Fsu Baseball Opens ACC Quarterfinals With Wes Mendes on the Mound at 3 p.m. Thursday

Fsu baseball faces Pittsburgh at 3 p.m. Thursday in the ACC quarterfinals as Wes Mendes, the ACC Pitcher of the Year, starts to bolster a 38-16 season.

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Stephanie Grant
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Sports reporter covering women's athletics, college sports, and the Olympics. Advocate for equal coverage in sports journalism.
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Fsu Baseball Opens ACC Quarterfinals With Wes Mendes on the Mound at 3 p.m. Thursday

will start on the mound for when the No. 3 seed opens its quarterfinal against at 3 p.m. Thursday on the .

The Seminoles enter the game at 38-16 and are trying to strengthen their case for a top-eight national seed in the ; Mendes’ start is a central part of that plan. Mendes was the third ACC Pitcher of the Year in Florida State history and earned First Team All-ACC honors this season.

Those credentials give Florida State a clear axis to build around. Mendes finished the regular slate as the program’s most decorated pitcher this year, and the Seminoles have pushed into the conference bracket as the No. 3 seed with the explicit goal of improving their postseason standing.

Pittsburgh arrives having upset higher seeds to reach the quarters: the Panthers took down No. 11 Louisville on Tuesday and followed that by beating No. 6 Wake Forest on Wednesday. Pittsburgh’s run through the bottom half of the bracket has added a layer of unpredictability to the matchup, even though Florida State swept Pittsburgh in the regular season.

The contrast is the story’s tension: Florida State’s regular-season dominance over Pittsburgh and its clear postseason objectives versus Pittsburgh’s fresh momentum from back-to-back tournament wins. That momentum matters in short, win-or-go-home tournament play, and Pittsburgh had yet to announce a starter for the quarterfinal as of Thursday’s matchup announcement.

For fsu baseball, the immediate stakes are straightforward. A win keeps the Seminoles on track to claim the conference crown they have not won since 2018 and bolsters the argument for a top-eight national seed, which would influence NCAA Tournament planning and regional assignments. A loss, particularly to a team the Seminoles swept in the fall, would complicate that narrative and shift the calculus for the committee.

How the game unfolds will hinge on a few clear variables: whether Mendes can replicate the form that earned him league honors, how the Seminoles’ lineup handles Pittsburgh’s tournament-tested pitching, and whether Pittsburgh’s late surge is the kind of momentum that can overcome earlier regular-season results. The Panthers’ two wins over higher-ranked opponents this week signal they will not be an easy out.

Given the facts at hand, Florida State’s best path forward is simple: leverage its ace. Mendes’ start gives the Seminoles their highest-probability way to advance with their postseason positioning intact. If they protect that edge Thursday at 3 p.m., the Seminoles will preserve the clearer route to both an ACC title — their first since 2018 — and the national seeding they are chasing.

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Sports reporter covering women's athletics, college sports, and the Olympics. Advocate for equal coverage in sports journalism.