USC Upstate defeats High Point 13-9 to reach Big South Tournament title game
HIGH POINT, N.C. (USC Upstate SID) – One game away from putting itself in the driver's seat at the Big South Baseball Championship, USC Upstate baseball advanced itself through the winner's bracket and secured its place in the Big South Tournament Championship Game for the third straight season behind a 13-9 come-from-behind victory Friday afternoon over No. 2 seed High Point. The Spartans, facing their first deficit in the 2025 iteration of the conference championship, displayed their resolve, fighting their way behind a six-run sixth inning. Settling Upstate, sophomore right-handed pitcher Cooper Ellingworth proved crucial in setting up the comeback as he limited the Panthers to three hits and two runs over 5.1 innings of work out of the bullpen, a career-long outing. He struck out six, tying a career-high as he earned his first win of the season. Following a one-out double from redshirt junior Alex Ritzer, Upstate forced High Point into its bullpen, a decision the Spartans took advantage of. Against the first Panther reliever, Upstate loaded the bases behind a walk and HBP before redshirt junior rightfielder Scott Campbell and junior designated hitter Johnny Sweeney notched back-to-back RBI with a single to center and walk, respectively. Facing a new High Point arm, redshirt sophomore centerfielder Scott Newman lifted a sac fly before consecutive doubles, a two-run two-bagger from junior catcher Preston Lucas and an infield double from junior second baseman Gage Griggs closed the inning's six-spot. The Spartans' six-run frame proved its largest, delivering it the lead for the first and final time, but the team showed its fight all game long, including erasing a four-run deficit in the first inning, matching High Point to begin the game anew in the second frame. Upstate, upon taking the lead, twice answered Panther runs with a tally in the subsequent half inning, doing so with a solo shot from redshirt freshman Henry Zenor and an RBI triple from Lucas. Game InformationScore: No. 1 USC Upstate 13; No. 2 High Point 9Records: USC Upstate (35-23; 19-5 Big South); High Point (39-18; 18-6 Big South)Location: Truist Point | High Point, N.C. How It Happened
T1: Taking advantage of a pair of free bases, High Point loaded the bases in the first inning and Christian Smith cleared them with a grand slam off the batter's eye.
B1: Fighting its way back, Upstate scratched four runs of its own in the first. Scott Campbell and Johnny Sweeney sent back-to-back doubles into the leftfield corner, driving home one and two, respectively. Gage Griggs tied the game with his sacrifice squeeze, scoring Sweeney from third.
T2: High Point pushed itself back out in front, scoring thrice in the second. Landon Johnson drove home two with a single up the middle before a walk with the bases loaded to Smith added another.
B3: Scoring one back up the middle, Jake Armsey picked up an RBI as his single knocked in Campbell.
B6: Battling back to regain the lead, Upstate took advantage of High Point dipping into its bullpen, hanging six runs in the sixth. Campbell drove home the first with a single into center with the bases juiced before a walk to Sweeney tied things up. Scott Newman delivered the lead with a sac fly to center followed by a two-run double off the wall in left-center added two insurance runs. Gage Griggs beat out a double on a high pop-up on the infield, sending home the Spartans' final run of the frame.
T7: Getting a run back, High Point's Three Hillier slugged a solo shot to right.
B7: Answering the Panther long ball, Henry Zenor launched his own solo homer to rightfield, his second of the week.
T8: Trimming the Spartans' advantage, the Panthers used a sac fly from Brayden Simpson to scratch their lone run of the stanza.
B8: Adding another RBI to his daily total, Lucas tripled to dead center, scoring Sweeney from first.
Notable
Earning its way to the Big South Tournament Championship Game via its semifinal win Friday, Upstate qualified for its third straight Big South Tournament Championship Game.
With its victory Friday, Upstate secured its fifth straight 35-win season, the longest streak of 35-win seasons in program history. The win also makes head coach Kane Sweeney the winningest first-year head coach in program history, breaking a tie with John Daurity (34 in 1986).
Totaling three RBI Friday against High Point, Johnny Sweeney became the first Spartan to break the 80-RBI barrier in a single season, claiming the program's single-season RBI record, ending the day with 81. He broke a tie with Grant Sherrod (78 in 2024) for the record.
Drawing a walk in the first inning, Vance Sheahan improved his reached base streak to 45 games, the longest known streak in the program's Division I era (2007-pres.).
