UCLA shines in critical moments to defeat LSU and reach Final Four for first time
UCLA shines in critical moments to defeat LSU and reach Final Four for first time
UCLA players and coaches celebrate after defeating LSU 72-65 in the Elite Eight of the women's NCAA tournament on Sunday.
(Young Kwak / Associated Press)
This time, everything came together when it mattered most.
Lauren Betts made sure of it, following one powerful move with another.
This time, the last seconds were full of joyous anticipation.
Kiki Rice made the most of them, sinking two late free throws inside Spokane Arena.
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This time, there was reason to celebrate the meaning of it all.
Gabriela Jaquez made sure to marinate in this moment, bouncing gleefully toward half-court while her teammates formed a joyous mob.
Read more: Lauren Betts dominates again as UCLA advances to Elite Eight showdown with LSU
A year after Louisiana State ended UCLA's season in the NCAA women's basketball tournament, the Bruins returned the favor.
Making the critical plays it needed in the final minutes, top-seeded UCLA pulled away for a 72-65 victory over the third-seeded Tigers on Sunday in a Spokane Regional final, propelling the Bruins to their first Final Four in school history.
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UCLA (34-2) will face either top-seeded USC or second-seeded Connecticut in a national semifinal on Friday at Amalie Arena.
It took some late fortitude to set the stage for the cross-country trip.
With LSU having closed to within 59-53, Jaquez followed two free throws with a three-pointer that she celebrated by raising her arms in triumph. UCLA held a 62-53 lead and just needed to play a clean final 90 seconds.
The Bruins got the job done.
UCLA players celebrate after defeating LSU in the Elite Eight of the women's NCAA tournament on Sunday.
(Young Kwak / Associated Press)
This was the long-awaited breakthrough UCLA had been seeking under coach Cori Close, who has taken her teams to the second weekend of this tournament seven times. The Bruins had reached a regional final only once previously under their current coach, losing to Mississippi State in 2018.
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Now they're two victories away from the school's first NCAA title in the sport after winning the 1978 AIAW championship behind the dynamic play of Ann Meyers and Denise Curry.
Joining them in school lore will be Betts, who continued her dominant run in this tournament with 17 points, seven rebounds and six blocks. The 6-foot-7 center has now tallied 78 points, 31 rebounds and 11 blocks over her last three games.
Jaquez added 18 points, eight rebounds and three steals and Timea Gardiner made five of eight three-pointers on the way to 15 points. The Bruins celebrated by dumping a cooler of confetti on Close.
Beating LSU (31-6) necessitated a better finish than a year ago, when the Bruins missed their final eight shots while being outscored 14-2 on the way to a 78-69 loss. Showing the poise their coach had referenced her players having on the eve of the rematch, UCLA did not wilt this time.
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Returning from foul trouble to start the second half, Betts quickly reasserted herself. She stepped out to contest an Aneesah Morrow three-pointer that was airballed, made a layup and snagged a defensive rebound. Londynn Jones added a three-pointer to push the Bruins' lead into double digits for the first time, forcing LSU to call a timeout.
UCLA was just getting started. After Jones followed a steal in the backcourt with a jumper and Jaquez added a three-pointer, the Bruins' cushion was up to 43-29 and the Tigers needed another timeout.
UCLA players celebrate after defeating LSU on Sunday to reach the Final Four.
(Young Kwak / Associated Press)
LSU surged to get within 46-41 before Morrow, the Tigers' leading scorer to that point with 13 points, went down with an injury and briefly had to go to the locker room before returning for the fourth quarter. Guard Flau'Jae Johnson led LSU with 28 points.
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After getting played closely in the first half of its most recent tournament victories over Richmond and Mississippi, UCLA's 31-25 halftime lead over the Tigers felt like a massive edge. It largely came courtesy of Gardiner's making all three three-pointers she took in the second quarter, helping the Bruins withstand playing the entire quarter without Betts because of foul trouble.
Earlier this week, Close had said she wanted her team to be able to push through chaos and have the flexibility to play the game 'like an art project, not a scientific formula.' That chaos came in the form of playing so many minutes without the team's best player.
Betts had asserted herself in the early going, blocking two shots in the first 10 seconds and making three of five shots before exiting the game. But despite a prolonged shooting slump by the Tigers, who missed 14 of their first 16 shots, UCLA could not build more than a five-point lead. Two missed layups and three missed free throws were largely to blame.
