logo
Texas Tech's NiJaree Canady leads AP's college softball players to watch

Texas Tech's NiJaree Canady leads AP's college softball players to watch

Texas Tech's NiJaree Canady leads The Associated Press' list of college softball players to watch this season.
Last year's USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year sent shockwaves through the sport when she transferred from Stanford to Texas Tech for an NIL deal reportedly worth more than $1 million. She led the nation with 337 strikeouts and a 0.73 ERA last season and led the Cardinal to the Women's College World Series semifinals. The Big 12's coaches have picked Texas Tech to finish second in the conference behind Oklahoma State.
Here are other players to watch, in alphabetical order:
Reese Atwood, Texas
Atwood was a Top 3 finalist for USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year last season. The junior catcher set school records last season for home runs (23), runs batted in (90), total bases (163) and slugging percentage (.862) and led the team with a .423 batting average. Last season, she helped the Longhorns earn the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament and finish as national runners-up.
Jordyn Bahl, Nebraska
Bahl transferred from Oklahoma to Nebraska before last season and suffered a season-ending ACL injury in her first game for the Huskers. She won two national titles at Oklahoma. As a sophomore, she had a 22-1 record and an 0.90 ERA. She threw 24 2/3 scoreless innings at the 2023 Women's College World Series and was named its Most Outstanding Player. She will hit and possibly play some first base after almost exclusively being a pitcher at Oklahoma.
Jaysoni Beachum, Florida State
Beachum was the National Fastpitch Coaches Association Freshman of the Year and a top 10 finalist for USA Softball National Player of the Year. She also was an NFCA second-team All-American at third base. She hit .417 last season — the third-highest average in school history. She set Florida State's freshman record with 66 RBIs and led the team in hits (78), home runs (16) and on-base percentage (.509).
Jocelyn Erickson, Florida
Erickson was the NFCA National Player of the Year last season after leading Florida to the World Series semifinals. The catcher ranked second nationally with a school-record 86 RBIs. She hit .382 and had a .994 fielding percentage. She finished in the top 10 in the Southeastern Conference in 15 categories in a dominant first year for the Gators after transferring from Oklahoma.
Jenna Golembiewski, Miami (Ohio)
Golembiewski was the Mid-American Conference Player of the Year in 2023, then she got better. She finished second in the nation with 28 home runs last season behind teammate Karli Spaid. She was a third-team NFCA All-American after hitting .394 with 78 RBIs in 57 games. She had a .474 on-base percentage and a .944 slugging percentage.
Ella Parker, Oklahoma
Parker is one of the few big-name holdovers from last year's championship run. The utility player was a third-team NFCA All-American and a top-three finalist for NFCA Freshman of the Year. She hit .415 with 13 home runs, 15 doubles and 17 stolen bases. She was the Most Outstanding Player of the Big 12 Tournament and was on the World Series all-tournament team.
Karlyn Pickens, Tennessee
Pickens was a top 10 finalist for USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year last season. She posted a 22-7 record with a 1.12 ERA. The 2024 SEC Pitcher of the Year had 225 strikeouts in 188 1/3 innings, had 12 shutouts and threw 15 complete games. She held opponents to a .156 batting average.
Keagan Rothrock, Florida
Rothrock led the nation with 33 wins, 262 innings pitched and 28 complete games as a freshman. She got a win against Oklahoma in the World Series semifinals. Though Oklahoma bounced back and beat the Gators in the double-elimination tournament on the way to its fourth consecutive title, Rothrock made the all-tournament team.
Aminah Vega, Duke
Vega was a first-team NFCA All-American at second base and helped Duke make its first-ever World Series appearance. She hit .369 with 12 home runs and 52 RBIs as a sophomore last season. She had a .433 on-base percentage and a .668 slugging percentage, spurring a program that just started playing softball in 2018 to its highest heights yet. In 2023, she hit 12 home runs to set the school's freshman record.
___

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ranking every SEC basketball stadium by seating capacity
Ranking every SEC basketball stadium by seating capacity

