Baseball

Johns Hopkins Knocked Out by Denison

Release courtesy of Johns Hopkins Athletic Communications

EASTLAKE, Ohio – The eighth-ranked Johns Hopkins baseball team saw its remarkable 2026 campaign come to a close Saturday morning, falling to Denison, 8-0, in an elimination game at Classic Auto Group Park during the NCAA Division III Baseball Championship.
 
Despite the tough finale, the Blue Jays conclude a stellar first year under head coach Nate Mulberg with a 38-12 record. In his debut season, Mulberg guided Hopkins to the program's fourth consecutive—and 20th overall—Centennial Conference Championship, a ninth NCAA Regional title, a fourth Super Regional crown, and the program's eighth all-time Division III World Series appearance.
 
Denison jumped out to an early lead in the bottom of the first, using four consecutive singles to plate two runs against Hopkins starter Michael Yousef. Right fielder Alex Shane limited the damage by making a spectacular leaping catch against the wall to rob the Big Red of extra bases and save at least one additional run.
 
Following the rocky start, Yousef settled into a groove, retiring nine of the next 11 batters he faced. However, Denison manufactured another run in the fifth using a suicide squeeze bunt to stretch the lead to 3-0, before capitalizing on a bases-loaded groundout later in the frame to make it 4-0.
 
Meanwhile, the Blue Jays struggled to find a rhythm against Denison's pitching staff, managing just three hits on the day. Hopkins threatened briefly in the top of the seventh when Clay Hartje drew a walk to snap a long stretch of retired batters, but the offense ultimately couldn't cash in.
 
The Big Red (46-2) put the game out of reach in the bottom of the seventh, taking advantage of a pair of costly defensive miscues—including a missed double-play opportunity and a dropped pop-up—alongside a two-run single to add four unearned insurance runs to take an 8-0 lead.
 
While the elimination marks a bittersweet end to the weekend, the 2026 season stands as a highly successful debut campaign for the program's new leadership, as well as a historic senior class that leaves Eastlake having guided the Blue Jays to their third Division III World Series appearance in the last four years.
 
Inside the Box Score – Johns Hopkins
 
• Michael Yousef (7-2) absorbed the loss, surrendering four runs (three earned) on 10 hits with one strikeout.
 
• Three Blue Jays recorded a hit led by Clay Hartje, who went 1-for-2 with a walk.
 
• Luke Baker reached base safely in 42 of the last 44 games to conclude the season.