logo
Stewart homer, Morgan and Teagan Kavan pitching send Texas past Tennessee for spot in WCWS finals

Stewart homer, Morgan and Teagan Kavan pitching send Texas past Tennessee for spot in WCWS finals

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Katie Stewart hit a home run, Mac Morgan and Teagan Kavan combined on a 3-hitter, and Texas defeated Tennessee 2-0 on Monday to reach the Women's College World Series championship series for the third time in four years.
Kavan, who threw a complete game with eight strikeouts in Saturday's 4-2 win over Oklahoma, came on in relief of Morgan in the fifth inning and didn't allow a hit the rest of the way. She struck out the Volunteers' Emma Clarke to end the game.
Texas (54-11) will play either Oklahoma or Texas Tech in the best-of-three series, which starts Wednesday. Those teams square off in Monday night's other semifinal.
Karlyn Pickens, a National Fastpitch Coaches Association first-team All-American, allowed just one earned run on five hits and struck out nine for Tennessee (47-17).
Texas loaded the bases against Pickens in the third with one out but couldn't score. Reese Atwood struck out swinging and Joley Mitchell popped out to the catcher to end the inning.
Things got heated in the top of the fourth when Tennessee hitting coach Craig Snider, the former Texas Tech head coach, appeared to have words with the Texas dugout and was ejected.
Stewart homered off Pickens to start the fourth, a high drive to left that drifted beyond the outstretched glove of Alannah Leach. Pickens recovered quickly, striking out the next three batters she faced.
Morgan got the win, striking out four and walking one. The Longhorns added an insurance run the sixth on a throwing error by Vols third baseman Taylor Pannell.
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Knicks shed stability of Thibodeau era by seeking a new coach after they had gotten good
Knicks shed stability of Thibodeau era by seeking a new coach after they had gotten good

Winnipeg Free Press

time29 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Knicks shed stability of Thibodeau era by seeking a new coach after they had gotten good

NEW YORK (AP) — Tom Thibodeau's firing brought back some of the confusion and chaos the New York Knicks had seemingly left behind. After an era of stability and more success than they had enjoyed in a quarter of a century, the Knicks opened a coaching search few could have predicted when they fired Thibodeau on Tuesday. 'When I first saw it, I thought it was one of those fake AI things. No way. There's no way possible,' Indiana Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. Coaching searches weren't unusual in New York for much of the 2000s, but the Knicks weren't winning then. This time, they had just reached the Eastern Conference finals for the first time in 25 years before losing to Carlisle's team, and were an early favorite to do it again next year. So changing course brought swift and strong reaction from a fan base that seemed satisfied. Who decided Thibodeau had to go? And why? 'That seemed like an unfortunate call that the boss made, certainly for him,' tennis Hall of Famer John McEnroe, a Knicks fan, said while calling the French Open quarterfinals for TNT. But which boss? Direct answers may not come. Knicks leadership, from owner James Dolan to team president Leon Rose, doesn't do interviews with the reporters who cover the team. So the only hint may have come in the team's statement announcing the firing, in which Rose said the organization was 'singularly focused on winning a championship for our fans.' That means the view was that Thibodeau was good enough to get the Knicks close but not all the way. Rose was friends with Thibodeau long before hiring him in 2020 and giving him a three-year contract extension last summer. So immediate speculation was that Dolan, who at times has been viewed as meddlesome and unpopular with his team's fans, must have ordered the ouster. But a person with knowledge of the decision, speaking to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because details were to remain private, said Rose made the call with Dolan's approval. Rose conducted a thorough search five years ago, even though Thibodeau had been viewed as a favorite because of his relationship both to Rose and the organization as an assistant to Jeff Van Gundy in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Van Gundy has returned to coaching as an assistant with the Clippers, if the Knicks wanted to gauge interest in a reunion. Michael Malone, who led Denver to the 2023 NBA title, is another former Knicks assistant who is available, as is Johnnie Bryant, who was beaten out Wednesday by Jordan Ott for Phoenix's head coaching position. Rick Pitino, Dan Hurley and John Calipari are all big names with ties to the New York area if Rose wanted to go the college route, and the retired Jay Wright coached current Knicks players Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges on national championship teams at Villanova. Brunson's father, Rick, was an assistant on Thibodeau's staff, if Rose wanted to promote the team captain's father. The Knicks had 12 different coaches between the time Van Gundy resigned early in the 2001-02 season and Thibodeau's hiring, and they won just one playoff series. Thibodeau won four in the last three seasons. McEnroe thought that earned Thibodeau another year, a common reaction to his firing. The Knicks decided otherwise, sending Rose into a search with much higher consequences than last time. Back then, on the heels of seven straight losing seasons, he just needed a coach who could win some games. Now he needs one who can deliver a championship. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. 'I mean, I'm not really in that situation, but the thing I can say is Thibs did a lot for New York,' said Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein, who played in New York last season. 'He did a lot just building that culture over there. So I think I have a lot of respect for him.' ___ AP Sports Writer Cliff Brunt in Oklahoma City contributed to this report. ___ AP NBA:

