The Texas A&M softball team went 4-0 in the Aggie Classic for a strong start to the season

The Aggies softball team sweeps the weekend with a strong offensive output

The long ball was on full display over the weekend with the Aggies hitting an impressive 12 home runs over four games. They outscored their opponents 39-9 on 34 hits and ran the bases well.

It’s a good start but they still have some work to do as they allowed 9 runs in just two games. Besides that, Coach Trisha Ford has a lot to like from what she’s seen so far.

“For Aggie softball um I thought our offense tonight um was just absolutely dynamic I don’t know just lots of hard hit balls they’ve been working hard our lineup as you can tell has changed quite dramatically from last year”
“..just you know for me it’s first you know day of the season so some good and some things that we need to improve on which I think is always good.”
There is a lot to be excited about going forward and you can watch some of the highlights from the successful weekend.

Softball holds off Utah Valley 3-2 to wrap up Puerto Vallarta Challenge

The Nebraska softball team wrapped up its season-opening tournament against Utah Valley Saturday morning in the Puerto Vallarta Challenge.

The Nebraska softball team wrapped up its season-opening tournament against Utah Valley Saturday morning in the Puerto Vallarta Challenge. The Huskers won their final game, 3-2, to finish the tournament with a 2-2 record.

Nebraska sprung out to the 3-0 lead by the end of the third inning, but Utah Valley closed the margin to 3-2 in the fourth. The Huskers fended off the Wolverines for the remainder of the game, making clutch plays in the field.

In the batter’s box, Nebraska produced six hits in total, with six batters earning a hit. Billie Andrews produced the biggest hit, cracking a solo home run, her 45th career home run and 75th career extra-base hit. Bella Bacon hit an RBI double and freshman Samantha Bland added an RBI single.

Sarah Harness started in the pitching circle for the Huskers and allowed two runs on two hits in 3.2 innings. Kaylin Kinney earned the win in relief for the second straight game, pitching for 3.1 innings and surrendering no runs. Kinney struck out two and did not allow a hit against the Wolverines.

Nebraska will return to action next week in the Troy Cox Classic. The Huskers will play five games in the tournament, starting with a doubleheader against New Mexico State on Friday. Game one is set for 4:30 p.m. and game two is set for 7 p.m.

Huskers dominate Michigan 79-59 to earn their 17th win of the season

ebraska returned home Saturday night following two road losses.

Nebraska returned home Saturday night following two road losses. The Huskers welcomed in Michigan, seeking their elusive 17th win, something they haven’t done since 2018-2019. Nebraska won in dominating fashion, blowing out the Wolverines en route to a 75-59 victory.

The Huskers erupted in the first half, leading by as much as 43-13 before heading into the locker rooms up 45-25. On the night, Nebraska shot 30-of-64 while Michigan shot just 20-of-62.

Keisei Tominaga finished the night as the Huskers’ top scorer, landing 19 points, by going 8-of-14 in total shooting. Tominaga also shot 3-of-6 from beyond the arc, reaching a season total of 50 in three-pointers. He is now 17 three-pointers away from reaching the top-10 in school history for three-pointers made in a single season.

Josiah Allick took runner-up in scoring for Nebraska, dropping 16 points by going 7-of-10 in total shooting. Allick also led the Huskers in rebounds, hauling in eight. Brice Williams scored 13 points for Nebraska, shooting 5-of-9 from the field. Rienk Mast tallied up 11 points for the Huskers and led the team in assists with eight.

Nebraska is now 17-8 on the season and 7-7 in conference play. It will remain home to face Penn State next Saturday morning. Tipoff is set for 11 a.m. and can be viewed on the Big Ten Network.

What Brad Brownell said after Clemson’s win at Syracuse

A look at what Clemson coach Brad Brownell said following his team’s 77-68 win at Syracuse on Saturday.

It was hard for Clemson coach Brad Brownell not to be happy after his team’s gutsy 77-68 victory at Syracuse on Saturday.

