logo
Texas A&M vs. Oklahoma in the SEC softball Championship has been delayed

Texas A&M vs. Oklahoma in the SEC softball Championship has been delayed

USA Today10-05-2025

Texas A&M vs. Oklahoma in the SEC softball Championship has been delayed
No. 1 Texas A&M (45-9, 16-7 SEC) run-ruled the Texas Longhorns 14-2 on Friday night during the SEC Tournament semifinal round, just a day after run-ruling South Carolina on Thursday evening. The Aggies are the hottest team in the country and have earned a spot in the SEC Tournament Championship against perennial contender Oklahoma.
However, the Championship game has now been pushed back multiple times due to inclement weather in Athens, Georgia, as the matchup was previously moved up to noon CT. before the rain began to pour in during the early parts of Saturday afternoon. While the game is expected to be played sooner than later, this does open the possibility of a momentum shift.
Scoring 14 runs against a respectable Texas team is nothing to scoff at, and with the Aggie offense, led by KK Dement, Amari Harper, Mac Barbara, and Mya Perez, the pitching staff, especially ace Emiley Kennedy (21-4) have been nothing short of stellar, and are more than ready to make a run in the NCAA Tournament. Getting past the Sooners is the first step, however.
Until the tarp is removed from the field, and the rain stops for at least a couple of hours, it is not expected that the game will start. Right now, rain is forecasted throughout the day in Athens, so prepare for an elongated wait time moving forward.
Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Cameron on X: @CameronOhnysty.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Teagan Kavan's ‘guarded' approach differs from NiJaree Canady, spurring Texas' WCWS run nonetheless
Teagan Kavan's ‘guarded' approach differs from NiJaree Canady, spurring Texas' WCWS run nonetheless

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Teagan Kavan's ‘guarded' approach differs from NiJaree Canady, spurring Texas' WCWS run nonetheless

OKLAHOMA CITY — Every pitch Teagan Kavan throws follows a similar routine. She stretches her right foot ahead of her left, bends her knees, raises her left arm to check the pitch call on her watch as her right hand bobbles the ball. Her gloved left hand meets her right one, she winds up and lets it fly. Advertisement It's a symphony of movement — everywhere but her face, where her muscles are static. The hitter has no idea what she's thinking, and that's exactly how she wants it. 'I always try to have good composure for my team and stay strong for them, but also just growing up my mom has wanted me to keep my composure through everything,' Kavan told The Athletic. 'I like to stay locked in and be what my team needs from me. I like to show some emotion every now and then, but just let it out when it needs to.' Kavan's approach differs from her counterpart for Friday's decisive Game 3 of the Women's College World Series finals. While Texas Tech's NiJaree Canady is known for her electric 'NiJa stomp,' especially after key strikeouts, Kavan is unassuming, disguising a fierce competitor trusted to deliver the Longhorns their first national championship. She might shake her fist or point to a teammate after a good defensive play, but Kavan said harnessing her emotions in the circle helps her throw both strikes and doubts the batter's way. And it's working. In winning Game 1 against Texas Tech on Wednesday by allowing just three hits, Kavan tied Cat Osterman as the winningest Texas pitcher at the WCWS with five career victories, and improved to 4-0 against Canady — the nation's leader in ERA. 'Compartmentalizing, she does that very well,' Kavan's mother, Theresa, said. 'Don't let people know what you're thinking. Don't let it bother you. (Pitching) is what you do, it's not who you are. No matter what you do (in the circle), good or bad, it doesn't define who you are.' With bases loaded in the top of the first, Teagan Kavan escapes the jam and gets NiJaree Canady to ground into a double play The Longhorns fans' 'Texas fight' chant ensues — Lauren Merola (@laurmerola) June 5, 2025 Her steady hand helped her avoid disaster in Game 1, when Texas Tech loaded the bases with one out in the top of the first inning. To escape, she got Canady to ground into a double play. She celebrated with a singular clap of the hands and an enthusiastic point to third baseman Mia Scott. Then, she was back at it, inducing an inning-ending groundout. Advertisement Kavan entered Thursday's Game 2 in relief with runners on first and third and allowed the two inherited runners to score in a messy sixth inning that included a couple of fielding errors, but that didn't shake her teammates' trust heading into Game 3. 'Every game she comes into she has just a super tough mentality and I don't think that's gonna change in Game 3 of this series,' Katie Cimusz said. 'I think if anything it's gonna make her stronger. I know she wants it for herself as well as the entire team, so I think she comes out there (Friday) with the toughest mentality she's ever had.' Tuning out the noise was a skill learned from Kavan's mother and grandmother. Kavan's grandmother, or Miney, as she was called, coached Theresa, who was also a pitcher and played one year collegiately. Miney, who died before the Longhorns' WCWS game against Oklahoma on May 31 at 97 years old, was a sports rat, adjusting her fandom from Iowa — Kavan is a West Des Moines, Iowa native — to Texas when Kavan moved south. 'Every day of her life, she would watch ball games,' Theresa said. 'The last year of her life, year and a half of her life, it was watching Texas.' "Teagan Kavan is my hero today." ❤️ Hours after her grandmother passed away Saturday morning, Texas' ace earned the complete-game win against Oklahoma. Hear from Kavan and her teammates on her inspiring performance.#WCWS — NCAA Softball (@NCAASoftball) June 1, 2025 Her birthday, Nov. 17, is the reason Kavan dons No. 17. After Kavan found out Miney died, she knew she would still take the circle against the Sooners, telling her teammates that morning she 'was ready to go today,' Joley Mitchell said. She posted eight strikeouts in seven innings, including three in the bottom of the seventh to refuse any momentum for an Oklahoma comeback. Advertisement Mitchell said postgame that 'Teagan Kavan is my hero today,' while a tear escaped her right eye as she rubbed the shoulder of Kavan, seated to her right. 'This is where (Miney) wants me to be,' Kavan said. 'She always told me that she'll always have my back, and so I know she's out there and I know she has my back. I say everything happens for a reason, and so I think she just wanted to watch. 'I want her to see us hold it up for her and for this university, the first one, for the whole state and for these girls and these coaches. I just want her to see us end up on top in the best seed.' Texas coach Mike White predicted Thursday that Kavan will stay 'guarded' during the final game, but given the stakes, she might show a little more emotion to meet the moment. 'She's not going to wear her emotions on her sleeves but there's going to be moments where she's going to pump up and fire and show her emotions to her team to let her team know she's giving it everything she has,' White said. 'I think she'll do a little more of that than what she's done in the past.'

