logo
Paul Skenes, Jac Caglianone, David Price headline The Athletic's SEC baseball All-Century Team

Paul Skenes, Jac Caglianone, David Price headline The Athletic's SEC baseball All-Century Team

New York Times20-05-2025

The SEC just completed its 25th regular season of the 21st century, and the league has never been better, relative to its competition around the nation.
Last year, Tennessee became the fifth different SEC team in the last five seasons to win the national championship, and three of the last four College World Series Finals featured an SEC vs. SEC matchup.
Advertisement
Dating back to 2009, SEC teams have won 10 national titles, with LSU, South Carolina and Vanderbilt each winning two and Florida, Mississippi State, Ole Miss and Tennessee winning one.
These championship teams have been loaded with elite players, headlined by seven winners of the Golden Spikes Award.
So, who are the best of the best? Here's our SEC All-Century Team.
Catcher: Mike Zunino, Florida (2010-12) — Zunino hit .327 with 47 home runs and a 1.013 OPS in three years at Florida. His best season came in 2011, when he hit .371 with 19 home runs and 67 RBIs. The Gators went 62-28 in the SEC and reached the College World Series three times during his three years on campus.
First base: Jac Caglianone, Florida (2022-24) — Cags is the only player in SEC history with two 30-home run seasons. He hit 33 as a sophomore in 2023 and followed up with 35 in 2024, when he slashed .419/.544/.875 with 83 runs scored and 72 RBIs. He was also part of the Gators' weekend pitching rotation in his last two seasons.
Second base: Christian Moore, Tennessee (2022-24) — Moore is one of the top offensive second basemen in college baseball history. As a junior, he slashed .375/.451/.791 with a school-record 34 home runs and 74 RBIs. For his career, he hit 61 home runs with a 1.144 OPS. He played in the College World Series twice and was a key member of the Vols' 2024 national championship team.
Shortstop: Alex Bregman, LSU (2013-15) — Bregman was a consistent producer during the 'dead ball' era of college baseball, hitting .337 with 21 home runs and a .923 OPS. His best season statistically was in 2013, when he slashed .369/.417/.546 as a freshman. He played on two teams that reached the College World Series.
Third base: Pedro Alvarez, Vanderbilt (2006-08) — Alvarez's 22 home runs in 2006 are the most ever by a true freshman in the SEC. He slashed .359/.460/.680 with 40 home runs and 132 RBIs over his first two seasons and was a first-team All-American in 2007. He was slowed by a hamate injury as a junior and hit .317 with nine home runs and 30 RBIs in 40 games.
Outfield: Andrew Benintendi, Arkansas (2014-15) — Benintendi enjoyed one of the most out-of-nowhere seasons of the past two decades. After hitting .276 with one home run and a .701 OPS as a freshman in 2014, he won the Golden Spikes Award as a sophomore when he hit .376 with 20 home runs and a 1.205 OPS. He is one of only five players to lead the SEC in batting average and home runs in the same season, joining Mississippi State's Rafael Palmeiro in 1984, Kentucky's Jeff Abbott in 1994, Mississippi State's Brent Rooker in 2017 and Georgia's Charlie Condon in 2024.
Advertisement
Outfield: Dylan Crews, LSU (2021-23) — One of the most decorated college players ever, Crews was a two-time first-team All-American and the winner of the 2023 Golden Spikes Award. In three seasons, he hit .380 with 58 home runs and 184 RBIs. As a junior, he slashed .426/.567/.713 and led the Tigers to their first national championship since 2009.
Outfield, Wyatt Langford, Florida (2021-23) — Langford, amazingly, appeared in only four games as a freshman, all as a pinch hitter. His next two seasons were among the most productive in SEC history. He hit .355 with 26 home runs and 63 RBIs as a sophomore and .373 with 21 home runs and 57 RBIs as a junior on a team that lost to LSU in the CWS Finals. His career OPS was 1.217.
DH: Charlie Condon, Georgia (2022-24) — Condon played in a home run-friendly environment, but his numbers in two seasons — he famously redshirted as a freshman — are absurd. In 2023, he hit .386 with 25 home runs and a 1.284 OPS. He was far better as a third-year sophomore, hitting .433 with 37 home runs and a 1.565 OPS en route to winning the Gold Spikes Award. Condon is one of 10 players in SEC history to hit at least 60 home runs. He accomplished it in 116 games; the other nine did so in an average of 207 games.