USA Today

time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

Ranking every SEC basketball stadium by seating capacity

Ranking every SEC basketball stadium by seating capacity The Georgia Bulldogs are not known for having the best basketball program in the SEC, but the Dawgs were part of the best conference in men's basketball during the 2024-2025 season when a record-breaking 14 (of 16) SEC teams made March Madness. The Florida Gators ended up as the national champions to cap the SEC's elite season. That means 87.5% of SEC basketball fan bases had a team that made the 2024-2025 NCAA Tournament. The Georgia Bulldogs were one of those teams to make March Madness. They went 20-13 in the 2024-25 season, good enough to earn a No. 9 seed in March Madness. The Bulldogs can welcome up to 10,253 fans in Stegeman Coliseum and in 2024-2025 those fans were treated to a Georgia team that reached new heights not seen in years. Stegeman Coliseum ranks just 13th in maximum seat capacity among all SEC basketball stadiums. Despite that, Georgia was still able to beat Kentucky and Florida in Stegeman Coliseum in 2024-2025, showing that UGA still has a strong home-court advantage. Ranking all 16 SEC men's basketball stadiums by capacity Tennessee Volunteers (Stadium: Thompson-Boling Arena, Max Capacity: 21,678) Kentucky Wildcats (Rupp Arena, 20,500) Arkansas Razorbacks (Bud Walton Arena, 19,368) South Carolina Gamecocks (Colonial Life Arena, 18,000) Alabama Crimson Tide (Coleman Coliseum, 15,383) Missouri Tigers (Mizzou Arena, 15,061) Vanderbilt Commodores (Memorial Gymnasium, 14,316) LSU Tigers (Pete Maravich Assembly Center, 13,215) Texas A&M Aggies (Reed Arena, 12,989) Oklahoma Sooners (Lloyd Noble Center, 11,528) Texas Longhorns (Moody Center, 10,763) Mississippi State Bulldogs (Humphrey Coliseum, 10,575) Georgia Bulldogs (Stegeman Coliseum, 10,523) Florida Gators (Exactech Arena at the Stephen C. O'Connell Center, 10,151) Ole Miss Rebels (The Sandy and John Black Pavilion at Ole Miss, 9,500) Auburn Tigers (Neville Arena, 9,121) Follow UGAWire on Instagram!

Texas A&M is reportedly pursuing Cal State Fullerton star short stop
Texas A&M is reportedly pursuing Cal State Fullerton star short stop

USA Today

time4 hours ago

  • USA Today

Texas A&M is reportedly pursuing Cal State Fullerton star short stop

Texas A&M is reportedly pursuing Cal State Fullerton star short stop Texas A&M baseball's roster will look significantly different in 2026, primarily due to the departure of junior star outfielder Jace LaViolette, who is expected to enter the 2025 MLB Draft, along with several pitchers, including Ryan Prager and Justin Lamkin, who have yet to announce their decisions. Still, nothing compares to the last month's news regarding Texas A&M Athletic Director Trev Alberts' decison to retain head coach Michael Earley, whose inagural season ended with a dissapointing 30-26 (11-19 SEC) record, including a series sweeping loss to lowly Missouri, which all but eliminated the Aggies from the NCAA Tournament. Given a second chance, Earely will need dominate the transfer portal, which, outside of adding three veterans, pitchers Michael (MJ) Bollinger (FAU), Preston Prince (Rutgers), and star outfielder Jake Duer, also an FAU transfer, he will need to continue bolstering the roster to have any chance at competing in the always stacked SEC next season. This week, it was revealed that star Cal Fullerton shortstop Maddox Latta has entered the transfer portal. According to AggieYell (Rivals) Editor Mark Passwaters, Texas A&M is in pursuit, which could lead to a future visit. Currently, junior shortstop Kaeden Kent has yet to announce his return for next season, and although his return is assumed, nothing is guaranteed. Last season, Latta was highly productive, leading Cal Fullerton with a .362 batting average, 72 hits, 27 RBI, and three home runs. Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Cameron on X: @CameronOhnysty.