Read more: UCLA finds its Dylan Andrews replacement in former New Mexico standout Donovan Dent
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Things deteriorated further for the Bruins late in the first quarter when Betts was called for her second foul, sending her to the bench for the rest of the first half. But then something encouraging happened: UCLA went on a run.
Back-to-back three-pointers from Jaquez and Gardiner capped a 12-2 push that gave the Bruins a 23-17 advantage and swung the momentum hugely in their favor.
They would not let up, this time different from so many others.
Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Auburn basketball learns opponent for 2025 ACC-SEC challenge
Auburn basketball learns opponent for 2025 ACC-SEC challenge Bruce Pearl and the Auburn Tigers will face a former SEC head coach in this year's edition of the ACC-SEC Challenge. The 2024 ACC-SEC Challenge was a huge success for the SEC, who posted a 14-2 record in the event. Auburn, unfortunately, was not on the winning side of last year's challenge, falling to Duke at Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, North Carolina, 84-78. This year, the Tigers will aim for revenge in front of their home crowd as they will host the NC State Wolfpack at Neville Arena for this year's edition of the ACC-SEC Challenge, Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports reports. This year's matchup is intriguing as it will pit Auburn's Bruce Pearl against former LSU head coach Will Wade, who is set to begin his first season as the Wolfpack's head coach after spending the last two seasons at McNeese State. Wade is set to take on the challenge of building NC State back into an ACC contender after the program recorded a 38-34 record, with a 14-26 mark in ACC play over the last two seasons under Kevin Keatts. Wade won 105 games in five seasons at LSU. Since arriving in Raleigh, Wade has worked tirelessly in his rebuilding efforts through the transfer portal by landing former North Carolina forward Ven-Allen Lubin, former Houston forward Terrance Arceneaux, and ex-Texas Tech forward Darrion Williams. He also landed the nation's No. 14 recruiting class with four-star guard Matt Able headlining the haul. Auburn basketball will nearly start from scratch with its roster following last season's Final Four run. Auburn signed key players, including Mississippi State forward Keshawn Murphy, the Big 12's leading scorer Keyshawn Hall, and a talented wing player in Elyjah Freeman this offseason. Pearl also landed a top-20 recruiting class that features two JUCO stars and a pair of four-stars from the high school ranks. This season's matchup with NC State has the makings of a classic. Here is a look at the complete lineup for this season's ACC-SEC Challenge. Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on X (Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Taylor on Twitter @TaylorJones__

Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
ICE's go-to charter airline for deportations also flew NCAA teams, Inter Miami and more
Cheers greeted the Memphis men's basketball team as it emerged from an Airbus A320 on the night of March 16. The plane had carried the team from Fort Worth, Texas, to Memphis International Airport, and the flight home was a joyous one. The 16th-ranked Tigers were American Athletic Conference tournament champions and NCAA Tournament-bound. The trophy, topped by a large silver basketball, was buckled into a seat next to head coach Penny Hardaway. On the tarmac, cameras flashed. Hardaway gave well-wishers a thumbs-up. Players high-fived fans. Advertisement Less than 12 hours later, the same Airbus A320 – tail number N281GX – flew from El Paso, Texas, to Tapachula, Mexico. The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) flight transported 105 men, seven women and one child. Handcuffs, leg irons, and a waist chain likely restrained most adults' wrists and ankles. Guards monitored the cabin. After landing in Tapachula, the sullen passengers filed off the plane, met by Mexican authorities in safety vests. Both flights were operated by Global Crossing Airlines, commonly referred to as GlobalX, a charter company based in Miami. In the last eight months, the company has transported athletic teams from Arkansas, Kentucky, Houston, Kansas, Marquette, Memphis, Miami, North Carolina and St. John's, among others. During March Madness, GlobalX planes carried the Duke men back from the Final Four and the UConn women home after winning the national title. GlobalX also has ferried professional teams, including Inter Miami CF and its star, Lionel Messi. At the same time, GlobalX has operated more than half of ICE deportation flights. The airline regularly shuttles deportees to Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico and elsewhere, sometimes on the same planes that only hours or days earlier carried sports teams. The Trump administration's controversial March 15 deportation of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia and more than 200 others to El Salvador involved three GlobalX planes. Two of them carried college basketball teams in the weeks prior. Advertisement 'When you get asked to do an NCAA flight, you feel lighter,' said a former GlobalX pilot who spoke on the condition he not be identified. 