Utility: AJ Reed, Kentucky (2012-14) — The most accomplished two-way player of the past 25 years, Reed won the 2014 Golden Spikes Award after slashing .336/.476/.735 with 23 home runs at the plate and going 12-2 with a 2.09 ERA and 1.134 WHIP on the mound. In three years at Kentucky, he hit 40 home runs and had a .973 OPS.
Starter: Aaron Nola, LSU (2012-14) — It would be hard to find a pitcher with a better two-year run than Nola, who went a combined 23-2 with a 1.52 ERA and 0.813 WHIP in 2013 and 2014. Not surprisingly, he was named SEC Pitcher of the Year both seasons. He wasn't bad as a freshman, either, going 7-4 with a 3.61 ERA and 1.059 WHIP as a weekend starter.
Starter: David Price, Vanderbilt (2005-07) — Price won the Golden Spikes Award as a junior in 2007 when he went 11-1 with a 2.64 ERA and 0.945 WHIP to go along with 194 strikeouts in 133 1/3 innings. In his three years, he went 22-10 with a 3.23 ERA and had 441 strikeouts in 313 innings.
Starter: Paul Skenes, LSU (2023) — Skenes spent only one year in the SEC, but it was arguably the greatest season by a pitcher in league history. His numbers: 13-2, 1.69 ERA, 0.750 WHIP with 209 strikeouts and 20 walks in 122 2/3 innings. In two starts at the College World Series — where LSU beat Florida for the national championship — he allowed seven hits and two earned runs in 15 2/3 innings.
Advertisement
Reliever: Jonathan Holder, Mississippi State (2012-14) — Holder had nine saves and allowed only one earned run in 28 1/3 innings (0.32 ERA) as a freshman. His numbers the next two years weren't quite as gaudy but still very impressive: 9-1, 28 saves with a 1.93 ERA and 0.941 WHIP. The 2013 Bulldogs reached the CWS Finals.
Reliever: Matt Price, South Carolina (2009-12) — Price saved a combined 43 games over his last three seasons on teams that won back-to-back national titles and then lost in the CWS Finals. His best season was in 2011 when he went 7-3 with a 1.83 ERA and 1.085 WHIP with 20 saves.
Swingman: Carson Fulmer, Vanderbilt (2013-15) — Fulmer, who was a reliever until midway through his sophomore season, had a 24-3 record with a 1.99 ERA, a 1.087 WHIP and 14 saves in three seasons. He was part of the 2013 team that set a record with 26 SEC wins, the 2014 team that won the national championship and the 2015 team that lost in Game 3 of the CWS Finals.
• Jac Caglianone was the obvious choice at first, but several others deserve a mention: Matt LaPorta (Florida), Justin Smoak (South Carolina), Hunter Morris (Auburn), Brent Rooker (Mississippi State) and Christian Walker (South Carolina).
• There was a spirited Alex Bregman vs. Dansby Swanson debate in 2015. Bregman was named first-team All-SEC, while Swanson went on to become the No. 1 pick in the MLB Draft (Bregman went second). Bregman gets the nod for this team. He played all three years at shortstop. Swanson missed most of his freshman season due to injury and played second base in 2014 on the national championship team. Chris Burke, like Swanson, played both second base and shortstop. He had a great career at Tennessee but played only one season this century.
• Pedro Alvarez edged Tommy White for third base. White's home run numbers were better (75 to 49), but 27 came as a freshman at NC State, and he played in a more offensive era. They have a similar career OPS, and Alvarez was a better defensive player.
• Picking the final outfield spot was extremely difficult. Andrew Benintendi, who won the Golden Spikes Award, was the pick over Jace LaViolette (Texas A&M), Jackie Bradley Jr. (South Carolina), Mikie Mahtook (LSU), Jake Mangum (Mississippi State) and many others.
Advertisement
• AJ Reed, the 2014 SEC Player of the Year, was an obvious pick for the utility position as the best true two-way player of the last 25 years. Austin Martin, who played multiple positions at Vanderbilt, was another option. He had a 1.007 career OPS and had most of his junior season taken away by the pandemic.
• There are far too many elite pitchers to name, but Michael Roth, who was on two national title teams at South Carolina and went 26-6 with a 1.90 ERA in four seasons, was the toughest omission.
• Kevin Kopps of Arkansas had arguably the finest season for a reliever in league history (12-1, 11 saves, 0.90 ERA), but both Jonathan Holder and Matt Price had much better careers while also having standout individual seasons.
(Top photo of Jac Caglianone: Jay Biggerstaff / Getty Images)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The NFL's most expensive backup QB, plus USMNT's nightmare
The NFL's most expensive backup QB, plus USMNT's nightmare