Kade Anderson's dominant outing carries LSU in 4-1 win over Arkansas at the College World Series

time9 hours ago

Kade Anderson's dominant outing carries LSU in 4-1 win over Arkansas at the College World Series

OMAHA, Neb. -- Kade Anderson limited Arkansas' high-powered offense to three hits and a run in seven-plus innings, LSU knocked Razorbacks ace Zach Root out of the game early, and the Tigers beat the rival Razorbacks 4-1 in the College World Series on Saturday night. Anderson, a projected top-five overall pick in the MLB amateur draft next month, kept Arkansas batters off-balance with his four-pitch mix and struck out seven to become the national leader with 170. 'Outstanding performance, one we've been accustomed to on opening night of every weekend,' LSU coach Jay Johnson said. 'He got stronger as the game went along, and he executed pitches at a high level, which you have to do against that offense. Offensively, we did just enough.' LSU (49-15), which won the SEC regular-season series against the Razorbacks in Baton Rouge last month, improved to 4-0 in all-time CWS meetings. The Tigers will play UCLA on Monday night as they continue their bid to win a second national title in three years. Arkansas (48-14), in its 12th CWS and looking for its first championship, meets Murray State in an elimination game Monday. 'Obviously, we need to move on from this one and get over it and not think too far down the road,' Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn said. 'We have to take care of business Monday because if we don't, there's no Tuesday. You can't get all uptight about it. These guys have come back and won games. They've done some great things this year.' The matchup between the No. 3 national seed Razorbacks and No. 6 Tigers marked the first time since the NCAA Tournament went to its current format in 1999 that the highest remaining seeds have met in their CWS opener. The Tigers were up 3-0 in the second inning after Root (8-6) issued two walks and allowed a bunt single to Daniel Dickinson to load the bases. Chris Stanfield singled in a run and another was forced in when Root plunked Michael Braswell III in the foot. The third came home when Josh Pearson grounded to short and beat the relay throw to first on the double-play attempt. That was all for Root, whose 1 2/3 innings marked his shortest start of the season. 'When you're facing that caliber of arms, you aren't going to get a ton (of runs) maybe like you would playing in SEC ballparks where home runs are a real thing with every pitch of the game,' Johnson said. 'We did an excellent job setting the table. I've coached enough games here to know getting the lead is really important.' Van Horn said it was a hard decision to take out Root. 'The game was about to get out of hand,' Van Horn said. 'Yeah, it's early. The wind was blowing in. Scoring a lot of runs against Anderson, to me, was something that wasn't going to happen. I hated to do it, but I felt like it was the right decision and I'll stand by it.' Gabe Gaeckle, who moved to the bullpen after making nine starts, kept his team in the game. He allowed just three hits, and his 10 strikeouts and six innings were career highs. Gaeckle left with two outs and a runner on second in the eighth. Cole Gibler came on and Derek Curiel sent his 0-2 pitch to left for an insurance run. Anderson (11-1) held the Razorbacks scoreless until the sixth when Reese Robinett connected for his third homer of the season. 'Real cool moment,' Anderson said of his night. 'Just taking it all in. That's why you come here. Really proud of our team. Doesn't matter the stat line. We won the game and that's all I really care about.' The left-hander from tiny Madisonville, Louisiana, went seven innings for the third straight start and departed after Cam Kozeal singled leading off the eighth. Chase Shores retired three straight and turned things over to freshman Casan Evans in the ninth. Evans worked around Charles Davalan's leadoff single to finish off the Razorbacks. The full house of more than 25,000 was evenly split between the fan bases. Well before first pitch, Arkansas fans countered passionate 'L-S-U' chants by raising their arms and doing the Hog call: 'Wooooooooo. Pig. Sooie!' Influencer and former LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne was in the front row in a half-LSU, half-Pittsburgh Pirates No. 30 jersey with the name of her boyfriend, Paul Skenes, on the back. Skenes pitched on LSU's 2023 title team before he made his fast rise in the majors.

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