'If your team wins, you get the honor of transporting the winning team. It's just a feeling of accomplishment. For me doing an ICE flight, I don't want to be dramatic and say it's like a death sentence, but I hated it.' The system of chartered ICE flights – referred to as ICE Air – has operated for more than a decade, spanning presidential administrations, immigration policies and airlines. The flights have long drawn criticism from human rights advocates, raising concerns about mistreatment of detainees, safety and a lack of transparency. Less spotlighted has been the crossover between GlobalX's sports charters and ICE Air, as universities and sports organizations unwittingly support a company deeply involved in and profiting from deportation flights. 'They may not have known, but now they do, so now they have a choice to make,' said Ann Skeet, a senior director at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics at Santa Clara University. 'They need to think about the purpose of their organization and their mission, and whether or not using a charter service that also serves ICE is consistent with their mission.' GlobalX and ICE didn't respond to emailed questions. Only 10 of 20 universities responded to requests for comment from about flights their teams took on GlobalX in recent months. The schools willing to speak about the matter said they were unaware that the planes they were on were also used to deport people. Memphis, for one, said in a statement: 'The University of Memphis uses multiple sources to charter athletic flights and have no knowledge of their customer base.' Many schools and coaches declined to address the issue at all; several feared potential retaliation given the Trump administration's targeting of some universities. Advertisement The first GlobalX revenue flight took off in August 2021. A slogan on the airline's website promised: 'You can't beat the eXperience.' The company soon became a major player in the sports charter business as its fleet expanded to more than a dozen. Past clients include professional basketball and football teams, a national soccer team, a major cricket tournament and an array of college sports teams. 'We do fly some of the biggest stars in professional sports, in soccer and some of the top – I think 10 of the top 20 college basketball teams for this season,' Ryan Goepel, the company's president and chief financial officer, said during an earnings call in March. GlobalX provided four dedicated aircraft for the NCAA men's and women's basketball tournaments this year as part of a contract worth at least $5 million, continuing a years-long relationship with the NCAA. March Madness travel is organized through the NCAA's charter program. Third-party brokers usually arrange travel for college teams during the regular season. In response to questions from about GlobalX, the NCAA issued a statement that didn't address them: 'The NCAA contracts only with safe and regulated charter plane vendors that maintain specified certifications, high ratings on reliable scales and meet insurance standards. The approval process for vendors is rigorous. We are not aware of any instances of sub-standard service on any charter flights during this championship season.' Advertisement A promotional video for sports charters on the GlobalX website earlier this year featured gourmet snacks, a grinning flight crew and spacious seats, complete with pillows, blankets and Fiji bottled water. A company brochure described its charter flights as 'the ultimate in flexibility, convenience, and luxury' and 'your ticket to wherever you want, whenever you want.' 'They were great flights, they are all excited about playing and having fun,' a second former GlobalX pilot said of the sports charters. 