NCAA suspends all recruiting until April 15 per report

In a statement sent to NCAA coaches, recruiting has been placed under suspension. Schools must now follow dead period rules.

In the latest news regarding NCAA suspensions, recruiting is now suspending until April 15th. That day is the first day that players can submit their NLI (National Letters of Intent). It is uncertain at this time how that will impact basketball recruiting. For the Texas Longhorns, they do not have a single signee for the 2020 recruiting cycle for Shaka Smart’s team. Greg Brown is the main target for the class and this might delay his commitment. We will keep you updated on the situation.

In a report released on 247 sports, the following statement was sent to coaches on Friday.

“Dear Coaches and Staff,

The NCAA has adopted emergency Legislation to establish a temporary recruiting DEAD PERIOD. The Council Coordination Committee adopted emergency legislation to establish a temporary recruiting dead period in all NCAA Division I sports, effective immediately. The dead period will remain in effect at least until April 15 , at which time the Council Coordination Committee will re-evaluate the status of the situation. Based on the immediate effective date, reasonable measures should be taken to cease all recruiting activities that are not permissible during a dead period (e.g., official and unofficial visits, contacts and evaluations).From now until April 15, all sports are prohibited from any on-campus or off-campus recruiting contacts or evaluations.”

In a dead period for recruiting, coaches are not allowed to have any face to face visits at the university or in a players home with the prospect or parents. Teams are allowed to communicate through emails, texts and phone calls. It is also unclear at this time if the NCAA will delay National Signing Day in light of this new ruling.

Locked on Longhorns Podcast: NCAA cancellations and spring football

The fun fact Friday edition of the Locked on Longhorns Podcast. Pat and Cami discuss the impact on the cancellations and spring football.

Cami and Patrick bring you another edition of the Locked on Longhorns podcast. What started as just a cancellation of the Texas-Texas Tech game spirals into the Big 12 tournament and more being cancelled. They discussed what impact that could have on the seniors who might have played their final games in burnt orange and white.

Patrick reads a heartbreaking post by one such senior in John Burt from his instagram.

Plus a statement released by Athletic Director Chris Del Conte. What could that mean for football team that was expected to begin spring practice on March 25th. All that and more on the fun fact Friday edition of the podcast.

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Updated NCAA cancellations during pandemic

With the COVID-19 outbreak, there a lot of moving parts in regards to the athletic programs. The updates on how things look for Texas.

The news on NCAA athletics have been released at a fast and furious rate. Following the cancelling of the Texas and Texas Tech Big 12 tournament game on Thursday morning, it was reported following that news that the Big 12 would cancel their tournament much like the rest of the power five conferences.

In wake of the decisions made by the conference commisioners, the news spread about cancellations of spring athletics much like New Mexico University with their upcoming series with the Texas Longhorns baseball team. The opportunity arose for each athletic conference along with the professional sports leagues to try and slow the spread of the COVID-19 (coronavirus).

The Big 12 later released a tweet that they would be suspending all conference championships until at least April 15th.

The NCAA later cancelled the NCAA men’s and women’s basketball tournaments as well as the men’s and women’s College World Series. Essentially all sports through the academic year of 2019-2020 have been cancelled at this point in time.

Athletic Directory Chris Del Conte released the following statement.

With the Big 12’s recent directive suspending athletics activities until Sunday, March 29, all regular-season Longhorn Athletics competitions will be cancelled until that date, beginning with our Baseball series on Friday. In addition to in-season UT sports with current regular-season competition like Baseball, Golf, Rowing, Softball and Tennis, this also will include the Texas Relays and Spring Soccer matches, and postpone a decision on the start of Spring Football Practice until after the March 29 date.

“That was followed by an announcement from the NCAA that all winter and spring sports championships have been cancelled, which includes those upcoming in Track & Field, Basketball and Swimming & Diving. This is a very fluid situation and one that presents great challenges. The health, safety and well-being of everyone involved is the number one priority and we will be having many discussions in the coming hours, days and weeks to determine what the next steps are. We appreciate everyone’s support and patience on this and will continue to provide updates as decisions are made

At this point in time, spring football is at least pushed back into the month of April most likely but we will provide updates as they are passed along.

Texas baseball’s weekend series against New Mexico canceled

Texas’ weekend series against New Mexico will be canceled. The Lobos were scheduled to play games in Austin on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.

Like many sports across the country, Texas’ weekend series against New Mexico will be canceled. The Lobos were scheduled to come to Austin and play games on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

The news broke when the Mountain West Conference announced they had suspended baseball season until further notice. While the Big 12 has not done the same, an announcement of similar nature is expected soon.

