Auburn baseball drops regional opener to Penn

The Quakers scored three runs in the 11th inning to stun the regional hosts on Friday night.

Samford opened the Auburn Regional on Friday afternoon by stunning Southern Miss, 4-2, to force the Golden Eagles into the losers bracket.

Turns out, that would not be the only upset that the walls of Plainsman Park would see on the day.

The No. 13 overall seed, Auburn, hosted the Ivy League Champion Penn Quakers in the No. 1 vs. No. 4 matchup in primetime on Friday evening only to leave in defeat as they fell to Penn, 6-3 in 11 innings.

After tying the game at 3-3 in the bottom of the 8th inning to ultimately set up extra baseball, the Quakers pieced together three runs in the top of the 11th inning thanks to a pair of fielder’s choices and an RBI double by Ryan Taylor. Penn’s Carson Ozmer faced the minimum in the bottom half of the inning to nail down the win for his team.

“I give all the credit in the world to Penn,” Auburn coach [autotag]Butch Thompson[/autotag] said following the game. “We knew they had a high-level pitching staff. We just didn’t get enough hits. We couldn’t link up enough offensively to keep pace.”

Ozmer got the win for the Quakers by tossing 3.2 innings of relief where he allowed one hit and struck out three batters. His relief outing complimented Ryan Dromboski’s start which lasted 5.1 innings. While on the mound, Dromboski allowed three hits, two earned runs, and four walks while striking out eight batters. Penn pitchers combined to strike out 14 Auburn batters in the game while only allowing four hits.

After three innings of scoreless effort from both squads, Penn grabbed an early lead in the top of the 4th on a double by Wyatt Henseler to give his team the early 1-0 lead. The Tigers responded in the 6th inning by stealing the lead away on a bases-loaded walk to [autotag]Cooper McMurray[/autotag] and a groundout by [autotag]Kason Howell[/autotag] that scored [autotag]Ike Irish[/autotag] from third base to put Auburn ahead, 2-1.

Penn regained the advantage in the top of the 8th inning on a two-run blast by Jackson Appel to move them ahead, 3-2. The lead was shortlived as [autotag]Brody Moss[/autotag] was walked with the bases loaded to score [autotag]Josh Hall[/autotag] to ultimately send the game to extra innings.

Auburn will look to rebound on Saturday afternoon as the Tigers will face Southern Miss in an elimination game at Plainsman Park. First pitch is scheduled for 2 p.m. CT and can be seen on ESPN+.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Taylor on Twitter @TaylorJones__

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Auburn storms back to defeat Mississippi State in wild series finale

Auburn and Mississippi State provided offensive fireworks for the second game in a row on Sunday.

If you enjoy offensive-heavy baseball, then the series between Auburn and Mississippi State was perfect for you.

After a low-scoring affair on Friday, Auburn and Mississippi State combined to score 44 runs over the final two games. In Sunday’s finale, the Tigers claimed the series with a 12-11 win over Mississippi State.

In a similar fashion to Saturday’s 11-10 win for Mississippi State, Auburn trailed the Bulldogs by a heavy margin in Sunday’s game before flipping the switch and starting a comeback.

The Tigers trailed Mississippi State, 7-0, through the first three innings of the game before hanging a three spot in the bottom of the 4th inning. For the third-straight game, [autotag]Cooper McMurray[/autotag] put Auburn on the board with a home run. His three-run blast trimmed the Bulldogs’ lead to 7-3. 

“I knew he had a good slider so I was just trying to stay on it,” McMurray said of Mississippi State pitcher Jurrangelo Cijintje. “Fortunately he gave me one over the plate with two strikes and I was able to pull it down the line. Thank God it stayed fair. Doing whatever we can to help the team win. I’m blessed to be in that situation.”

The momentum would shift back to the Bulldogs in the top of the 5th inning, as two passed balls from Auburn’s [autotag]Will Cannon[/autotag] sent home two Mississippi State base runners to extend their lead to 9-3.

McMurray made his presence felt again in the bottom of the 6th inning as he crushed his second home run of the game off of the left field foul pole to cut Mississippi State’s lead to four. [autotag]Nate LaRue[/autotag] joined the party as well by hitting a two-run blast of his own two at-bats later to cut the Bulldog advantage to 9-7.

A sacrifice fly by [autotag]Kason Howell[/autotag] in the 7th inning would get Auburn to within one, 9-8. Mississippi State would add another run in the 8th on a single by Kellum Clark to bring the Bulldogs’ advantage to 10-8.