Report: Oregon football WR Evan Stewart suffers knee injury, could miss 2025 season
Report: Oregon football WR Evan Stewart suffers knee injury, could miss 2025 season

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Report: Oregon football WR Evan Stewart suffers knee injury, could miss 2025 season

One of the Oregon football team's top returners on offense is expected to miss time in 2025 after suffering an injury, according to multiple reports from national news outlets. Receiver Evan Stewart, a senior and former Texas A&M transfer and five-star recruit, reportedly suffered a knee injury and could miss the entirety of the 2025 season, per the reports. Reports by On3 and CFBHeadlines suggest that Stewart suffered a torn patellar tendon. The senior receiver caught 48 passes for 613 yards and five touchdowns for the Ducks last season. But he did not play in the Rose Bowl after a lower back injury hampered him during bowl prep and did not participate in Oregon's spring game due to an undisclosed injury during spring practices. Advertisement Alec Dietz covers University of Oregon football, volleyball, women's basketball and baseball for The Register-Guard. You may reach him at adietz@ and you can follow him on X @AlecDietz. Oregon wide receiver Evan Stewart walks the field during warmups before the Rose Bowl Jan. 1 in Pasadena, Calif. Multiple reports say Stewart is expected to miss at least part of the 2025 season with a knee injury. This article originally appeared on Register-Guard: Oregon's Evan Stewart could miss 2025 season to injury, per reports

Baton Rouge Super Regional Preview: Schedule, analysis, prediction for LSU vs. WVU
Baton Rouge Super Regional Preview: Schedule, analysis, prediction for LSU vs. WVU

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Baton Rouge Super Regional Preview: Schedule, analysis, prediction for LSU vs. WVU

