Eddie King leads UofL baseball past Kentucky

Big night for Eddie King, Jr., driving in the winning run with his second hit of the game (Mike DeZarn photo).
Two Louisville coaches with success in their rivalries with Kentucky, Jeff Brohm and Dan McDonnell (Mike DeZarn photo).

Some games, mostly the winning outcomes, are more memorable than others. Just ask Eddie King, Jr., the University of Louisville outfielder, who waited until his senior year in college to record his first ever walk off run batted in. It could not have come at a better time for Louisville baseball, giving the Cardinals a 4-3 win over Kentucky in the 10th inning.

A hardy crowd of 3,680 braved the 40-degree temperatures at Jim Patterson Stadium, most of them still around at the end. Not just any college baseball game, a rivalry game between two programs who don’t want to let down their fans under any circumstances.

It was an Eddie King, Jr. night.  The player who got off to a slow start this season, coming on strong of late. He would would have two hits in four at bats, with two runs batted in. His first hit, a single, driving in Jake Monroe who had tripled in the second inning.

But the one he will remember in this game was his last at bat in the 10th inning. Lucas Moore earned a walk, Garrett Pike singled up the middle to put the tying and winning runs on base.  Jake Munroe would hit the first pitch off a relief pitcher to drive Moore home, tying the game.

Eddie King, Jr. was 0-2 in the pitch count, tense, tense, tense. No problem, got his eye on the ball, driving a singer up the middle over second base. Pike will score the winning run. And Eddie King, Jr. is the guy that every UofL fan loves forever. It was his fourth home run of the season, improving his batting average to 333 for the year.

Eddie and company hit the road for three games at North Carolina State this weekend. First game Friday at 6 p.m.

Is Jake Monroe happy? He’s leading the team in home runs with five and has a 393 batting average (Mike DeZarn photo).
Lots of strikeouts for the visitors from Lexington, 12 of them against eight UofL pitchers (Mike DeZarn photo).
Young Jeremiah had the honor of opening the game with “Play Ball!” to the delight of his dad (Mike DeZarn photo).

ByCharlie Springer

Charlie Springer is a former sportswriter with the Courier-Journal & Louisville Times, former Managing Editor with Louisville Magazine, Communications Manager at Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. and a corporate affairs manager with CSWorks, LLC ... as well as a longtime fan of the University of Louisville and a Master's degree holder.

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