With one out in the 8th inning, and two runners on, [autotag]Bryson Ware[/autotag] smacked a three-run shot on the first pitch of the at-bat to left field to put Auburn ahead, 12-11. Mississippi State scored an unearned run in the top of the 9th to tie the game, but [autotag]Cole Foster[/autotag] would deliver the dagger in the bottom of the inning. His double to center field was deep enough to score [autotag]Josh Hall[/autotag], thus giving Auburn the series win.

“I’m just proud of them to keep fighting through everything that happens,” head coach [autotag]Butch Thompson[/autotag] said Sunday. “If this is the new way this game is played, I’m the one who has to adjust more. They just need to keep fighting and find their opportunities when they can have success.”

Auburn has another challenging weekend ahead of them, as they travel to No. 6 South Carolina for another important SEC series starting Friday at 6 p.m. CT at Founders Park in Columbia. Before the road trip, the Tigers will host in-state foe Troy for a midweek clash on Tuesday at 6 p.m. CT.

Contact/Follow us @TheAuburnWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Auburn news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Taylor on Twitter @TaylorJones__

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Extra inning walk off seals comeback win for Auburn baseball

Auburn stormed back to win Tuesday’s game over Georgia Tech in 12 innings after trailing 7-0 in the 3rd inning.

Auburn baseball proved Tuesday night what it has proven all season long… they refuse to quit.

After trailing 7-0 to Georgia Tech heading into their half of the 3rd inning in Tuesday’s contest, the Tigers outscored the Yellow Jackets 12-4 over the ensuing 9.5 innings to walk off with a 12-11 win at Plainsman Park.

The Tigers scored five runs in the bottom of the 6th inning to tie Georgia Tech, 11-11, with the score remaining that way until the bottom of the 12th inning with two down. Auburn’s [autotag]Justin Kirby[/autotag] led off the inning by reaching base on a walk and was sent home by an unlikely hero in [autotag]Brody Wortham[/autotag]. The transfer from West Georgia who pinch hit for [autotag]Josh Hall[/autotag] in the inning earned his “welcome to Auburn” moment by delivering a single to right field to score Kirby from 2nd base to seal the win.

“I took one pitch to kind of just get a feel because I had been over on the sideline for a while, but I was looking for something middle-away and got a fastball on the outer half,” Wortham said of his game-winning hit. “As soon as it hit the bat, I knew it was through and I knew Kirby was scoring, no doubt.”

The walk-off win was Auburn’s second of the season, the first coming against Lipscomb on March 4, which coincidentally was also a 12-11 win by Auburn. The win ahead of a crucial SEC-opening series at Arkansas speaks volumes to the Tigers’ identity.

“It speaks to how resilient our offense is. Honestly, even our pitching staff,” Kirby said of Auburn’s comeback win. “The last four or five innings we got some really big zeros, and that was huge. It just speaks to how resilient this team is. We have a lot of fight, and you can’t really teach that.”

The marathon game ended with 23 total runs, 42 hits, and it took 4 hours and 33 minutes to complete. Seven Tigers recorded multiple hits, and Kirby led the way with four. Kirby also led the team in RBI with three while Josh Hall and Gavin Miller added two to the total.

Auburn will now focus on Fayetteville, Arkansas, where they will travel for their first SEC series of the season. Game one between Auburn and Arkansas is set for 6:30 p.m. CT on Friday at Baum-Walker Stadium.

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Baseball roundup: Auburn sweeps Lipscomb in thrilling three-game set

This team just will not quit.

Auburn baseball’s hot streak continues after a three-game sweep over Lipscomb at Plainsman Park, which extends their streak to eight straight games without a loss.

Even though the Tigers earned the sweep, Lipscomb provided a challenge that measured just how solid Auburn’s lineup is. Auburn completed the task by earning two come-from-behind wins on Saturday and Sunday behind the bats of [autotag]Ike Irish[/autotag] and [autotag]Bryson Ware[/autotag].

In Auburn’s series-opening win over Lipscomb on Friday, the Tigers used two key offensive innings to propel themselves to victory. Bryson Ware broke the 1-1 tie with a solo home run in the 4th inning, and [autotag]Kason Howell[/autotag] capped the inning with a two-run double down the left field line. In the 7th inning, freshman [autotag]Chris Stanfield[/autotag] scored two on a double to left field.

Both teams combined to score 23 runs in Saturday’s middle game of the series. Bryson Ware hit a two-run blast to left field to tie the game at 11-11 in the 8th inning, which set up Ike Irish for a chance to walk it off in the 9th inning. With the bases loaded, the freshman singled up the middle to score [autotag]Josh Hall[/autotag] from 3rd to seal the comeback.