Baton Rouge Super Regional Preview: Schedule, analysis, prediction for LSU vs. WVU LSU baseball is two wins away from a return to Omaha and the College World Series. On Saturday, the Tigers will being a best-of-three series vs. West Virginia in the Baton Rouge Super Regional. For LSU, it's the Tigers' 17th super regional appearance since the current format was adopted in 1999. It's the 12th super regional being hosted in Alex Box Stadium. The Box has been kind to LSU in the postseason. The Tigers are 9-3 in Baton Rouge Super Regionals. And even when it looks like hope is lost, Baton Rouge has a way of figuring things out. LSU's last super regional appearance came in 2023, when the Tigers swept Kentucky in two games. Led by Paul Skenes and Dylan Crews, that team went on to win the national championship. The last time LSU dropped a super regional in Baton Rouge was 2019, when Florida State got the best of Paul Mainieri's squad. Here's a complete preview of LSU baseball's Baton Rouge Super Regional vs. West Virginia. LSU baseball vs. West Virginia Mountaineers Super Regional: Time and TV schedule GAME 1: Saturday, 1:00 PM CT, ESPN GAME 2: Sunday, 5:00 PM CT, ESPN2 If a Game 3 is necessary, time and TV information will be released this weekend. Elite starting pitching could be the story of the weekend Both LSU and West Virginia are built around elite starting pitching. Both squads have two pitchers at the top of the rotation who could be considered ace's 1A and 1B. For LSU, Kade Anderson and Anthony Eyanson. For West Virginia, its Griffin Kirn and Jack Kartsonas. Anderson and Eyanson are coming off dominant performances in the Baton Rouge Regional and are two of the best strikeout getters in college baseball. In their regional starts, they combined for 14.2 shutout innings. Then Eyanson was called upon again to get the final outs as a reliever in the final. We know what we're getting with these, too. Anderson has a chance to be a top-five draft pick in this year's MLB Draft, while Eyanson is making a strong case to be a first-round pick too. On the other side, Kirn is a tall lefty who can challenge LSU with a three-pitch mix. His fastball sits low 90s, but it has some cut. His wide release makes him tough on lefties. Kirn has a 3.13 ERA in 95 innings this year. Kartsonas, with his 2.94 ERA, might even be better than Kirn. He's pitched fewer innings with 64.1 on the year, but Kartsonas' strikeout rate was one of the best in the Big 12. Who has the lineup to equalize the starting pitching? Both LSU and West Virginia enter the series with some questions about the lineup. Both squads finished their respective regionals with double-digit runs, but that doesn't tell the full story. LSU struggled to score on Sunday night vs. Little Rock when the power disappeared. That's been a problem for LSU at multiple points in 2025. When LSU isn't driving the ball, the Tigers have failed to produce runs vs. quality pitching. And LSU will see quality pitching this week. Jay Johnson altered the lineup in the regional final, and it paid off with Ethan Frey in the No. 2 slot. The struggling Jared Jones was moved down to No. 6, and he rewarded Johnson with a two-hit night, including a home run to put the game on ice. That's the Jones LSU needs to show up this weekend. With a lefty getting the start for WVU in Game 1, we could see Johnson make adjustments again. Some of the same questions can be asked about West Virginia. The Mountaineers rank No. 3 in the Big 12 with a .299 batting average, but ranked 11th in slugging and home runs. Just one Mountaineer has double-digit homers in 2025. This isn't a lineup that does damage with the home run. That should work in LSU's favor. Anderson and Eyanson have been susceptible to homers, but it's not easy to string hits together vs. the Tigers' aces. WVU doesn't strike out much, which means the ball will be put in play. But more good news for LSU: The Tigers' defense is good at converting balls in play to outs. LSU's lineup has the advantage With all of that in mind, I feel better about the LSU bats this weekend. Yes, there have been times when LSU has gone silent at the plate, but this is still a top 25 lineup. Meanwhile, West Virginia ranks outside the top 90 in key categories. LSU needs a pitcher to step up LSU is set with Anderson and Eyanson, but there are questions elsewhere on the pitching staff. Last week, Jay Johnson handed the ball to Jaden Noot on Sunday, and Noot couldn't make it out of the second inning. The same thing happened when Johnson gave Zac Cowan a start on Monday. Casan Evans entered in relief of Cowan and was dynamite for six innings. It's clear Evans is the third-best pitcher on this staff right now, but LSU will need more than three pitchers to get it done this weekend. Yes, there's a scenario where Anderson throws a complete game and then Eyanson and Evans combine to shut down the Mountaineers on Sunday, but you can't count on that. Whether it's Noot, Cowan, or Chase Shores, LSU needs another arm it can rely on. Cowan was one of the nation's top relievers before his recent struggles. If he can get back to the Cowan we saw in April, LSU is set. Even if LSU makes it through the super regional without finding another pitcher it can trust, LSU will need guys to step up in Omaha. You can't win a College World Series with just three pitchers. What does West Virginia's pitching depth look like? WVU's top reliever is Reese Bassinger. After Kirn pitched 7.1 strong innings in the regional opener vs. Kentucky, Bassinger entered to shut it down. Bassinger is far from unhittable, though. He's posted a 4.28 ERA in 61 innings this year and doesn't have the strikeout stuff you'd expect from a closer. Expect to see Chase Meyer in a high-leverage spot at some point. He owns a 4.09 ERA but has struck out 62 in just 44 innings. What the Massey Ratings say The Massey Ratings rank every team in the country based on scores and strength of schedule. Here's how LSU and WVU matchup: Stat LSU WVU Overall Rating Ranking 5th 15th Offense Ranking 16th 29th Defense/Pitching Ranking 3rd 30th Strength of schedule 62nd 79th LSU vs. West Virginia Betting Odds Here are the Baton Rouge Super Regional betting odds, courtesy of BetMGM. LSU -400, West Virginia +310 That puts LSU's handle-adjusted odds of winning the series at 76.61%. Prediction Its hard to pick against LSU in Baton Rouge, and I'm not going to be the one to do it. I think LSU sweeps West Virginia behind stellar outings from Anderson and Eyanson. I like the Tigers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store