Notre Dame tames Tigers 4-0

The Fighting Irish responded with a 4-0 win over Clemson in the second of a three game series at McWhorter Stadium tonight. Millie Thompson started off in the circle for the Tigers with three strikeouts, allowing eight hits and four runs. The game …

The Fighting Irish responded with a 4-0 win over Clemson in the second of a three game series at McWhorter Stadium tonight. Millie Thompson started off in the circle for the Tigers with three strikeouts, allowing eight hits and four runs.  
The game got off to a slow start with both teams playing exceptional defense in the first three innings, neither allowing a run. Things sped up in the bottom of the fourth when Notre Dame scored their first run as Abby Sweet doubled down the right field line and Emma Clark, on second, advanced home. In the same inning, Karina Gaskins doubled to center field as Sweet made it to home plate. Clemson was unable to respond and allowed the Fighting Irish to extend this lead by another two runs thanks to some sloppy fielding in the top of the fifth. Notre Dame’s Leea Hanks and Brooke Marquez reached home after multiple fielding errors.  
The Tigers continued to struggle on offense in the bottom of the fifth as Sam Russ and Aby Vieira strike out swinging and Alia Logoleo grounds out to third. They were able to hold on to begin the sixth as McKenzie Clark had a big throw to Vieira, who got Notre Dame’s McKenzie Johnson out while trying to advance home, attempting to extend their lead. 
In the top of the seventh Regan Spencer took over the circle and had one strikeout. In their final attempt at bat Valerie Cagle and Logoleo ground out, and MarissaGuimbarda strikes out swinging. The winner of the series will be decided in the final game which will take place tomorrow at 1 pm at McWhorter Stadium. 

Pereira, Taylor Homer as Tigers Sweep Pitt

The No. 17 Clemson Tigers completed the sweep over Pitt at Vartabedian Field with an 11-3 run-rule victory in five innings. This is Clemson’s second sweep and 12th run-rule win of the 2022 season. Following this weekend, the Tigers improve to 30-10 …

The No. 17 Clemson Tigers completed the sweep over Pitt at Vartabedian Field with an 11-3 run-rule victory in five innings. This is Clemson’s second sweep and 12th run-rule win of the 2022 season. Following this weekend, the Tigers improve to 30-10 (9-6 ACC), while the Panthers drop to 13-19 (1-12 ACC).

The Clemson offense exploded for 11 runs off 11 hits led by graduate Bailey Taylor going 2-for-2 with a solo home run, Valerie Cagle going 2-for-3 with two runs scored and Sam Russ going 2-for-4 with two RBIs.
Pitt was the first to bring a runner home, hitting a solo home run in the bottom of the second inning. Clemson’s bats responded in the top of the third tallying five hits after Bailey Taylor, who Carlee Shannon pinch ran for, led off with a single into left field. Shannon stole second and freshman Maddie Moore drew a walk to put two on base for Cammy Pereira. Pereira drove the second ball of her at bat out of left field to put the Tigers up, 3-1.
Action didn’t stop there in the third as Valerie Cagle was walked and Sam Russ hit a single to put two on for Alia Logoleo. Logoleo came up with a huge single into right field to bring both Cagle and Russ home and then advanced to second on a throwing error. Freshman Aby Vieira followed with an RBI single up the middle to extend Clemson’s lead to 6-1.
The Panthers got runs back in the bottom of the third and fourth off solo home runs, but Clemson kept things at bay with Cagle hitting a double down the left-field line and being brought home by Russ hitting a double into left center.
The Tigers struck again in the fifth inning with Taylor hitting a home run, her first of the 2022 season, out of left field to begin the inning. Moore followed with a single into right field and stole second before Pereira reached on an error. McKenzie Clark brought home Moore with a double into right field, and Cagle scored Pereira off a single through the left side. Russ brought home Clark with a hard-hit ball to Pitt’s second baseman but was ruled out on the play at first.
Freshman Brooke McCubbin got her fifth start of the season and pitched 3.0 innings with one strikeout. Sophomore Regan Spencer came in in the fourth inning and pitched two innings with a single strikeout.
Up Next

Clemson continues the road stretch on Tuesday traveling to Columbia, S.C. to complete the home-and-home series with South Carolina.

Tigers Power Past Panthers in Five

Behind an eight-strikeout performance from Valerie Cagle and home runs from McKenzie Clark and Alia Logoleo, the No. 18/17 Clemson softball team run-ruled Pittsburgh in five innings. Following the 8-0 win, the Tigers improve to 28-10 (7-6 ACC), …

Behind an eight-strikeout performance from Valerie Cagle and home runs from McKenzie Clark and Alia Logoleo, the No. 18/17 Clemson softball team run-ruled Pittsburgh in five innings. Following the 8-0 win, the Tigers improve to 28-10 (7-6 ACC), while the Panthers drop to 13-17 (1-10 ACC). Today’s win is also Clemson’s 16th shutout and 11th run-rule victory this year.