Up Next for the SpartansAdvancing to its third consecutive Big South Tournament Championship Game, USC Upstate continues its quest for a Big South Tournament Title Saturday at noon. The Spartans' opponent is yet to be determined, but the game features on ESPN+ and CW-62.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
26 minutes ago
- New York Times
A Christian Walker turnaround can change Astros' trade deadline priorities
HOUSTON — An answer to the Houston Astros' most apparent need is already in their clubhouse. He switched lockers some time last month, hoping to harness a sliver of luck amid an otherwise subpar season. Christian Walker went 8-for-42 across his next 12 games, negating whatever nirvana the superstition may have spurred. He averaged at least a 96.5 exit velocity during eight of those 12 contests, continuing a confluence of poor luck and putrid results. Advertisement 'Sometimes it can get really frustrating when you don't get your hits,' manager Joe Espada said. 'You see other players (get) end-of-the-bat knocks, and they get lucky on some of these balls. You as a hitter, you're like, 'Man, I'm doing everything I can to put the barrel on the ball and they're not falling for me.'' Few aspects of Walker's horrific start have been more frustrating. Stretches of three or four games have offered hope for a turnaround, only for the subsequent seven or eight to erase all momentum. For instance, he had a three-RBI game on May 11, only to follow it with a 5-for-47 funk. So, assign proper perspective to Walker's first four-RBI game as an Astro on Wednesday night. The beleaguered first baseman broke out of a brutal slump in a season full of them, spearheading a 10-2 shellacking of the Chicago White Sox with his first three-hit game since May 25. ALL-STAR SMASH.#VoteWalker ⭐️ — Houston Astros (@astros) June 12, 2025 Walker's performance raised his OPS to .653. He hasn't had a higher one since that aforementioned outburst on May 11. The anemia that followed is the story of Walker's season. Whether he can avoid it is the Astros' most pertinent question. Parlaying a performance like Wednesday into something more sustainable would crystallize the club's focus toward the July 31 trade deadline. A left-handed hitter and starting pitcher sit atop the Astros' wish list, but any prolonged success from Walker may alter their priorities. The development would lessen Houston's urgency to address a lineup still missing Yordan Alvarez, its most potent left-handed threat. Alvarez's return — whenever it arrives — already represents a pseudo-deadline acquisition, but pairing him with a well-performing Walker would be a permutation Houston hasn't yet seen this season. Advertisement 'The nature of the at-bats — taking good pitches, swinging at good pitches — I feel good,' Walker said. 'I'm happy with how competitive I feel in the box right now.' Walker still awoke Wednesday with a .623 OPS. Of the 17 qualified major-league hitters with a lower one, only Michael Harris III and Willy Adames had taken more plate appearances. Of the 27 players worth fewer wins above replacement, just Kansas City Royals catcher Salvador Perez had played more than Walker. Like Perez, Walker has salary, service time and status as a respected veteran that afford an almost endless runway to correct whatever ails him. Houston's lack of other options only widens it. Walker will start at first base and slot somewhere in the middle of the Astros' order regardless of what the club does during the trade deadline. Espada slid Walker to the five-hole before the series opener against the White Sox on Tuesday. In 147 plate appearances as the cleanup hitter, Walker slugged .296. 'It's trusting the process and having the confidence that, at some point, this is going to turn,' Espada said. 'He knows this tide will turn for him.' Finding better fortune is a factor, but Walker still boasts his highest chase rate, whiff rate and strikeout rate of the past four seasons. He entered Monday with a .208 batting average and, according to Statcast, a .243 expected batting average. Forty-three of Walker's 74 strikeouts have come with a runner on base, problematic for an offense that has scored the sport's seventh-fewest runs. Whether a wholesale turnaround from Walker and full health from Alvarez will fix that is what general manager Dana Brown must ponder over the next seven weeks. Even if both of those circumstances come to pass, a left-handed bench bat or outfield platoon partner would be beneficial for an imbalanced roster. Either would profile as cheaper for an Astros team short on tradeable assets. Focusing the few they have on fortifying a pitching staff staggered by injuries is another byproduct of Walker's potential renaissance. Advertisement Gauging whether one is looming is difficult. Hammering a hanging slider for a two-run home run during Wednesday's first inning ignited the dugout, but it should be standard for someone of Walker's caliber. A more telling sequence came two frames later. Four-seam fastballs have flummoxed the first baseman all season, strange for a player who produced a run value of nine against the pitch last year, according to Baseball Savant. Walker entered Wednesday with a minus-1 run value against the pitch. His .203 batting average against them was 43 points lower than last season and 79 away from the career-best mark he established in 2023. Opponents are aware and attempting to seize advantage. During the third inning, White Sox starter Sean Burke believed he did. Walker waved through one of his elevated four-seamers to even the count at 1. 'It's something we're working on for sure, but it's hard to plan for that,' Walker said. 'You start looking at the top and you get your hanger and you miss it because you're looking for something else.' Drivin' in the runs. #VoteWalker ⭐️ — Houston Astros (@astros) June 12, 2025 Part of Walker's work to remedy the problem involves 'maybe daring guys to go up there,' reasoning that 'if they miss a spot two inches, three inches lower, now we're talking about a ball that can get hit 107, 108 (mph).' Burke did. The 1-1 four-seamer he threw grazed the top rail of Walker's strike zone. He struck it 106 mph into the left-center field gap. Two runs came home. 'It felt good to turn that around,' Walker said.


Washington Post
29 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Rickea Jackson scores a career-high 30 points to help the Sparks beat the Aces
LAS VEGAS — Rickea Jackson scored a career-high 30 points, Azura Stevens had 19 points and 10 rebounds and the Los Angeles Sparks beat the Las Vegas Aces 97-89 on Wednesday night. The Aces were without star center A'ja Wilson for the final 11 minutes of the game after she left with 1:17 left in the third quarter with a head injury. She was accidentally hit in the face on Dearica Hamby's drive to the basket.


Washington Post
40 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Rickea Jackson scores a career-high 30 points to help the Sparks beat the Aces, 97-89
LAS VEGAS — Rickea Jackson scored a career-high 30 points, Azura Stevens had 19 points and 10 rebounds and the Los Angeles Sparks beat the Las Vegas Aces 97-89 on Wednesday night. The Aces were without star center A'ja Wilson for the final 11 minutes of the game after she left with 1:17 left in the third quarter with a head injury. She was accidentally hit in the face on Dearica Hamby's drive to the basket.