Sunday’s game featured much less offense than Saturday’s thriller, but it was a game that Lipscomb was in control of until the 8th inning. In repeating fashion, Ware hit a crucial home run in the 8th in Sunday’s game. Only this time, it was a three-run, go-ahead blast to put his team ahead, 4-3, which would be the final score.

Here’s a look at this weekend’s key players.

Report: Former Thunder wing Josh Hall has interest from multiple teams

Former Thunder wing Josh Hall has a short list of teams to work out for, according to a report.

Josh Hall was released by the Oklahoma City Thunder to make way for Paul Watson Jr.’s two-way contract, but the 20-year-old small forward is not out of the league.

Hall has drawn interest from teams and is “working out for a short list” of them, according to BasketballNews.com.

Upon entering the league, there was interest in Hall due to his youth and athleticism. He put on 25 pounds since entering the NBA, according to BasketballNews, and his final game with the Thunder may have helped his cause. Hall posted 25 points and 10 rebounds against the Los Angeles Clippers during a game in which both teams rested the majority of their primary players.

He did not get much court time last season, in part due to skill level and in part due to a knee injury that prevented him from playing in the G League bubble with the OKC Blue. He appeared in seven of the final 10 Thunder games and had 21 total appearances.

Excluding the 25-point performance, Hall averaged 3.1 points in 14.7 minutes of play.

He can be expected to play on a G League team this season.

Thunder waive Josh Hall, reportedly sign small forward Paul Watson

The Thunder announced that they waived Josh Hall and reports broke that they signed former Raptor Paul Watson to a two-way contract.

The Oklahoma City Thunder waived wing Josh Hall, the team announced on Sunday.

The 20-year-old was on a two-way contract. In releasing him, OKC was able to sign small forward Paul Watson to a two-way deal, according to a report from BasketballNews.com reporter Kelsea O’Brien.

Watson has been in the league since 2017, when he went undrafted and later joined the G League Westchester Knicks. He only appeared in G League games until the 2019-20 season, when he appeared in 10 total games between the Atlanta Hawks and Toronto Raptors.

But Watson broke out in the G League that season, averaging 19.0 points, 6.5 rebounds and 1.9 assists per game for the Raptors’ affiliate. Over those 30 games, he attempted 7.2 3-pointers per game and hit them at a 42.3% clip.

The 6-foot-6 forward had 27 appearances for the Raptors last season.

Watson will have a chance to bounce between the OKC Thunder and Blue this year.

Out goes Hall, who averaged about 20 minutes in 14 appearances after the all-star break last season. He scored more than five points in only five of them, but broke out in a big way in the final game of the season when he posted 25 points and 10 rebounds to help the Thunder take down the likewise-tanking Los Angeles Clippers for a win to conclude the year.

A young, super athletic wing, Hall will look for a new NBA team.

This post originally appeared on OKCThunderWire. Follow us on Facebook!

Josh Hall staying with Oklahoma City, signs 2-way contract with Thunder

Josh Hall is returning to Oklahoma City after signing a two-way deal with the Thunder.

The Oklahoma City Thunder got a look at Josh Hall late last season as the tank was revving up. They liked what they saw enough to keep the forward around.

Hall signed a two-way deal with the Thunder, the organization announced Wednesday. He will be able to play for the Thunder and their G League affiliate, the OKC Blue.

Extremely athletic with a height of 6-foot-9 and a wingspan around 6-foot-11, Hall has the build that general manager Sam Presti and the organization have looked for in young talent.

After playing a year of postgrad basketball at Moravian Prep, Hall skipped college and declared for the 2020 draft. He was signed to a two-way deal by the Thunder in December and made his debut in the third game of the season, when he got 47 seconds of play.

His final game was the opposite. The Thunder let him run wild in a game against the likewise-trying-to-lose Los Angeles Clippers organization, and Hall posted 25 points and 10 rebounds in 42 minutes of play.

Over 14 appearances after the All-Star break, Hall averaged 5.3 points, 3.6 rebounds and 1.5 assists in 20.3 minutes per game. He shot 32.1% from the field on 5.8 attempts per game and made three of his 29 attempts from 3.

Hall seems likely to start the season with the Blue and could play time on the Thunder intermittently throughout the season.

Thunder injuries: Aleksej Pokusevski out, Isaiah Roby active vs. Jazz

Thunder rookie Aleksej Pokusevski is inactive with an arm injury against the Utah Jazz, but Isaiah Roby and Josh Hall are active.