The Clemson bats came alive in the second inning with Marissa Guimbarda hitting a hard bouncer to Pitt’s shortstop for a base hit. Alia Logoleo followed with a walk to put two on for Bailey Taylor to find a wide-open gap in left center to bring home both Guimbarda and Logoleo with a double. Freshman Maddie Moore found the exact same spot that Taylor did for a double of her own, scoring Taylor. Cammy Pereira finished the inning hitting an RBI single down the left-field line to score Moore. Clemson held a 4-0 lead after two.
The Tigers continued to add a run in both the third and fourth innings with Sam Russ singling down the right field line to bring home Valerie Cagle in the third, and McKenzie Clark hitting a solo home run out of right field in the fourth. This was Clark’s sixth of the season.
Logoleo hit a two-run homer out of left center in the top of the fifth inning for her ninth home run of the season. She brought home Russ, who had gotten on off a fielder’s choice and then stole her 20th base of the season and 123rd of her career. With the two-run bomb, Clemson put the final touch on the 8-0 run-rule victory over Pitt.
Cagle threw her 11th-complete game and fifth solo shutout on her way to her 12th win. She faced 19 batters and didn’t give up a walk in the five-inning effort.
Up Next

Clemson returns to Vartabedian Field tomorrow afternoon at 1 p.m. for the second game of the series vs. the Panthers.

No. 18 Tigers outlast Paladins in doubleheader sweep

Following a thrilling 3-2 walk off win in game one, Clemson came back in winning fashion to take game two by a score of 8-0. In the doubleheader sweep, the Tigers outscored the Paladins by eleven runs and were 7-for-7 in stolen bases. Clemson ace …

Following a thrilling 3-2 walk off win in game one, Clemson came back in winning fashion to take game two by a score of 8-0. In the doubleheader sweep, the Tigers outscored the Paladins by eleven runs and were 7-for-7 in stolen bases.

Clemson ace Valerie Cagle earned the win in the circle for the Tigers in game one and left-hander Millie Thompson tallied the win in game two for the first solo no-hitter of her career.

In the first of two games, Clemson was the first to strike. In the bottom of the first following back-to-back batters hit by pitch along with a walk to load the bases, Marissa Guimbarda was walked, scoring Cammy Pereira from third to give the Tigers the 1-0 lead.

Furman gave their answer in the fourth with infielder Natalie Morgan’s two-run homer to left field to put the Paladins up 2-1 through four. The Paladins held their lead into the seventh, but the Tigers struck with a vengeance to ultimately take the win thanks to Guimbarda’s two-run walk off home run for a final score of 3-2.

Clemson continued to stay hot at the plate into game two. The Tigers struck in the first once again, this time with McKenzie Clark scoring on the Paladin throwing error following Cagle’s single back to the pitcher.

The Tigers tacked on another two runs in the second all thanks to a monster home run to right field by Arielle Oda, the first of her career, for the 3-0 lead through two.

The third inning was huge for Clemson, scoring five more runs, good for a final score of 8-0 and the shutout win through five innings.

The Tigers are back in action this weekend, traveling to Pittsburgh for a three-game series versus the Panthers, good for their fifth ACC series of the season. Game one is scheduled for Friday, April 8, with first pitch scheduled for 5 p.m. on ACCN.

Guimbarda Named ACC Co-Player of the Week

CLEMSON, S.C. – Outfielder Marissa Guimbarda has been named the ACC’s Co-Player of the Week, it was announced today by the league office. This is the second such honor of her career and first ACC weekly honor of the season for the Tigers. Guimbarda …

CLEMSON, S.C. – Outfielder Marissa Guimbarda has been named the ACC’s Co-Player of the Week, it was announced today by the league office. This is the second such honor of her career and first ACC weekly honor of the season for the Tigers.

Guimbarda helped lead the 18th-ranked Tigers to a perfect 4-0 week, including a win over rival South Carolina and a weekend sweep at North Carolina. The senior finished the week 6-for-12 (.500) at the plate with four home runs and eight RBI. She also tallied a 1.500 slugging percentage and a .571 on-base percentage. The Suwanee, Georgia, native turned in her best performance of the week in Saturday’s game against the Tar Heels going 3-for-4 with two home runs and five RBI. On Sunday, Giumbarda was 3-for-3 with two homers and a walk to propel Clemson to the 12-4 run-rule victory.
Guimbarda shares Co-Player of the Week honors with Florida State’s Michaela Edenfield, while Virginia Tech’s Keely Rochard was named Pitcher of the Week.

Clemson returns to action on Wednesday, taking on Furman in a doubleheader beginning at 2 p.m. at McWhorter Stadium.