'That was one part of GlobalX's business model. The other part was the deportations.' Tom Cartwright, an immigration advocate who tracks ICE flights, first noted ICE's use of GlobalX in late 2021. GlobalX announced a five-year contract in August 2024 worth $65 million per year as a subcontractor to CSI Aviation for the flights. Cartwright estimates that from March through May of this year, GlobalX operated 64 percent of total ICE Air flights and 62 percent of deportation flights. Most adult passengers are required to be 'fully restrained' with 'handcuffs, waist chains, and leg irons,' according to the ICE Air Operations handbook. Carry-on items like books aren't allowed. Detainees can't wear belts, hats or shoelaces. Advertisement 'They're in conditions that you would see in a POW camp,' said the first former GlobalX pilot. An Airbus A320 with the tail number N291GX joined the GlobalX fleet last year, and its usage in recent months illustrates the disparate worlds the airline straddles. That plane carried San Diego State, Maryland, Kentucky and Auburn during the NCAA Tournament. In the two months preceding March Madness, N291GX flew dozens of times with flight numbers and destinations that match ICE Air routes. The plane traveled from Alexandria, La., to the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, then onto Comayagua, Honduras. The Honduran foreign minister tweeted a photo of the aircraft. ICE later announced that 177 detained migrants from Venezuela had been flown from Guantanamo Bay to Honduras, where a Venezuelan plane picked them up. Another trip deported 157 migrants from El Paso, Texas, to Tapachula, Mexico. Local media reported that passengers had been 'handcuffed and shackled from the waist to the feet and hands.' Advertisement The plane flew from El Paso to San Pedro Sula, Honduras, using a flight number associated with ICE Air. The airport is a regular destination for deportation flights. The next day, March 17, the same plane carried the San Diego State men's basketball team to Dayton, Ohio, and on March 19, it flew the Maryland men to Seattle. The plane traveled to San Salvador, El Salvador on another trip using a flight number associated with ICE Air, then, a week later, on April 2, ferried the Auburn men's basketball team to San Antonio International Airport for the Final Four, where a mariachi group and dancers in bright dresses greeted them in a hangar. Another GlobalX plane – tail number N278GX – landed in San Salvador on Jan. 29, according to flight records and local media reports. More than 80 deportees were aboard. A reporter for El Diario de Hoy photographed the red wrists of one of the passengers and wrote they 'show signs of having been handcuffed for hours.' Two days later, the Kansas State men's basketball team flew from Manhattan, Kan., to Des Moines, Iowa, aboard the same plane in advance of a game against Iowa State in Ames, Iowa. (In a statement, Kansas State said it has been 'pleased' with GlobalX's 'aircraft and service.') Advertisement Also on Jan. 29, a different GlobalX plane with the tail number N837VA ferried 40 deportees to San Pedro Sula. 'They brought me in chains from last night until we arrived here. We're not criminals,' one of the passengers, Dagoberto Portillo, told local media. 'I don't understand the treatment of migrants.' Three days later, the Nebraska men's basketball team traveled aboard the same plane from Lincoln, Neb., to Eugene, Ore. The university said in a statement that the school wasn't 'involved in how that plane was received or procured.' Another GlobalX plane with the tail number N276GX landed at Eduardo Gomes International Airport in Manaus, Brazil, on Jan. 24 with 88 Brazilian deportees. Someone activated the aircraft's emergency exit slides. Photos and videos recorded a chaotic scene where shackled passengers stood on a wing and others roamed the tarmac. Brazil's Ministry of Foreign Affairs derided 'the use of handcuffs and chains' and 'undignified treatment' on the flight. Advertisement 'The most difficult moment was when the air conditioning broke down in the air, people started to feel sick, some fainted and children were crying,' Kaleb Barbosa, one of the passengers, told the Brazilian media outlet G1. 'The turbines were stopping during the flight; it was desperate, like something out of a movie.' The same plane carried the men's basketball teams from Arkansas and Houston in the previous two months, amid a stream of deportation trips. Those didn't stop. Neither did the sports flights. On May 13, the plane transported the Miami track and field team to the Atlantic Coast Conference outdoor championships in Winston-Salem, N.C. Miami's men's and women's basketball teams and baseball team also have flown GlobalX this year. The university didn't respond to a request for comment. A higher-profile Miami team is featured on GlobalX's Instagram account. The airline shuttled Messi and the rest of Inter Miami CF to preseason matches in Peru and Honduras this year in addition to a match in Kansas City. Inter Miami also didn't respond to a request for comment. Advertisement When Inter Miami arrived at Ramón Villeda Morales International Airport in San Pedro Sula on Feb. 8, fire trucks shot arcs of water over the plane with the tail number N281GX. Photographers snapped pictures of players, including Messi, walking down the passenger stairs. Contrast that with a flight that same plane made into San Pedro Sula on Dec. 4. Deportees, some of them with children, were photographed as they walked the tarmac. Behind them was the plane they traveled on, 'GlobalX' written in giant blue letters across its fuselage. 