Up until this point of the season, the Longhorns were 14-3 and riding a four-game winning streak. Conference play was slated to begin on March 20 with Texas traveling to Oklahoma.

With many sporting events throughout the country being suspended or canceled, Texas fans can only wait until the Big 12 has made an official announcement on the status of spring sports.

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University of Texas to ban all fans from attending sporting events

With the recent pandemic concerning the COVID-19 (coronavirus), the Big 12 conference and the University of Texas released rulings.

With the recent rulings by the NCAA concerning the tournament amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, the University of Texas has also made their announcement.

This comes on the heels of the Big 12 limited fans from attending the Big 12 tournament currently taking place in Kansas City, Missouri. Per Big 12 Commissioner Bob Bowles, schools will be limited to 125 fans per school.

Texas President Greg Fenves released an announcement regarding Spring Break.

I am writing to announce that I have decided to extend spring break for students by one week in response to the spread of COVID-19 (coronavirus). Classes will resume on campus on Monday, March 30, and students should plan on returning prior to that date.

The university will remain open, and the additional week of spring break will provide UT faculty and staff members time to prepare to increase “social distancing” on campus. As recommended by public health officials, social distancing provides guidelines through which individuals avoid group settings and mass gatherings, maintain a safe distance from others and follow good personal hygiene practices whenever possible.

COVID-19 represents a serious public health concern. UT is committed to the well-being of our community members and slowing the spread of the coronavirus while also supporting our students’ educational goals and the needs of staff and faculty members and students during these challenging times.

You can read the full release from President Fenves here.

The school pushing back spring break to March 30th brings into question the start of spring practice. The original start date was set for March 25th. The ban of attending home sporting events would last to the 22nd so that would not have factored in. However, the extension of spring break does.

We will monitor the situation and report the facts as they are made available.

Texas Baseball: USA Today’s Coaches Poll has Longhorns ranked No 22

The USA Today/Coaches poll has been released and the Texas Longhorns are currently ranked 22nd in the nation.

The Texas Longhorns baseball team has started off hot winning 13 of their first 16 games. In the Shriners Hospital for Children College Classic, the Longhorns beat the number six ranked Arkansas Razorbacks 8-7 and dropped a game to the 11th ranked LSU Tigers 4-3. The Longhorns have also played three weekend series going a perfect 9-0.

In the latest USA Today Coaches Poll that was released on March 9th, the Longhorns came in at number 22 in the poll. They are just two points based on votes behind the number 21 ranked Alabama Crimson Tide. Texas finished seven points ahead of Texas A&M who comes in at 23rd. The Aggies and Longhorns will have a one-game duel in College Station on March 31st.

Big 12 Teams in the top 25:

  • Texas Tech (3)
  • Oklahoma (13)

Following the five games left on their nine-game homestead, the Longhorns will travel to Frisco, Texas for a matchup with UT-Arlington. The team then starts Big 12 play with a trip to Norman for a three-game set with Oklahoma.

Texas Baseball: Longhorns finish off sweep 8-4

In the final game of the three-game series between the Longhorns and Cal State Fullerton Titans, Texas showed off their power.

The Texas Longhorns and Cal State Fullerton Titans met for the third game of the weekend series. Texas took the first two games, looking for their third sweep of the season. Coy Cobb took the mound looking for his first win on the year.

After the scoreless top of the first inning, the Longhorns got the bats going early. A Trey Faltine double brought home a run on the legs of leadoff hitter Austin Todd to give Texas a 1-0 lead. With runners on second and third, Eric Kennedy came to the plate with an opportunity to give Texas a nice cushion to start off the game.

Cobb would take the mound again in the top of the second inning but he would be pulled and Tristan Stevens would come on in relief as the Titans would tie it up before Stevens could retire the side. with the game now all tied at three, Austin Todd would come to bat to break the tie in the bottom of the second inning.

That gave Todd his first home run on the season and Texas led 5-3 after two. In the third Faltine would score again on a Murphy Stehly RBI ground out to short. It would be a throwing error by Faltine in the top of the next inning that would plate another Titan in Miguel Ortiz that brought them within two runs at 6-4.

The big cat Zach Zubia would drive home Todd in the bottom of the inning to get their three-run cushion back on the sacrifice fly to right field. That would give Zubia 20 RBI’s on the season. On the mound it would be four innings from Dawson Merryman that would allow Texas to take control. He gave up one unearned run and that would do it for the Titans offense.