Guimbarda Shines at the Plate in Tigers Victory

Marissa Guimbarda recorded her 54th and 55th career home runs to lead the No. 18/16 Clemson Tigers to a 7-0 shutout win over North Carolina on Saturday afternoon. With the win, the Tigers improve to 24-10 (5-6 ACC) as the Tar Heels drop to 19-16 …

Marissa Guimbarda recorded her 54th and 55th career home runs to lead the No. 18/16 Clemson Tigers to a 7-0 shutout win over North Carolina on Saturday afternoon. With the win, the Tigers improve to 24-10 (5-6 ACC) as the Tar Heels drop to 19-16 (4-7 ACC). Today’s victory also marks the 14th shutout in 2022.

Guimbarda led the Tigers from the plate going 3-for-4 with five RBIs and two runs scored. Cammy Pereira, Valerie Cagle, Sam Russ and Maddie Moore joined Guimbarda with one hit each, and Cagle scored two runs.
UNC gave the Tigers the first run of the game after Clemson loaded the bases in the first inning. Alia Logoleo drew the walk to bring home Clark and give Clemson the 1-0 lead.
The score stayed stagnant until the third inning when Cagle hit a single up the middle to lead off and put a runner on for Guimbarda to hit her first multi-RBI homer in the game. Freshman Maddie Moore followed with a home run in the fourth inning for her second homer of the season.
Later in the fourth, Pereira was hit by a pitch and Cagle walked to allow Guimbarda to blast her second home run of the day out of left field to add three runs to push Clemson’s score to 7-0, which would hold for the remainder of the game.
Sophomore Millie Thompson pitched her fourth complete game and second solo shutout on the year. She struck out six batters and only gave up one walk to earn her seventh victory this year.
Up Next

Clemson will look to sweep the North Carolina series tomorrow afternoon in Anderson Stadium. First pitch is scheduled for 1 p.m. on ACCNX.

Bart Boatwright’s Photo Gallery: Clemson smashes South Carolina

Clemson, S.C. – The Tigers defeated South Carolina 8-1 Wednesday night in front of an outstanding crowd at McWhorter Stadium. Check out some great pictures from the huge win in Bart Boatwright’s Photo Gallery.

Clemson, S.C. — The Tigers defeated South Carolina 8-1 Wednesday night in front of an outstanding crowd at McWhorter Stadium.

Check out some great pictures from the huge win in Bart Boatwright’s Photo Gallery.

Cagle, Tigers bring the heat in 8-1 win over Gamecocks

In the second-ever meeting between the in-state rivals, the first in McWhorter Stadium, Clemson brought the heat early on en route to their 8-1 win over the South Carolina Gamecocks in Clemson. It all came down to a huge first inning for the Tigers, …

In the second-ever meeting between the in-state rivals, the first in McWhorter Stadium, Clemson brought the heat early on en route to their 8-1 win over the South Carolina Gamecocks in Clemson.

It all came down to a huge first inning for the Tigers, who scored five of their eventual eight runs in the first thanks to Valerie Cagle’s three-run bomb to left and two more runs brought in by a Gamecock error at second and an RBI single by infielder Maddie Moore.

Clemson ace Valerie Cagle earns the win and complete game in the circle for the Tigers, coming away with eleven strikeouts and her ninth win of the season. Righthander Bailey Betenbaugh takes the loss for the Gamecocks.

Clemson got the bats rolling early on in Wednesday evening’s midweek matchup versus the Gamecocks. In the first with runners on second and third, Cagle hit a bomb to deep left field good for three runs. The Tigers struck yet again, bringing in two more runs on an error and Moore’s RBI single to left field. Clemson led 5-0 after one.

The Tigers kept the scoring alive into the second. With a runner on second, left fielder Sam Russ reached on a fielding error that also scored pinch runner Arielle Oda to put Clemson up 6-0.

South Carolina responded with a run of their own in the top of the third. After advancing to second on a wild pitch and later to third with two outs, center fielder Aaliyah White scored the Gamecock’s lone run of the night on a wild pitch.

Alia Logoleo and McKenzie Clark both struck again for the Tigers in the fifth and sixth respectively, with solo homers to left center field, good for a final score of 8-1.

With the win, eighteenth-ranked Clemson now leads the series 2-0 over the Gamecocks and improves to 22-10 this season.

Later this week, Clemson travels to Chapel Hill, N.C. to take on the North Carolina Tarheels in a three-game weekend series. The Tigers open up series play Friday, April 1, with first pitch scheduled for 6 p.m. on ACCNX.

Clemson softball learning ‘we always have to be on our A-game’

While Clemson softball coach John Rittman believes his team has gotten used to going from the hunter to the hunted, some of his players think the Tigers are still working through the process. “Last year, we kind of snuck up on people a little bit,” …

While Clemson softball coach John Rittman believes his team has gotten used to going from the hunter to the hunted, some of his players think the Tigers are still working through the process.