'On the one hand, you have the low-end flights for people, which are basically shackled in the sky,' said Angelina Godoy, director of the University of Washington's Center for Human Rights and author of a 2022 study about ICE Air, 'and then you have the other end, the very high-end flights, with these corporate logos and everything on the plane and the athletes in there looking great … and it's the same damn (plane).' This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Advertisement Inter Miami CF, MLS, College Football, Men's College Basketball, Soccer, Sports Business, Women's College Basketball, FIFA Club World Cup, A1: Must-Read Stories, Graphics 2025 The Athletic Media Company


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Eight things to know about the 2025 NCAA Men's College World Series field
The 2025 College World Series begins at 2 p.m. ET on Friday at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha. The field consists of two teams from the SEC (Arkansas and LSU) and one each from the ACC (Louisville), Big 12 (Arizona), Big Ten (UCLA), Missouri Valley (Murray State) and Sun Belt (Coastal Carolina) as well as one independent (Oregon State). Advertisement Here are eight things to know about the 2025 CWS. Arkansas has had no trouble recruiting elite high school talent to Fayetteville over the years, but the 2025 Razorbacks were built by the transfer portal. Of the Hogs' eight position players with at least 30 starts, catcher Ryder Helfrick is the only one who signed with the Razorbacks out of high school. The imports: Wehiwa Aloy, the SEC Player of the Year, is the only one on that list who has been with the program for more than one season. Starting pitchers Zach Root (ECU) and Landon Beidelschies (Ohio State) also arrived via the portal last offseason. The bullpen, however, is almost exclusively homegrown, with Dylan Carter (Crowder College) and Aiden Jimenez (Oregon State) the only transfers. The previous two College World Series featured a total of 15 future first-round MLB Draft picks, including five of the top nine picks in 2023. The 2025 field does not appear to be as star-studded, with only five players in the first round in Keith Law's most recent mock draft. Three players were mentioned among 'others to watch' — Arkansas pitchers Zach Root and Gage Wood and Louisville pitcher Patrick Forbes. Some fun facts on the eight head coaches in the 2025 field: • Four of the eight are coaching at their alma mater — Arkansas' Dave Horn, Arizona's Chip Hale, Coastal Carolina's Kevin Schnall and Oregon State's Mitch Canham. • Three coaches played in the College World Series. Hale was on the Arizona team that won the national title in 1986. Louisville's Dan McDonnell was on the 1990 The Citadel team that reached the CWS as a No. 5 seed in the Atlantic Regional when the field was still 48 teams (with eight six-team Regionals). Canham was a catcher on the Oregon State teams that won back-to-back national titles in 2006 and 2007. Advertisement • Two coaches have taken other schools to the CWS — Van Horn (Nebraska, 2001 and 2002) and LSU's Jay Johnson (Arizona, 2016 and 2021). • Hale can become the third person to manage in the major leagues and lead a team to the College World Series title. The list of two right now includes Jack Barry and Bobby Winkles. Barry, who led Holy Cross to the 1952 national championship, spent one season as the Boston Red Sox manager (90-62 in 1917). Winkles won three national titles at Arizona State in the 1960s and later managed the Angels and A's in the 1970s. Hale went 148-176 in two seasons with the Arizona Diamondbacks (2015-16). Eight players on the LSU roster were also on the 2023 team that won the national championship, but only three saw action in Omaha. Pitcher Gavin Guidry made four appearances out of the bullpen, giving up seven hits and three earned runs in five innings. He was on the mound for the final two innings of the 18-4 win over Florida in Game 3. Outfielder Josh Pearson struggled, going a combined 2-for-20, but he hit a home run in the clincher. Jared Jones, a freshman at the time, went 1-for-2 in two appearances as a pinch hitter. Coastal Carolina has two players on its roster who were on teams that played in the College World Series — pitchers Cullen McKay (Virginia in 2023 and 2024) and Chance Mako (NC State in 2024). Neither appeared in a game in Omaha. Arkansas outfielder Logan Maxwell, a