Chapelboro.com’s coverage of Carolina baseball in the Men’s College World Series is proudly presented by High & Rubish Insurance Agency.
Chapelboro’s Michael Koh is in Omaha to cover UNC Baseball as it plays in the Men’s College World Series. During Michael’s stay, he’ll publish a daily series featuring his thoughts and observations from Omaha, as well as his usual coverage of the team.
Day 1: The Venice of the Midwest
Day 2: Autographs
Day 3: The Center of the Universe
Day 4: Scenes from Rocco’s
Day 5: Easy Like Sunday Morning
Before the games begin, I want you to sit back and think about just what is happening in Omaha.
Carolina baseball is playing for a national title. That’s something that, at different points in time, seemed fated to never happen again. After the consecutive heartbreaks of 2006 and 2007 against Oregon State. After falling victim to Cinderella Fresno State in 2008. After going nearly wire to wire as the No. 1 team in America in 2013, only to lose in the national semifinals. After getting picked off by Oregon State again in 2018. After beating Arizona 18-2 in Game 1 of the Super Regionals in 2025, then letting late leads in Games 2 and 3 slip away.
Heck, just think back a couple weeks ago. Boshamer Stadium seemed more like a funeral home than a ballpark as USC pulled away for a stunning win in Game 1 of the Super Regionals. Carolina had never won a Super after dropping the first game.
And yet, here we are. UNC is one of two collegiate teams still playing baseball in 2026. It’s been more than four months since the regular season began, and more than 10 months since the Diamond Heels first met on campus as a group. Even if the team never doubted its ability to reach this point, you could be forgiven for not exactly seeing this in the cards. In the national polls, the general consensus was that Carolina – after losing almost all of its starting position players – would be a good team, but not quite at the “championship contender” tier. That was occupied by defending champs LSU (the Tigers didn’t make the NCAA Tournament), 2025 College World Series participants UCLA (the Bruins spent the entire season ranked No. 1, only to lose in their own regional) and future ACC champions Georgia Tech (the Yellow Jackets, like UCLA, also lost in their own regional — to the Oklahoma team UNC will face today).
Long story short: this is really, really hard. Carolina has won eight games to get to this point; that’s two more than the required number to win the NCAA Basketball Tournament. Oklahoma has done UNC one better, winning nine NCAA Tournament games due to the Sooners’ path out of the loser’s bracket all the way back on regional weekend.
These two teams have earned their way here, and then some. It’s why they have the honor of flying their flags high and proud around Omaha this weekend, a distinction captured by Voice of the Diamond Heels Dave Nathan.
And then there were two. Team flags are lowered when they get eliminated in Omaha at the #CWS. @DiamondHeels and Oklahoma are the last two at the top of the flagpole. pic.twitter.com/ynbNOlO6Dw
— Dave Nathan (@Davenathanonair) June 19, 2026
It’s been a long time – 19 years to be exact – since the UNC flag has flown that high this late into the summer. So before heading over to Charles Schwab Field, do yourself a favor and soak in this moment. Take Scott Forbes’ advice and enjoy some down time. Take in the spectacle of Omaha. Walk a lap around the block. Try and go find that flag.
All set? Perfect. Now let’s go watch some baseball.
Click to find more Carolina baseball coverage from Chapelboro.com, onsite in Omaha! Proudly presented by High & Rubish Insurance Agency.
Featured image via UNC Athletic Communications/Ainsley E. Fauth
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The Omaha Diaries, Day 6: Last Flags Flying Chapelboro.com.
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