“Last year, we kind of snuck up on people a little bit,” center fielder McKenzie Clark said. “Now we’re not doing that as much, which I don’t mind at all. I like the competition. I like the fight. We just need to start executing a little bit more.”

Last year is a reference to Clemson’s ACC regular-season championship season, which firmly put Rittman’s program on the college softball map in just the second year of its existence. With the Tigers now getting everyone’s best shot, their title defense has gotten off to a slow start.

Clemson (21-10 overall) is just 3-6 in conference play through its first three ACC series, though the slate certainly hasn’t lacked for meat on the bone. The Tigers were swept at home by a top-10 Virginia Tech team to start the month and dropped two of three at Duke, another legitimate conference contender.

Clemson, which also lost by a run at Georgia last week and fell in extras to Louisville at home its last time out Sunday, has lost four of its last seven games after an 18-6 start that included a win over Washington, another top-10 team.

“Definitely our schedule has challenged us,” Rittman said. “We’ve played a very tough schedule, and we’ve lost some close games. And (Sunday) was another one where we still gave ourselves a chance in the seventh inning with the winning run at the plate. As a coach, that’s really all you can ask for in your team.”

Clemson did pick up its first league series win against Louisville, outscoring the Cardinals 13-2 in the first two games. The Tigers looked primed to do one better in Sunday’s series finale, controlling the game through the first four innings. But much like its midweek loss to Georgia, an early two-run lead evaporated as Clemson’s offense struggled to get out of first gear.

The Tigers mustered just six hits against Louisville right-hander Taylor Roby, who went the distance to notch the win. Camryn Greenwood’s two-run, opposite-field homer in the eighth made for the winning separation in a game in which Clemson hit just 3 of 15 with runners on and 2 of 11 with runners in scoring position.

Some of those were tough-luck outs on balls that were hit directly at the Cardinals, but Clemson’s batters also put themselves in plenty of adverse situations by being passive and falling behind in counts. Being more aggressive is something Clark said the offense has to work on as a whole.

“Jumping on the good pitches,” said Clark, who had two of Clemson’s hits, including an RBI single. “Even though we had established the strike zone later in the game, just getting on top of those good pitches. Whether it’s the first pitch or second pitch, it doesn’t matter. We’ve just got to be ready.”

Through the first three conference series, Rittman said he’s learned his team’s pitching and defense are good enough to win games. Star sophomore Valerie Cagle (2.35 earned run average) is the headliner, but right-hander Regan Spencer, who hurled five innings of two-run ball Sunday, leads the Tigers with a 0.77 ERA in 36 ⅓ innings.

Sophomore Millie Thompson has also given Clemson a lift in the circle, posting a 1.57 ERA in 13 appearances (eight starts). Meanwhile, the Tigers’ defense had just one error in the Louisville series and has gone 11 straight games without committing multiple errors.

“The biggest thing now is getting the timely hits and building off this series win for next week,” Rittman said.

That starts Wednesday with a home game against rival South Carolina. Then it’s off to North Carolina on Friday to begin a three-game series against the Tar Heels.

They are Clemson’s latest opportunities to implement the biggest lesson it’s learned so far if the Tigers are going to make a late-season push to get back in the conference title race.

“We always have to be on our A-game,” Clark said.

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Clemson softball drops series finale to Louisville in extras

Regan Spencer started strong in the circle while Valerie Cagle finished it. But offense was hard for Clemson’s softball team to come by against Louisville’s ace Sunday. It kept the Tigers from pulling off their first ACC sweep of the season. After …

Regan Spencer started strong in the circle while Valerie Cagle finished it. But offense was hard for Clemson’s softball team to come by against Louisville’s ace Sunday.

It kept the Tigers from pulling off their first ACC sweep of the season.

After dropping series to Virginia Tech and Duke to begin the league portion of its schedule, Clemson, which had dropped three of four entering the weekend, looked primed for a perfect bounceback weekend against Louisville with a two-run lead midway through the teams’ series finale at McWhorter Stadium.

But the Cardinals eventually caught up to send the game to extras, and Camryn Greewood’s two-run home run in the eighth was the decisive blow in a 4-2 loss for Clemson. The Tigers combined for 13 runs in their wins Friday and Saturday but mustered just six hits Sunday against Taylor Roby, who went the distance for the win.

Clemson still had a chance in its final at-bat when Marissa Guimbarda led off with a single and Sam Russ reached on an error, but Roby got Kyah Keller to pop up a bunt attempt for the first out before Aly Vieira grounded into a fielder’s choice. Roby then induced an infield pop-up from Alia Logoleo after a lengthy at-bat to finish off Louisville’s first-ever win over Clemson, which was 6-0 all-time against the Cardinals entering the day.

This story will be updated.