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Charlottesville, Va. — March 20–22, 2026
Wake Forest’s weekend in Charlottesville was defined by three different baseball games — each with its own story, momentum swings, and turning points — and by the time Sunday’s final out was recorded, the Demon Deacons had shown why they’re one of the ACC’s most electrifying offenses, while also revealing just how fine the margins are when facing a nationally ranked opponent.
Across three contests at Disharoon Park, Wake Forest had its chances, seized moments, and put together one of its most dominant innings of the season. What it couldn’t do consistently was match Virginia’s timely execution in clutch situations. The result: a 2‑1 loss for the Deacons, but one that illustrated both their potential and the work ahead. (virginiasports.com)
GAME 1 — Friday Night: Missed Chances Linger in 10‑6 Loss
Friday night never got away from Wake Forest — and that was part of the frustration.
The Deacons put pressure on Virginia early, working counts and forcing traffic on the bases. In multiple innings, Wake had runners in scoring position with a chance to tilt the game. But each time, the breakthrough never quite came. A strikeout here, a routine ground ball there — small moments that kept innings from turning into something bigger.
Virginia didn’t leave those same openings untouched. The Cavaliers built their lead methodically, stringing together base hits and taking advantage of every extra opportunity. Where Wake Forest saw innings stall, Virginia saw innings extend. Shortstop Eric Becker set the tone for the Cavaliers with a leadoff home run in the first, and Virginia never let that momentum slip. (virginiasports.com)
Still, Wake Forest stayed within reach. A solo home run by Luke Costello in the second inning energized the team, and later innings saw contributions from Javar Williams, Kade Lewis, and Matt Conte as Wake Forest chipped away at the lead. (godeacs.com)
By the later innings, Virginia’s extended rallies kept Wake Forest playing from behind, and the final outs recorded a 10‑6 loss that felt closer than the scoreboard suggested.
Final: Virginia 10, Wake Forest 6
GAME 2 — Saturday: One Inning Changes Everything in 13‑4 Rout
Saturday didn’t build slowly — it erupted.
Through the first two innings, the game carried a familiar tension. Then came the third, and everything changed. With two outs, Wake Forest sent eleven batters to the plate, scoring eight runs and flipping the game entirely in its favor.
Javar Williams launched a home run to start the barrage, followed by JD Stein with a two-run homer — his first career long ball — and Boston Torres, in his first start, added three hits and an RBI double. Kade Lewis, Luke Costello, and Blake Schaaf all drove in runs, turning a potentially quiet inning into a historic offensive surge. (godeacs.com)
What stood out was not just the scoring, but the sustained pressure. Every at-bat carried weight; two outs didn’t end innings — they extended them. Wake Forest maintained momentum for the rest of the game, adding runs in the middle and late innings to finish with 16 hits and seven extra-base knocks. The Cavaliers could not recover from this offensive onslaught.
Final: Wake Forest 13, Virginia 4
GAME 3 — Sunday: Early Lead Slips Away as Virginia Pulls Away, 14‑4
Sunday began with opportunity — and for a moment, Wake Forest grabbed it.
In the third inning, after working the count and drawing walks, Luke Costello delivered a two-RBI single to give Wake the lead, sparking hope that Saturday’s momentum could carry into a series win. (theacc.com)
But Virginia’s response was immediate. The Cavaliers strung hits together in the middle innings, adding five runs in one stretch that erased the Wake lead and swung momentum decisively. Virginia extended the lead further, forcing Wake Forest into a defensive posture it could not escape.
Wake still had flashes. Kade Lewis and Blake Schaaf recorded multi-hit games, and the lineup continued to battle at the plate. But Virginia’s sustained rallies and timely hitting proved too much, ultimately ending the game early via run rule.
Final: Virginia 14, Wake Forest 4
SERIES STATISTICS & KEY THEMES
Wake Forest Storylines
• Offensive Explosion: Saturday’s 13-run output demonstrated the Deacons’ capability when the lineup clicks. (godeacs.com)
• Two-Out Production: Key hits in Saturday’s third inning turned pressure into decisive runs.
• Inconsistency: While Wake led or stayed close in all three games, execution varied inning-to-inning.
Virginia Storylines
• Timely Response: The Cavaliers converted in clutch situations, particularly in Games 1 and 3. (theacc.com)
• Depth in Scoring: Spread runs across multiple innings, keeping pressure on Wake’s defense.
• Series Resilience: Answered Wake’s best moments with their own momentum swings. (virginiasports.com)
The Feel of the Series
Friday felt like a missed opportunity: Wake Forest had enough moments to control the game but couldn’t string them together. Saturday was a breakout, demonstrating Wake’s offensive ceiling when patience, power, and timing aligned. Sunday showed how quickly momentum can shift; Wake struck first, but Virginia’s response was immediate and overwhelming.
Across the weekend, Wake Forest illustrated its potential and competitive fire, while also revealing the work needed to sustain that level against elite ACC opponents.
Weekend Takeaways
For a team chasing its first series win in Charlottesville since 2002, Wake Forest showed both its potential and the challenges ahead. The offense flashed in bursts — most notably in Saturday’s eight-run third inning — proving that when patience, contact, and power align, the Demon Deacons can dominate.
Defensively and on the mound, Wake showed moments of resilience, keeping Friday’s opener competitive and limiting Virginia after the early innings on Saturday. Yet consistency remained elusive. Runs came in waves rather than steady pressure, and key opportunities slipped away, especially in Friday’s and Sunday’s contests.
What this series ultimately highlighted is clear: Wake Forest has the talent and firepower to compete with any team in the ACC. The next step is sustaining it across every inning and every game. If the Deacons can turn flashes of brilliance into a reliable formula, the rest of the season could be very exciting.

