
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) ā Coastal Carolina coach Kevin Schnall, tossed from the game along with first base coach Matt Schilling in the first inning of the College World Series finals Sunday, said his ejection wasn't justified and he was wrongly accused of bumping an umpire.
Walker Mitchell was at bat with two outs and Sebastian Alexander had just stolen second base when Schnall went to the top steps of the dugout, gestured at plate umpire Angel Campos with three fingers and began shouting at him.
The NCAA said Schnall was arguing balls and strikes, was given a warning and thrown out when he did not leave immediately. Instead, Schnall went onto the field to continue arguing.
LSU won 5-3 for their second national championship in three years.
When Schnall was arguing with Campos, one of the base umpires ran toward the confrontation and fell on his back.
āIf you guys watch the video, there was a guy who came in extremely aggressively, tripped over Camposā foot, embarrassed in front of 25,000, and goes ātwo-game suspensionā and says ābumping the umpire,ā" Schnall said. āThere was no bump. I shouldnāt be held accountable for a grown manās athleticism. Now itās excessive because I was trying to say I didnāt bump him.
āIt is what it is. If that warranted an ejection, there would be a lot of ejections. As umpires, itās your job to manage the game with some poise and calmness and a little bit of tolerance.ā
A spokesman said the NCAA stands by its original statement on the incident when asked for comment on Schnall's remarks about bumping an umpire.
The NCAA in its initial statement on the incident said Schnall and Schilling engaged in āprolonged arguing,ā which is to result in a two-game suspension. Schnall would miss the first two games of the 2026 season.
Schilling was thrown out for the comments he made while arguing, the NCAA said. If an assistant is ejected, he automatically also is suspended for one game. Schilling also got an additional two-game suspension under the āprolonged arguingā rule, the NCAA said. That means he will miss the first three games next year.
Associate head coach Chad Oxendine took over Schnall's duties.
Schnall said he couldn't hear Campos' initial warning when he was arguing balls and strikes from the dugout.
āAs a head coach, itās your right to get an explanation for why we got warned,ā Schnall said. āI'm 48 years old and I shouldn't get shooed by another grown man. When I came out, I got told it was a warning issued for arguing balls and strikes, and I said it was because you missed three. At that point, ejected. If that warrants an ejection, Iām the first one to stand here like a man and apologize.ā
That wasn't going to happen.
āIām not sorry for what happened,ā he said. āIām sorry for this being over. Iām sorry for how it ended.ā
In a statement posted Sunday night on Coastal Carolina athletic director Chance Miller's X account, the school said the ejections āaltered the trajectory of a must-win game for our team.ā
āThese decisions were made with an alarming level of haste, without an attempt at de-escalation, and deprived our student-athletes of the leadership they have relied on throughout a historic postseason run.
āThis is not about a single call ā it's about process and professionalism. In the biggest moment of the college baseball season, our program and its student-athletes deserved better.ā
The statement also urged the NCAA to re-evaluate how it trains, assigns and reviews umpires in championship settings.