New York Times

time27 minutes ago

  • New York Times

The NFL's most expensive backup QB, plus USMNT's nightmare

The Pulse Newsletter 📣 | This is The Athletic's daily sports newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Pulse directly in your inbox. Good morning! Sign your first-round pick today. Just do it. It's difficult to fathom how bad things are for the USMNT right now. Let's try anyway: The U.S. enters the Gold Cup with plenty on the line, maybe even Pochettino's job. He took the blame after last night's debacle, which is good PR. But it's fair to wonder, bad roster or not, whether his coaching is taking root. I went to Martin Rogers, our head of U.S. soccer, for a status update the team: 💬 How bad is it? The program will be judged on the World Cup, but a year out, the prognosis could hardly be gloomier. No positive vibe around the squad, little passion, few ideas. As a result — none of that host nation momentum to build interest and support ahead of what's supposed to be the moment of a lifetime. I highly recommend reading Paul Tenorio's column on the situation, which offers a simple, yet brutal, solution: We should blame everyone for the disaster. Yuck. The Americans start Gold Cup action Sunday. Can't wait? Legendary quarterbacks have been in Kirk Cousins' position, benched for a younger talent. Peyton Manning got demoted for Brock Osweiler once. Tony Romo gave way to Dak Prescott. And, of course, Drew Bledsoe's injury helped birth the career of Tom Brady. None of them stuck around, though, and none of them were quite as expensive as the Falcons quarterback, either, which makes the 14-year veteran one of the most interesting stories in the NFL right now. Two quick points: So, Cousins is at Falcons minicamp, behaving as normally as possible as he and the team wait for a fairytale trade scenario to appear. I asked our Falcons writer Josh Kendall for a vibe check from Atlanta: What's the mood like at minicamp with Cousins around? It's hard for me to remember such a unique QB situation. 💬 The situation does feel unprecedented in some ways, but on the surface, at least, things are remarkably normal. Cousins said all the right things Tuesday in his first appearance with the local media since the end of the season, and Penix so far in his young career has been impossible to fluster on or off the field. The caveat to all this is it's easy for everyone to play nice in June. The vibe might feel very different in November. Gut feeling: Do you think the team trades him before the season? 💬 I still believe the Falcons want to trade Cousins, but the Steelers' signing of Aaron Rodgers filled the last glaring hole in the league. Atlanta now has to wait and see if an injury or ineffectiveness opens up a spot after training camps begin. Even if it does, though, it would have to be a place Cousins is willing to go because he has a no-trade clause. What a setup. It's hard to imagine this just being the status quo for the rest of the year. I thought the 'Scoop City' podcast crew went into great detail on the situation, too, which you can listen to here. Knicks striking out? Mavericks officials believe coach Jason Kidd, one of the Knicks' top targets to replace Tom Thibodeau, will stay in Dallas, sources told The Athletic yesterday. Also, according to an ESPN report last night, New York requested interviews with both Rockets coach Ime Udoka and Timberwolves coach Chris Finch — and both were denied. Already seems like a disaster from here. Advertisement Rodgers casually drops wedding news New Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers showed up to minicamp yesterday wearing a wedding ring, which he confirmed in a news conference was not just a smart ring. Rodgers said he's been married 'a couple of months,' though it's unclear to whom. See his full comments here. More news 📫 Love The Pulse? Check out our other newsletters. 📺 MLB: Yankees at Royals 7:40 p.m. ET on MLB Network and Prime Video The Yanks are still a behemoth, but relief pitching is a worry for now with Luke Weaver out. They are up to No. 3 in our latest Power Rankings, though. 📺 NBA: Thunder at Pacers 8:30 p.m. ET on ABC The most pivotal moment arrives. Will Indiana reclaim a surprising lead? Or will the insatiable Thunder begin their bludgeoning march toward an inevitable title? Crowd should be raucous. I imagine they're all just screaming 'YES'CERS' over and over again. Find a couch. Get tickets to games like these here. The NBA Draft is a week away. Our expert Sam Vecenie put together an entire guide for us. This draft is deeper than Cooper Flagg, too. Polish up before next Wednesday. The House settlement in the NCAA has been complex, but Justin Williams covered my biggest takeaway: Get ready to say hello to the bag men again. Andy McCullough sought out some former Rockies greats — Nolan Arenado, Trevor Story, DJ LeMahieu, among others — and asked how they felt about the current state of the franchise. Their reactions were … interesting. We're doing a full U.S. Open preview tomorrow, but here's a question for an appetizer: Is there any reason we should pick against Scottie Scheffler? Answers here. OK, I lied, one more amuse-bouche: Our U.S. Open Big Board, which is crucial as you make picks. 🎥 The GOAT Sue Bird stopped by our 'No Offseason' podcast to talk WNBA ownership, collectibles and more. Fun conversation. Advertisement Most-clicked in the newsletter yesterday: Brendan Marks' story on Jordon Hudson's beginnings. Catch up here. Most-read on the website yesterday: A beautiful story on Roger Federer's viral commencement speech, which was more than that, as Rustin Dodd wrote. It was masterful.

