Latest news with #JadenNoot
Yahoo
24-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
LSU baseball eliminated from SEC Tournament after loss to Ole Miss
After holding off a rally from Texas A&M in the quarterfinals on Friday night, LSU baseball fell 2-0 to Ole Miss in the semifinal round of the SEC Baseball Tournament. Jay Johnson used Kade Anderson and Anthony Eyanson during last night's win, so LSU entered Saturday with its two aces on the shelf. Jaden Noot got the start on the mound. In the top of the first inning, the Rebels got on the board with a solo shot to give them a 1-0 lead. Advertisement The LSU bats picked up where they left off against Texas A&M. The Tigers failed to even get a hit after the third inning against the Aggies. LSU was held hitless in the bottom of the first. In the bottom of the third inning, LSU finally got its first hit as Cade Arrambide hit a single. Chris Stanfield followed that with a single to put runners on first and second with only one out and the top of the order due up. Derek Curiel and Jared Jones weren't able to get a hit, and we headed to the top of the fourth inning still trailing 1-0. In the top of the fourth inning, the Rebels scored again on an RBI single to increase their lead to 2-0. Noot's day came to an end after the fourth inning as Chase Shores entered to pitch. Noot pitched four innings and allowed two runs on three hits, seven strikeouts, and two walks. Shores found himself in a jam in the top of the sixth inning, but Stephen Milam made a great play to bail him out, and he was able to keep Ole Miss from scoring before being pulled from the game in the top of the seventh inning. He finished the day after 2.2 innings. He allowed zero runs on zero hits, three strikeouts, and three walks. Jacob Mayers entered the game to pitch after Shores. As we entered the bottom of the eighth inning, LSU had not gotten a hit since the bottom of the third inning, just like last night against Texas A&M. The difference is, they were behind in this game instead of being ahead. The Tigers still trailed 2-0, and they were running out of chances to make a comeback. LSU hitters went three up and three down, and we headed to the ninth with the Tigers still trailing. Advertisement In the bottom of the ninth inning, Danny Dickinson grounded out, Jake Brown struck out, Ethan Frey walked, and Josh Pearson entered to pitch hit. Pearson flew out to center field, and the game was over. LSU will now wait to see which teams it will welcome into Baton Rouge for the Regional next week. The hosts will be announced Sunday night at around 7:30 PM. This article originally appeared on LSU Wire: Recap: LSU baseball eliminated from SEC Tournament with Ole Miss loss
Yahoo
16-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
LSU blows ninth inning lead and drops game one vs. South Carolina
LSU baseball entered Thursday with a chance to finish the season strong and earn the No. 2 seed in the SEC Tournament, but LSU took a step back after blowing a 5-4 ninth-inning lead vs. South Carolina to lose 6-5. The only thing LSU can control is how it finishes against the Gamecocks. Former Tigers head coach Paul Maneiri is the head coach for Carolina, and he has had a rough time this year. Advertisement Before the game started, Jay Johnson announced that Kade Anderson would be pushed back to start the Friday game and Anthony Eyanson would start the Saturday game. Conner Ware got the start in game one. LSU grabbed the lead early as a two-run homer by Danny Dickinson gave the Tigers a 2-0 lead in the top of the first inning. In the bottom of the second inning, a sacrifice fly by the Gamecocks cut the lead in half, making it 2-1 Tigers through two full innings. Jaden Noot entered to pitch for the Tigers in the second inning. He worked through the rest of the second inning and remained in the game until the bottom of the sixth. LSU added to its lead in the top of the fifth inning as Jared Jones hit an RBI single to increase the lead to 3-1. Advertisement The Tigers possibly could have scored more, but a baserunning error got the Gamecocks out of the inning. In the bottom of the sixth inning, an error led to a couple of runs for South Carolina as they tied the game 3-3. Chase Shores entered to pitch for the Tigers to finish the sixth inning. Noot finished with four innings pitched. He allowed two runs on two hits, five strikeouts, and zero walks. Shores found himself in a jam in the bottom of the seventh inning as the Gamecocks had runners on first and second with one out. Josh Pearson then became the hero the Tigers needed as he made a great catch to cause a double play to end the inning. In the top of the eighth inning, Dickinson hit a single, and Jake Brown entered to pinch-hit for Luis Hernandez. Brown hit a single to move Dickinson to third base with one out. Advertisement Josh Pearson was then intentionally walked to load the bases. Stephen Milam then hit a sacrifice fly to give LSU the lead again. Michael Braswell III then hit an RBI single to score another run to make it 5-3. Chris Stanfield then struck out to send us to the bottom of the eighth inning. Zac Cowan entered to pitch for the Tigers in the bottom of the eighth inning. Shores finished after two full innings. He allowed zero runs on two hits, one strikeout, and zero walks. Cowan was greeted by a triple and a single to cut the lead to 5-4. That runner was caught stealing by Cade Arrambide then back-to-back flyouts ended the inning. We headed to the ninth inning with the Tigers still leading by one run. Advertisement In the bottom of the ninth inning, LSU entered with a 5-4 lead. After striking out the first batter, Cowan gave up a homer and a triple to tie the game and put the winning run at third base. Cowan then hit the next batter to put runners on the corners with one out. He got a pop fly for an out, and then an intentional walk loaded the bases for the Gamecocks. A wild pitch then scored the game-winning run for South Carolina. LSU falls to 40-14 overall and 17-11 in conference play with the loss. Game two is scheduled for Friday night at 6 PM. This article originally appeared on LSU Wire: LSU blows ninth-inning lead vs. Paul Mainieri's South Carolina