Buggin' out: Little flies bother Djokovic and Zverev during their French Open quarterfinal
Buggin' out: Little flies bother Djokovic and Zverev during their French Open quarterfinal

Winnipeg Free Press

time44 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Buggin' out: Little flies bother Djokovic and Zverev during their French Open quarterfinal

PARIS (AP) — Novak Djokovic and Alexander Zverev were bugging out during their French Open quarterfinal Wednesday night, bothered by little flies that zoomed around Court Philippe-Chatrier as they competed. At one point, Zverev leaned over, put his hand on his knee and had a bit of a coughing fit, apparently after one of the bugs flew into his mouth. Both he and Djokovic occasionally would try to swat away the critters between points. The insects also flew around the stands in the 15,000-capacity main stadium, which had its lights on and the retractable roof open on a clear but chilly night, with the temperature around 60 degrees Fahrenheit (15 Celsius). Djokovic has won three of his 24 Grand Slam titles at Roland-Garros. Zverev was the runner-up at the clay-court Grand Slam tournament last year. Winnipeg Jets Game Days On Winnipeg Jets game days, hockey writers Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe send news, notes and quotes from the morning skate, as well as injury updates and lineup decisions. Arrives a few hours prior to puck drop. ___ More AP tennis:

NCAA argues Zeigler would be first to play 5 DI seasons in 5 years
NCAA argues Zeigler would be first to play 5 DI seasons in 5 years

Winnipeg Free Press

timean hour ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

NCAA argues Zeigler would be first to play 5 DI seasons in 5 years

Attorneys for two-time Southeastern Conference defensive player of the year Zakai Zeigler accuse the NCAA of trying to dodge facts and law by asking a federal judge to deny the Tennessee point guard's preliminary injunction seeking to play a fifth season in as many years. Zeigler's attorneys compared the NCAA's motion filed Monday to misdirection and said it used 'cherry-picked' or 'fundamentally flawed' data ahead of Friday's hearing on the preliminary injunction request before U.S. District Judge Katherine A. Crytzer in Knoxville. 'Rather than recognize the evolution of antitrust law's application to its business model, the NCAA relies on outdated legal arguments. And rather than address the law as it is, the NCAA mischaracterizes it to defend its illegal actions,' Zeigler's attorneys wrote in a response filed Tuesday. Zeigler sued the NCAA on May 20 over its rules limiting him to four seasons in a five-year window as an unlawful restraint of trade under both federal and Tennessee laws. His lawsuit argues he could earn between $2 million and as much as $4 million with another season. The NCAA argued Monday that Zeigler's injunction request should be denied because he is asking the court to make him the first athlete in history to play a fifth season in Division I 'as a matter of right.' The NCAA also said using the case of Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia doesn't help because that case was 'decided in error.' Pavia, who started his career at a junior college, was granted another year to play a fifth season, a ruling the NCAA is appealing. Zeigler played four seasons at Tennessee and already has graduated. The NCAA's motion said the life of a collegiate athlete is enabled by the Four-Seasons Rule, which creates a stream of opportunities for rising high school athletes. The NCAA argued the Four-Seasons Rule is necessary for DI athletics to exist separately from 'purely professional athletics.' Zeigler is asking the court to eliminate lines between the NCAA's compensation rules subject to the Sherman Act and eligibility rules that don't involve compensation. The NCAA said nothing would stop Zeigler from asking for a sixth or seventh season while pursuing a doctorate degree if he wins. 'College athletics is a means to a better end for student-athletes — not the end itself,' the NCAA motion said. Zeigler also has known since stepping on the Tennessee campus that he had five years to complete four seasons of basketball and could have challenged the Four-Seasons Rule at any time, the NCAA said. 'Whatever emergency underlies Plaintiff's request for relief is of his own making,' the motion said. It noted Zeigler can keep playing basketball with foreign leagues or the NBA's G League since 'if he had a viable path to the NBA, given his resume, he would already be a viable prospect.' The U.S. Department of Justice also filed a brief Tuesday encouraging the judge to apply Alston's 'flexible' rule of reason approach to Zeigler's injunction request and 'consider how the rule may benefit competition in the relevant labor market' and potentially enhance the athlete experience. Alston was the 9-0 Supreme Court case ruling in June 2021 that opened the door for compensation. The high court agreed with a lower court's determination that NCAA limits on education-related benefits that colleges offer athletes who play Division I basketball and football violate antitrust laws. ___ AP college basketball: and

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