From Sports Bars To Big Deals, Women Athletes Are Winning—Yet Pay Gaps Persist
From Sports Bars To Big Deals, Women Athletes Are Winning—Yet Pay Gaps Persist

Forbes

time33 minutes ago

  • Forbes

From Sports Bars To Big Deals, Women Athletes Are Winning—Yet Pay Gaps Persist

The WNBA's New York Liberty was recently estimated to be valued at $450 million. Summer 2025 is signaling a remarkable wave of milestones in women's sports. After a strong-performing 2024 that saw equal representation between women and men at the Olympics for the first time in history as well as standout college stars Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese making their much-anticipated WNBA debuts, women athletes have only continued to build on their momentum. In fact, this year, the growth potential for women athletes is expected to be even more impressive. According to reporting from Axios, there are now eleven women's sports bars across the U.S., a significant feat considering there was only one just three years ago. More locations may be on the horizon, as The Sports Bra, the world's first sports bar dedicated exclusively to women's sports, plans to expand into four more U.S. cities. In addition to being a popular place to watch women's games, many women's sports bars have developed into robust community hubs that welcome sports fans from all backgrounds. ROSEMONT, ILLINOIS - SEPTEMBER 28: Haylie McCleney #28 of Team Piancastelli hits a home run in the ... More sixth inning against Team Ocasio during the final weekend of the Athletes Unlimited softball league at Parkway Bank Sports Complex on September 28, 2020 in Rosemont, Illinois. (Photo by) MLB also recently announced in a press release plans to invest in the Athletes Unlimited Softball League (AUSL). MLB commissioner Robert D. Manfred called the investment 'an opportunity to support softball's long-term growth and expand our engagement with these outstanding athletes and their fans.' This marks MLB's first-ever partnership with a women's professional sports league and is expected to accelerate the AUSL's growth by helping cover operational costs and broadcasting AUSL games on MLB Network. And just last month, sources told The Athletic that the WNBA's New York Liberty was estimated to be valued at $450 million, a record-valuation in women's sports and well over double its estimated valuation just a year ago. Only a few days prior, Chelsea FC Women announced that Alex Ohanian, Reddit co-founder and husband of Serena Williams, bought a minority stake in the club at a price that would value the team at $326 million. In an interview with the BBC, Ohanian stated that the treble-winning club will one day be a 'billion-dollar franchise' (Chelsea FC Women is fresh off an undefeated season in the Women's Super League, won the Women's League Cup earlier this year, and recently lifted the FA Cup trophy after a 3-0 victory against Manchester United). Women are also excelling on the international sports stage. In March, Kirsty Coventry was elected as the first woman president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), and FIFA just confirmed the expansion of the Women's World Cup from 32 to 48 teams for 2031. These achievements only scratch the surface of the many ways women's sports are poised to thrive in summer 2025. It's no surprise, then, that Deloitte has projected the global value of women's sports to exceed $2 billion this year. However, unlocking this industry's