Peyton Powell would give Texas their eighth run on the day with his first career home run in the sixth inning. To close it out, Andre Duplantier II would come in from third base to pitch the final frame. He faced the minimum with one strikeout to secure the sweep for Texas.

They will face Abilene Christian at DischFalk Field on Wednesday night before hosting another three-game weekend series against the New Mexico Lobos. Merryman improved to 3-0 on the year, picking up his second win of the series and lowering his ERA to 1.74.

Texas Baseball: Longhorns take series with two-straight wins

The Texas Longhorns have won their third straight weekend series at home after beating Cal State Fullerton 4-3.

The Texas Longhorns and Cal State Fullerton Titans met again at the Disch following the six-run explosion in the seventh inning on Friday night for the 6-1 victory. On Saturday afternoon, Ty Madden took the mound in hopes of getting the Longhorns another win in less dramatic fashion.

Madden was only able to pitch four innings with one earned run given up. After a JJ Cruz in the second inning gave the Titans an early 1-0 lead, Texas fired back with three runs in the bottom of the inning. Murphy Stehly sent a ball down the left field line that brought Eric Kennedy and Silas Ardoin around to score.

In the fourth inning, the Titans would fire back to tie the game up at three. Leadoff hitter Zach Lew drove in two unearned runs as Cruz and Austin Schell scored on the single. That would be the last run to get across for the Titans and Texas would go to the bullpen in the fifth, ending Madden’s day.

Web Gem Nominee

The freshman pitching of duo of Pete Hansen and Andre Duplantier II along with Tristan Stevens would shut down the Titans. The trio of relievers allowed just two hits over the final five innings. Hansen went 3.2 innings with two strikeouts. Hansen has been a pleasant surprise this season with a WHIP (walks + hits per inning pitched) of 0.65 which is the best on the team.

In the bottom of the sixth inning, the Longhorns got a much needed run for the offense. After Douglas Hodo III worked a pinch hit walk, he came around to score on a single from Austin Todd. Todd was out on a run down as he got caught in no man’s land.

Duplantier came into the game in the ninth inning to close the door on the Titans offense. He faced the minimum with two strikeouts to give Texas the 4-3 win. Hansen earned his second win of the year. The Longhorns will go for their third sweep of the season and second-straight at the Disch.

Texas Baseball: Cal State Fullerton Preview

Texas welcomes Cal State Fullerton to Austin this weekend. Meeting for the first time since the 2004 CWS, UT will be looking for revenge.

Texas welcomes Cal State Fullerton to Austin this weekend for the first weekend series in March. While the Longhorns have lost two straight games, they are sitting at 10-3 overall, having the third-most wins in the Big 12.

The Titans are struggling this season, only picking up four wins in 13 games. They have only won one series to this point, taking two out of three from Stanford to begin the season.

These two teams have a history as they met in the 2004 College World Series Finals. The Titans swept Texas, winning the two games 6-4 and 3-2. Meeting for the first time since then, the Longhorns will be looking for revenge 16 years later.

Here is a weekend preview for Texas baseball:

Game information

Dates: March 6-8, 2020

Times: Friday – 6:30 p.m. CST; Saturday – Noon CST; Sunday – 1:30 p.m. CST

Location: UFCU Disch-Falk Field Austin Texas

Watch: Longhorn Network

Listen: 104.9 FM The Horn/1260 AM

Stream: ESPN App

Projected Pitching Matchups

Friday

Texas RHP Bryce Elder (2-1, 2.33) vs. CSF  RHP Tanner Bibee (1-2, 1.93)

Saturday

Texas RHP Ty Madden (3-0, 1.71) vs. CSF RHP Tanner Luckham (2-0, 1.80)

Sunday Texas RHP Coy Cobb (0-0, 2.51) vs. CSF RHP Joe Magrisi (0-2, 3.63)

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With extended family in attendance, Dane Acker etches name in Oklahoma baseball history books

With extended family in attendance, Oklahoma right-hander Dane Acker etches name in the history books with no-hitter against LSU.

HOUSTON — Brenham, Texas, is about an hour north of Minute Maid Park.

It’s a short drive, one the extended family of Oklahoma Sunday starting pitcher Dane Acker made to watch Acker throw against college baseball powerhouse LSU.

Outside, it was 70 degrees and extremely humid with a threat of rain in the afternoon. This forced the roof to be closed Sunday inside the home of the Houston Astros, where it was also 70 degrees in the controlled climate of Minute Maid—perfect baseball weather, especially to pitch in.

