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LSU Shreveport makes college baseball history with championship win
LSU Shreveport makes college baseball history with championship win

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • General
  • Yahoo

LSU Shreveport makes college baseball history with championship win

As LSU baseball goes in search of a national championship in the 2025 NCAA Tournament, one of its branch campuses etched its name into the college sports record books. LSU Shreveport won the 2025 NAIA national championship 13-7, the first national title in any sport for the Pilots. They ended with a 59-0 record, the first undefeated season in collegiate baseball history. Advertisement The Pilots went down early against Southeastern, trailing 4-0 heading into the bottom half of the second inning. But they mounted a comeback, trading blows with the Fire until a four-run outburst in the sixth. Jackson Syring and Ian Montz clubbed back-to-back solo home runs to lead off the frame, followed by an RBI single from Ryan Davenport and a sacrifice fly from Austin Gomm. The Pilots finished with 11 hits in the victory while also holding Southeastern scoreless over the final four innings. Kenneth Schechter earned the win on the mound, hurling four scoreless innings in relief. Issac Rohde pitched the final frame, holding the Fire without a hit to send the Pilots into celebration. Head coach Brad Neffendorf led the team to the win during his sixth season at the home. In his career, LSUS made three trips to the NAIA World Series and four opening round appearances. He's the fastest coach in program history to reach 100 wins. This article originally appeared on LSU Wire: How LSU Shreveport made college baseball history with national title

59-0! NAIA champ the first college baseball team on record to go unbeaten

time2 days ago

  • Sport

59-0! NAIA champ the first college baseball team on record to go unbeaten

LSU Shreveport became the first college baseball team on record to go unbeaten, finishing 59-0 when it won the NAIA championship in Lewiston, Idaho. The Pilots' perfect season ended with a 13-7 victory over Southeastern (Florida) on Friday night and gave the 10,000-student school in northwest Louisiana its first national title in any sport. For 25 years LSU Shreveport has been one of the top programs in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, which governs sports at 241 mostly small colleges across the country. The Pilots have appeared in the NAIA national tournament every year since 2005 and the NAIA World Series in 2021, 2022 and 2025. They're 270-49 in six seasons under coach Brad Neffendorf, including 142-13 in Red River Athletic Conference play. LSU Shreveport played only four games decided by one run this season, ranked second in the NAIA with 11.3 runs per game and third with a .361 batting average. The Pilots' 2.38 ERA was more than a run better than the next-closest team, and they led the nation with a .982 fielding percentage. Josh Gibson, at .436, was one of three players on the team to bat better than .400, and Isaac Rohde struck out an NAIA-leading 146 and had a 2.09 ERA while going 16-0. The Pilots broke the NAIA-record winning percentage of .935, set when Mount Vernon Nazarene (Ohio) went 43-3 in 1996. The NCAA top single-season winning percentages are .914 by Arizona State (64-6 in 1972) in Division I, .939 by Savannah State of Georgia (46-3 in 2000) in Division II and .978 by Trinity of Connecticut (45-1 in 2008) in Division III.

LSU Shreveport does impossible in mind-boggling historic season
LSU Shreveport does impossible in mind-boggling historic season

