OMAHA, Neb. -- Miami never had a chance against Florida, not after that fourth inning.

The Gators tied a College World Series record with an 11-run frame on their way to a 15-3 victory Saturday night that was the Hurricanes' most lopsided loss in their long and proud postseason history.

"Fourth inning says everything about the game," coach Jim Morris said. "Everything that could go wrong went wrong. Ten runs are pretty difficult to come back from. Beforehand I mentioned that if you give Florida an opportunity and put them on base, they'll get after you. That's exactly what happened."

Florida's outburst broke open a surprisingly sloppy game and ended with the Gators having turned a 2-1 deficit into a 10-run lead on nine hits off Andrew Suarez and two relievers.

"We came out a little nervous, and I certainly did not see an 11-run inning in the fourth," Florida coach Kevin O'Sullivan said. "I can't say enough about our approach there. We stayed in the middle of the field. The first few innings we tried to do too much. The big inning certainly was the difference."

Florida (50-16) advanced to a Bracket 1 winners' game against Virginia on Monday night. Miami (49-16) and Arkansas will play an elimination game that afternoon.

"The game's over, pretty much, and we just have to come out strong for Arkansas," Miami shortstop Brandon Lopez said.

Miami, which made the NCAA Tournament for the 43rd straight year and reached the CWS for the 24th time, hadn't been beaten so thoroughly in a postseason game since losing 16-5 to Florida in the 2009 regionals.

Suarez (9-2) pitched 3 1/3 innings in the loss, matching his second shortest outing of the season.

"I just fell behind in the count and they got hits, they found the holes," Suarez said. "But there's nothing I could do about that."

Florida scored 11 runs in the fourth inning, tying a College World Series record. Steven Branscombe/USA TODAY Sports

This was the 241st or 242nd meeting between Florida and Miami -- the schools don't agree on the number -- but the first at the CWS. The Gators took two of three against Miami in February and have won 20 of the last 25 in the series.

Florida is on a nation-best 10-game win streak since losing its opener in the Southeastern Conference tournament, and is batting .338 since the regular season.

The Gators made the most of their 12 singles, two doubles, six walks and two hit batsmen.

"We didn't try for the big at-bat or to hit it out," Josh Tobias said. "We tried to ground out at-bats, keep it up the middle, take walks and add on with each at-bat, string them together."

Florida became only the fourth team in 61 CWS games at the stadium -- and first in 27 games since 2013 -- to score 10 or more runs. Per-team scoring bottomed out at three runs a game the last two years.

Miami capitalized on a couple uncharacteristic mistakes by the nation's No. 1 defensive team to get out to a 2-0 lead.

Suarez balked in a run in the Florida third and couldn't get out of the fourth as the Gators rapped hit after hit following Lopez's fielding and throwing errors on the same play put runners at second and third.

Sam Abrams, superb in super regionals against VCU, couldn't stop the onslaught, and neither could Danny Garcia.

Florida sent 15 batters to the plate in the 40-minute inning.

"It was a long inning," Lopez said. "I was trying to get out of the inning after what happened, put it behind me and keep going."