transfer from TCU, went 3-for-7 in three games with the Horned Frogs in the 2023 CWS. Getting elite high school players to campus is always a challenge, even in the NIL era. The eight CWS teams combined to sign 17 of the top 100 players in Perfect Game's Class of 2024 recruiting rankings. Nine of the 17 enrolled in college, headlined by two top-10 prospects at LSU — pitcher William Schmidt (No. 5) and outfielder Derek Curiel (No. 10). Advertisement LSU's signing class featured 11 top-100 players (six enrolled), while Oregon State and Arkansas each signed two and Arizona and UCLA each signed one. Here's a look at the 2024 top-100 recruits who made it to campus for the teams in the 2025 CWS. No. 5 William Schmidt, RHP, LSU: Schmidt has pitched in 17 games, mostly in nonconference action, and has a 7-0 record with a 4.73 ERA. He has 41 strikeouts in 32 1/3 innings. No. 10 Derek Curiel, OF, LSU: Curiel has been one of the best freshmen in the nation. He's hitting .347 with seven home runs and 52 RBIs. No. 40 Mason Russell, LHP, Arizona: White has thrown only 7 1/3 innings in seven appearances. He has a 13.50 ERA and a 2.45 WHIP. No. 43 Dax Whitney, RHP, Oregon State: Whitney has been a key part of the Beavers' weekend rotation. The Idaho native is 6-3 with a 3.66 ERA and has struck out 111 batters in 71 1/3 innings. No. 56 Carson Wiggins, RHP, Arkansas: Wiggins has made 14 appearances, all in relief, and is 1-1 with a 3.21 ERA and three saves. He has given up only seven hits and has 20 strikeouts in 14 innings. No. 73 Cooper Williams, LHP, LSU: Williams has been a key left-handed option out of the bullpen. He has thrown 19 2/3 innings over 20 appearances and has an 0-1 record with a 1.83 ERA. No. 74 Casan Evans, RHP, LSU: Evans started three SEC games but has mostly been used out of the bullpen. He is 4-1 with a 1.90 ERA and six saves. He has 65 strikeouts in 47 1/3 innings. No. 79 David Hogg II, INF, LSU: Hogg played in only three games and recently entered the transfer portal. No. 92 Ryan Costello, 1B, LSU: Costello, like Hogg, is in the transfer portal after playing sparingly in 2025. Last year's CWS field featured some of the game's most prodigious power hitters. Led by Florida's Jac Caglianone and Tennessee's Christian Moore, seven of the nation's top 16 home run leaders played in Omaha in 2024. Advertisement It's a different story this time around. The 2025 field features only two of the top 20 sluggers: Jonathan Hogart of Murray State (tied for fourth with 24) and Roch Cholowsky of UCLA (tied for sixth with 23). Three teams in the field rank among the top 20 nationally in home runs — Arkansas (fourth with 124), Oregon State (tied for 16th with 103) and LSU (19th with 101). Next up is Louisville (43rd with 83). Coastal Carolina is the only team not in the top 100. The Chants are 108th with 66. Murray State is the fourth No. 4 Regional seed to crash the College World Series since the field expanded to 64 teams in 1999. Here's a look at how the Cinderellas got to Omaha, and how they fared. Fresno State, 2008: Aaron Judge's alma mater (no, he was not on the '08 Bulldogs) won the Long Beach Regional and then beat Arizona State in three games in the Tempe Super Regional to advance to Omaha. The Bulldogs beat No. 6 seed Rice 17-5 and No. 2 seed North Carolina 6-2 to stay in the winners' bracket. They lost to North Carolina 4-3 but then beat the Tar Heels 6-1 to move on to the championship series. Georgia won the opener 7-6, but Fresno State bounced back with wins of 19-10 and 6-1 to claim the title. Stony Brook, 2012: The America East champs had to come out of the losers' bracket to win the Coral Gables Regional and advance to face mighty LSU in the Baton Rouge Super Regional. LSU won the first game, but Stony Brook won the next two, 3-1 and 7-2, to stun the college baseball world. The Seawolves' stay in Omaha did not last long; they lost to No. 2 seed UCLA 9-1 in the opener and then bowed out with a 12-2 loss to No. 3 Florida State. Oral Roberts, 2023: Oral Roberts, which cruised through the Summit League with a 23-1 record, went 3-0 at the Stillwater Regional and then beat Oregon in three games at the Eugene Super Regional (after losing the opener 9-8 after leading 8-0!). The Golden Eagles went 1-2 in Omaha, beating TCU in the opener and then losing to Florida and TCU. The eight teams in Omaha have a combined 74 appearances in the College World Series and 16 national championships. LSU leads the way with 20 CWS appearances, followed by Arizona (19), Arkansas (12), Oregon State (eight), Louisville (six), UCLA (six), Coastal Carolina (two) and Murray State (one). The titles belong to LSU (seven), Arizona (four), Oregon State (three), Coastal Carolina (one) and UCLA (one). (Photo of Murray State: Jaylynn Nash / Imagn Images)