she didn't remember much after the 251-foot blast.
''It was just kind of a blackout moment." she said. ''I know going into that bat I just wanted to keep my mind right, stay aggressive. And honestly, after the swing, I did blackout indeed. After the fact, I just kind of trusted God with everything. The tensions were high and everything, and that's just where I just laid my pressure on.''