The win over the Orange marked the first time all season the Tigers (16-7 overall, 6-6 ACC) had won back to back games in conference play. After beating No. 3 North Carolina in Chapel Hill earlier in the week, Clemson made sure to avoid a letdown at the Carrier Dome.

The Tigers never trailed after the early going and had one of their better overall starts of the season, then withstood a second-half surge by Syracuse to close the game on a 17-8 run in the final 3:37.

Joe Girard led all scorers with 18 points and missed only two shots all afternoon in his return to Syracuse, where he spent four seasons under coach Jim Boeheim,

Here’s what Brownell said after the game.

On finishing strong down the stretch in back to back games:

“Obviously the free-throw shooting down the stretch was huge for our guys. Give Joe and Chase Hunter a ton of credit. It was kind of a strange game. Our starting unit did not guard well the first four minutes of either half. I thought our bench was terrific, giving us the jolt that we kind of needed. There’s been some games where those guys haven’t been able to help us and today they were big. That’s where the lead came from. RJ (Godfrey) was really good. I thought (Chauncey) Wiggins was good. Dillon (Hunter) was really good. I’m just proud of those guys.

“I give our older guys credit. I kind of got into them in a huddle midway through the second half. I was disappointed for a little bit because I thought we were just a little starry-eyed or what not. They thought it was going to be easy, but it’s not going to be easy. (Syracuse) was 11-1 up here. There was a huge crowd today, and they were fighting for their team. It gets loud in here, so we took a deep breath. PJ Hall had a great play off a dunk and then we had a great after-timeout play to Joe for a 3, but those were a couple of really good actions that got us some big baskets. Then defensively, we just kind of held on and held the ball against the (full-court) press.”

On Jack Clark’s performance (game-high 10 rebounds in 29 minutes):

“He did a good job on Chris Bell. When he was on Bell, he had maybe one mistake at the end of the game. The other times early on, he didn’t. Chris Bell is a hard cover because he’s so tall, and he shoots like he’s out of a phone booth. If you’re not in that phone booth with him, he just shoots over the top of you. Dillon was all over him one time, and he just shot on top of him. Dillon is 6-foot-4 and it still wasn’t tall enough. So I thought (Clark) did a good job of guarding. His presence with rebounding and even little things like passes against the press that you don’t think much about, he does them well. That’s certainly helped our team tremendously.”

On Joe Girard not letting his emotions affect him:

“I’m so proud of him. We’re trying to get him 12 shots a game and we run a bunch of different things, but when they put Judah Mintz on him and they just chase him everywhere, it’s like Reece Beekman from Virginia. Those dudes are panther-type athletes. Those dudes do an unbelievable job. They’re right on top of screens and they’re connected. It’s hard to break (Girard) free.

“To Joe’s credit, he did not take bad shots. He stayed within the offense. He moved and he accepted that sometimes he’s not going to get a shot. When they guard like that, sometimes it opens up room for other players. Chase Hunter has room to drive and has more space to post the ball. So just Joe being on the floor is significant from that (standpoint), but the efficiency is what it comes down to. Joe’s efficiency is so good: 5-for-6 (field goals), and then he makes all his free throws. There are a lot of guys that score 20 in games, but they take 20 shots to get them. Joe rarely does that. His poise down the stretch and the way he wanted the ball and helped us break press and deal with pressure, he was terrific.”

On getting past 21 turnovers:

“Our big guys just did not do a good job. Ian (Schieffelin) barely practiced Friday. He’s battling some stuff and even PJ, we had to sit him out two days. It’s hard when guys don’t practice, but you can’t simulate this kind of speed and athleticism. Maliq Brown is a tough hombre. I liked that kid for Syracuse. He plays hard and tough and has his hands on everything.

“It was hard for PJ to get comfortable, and I thought one of the moves he made at the end, one of the tough power moves, he multi-pivoted. That’s just a grown-man basket. That basket by PJ Hall, there are only three guys in our league that can make that play. It was a phenomenal play. It was tough all day and they were unrelenting in that they kept pressuring those big guys every second. We kept trying to do different things to try to move them around.”