The Oklahoma City Thunder will be down one young big against the Utah Jazz, but they’ll have another returning from concussion protocol for the game against the team with the best record in the league.

Forward Aleksej Pokusevski, who departed the game on Saturday against the Philadelphia 76ers in the first quarter due to right arm soreness, is inactive.

He had experienced discomfort before that game before trying to play through.

The rookie got 8 1/2 minutes of action before being subbed out and not returning for the match.

Big Isaiah Roby will be active after missing four games in concussion protocol.

The second-year power forward/center is averaging 8.9 points, 5.7 rebounds and 1.8 assists in 23.4 minutes per game. With Darius Bazley back in the lineup, Roby would likely come off the bench, though he could conceivably start at center over Moses Brown or even at small forward if head coach Mark Daigneault was so inclined.

Small forward Josh Hall was also upgraded to available. He too was in concussion protocol that caused him to miss four games.

Hall had played in five straight games before getting hurt. During that stretch, he averaged 4.6 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.0 assists in 19.4 minutes per game.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (foot), Gabriel Deck (not with the team), Al Horford (inactive), Mike Muscala (ankle) and Pokusevski are all listed as out for Oklahoma City.

Isaiah Roby, Josh Hall suffered concussions during Blazers game

Isaiah Roby and Josh Hall suffered concussions against the Portland Trail Blazers, the OKC Thunder announced on Sunday.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s injury list got longer during the game against the Portland Trail Blazers. The team announced on Sunday that big Isaiah Roby and wing Josh Hall sustained concussions in the Saturday night matchup.

Hall exited the game at the 5:13 mark of the second quarter. He finished with two points, two rebounds and two assists in 11 minutes.

Roby, who played in all four quarters, had five points and five rebounds.

There are now three Thunder players in concussion protocol upon the latest update. Lu Dort suffered on a little more than a week ago, on April 27. There has not been an update on him for several days, so he may be nearing a return. Oklahoma City hopes he can soon, because the Thunder are now low on players.

Oklahoma City’s injury list has included Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (plantar fasciitis), Darius Bazley (left foot contusion), Al Horford (shut down), Mike Muscala (ankle) and Dort (concussion) for quite some time now. The team is running out of depth with the injuries piling up.

Hall has seen the bulk of his action since the All-Star break. In five appearances since then, he played 20 minutes in all but the game he suffered the concussion in, and is averaging 4.6 points and 2.8 boards per game during that time.

Roby is averaging 8.9 points and 5.7 rebounds and 1.8 assists in 23.4 minutes per game this season.

If Dort remains unavailable, Kenrich Williams would likely take Roby’s spot in the starting lineup and Aleksej Pokusevski would rotate up to the power forward position.

The evaluation of Bradley, Hall, Mykhailiuk was important part of OKC-Mavs game

As important as the score of the OKC Thunder and Dallas Mavericks game were the performances of Tony Bradley, Josh Hall and Svi Mykhailiuk.

Thunder lose to Mavericks, Luka Doncic

It’s worth wondering if Oklahoma City Thunder fans are going to start seeing more of this.

The Thunder have remained competitive even with lack of on-paper talent and injuries to starters for a few reasons. They hustle more and play harder than you. Every rotation player has at least one NBA-level skill, which is different than many rebuilding rosters. They are versatile enough that even without their main players, they typically can find enough creation on offense and smart rotation on defense.

But finally, in the 127-106 loss to the Dallas Mavericks on Monday, it looked different. The lineups didn’t have the same complexity and skill sets. The roster as a whole doesn’t have much acquaintance with the NBA, but even so, this group was less experienced.

“We’re learning those things, and we have really, really good moments where it’s really, really tight and then we have moments where we slip, and that’s where we’re most vulnerable,” head coach Mark Daigneault said.

“We’re not vulnerable with energy, we’re not vulnerable with competitiveness, we’re not vulnerable with team-orientation. All those things are tight with this group, that’s why it’s so enjoyable to coach this team. But where we are vulnerable is just in those details, and it shows up on both ends of the floor.

The Mavericks went on a run to pull ahead midway through the second quarter when the Thunder had Theo Maledon, Ty Jerome, Josh Hall, Kenrich Williams and Moses Brown on the court. It’s not hard to see why this group would struggle together, especially against an offense like Dallas’.

Jerome is a point guard, but he’s had more success this year than as a rookie because he hasn’t had to play much of a creator role. Hall entered the night with a grand total of 72 NBA minutes played. He and Brown have still not had time to learn NBA defense and rotations, meaning Williams was the only markedly good defender on the court.  They were picked apart by the Mavericks and, during this stretch in particular, Tim Hardaway Jr.