The game was quick, lasting two hours and 15 minutes, but it was quick for a reason.

One that was more perfect than the ballpark, the setting and the weather which the game was being played in.

“I can’t stop shaking,” said Casey Acker after the game, dad of Oklahoma pitcher Dane Acker. “At the beginning of the game, I was so nervous and my hope was for him to come out and have a good performance and at the end of the game, it was completely the opposite—had a good performance and now finish it off …”

Dane Acker came out for the ninth-inning a little more delayed than he had all day. He walked slowly out of the dugout, looking down and then took over the mound that had been his haven.

LSU was held hitless for eight innings and with minimal hard contact off the right-hander.

Acker got the first hitter in the ninth to strike out swinging. He forced the second to pop out after getting behind 3-1 in the count. Then, behind again in the count 3-1 to the third hitter due up.

The Tigers two-hole hitter Alex Millazo put the ball in play on the 3-1 pitch. A ground ball to the short stop.

“Hold your breathe and just hope it gets there in time,” said Susan Acker after the game about the moment the ball was put in play, the mother of Dane. “We’ve done this for so many years and hopefully, finally all coming together.”

It did.

The Ackers, who are superstitious like the rest of the baseball community, did the same thing every inning. No one uttered the word ‘no-hitter’. No one changed a thing, and it paid off.

Dane Acker threw the first complete game no-hitter for Oklahoma baseball since 1989 in the Sooners huge 1-0 win over LSU. He struck out 11 hitters, walked one and hit two others with a pitch.

“Completely excited for him,” Casey said. “He’s worked so hard, so hard to get to where he is at and he’s got a lot of talent and a lot of skill, but to put it all together like that with the team that he’s got. Outstanding.”

It wasn’t easy for Dane Acker, either.

He got even or behind to 14 of the 29 batters he faced, including the final two LSU hitters of the game. Only one of those was able to reach base.

“I was really trying to step off,” Acker said about his mindset when he’d get behind. “We talk a lot about our focus and pitch-to-pitch, so if I fell behind I would just try to take a long stroll around the mound, rub up the ball and tell myself to pound the zone. Again, if they hit they hit it.”

Acker went into the ninth-inning just over 100 pitches. It’s only his third start of the 2020 season, but his head coach had no qualms about letting him go out for that final inning with a chance at history.

“I kept thinking about what Coach (Augie) Garrido always told me, ‘You can’t take the moment away from the kid,'” said head coach Skip Johnson. “You just can’t take the moment away from the kid. That is what was so special for him. He works hard at it and think it was a great moment for him.”

His catcher, Justin Mitchell, allowed him to finish the no-hitter off in the ninth inning after hitting a solo home run in the top of eighth—the only hit in the entire game by both teams. Mitchell, who has improved tremendously behind the plate from last season, has taken a bigger role as Oklahoma’s field manager alongside Brady Lindsly.

Mitchell caught Acker in warmups. Walked back with him from the bullpen before the game.

Was there anything different about his right-hander heading into Sunday’s game against LSU?

“No, that’s Dane Acker,” Mitchell said. “He attacks. He’s not scared to throw it in there and he’s going to challenge you.”

After Brandon Zaragoza made the throw to first to complete the no-hitter, Acker was mobbed on the mound. Bench players flooded from the dugout and pitchers from the bullpen sprinted in to heap all the praise towards him.

Acker then enjoyed a two-bucket gatorade bath while getting interviewed by the broadcast producing the game. He finished the interview and made his way over behind home plate where he spoke with the Shriners Hospitals for Children patient that spent time with the Oklahoma baseball team prior to the event.

Awaiting him near the Sooners dugout was his extended family who made the trip down. Acker jumped into the camera well, hugged his mom first. Shook his dads hand next and gave him a hug. Then his grandparents after that.

Acker had been playing ball in the Houston area his whole life. First due to growing up only an hour away, then going to Rice out of high school and transferring to San Jacinto College in the Houston area after his freshman year.

The city, the ballpark, the weather, the defense, the home run, the no-hitter—it could only be described in one way.

“As a baseball dad that’s been through the select ball, the club ball and the sacrifices and seeing that—it’s years and years that come together,” Casey said. “And knowing what the family has gone through and the sacrifices that they’ve made, it pales in comparison to real life scenarios, but you want your kid to succeed and having that one two-hour window on a Sunday … it brings it all home. It’s perfect.”

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