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • New York Post

LSU Shreveport does impossible in mind-boggling historic season

No baseball team is ever going to go 162-0, but 59-0 is now proven possible. LSU Shreveport became the first college baseball team ever to go undefeated when it finished off a perfect season Friday by beating Southeastern, 13-7, to capture the NAIA championship. The NAIA is different from the NCAA and governs more than 250 mostly small schools across the country. Athletes compete in 16 sports for 29 championships while earning $1.3 billion in scholarships. LSU Shreveport's dream was in danger — 58-1 without a championship would have been the ultimate heartbreaker — when it fell behind 4-0 in the second inning of the championship game. The Pilots didn't take the lead for good until a five-run outburst in the sixth. LSU Shreveport has appeared in the national tournament every year since 2005 and was making its third NAIA World Series trip since 2021. But this season was another level of dominance en route to the program's first national championship under sixth-year head coach Brad Neffendorf. LSU Shreveport finished their season at 59-0. Instagram/@lsusathletics 'It's hard to still comprehend,' Neffendorf told the school's Facebook page. 'It's hard to know that it's over because it's been such an unbelievable group, but it's 35 years in the making.' The Pilots only played four one-run games, averaged 11.3 runs per game, hit .361 as a team and launched 76 home runs. LSU Shreveport made history in their perfect season. Instagram/@lsusathletics All 11 players who had at least 100 at-bats over the season hit better .300, including three .400 hitters. They were just as good, if not better, on the mound (2.38 ERA) and in the field (.982 fielding percentage) — both of which led the nation. LSU Shreveport's winning streak is the longest ever at any level of college baseball. Fittingly, the Pilots ranked No. 1 in every NAIA poll from the preseason through the final pitch. By comparison, the NCAA's best single-season records belong to Arizona State (64-6 in 1972) in Division I, Savannah State (46-3 in 2000) in Division II and Trinity (45-1 in 2008) in Division III, according to The Associated Press.

59 for 59: LSU Shreveport become first college baseball team to go unbeaten
59 for 59: LSU Shreveport become first college baseball team to go unbeaten

The Guardian

time2 days ago

  • General
  • The Guardian

59 for 59: LSU Shreveport become first college baseball team to go unbeaten

LSU Shreveport became the first college baseball team on record to go unbeaten, finishing 59-0 when they won the NAIA championship in Lewiston, Idaho. The Pilots' perfect season ended with a 13-7 victory over Southeastern (Florida) on Friday night and gave the 10,000-student school in northwest Louisiana its first national title in any sport. For 25 years LSU Shreveport have been one of the top programs in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, which governs sports at 241 mostly small colleges across the country. The Pilots have appeared in the NAIA national tournament every year since 2005 and the NAIA World Series in 2021, 2022 and 2025. They're 270-49 in six seasons under coach Brad Neffendorf, including 142-13 in Red River Athletic Conference play. LSU Shreveport played only four games decided by one run this season, ranked second in the NAIA with 11.3 runs per game and third with a .361 batting average. The Pilots' 2.38 ERA was more than a run better than the next-closest team, and they led the nation with a .982 fielding percentage. Josh Gibson, at .436, was one of three players on the team to bat better than .400, and Isaac Rohde struck out an NAIA-leading 146 and had a 2.09 ERA while going 16-0. The Pilots broke the NAIA-record winning percentage of .935, set when Mount Vernon Nazarene (Ohio) went 43-3 in 1996. The NCAA top single-season winning percentages are .914 by Arizona State (64-6 in 1972) in Division I, .939 by Savannah State of Georgia (46-3 in 2000) in Division II and .978 by Trinity of Connecticut (45-1 in 2008) in Division III.

NCAA vs. NAIA: Explaining the key differences
NCAA vs. NAIA: Explaining the key differences

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • Sport
  • USA Today

NCAA vs. NAIA: Explaining the key differences

NCAA vs. NAIA: Explaining the key differences LSU Shreveport won the NAIA National Championship Friday, 13-7 over Southeastern, the first national title for any sport in school history. The Pilots need their season at 59-0, the first undefeated season in collegiate baseball history. The NAIA and NCAA are often confused, but they're separate organizations. The main differences between the two governing bodies are their size, structure and goals. The NCAA, which is significantly larger, has over 1,100 member schools and around 500,000 student-athletes across three divisions — I, II and III. The NAIA is made up of 250 members with around 77,000 student-athletes with one division. The NCAA, especially at the Division I level, emphasizes high-level competition with large budgets and world-class facilities. The NAIA schools don't have the same spending power. However, NAIA schools can offer scholarships, much like a D-II college can. The NAIA also grants more flexibility when it comes to admission standards. The NCAA typically maintains stricter academic guidelines that aren't found at the NAIA level. While both entities encourage fair and healthy competition among its student-athletes, the financial implications and talent levels are what separate the play of NCAA and NAIA institutions.

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