WHAT’S NEXT: Clemson returns to the court Wednesday night when the Tigers host Miami at 7 p.m. EST at Littlejohn Coliseum. The game will be televised by ESPN2.

Joe Girard leads Clemson past Syracuse, 77-68

Clemson got 18 points from Joe Girard, who earned his 2,000th career point in his return to his Syracuse, and Clemson defeated the Orange, 77-68, at JMA Wireless Dome Saturday.

Clemson got 18 points from Joe Girard, who reached 2,000th career points in his return to Syracuse, and the Tigers defeated the Orange, 77-68, at JMA Wireless Dome Saturday.

The win marks the first time the Tigers (16-7 overall, 6-6 ACC) have posted back to back wins in conference play this season.

Girard was a big reason why. He made five of his six shots for the game, including four of five from 3-point range, to lead Clemson in scoring.

“I’m proud of him. He did not take bad shots. He stayed within the offense,” Clemson coach Brad Brownell said of Girard afterwards.

Clemson made 60 percent of its shots in Saturday’s contest. PJ Hall had 15 points, Ian Schieffelin added 11, and Chase Hunter finished with 10 in the Tigers’ victory — their first at Syracuse since 2016.

Similar to Tuesday’s win at No. 3 North Carolina, Clemson got out to a big lead early but had to withstand a second-half surge to hold on.

The Tigers used a 14-0 run in the first half to open up a 15-point lead at 27-12 when Girard sank a long 3-pointer near the under-8 media timeout. It was part of an 18-2 overall run by Clemson, which led 35-24 by halftime.

Syracuse (15-9 overall, 6-7 ACC) made their run in the second half, and when JJ Starling hit a fadeaway jumper with 3:37 left, the game was tied at 60-all. Clemson answered when Hall went right back down the floor and made a spin move for a layup to put the Tigers back on top.

Turns out, Clemson wouldn’t look back.

Hunter drove to the rim on the Tigers next possession to lay one in with 2:37 to play to make it 64-60. Girard then hit Schieffelin for a wide-open 3-pointer to push the lead to 67-60 with under two minutes to play. Schieffelin would hit another basket under heavy pressure with 1:31 left to up the lead to 69-61.

Hunter sank two foul shots to close things out for Clemson’s last points of the afternoon to cap the game’s scoring.

But it was Girard who stole the show in his return to his old stomping grounds. The fifth-year senior from Glens Falls, N.Y. spent fours seasons at Syracuse under legendary coach Jim Boeheim before transferring to Clemson after the 2023 season.

“Joe’s efficiency is so good,” Brownell said. “There are a lot of guys that score 20 points in games, but they take 20 shots to get them. Joe rarely does that, and his poise down the stretch and the way he wanted the ball helped us break press and deal with pressure. He was terrific.”

Syracuse shot just 39 percent in the game and had two costly scoring droughts. They went over six minutes without a basket in the first half as Clemson built its 15-point lead, then went 4:36 without a basket in the second half.

By contrast, Clemson had one of its best starts of the season. The Tigers made 57 percent of their first-half shots and out-rebounded Syracuse, 26-11. Hunter managed to get off a shot at the buzzer with just one-tenth of a second on the clock to close out the half.

Clemson ended the day with 41 rebounds to Syracuse’s 24.

UP NEXT: Clemson will return to action on Wednesday when they host Miami at 7 p.m. EST at Littlejohn Coliseum. The game will be televised by ESPN2. The two teams met back on January 3 in Miami, a 95-82 Hurricanes victory.

Nebraska softball splits doubleheader against Duke and Long Beach State

The Huskers entered their second day at the Puerto Vallarta Challenge, facing Duke and Long Beach State in a doubleheader.

The Huskers entered their second day at the Puerto Vallarta Challenge, facing Duke and Long Beach State in a doubleheader. Nebraska split the day, falling to Duke and defeating Long Beach State.