full potential will require addressing significant gaps in pay equity. Despite countless strides forward, women athletes remain severely underpaid, often requiring them to take on outside jobs that limit their time to train and focus on their sport. In its report titled, 'Beyond the Game: Exposing the Economic Realities of Professional Women Athletes,' sports marketing and sponsorship platform Parity found that over half of women athletes earn no net income after accounting for sports-related costs, and 74% hold other jobs in addition to having intense training schedules. Gender pay disparities even exist among the highest-paid athletes. Forbes reports that Coco Gauff, the highest-paid woman athlete, falls nearly $20 million short of making its list of the 50 highest-paid athletes for 2025 (a list currently composed entirely of men). From local women's sports bars to growth on the global stage, the appetite for women's sports is clear. Unfortunately, much like when this author covered the business wins of women's sports in 2024, to meet that demand and achieve true pay equity requires increased investment, brand partnerships, and media engagement. Men's professional sports have had a century-and-a-half-long head start, so naturally, women's sports have a lot of catching up to do, and while each step forward matters, slowing down isn't an option. To reach the full potential of women's sports, we'll have to pick up the pace. The good news is, progress is continuing to be made. In addition to the MLB's investment in the AUSL, others are seizing the opportunity to invest in women's sports and are cashing in. New ventures, like Ariel Investments' Project Level, are being created specifically to fund women's sports initiatives. Brands are also beginning to forge partnerships with men's and women's leagues, such as Airbnb's partnership with both the men's and women's Tour de France for the next three years. And CBS Sports recently announced that it has acquired the rights to the UEFA Women's Champions League, with all matches for this year's season streaming on Paramount+. With rising investment, growing fan enthusiasm, and heightened global visibility, the foundation is being laid for a future where women are fully supported both on and off the field. Still, empowering women athletes to reach their full potential depends on closing persistent gaps in pay, media coverage and funding. If this summer is any indication, the world is ready not just to celebrate women's sports, but to take the next step to ensure women athletes receive the level of recognition, resources, and compensation they have earned.

The breakout star of the NBA playoffs now has a new foe: Scrutiny
The breakout star of the NBA playoffs now has a new foe: Scrutiny

Washington Post

time36 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

The breakout star of the NBA playoffs now has a new foe: Scrutiny

Yes, for the Indiana Pacers to scrounge up three more miracles, Tyrese Haliburton must play better. No, he doesn't need to conform to your shot-chucking expectations. The NBA Finals stage is such compelling theater for burgeoning stars because it presents these annoying mind games. Until a standout player leads his team to a championship, he wages simultaneous battles against foe and perception. The competition is tough, but it pales in comparison to the scrutiny of whether his game is up to snuff.

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