We’ll see more of these types of rotations as the Thunder explore the roster.

Oklahoma City doesn’t need to evaluate Brown anymore the way it does players like Hall, Svi Mykhailiuk and Tony Bradley. They’ve seen enough, and signed the center to a contract for up to four years. But they’ll still get him as much court time as possible to improve, particularly on the defensive end, where his ability to read and react to the opposing big is still developing.

Brown, Hall and Aleksej Pokusevski, all of whom were on the OKC Blue G League roster a month ago, will likely see time on the Thunder court together. That is not a design that should win often. That’s written with hesitation, because the Thunder have proved that mindset wrong time and time again this season — what should be competitive vs. what is competitive — but with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Lu Dort, Darius Bazley and Al Horford all out for the foreseeable future, the circumstances have changed.

After trailing by nine points at the end of the first quarter, the Thunder cut the deficit to a 47-46 Dallas lead with 5:51 to play in the half. Over the next 18 minutes, the Mavericks outscored Oklahoma City 53-37 to take a lead that stood.

To be frank, at this point in the season, more important than the score will be how the individual players performed. In this game, the focus was on Hall, Mykhailiuk and Bradley.

Bradley appeared in a Thunder jersey for the first time since the George Hill trade with the Philadelphia 76ers and New York Knicks. His first basket was early in the second quarter, and then he scored four more points before anyone else on the floor could get a bucket as he launched a solo 6-0 run with one of the baskets coming off an offense rebound.

Beyond that stretch he struggled to score, though, finishing with eight points and five rebounds in 14 minutes.

The newest Thunder member finished the game with eight points and five rebounds in 14 minutes.

After the game, Daigneault mentioned that Bradley hasn’t yet had time to learn the playbook or team terminology.

“Everything he does well, he deserves credit for. And everything he’s done poorly is a position we’ve put him in,” Daigneault said. “This is his starting point, he’ll just continue to learn … He’s a good player and will hit his stride.”

From Bradley: “Different things I’m still trying to learn and pick up, kind of on the fly. As I continue to play more, it’ll get more comfortable.”

Hall returned from a left knee injury on Saturday and scored four points over 20 minutes in his first game in almost two months. On Monday, he reached double-digits for the first time in his career, finishing with 10 on 3-for-6 shooting in 22 minutes.

He wasn’t great, but it was a step forward for the 20-year-old undrafted rookie who didn’t get a traditional NBA summer with Summer League or fall build-up with the Thunder.

“With the lack of those touchpoints, you have to understand how early this is in his trajectory,” Daigneault said. “This is like square zero for him, and he’ll gain the experiences. We’ll keep working with him. We have a lot of confidence in him as a person and in his game, but it’s gonna take time.”

Mykhailiuk started in place of Dort, his first start as a member of the Thunder.

It came on a night in which he would be the primary defender of one of the best offensive threats in the league, Luka Doncic.

The third-year Mavericks star finished with 25 points on 9-for-17 shooting in 28 minutes. When Mykhailiuk was asked about his defensive performance, he sounded very unsatisfied, pausing for several seconds before answering.

“For us, I feel like it was not to let him get comfortable on the court and just trying to get the ball out of his hands,” Mykhailiuk said. “He’s a great players, so it’s tough to do, especially in this situation. It is what it is.

Even while defending Doncic, Mykhailiuk was one of the better Thunder players on Monday. He shot 7-for-10 from the field, a line that included a couple nice step-back looks, and he impressed Daigneault beyond his shooting ability.

“With a guy that shoots it as well as he does, the tendency is to sometimes slip into a belief that you have a shooter on your hands, but when you unpack his game, he’s a way more complete player than that,” Daigneault said.

His 16 points were second on the Thunder to only Pokusevski, who finished with 21.

The rookie had a good night offensively, scoring from a variety of spots around the court. He made five of his seven attempts from inside the arc, though only three of his 10 from 3.

He is now averaging 11.3 points, 6.8 rebounds and 2.8 assists per game since coming back from the G League.

“With his size and his abilities, with his skills, it’s going to be tough to not play him and he’ll be tough to guard,” Mykhailiuk said.

Without Gilgeous-Alexander or Dort on the floor, OKC will be starved for playmaking. Expect Pokusevski’s role to continue to increase.

The Thunder will get a day off before their next game. Daigneault emphasized that losses like 21-point defeat to the Mavericks cannot affect the team’s mindset.

“We can’t allow this outcome to impact our process tomorrow, because otherwise you stagnate, and that’s the last thing we want to do,” he said.

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