The Huskers clashed with the Blue Devils in their first game. Jala Wright tossed a one-hitter for Duke in a 6-1 victory over Nebraska. Wright retired the first 18 batters she faced, taking a perfect game into the final inning before Billie Andrews produced Nebraska’s only run and hit with a leadoff home run in the bottom of the seventh.

Kaylin Kinney started the game for Nebraska on the mound, pitching for 5.0 and allowing five runs. Freshman Caitlin Olensky pitched the final 2.0 innings and allowed only one run.

Against Long Beach State, Nebraska produced eight hits in the game in its 7-2 victory. Brooke Andrews drove in four runs to power the Huskers to their win, hitting 1-for-2 with a double and four RBIs. Billie Andrews also drove in runs for Nebraska, scoring two by going 3-for-4 with two doubles and a triple.

Kaylin Kinney tossed the final 4.0 innings for Nebraska after taking over for Sarah Harness and did not allow a run while surrendering only two hits.

The Huskers move to 1-2 on the season and will wrap up the Puerto Vallarta Challenge against Utah Valley on Saturday morning. The first pitch is set for 10:30 a.m. and can be viewed on FloSoftball.

SEC revenue increased $51 million year-over-year according to USA TODAY report

The SEC rakes in millions of dollars every year and the astronomical revenue earned in 2023 increased according to a report from USA TODAY.

As arguably the best conference in college sports, the SEC rakes in millions of dollars every year and the astronomical revenue earned this past year increased according to a report.

Per Steve Berkowitz, a sports project reporter for USA TODAY, tax records show that the SEC earned $853 million in the 2023 fiscal year, which is an increase of $51 million from 2022 ($802M). The increase is about 6% year-over-year.

Without factoring in inflation, the reported revenue earned in 2021 was $833 million. Therefore, after one down year, the money is flowing once again.

Texas A&M and its 13 conference peers each received an average of $51.3 million in the revenue distribution split. Last year, each school got just under $50 million at $49.9 million.

According to Berkowitz, with Texas and Oklahoma joining the SEC this summer before the next school year, the conference is projected to surpass $1 billion in revenue in 2024-25. With the Pac-12 ceasing to exist, more money will be split among the remaining Power Four conferences.

Another factor is the football TV package now being broadcast on ESPN and ABC as opposed to CBS Sports. For more information on the SEC’s recent revenue increase, check out Berkowitz’s full report on usatoday.com.

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Shaun on Twitter: @Shaun_Holkko.

Clemson Tigers vs. Syracuse Orange: How to Watch/Stream/Listen

A look at how and where Clemson fans can watch, stream and listen to Saturday’s game against Syraucse.

After a thrilling upset of No. 3 North Carolina on Tuesday night in Chapel Hill, Clemson will look to do something it hasn’t done all season when it takes the floor at Syracuse Saturday at noon — win back-to-back games in conference play.

The Tigers (15-7 overall, 5-6 ACC) received a big shot in the arm, to say nothing of a huge boost to their NCAA Tournament résumé, with their 80-76 victory over the Tar Heels this week. Clemson currently is ranked 24th in strength of schedule by ESPN and has Quad 1 wins over Carolina, Pitt, Alabama, and TCU.

But the Tigers haven’t won back to back games since December and have struggled with consistency since ACC play resumed on January 3, something that head coach Brad Brownell alluded to after the victory over North Carolina.

“I’ve said a couple of times that I think we’re playing better than our ACC record. But we are what our record says we are, so we’ve got to finish some games,” Brownell said. “Our guys have really hung in there. They’ve battled and stayed pretty positive. They’re working hard in practice every day. We just haven’t had many good results.”

Clemson can change that with a win against a Syracuse team that’s had similar results in conference action. The Orange (15-8 overall, 6-6 ACC) have also struggled with consistency in Adrian Autry’s first season since the retirement of legendary coach Jim Boeheim.

Syracuse is led in scoring by sophomore Judah Mintz, who averages 18.3 points per game and had 21 in the team’s 94-92 victory over Louisville earlier this week. JJ Starling averages 13 points per game and has been more of a factor of late. Chris Bell (formerly Chris Bunch) is coming off a career-high 30-point showing for Syracuse.

For Clemson, PJ Hall has been the Tigers’ rock all season. His points-per-game average is up to 20 after a team-high 25 points in Tuesday’s win at Chapel. Hall has had seven games of 25 points or more this season .

Joe Girard is averaging 15 points per game and had 21 against UNC, including five 3-pointers.

Series Notes and Recent History

Clemson leads the all-time head to head series with Syracuse, 8-6. All but two of those meetings have occurred since the Orange joined the ACC in 2013-14. The Tigers won the last meeting between the two schools, 91-73, in February of last year at Littlejohn Coliseum. Clemson hasn’t won at Syracuse since 2016.

How To Watch

Here’s a look at how and where Clemson fans can watch, listen, and stream Saturday’s game.

Date: Saturday, Feb. 10

Time: 12 p.m. EST

Where: JMA Wireless Dome (Carrier Dome)

TV Channel: ESPN2

Live Stream: ESPN+

Radio: Clemson Athletic Network | TuneIn App | SiriusXM (Channel 381)

Broadcast Teams

ESPN2: Jay Alter, Malcolm Huckaby

Clemson Radio: Don Munson, Jim Davis

Social media reacts to Chip Kelly leaving UCLA for Ohio State

Social media reaction to Chip Kelly stepping down as head coach at UCLA to become offensive coordinator at Big Ten rival Ohio State.

Social media was abuzz Friday when news broke that Chip Kelly was expected to step down as head coach at UCLA to become offensive coordinator at Ohio State.

The move by Kelly is the latest to cause more than a few heads to turn. Just over a week ago, Jeff Hafley surprised many when he stepped down as head coach at Boston College to accept a position as defensive coordinator for the NFL’s Green Bay Packers.

The two moves are indirectly tied together. At Ohio State, Kelly will replace Bill O’Brien, who had been hired by Ryan Day to become the Buckeyes’ new offensive coordinator just three weeks earlier. O’Brien agreed to become the new head coach at Boston College on Friday.

O’Brien spent the 2023 season as offensive coordinator of the New England Patriots after two seasons in the same role at Alabama from 2021-2022.

Kelly, meanwhile, had been head coach at UCLA since 2018. He led the Bruins to just three bowl appearances in six seasons, including the 2023 LA Bowl at Los Angeles’ SoFi Stadium. UCLA defeated Boise State in that game, 35-22.

There’s been plenty of discourse as to why Kelly made the move. Here’s how Twitter/X users reacted to the news of Kelly’s transition from UCLA head coach to Ohio State offensive coordinator.

Huskers suffer massive road loss to Northwestern 80-68

The road woes continued for Nebraska as it faced off against Northwestern Wednesday night.

The road woes continued for Nebraska as it faced off against Northwestern Wednesday night. The Huskers fell behind early once again and couldn’t dig out their hole, resulting in an 80-68 loss.

Points off turnovers and three-pointers were Nebraska’s main burdens throughout the game. Northwestern finished the night with 26 points off turnovers and landed 11 shots from beyond the arc. The Huskers, meanwhile, only put up seven points off turnovers and delivered just six baskets from three-point range.

Nebraska overall saw four players score double-digit points. Juwan Gary led the charge for the Huskers, tallying up 15 points. Brice Williams led the team in rebounds with 10, accompanying his total of 13 points scored to earn his first double-double of the season. Jamarques Lawrence scored 12 points, and Keisei Tominaga rounded the squad with 11 points.

Nebraska falls to 16-8 on the season and 6-7 in conference play. It will return home Saturday to take on Michigan. Tipoff is set for 5:30 p.m. and can be viewed on the Big Ten Network.