Lady Vols shut out Lipscomb soccer

Tennessee soccer records third win of the season after defeating Lipscomb on Sunday.

Tennessee (3-1) defeated Lipscomb (1-1-1) on Sunday at Regal Soccer Stadium.

Ally Brown and Kate Runyon scored goals in the Lady Vols’ shutout win. Tennessee led, 1-0, after an own goal by Lipscomb in the sixth minute.

Runyon scored in the 27th minute and Luciana Latino was credited with an assist. Brown’s goal took place in the 51st minute and was assisted by Sarah Bridenstine.

11 of Tennessee’s 21 shots were on goal, while Lipscomb recorded six shots (two on goal) in the in-state match.

Goalkeepers Ally Zazzara and Cayden Norris recorded one save each for Tennessee.

Tennessee will next play Duke on Sept. 1. Kickoff is slated for 5 p.m. EDT in Durham, North Carolina.

Kate Runyon. Photo by Dan Harralson, Vols Wire

Lipscomb ends Tennessee’s 15-game midweek win streak

Lipscomb baseball ends Tennessee’s 15-game midweek win streak.

Lipscomb (16-27) defeated No. 3 Tennessee (37-8), 9-6, on Tuesday at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

Tuesday’s loss ended the Vols’ 15-game win streak in midweek contests. Tennessee’s last loss during a midweek game took place on April 18, 2023 versus Tennessee Tech (L, 12-5).

The Vols recorded 10 hits to Lipscomb’s 11 on Tuesday. Billy Amick hit Tennessee’s only home run in the contest. Lipscomb totaled four home runs at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

Dylan Loy started for the Vols and pitched two innings, recording two strikeouts. He totaled 31 pitches, including 20 strikes, against eight batters.

Tennessee will open a three-game Southeastern Conference series at Florida on Thursday. The Vols’ next home game is slated for May 7 versus Queens (6 p.m. EDT, SEC Network+).

Kentucky Beats Lipscomb by Run Rule

Kentucky’s baseball team got another win on Saturday, with a dominant win over Lipscomb.

The Kentucky Wildcats baseball team continued roll on Saturday, beating Lipscomb 16-1 in seven innings via the run rule. This gave the Wildcats the series win, with game three still coming tomorrow. The Cats dominated this game from start to finish, finishing Lipscomb off with a seven run sixth inning.

The Wildcats opened the game scoring in each of the first four innings. Star catcher Devin Burkes went one for two from the plate with a RBI, a run and two walks. Infielder Emilien Pitre was the biggest offensive player of the day, having gone three for four from the plate with two runs scored, two doubles, four RBIs, a stolen base and a walk.

On the other side of things, Dominic Niman had a dominant performance for the Wildcats. He pitched six innings, only allowing one run on four hits, walking one and striking out five. Niman, a graduate transfer, is now 3-0 on the season and has lowered his ERA to 2.81. The bullpen came in and pitched one scoreless inning, stretching their scoreless streak to 14 innings.

The Wildcats go for the sweep of Lipscomb on Sunday, March 3rd at 1 p.m. EST. The game will be available to watch on SECN+ and can be listened to the UK Sports Network on UKathletics.com and 98.5 FM.

Photo gallery: Best images from Lipscomb-Arkansas in NLR

Here are the best images from Arkansas’ annual trip to Simmons Bank Arena in North Little Rock.

It ended up being a little too close for comfort, but Arkansas improved its record to 18-10 all-time in North Little Rock on Saturday night.

Arkansas’ 69-66 victory over Lipscomb was the third over the Bisons in school history, joining triumphs in 2004 and 2020.

Keyon Menifield made his debut in the contest, scoring a basket and securing three rebounds while contributing two assists in just 19 minutes of play.

The lights briefly went out right before tipoff, which was scheduled for 5 p.m. It delayed things until about 5:20 or so.

The Razorbacks have two nonconference games left before SEC play begins on January 6 against Auburn.

Here are the best images from Saturday night’s game.

Lady Vols shut out Lipscomb

Tennessee soccer shuts out Lipscomb on the road.

Tennessee (2-0) defeated Lipscomb (0-2), 3-0, Sunday at Lipscomb Soccer Complex in Nashville, Tennessee.

Jordan Fusco, Keaton Mitchell and Kameron Simmonds scored goals for the Lady Vols. Maria Nelson and Ally Brown recorded assists for Tennessee.

“I’m very pleased with our performance today,” Tennessee head coach Joe Kirt said. “It was a great team win. We needed everyone today on a hot, Sunday afternoon. It’s difficult to win on the road, and today was no different. Lipscomb was organized and competed well. It took us a little bit to settle in, and we left a few chances out there, but we kept at it and eventually found the back of the net. Credit to our team for their mentality today, we competed at a high level and were dominant in our possession.

“We have a deep and talented team, with six different players scoring goals this week. We’ve had two good performances, which we will learn from and be better on Thursday night against ETSU back at Regal Stadium.”

Tennessee defeated California, 4-1, to kick off the 2023 season.

The Lady Vols return to Regal Soccer Stadium on Thursday versus East Tennessee State (7 p.m. EDT).

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2023 NCAA Tournament Clemson Regional baseball schedule

2023 NCAA Tournament Clemson Regional baseball schedule.

Clemson (43-17, 20-10 ACC) will host the NCAA Tournament Clemson Regional at Doug Kingsmore Stadium.

Tennessee (38-19, 16-14 SEC) is a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament Clemson Regional.

No. 3 Charlotte (34-26, 17-12 C-USA) and No. 4 Lipscomb (36-24, 23-7 ASUN) will also compete in the Clemson Regional.

Tennessee is making its fourth consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance under head coach Tony Vitello.

The Vols advanced to the 2019 Chapel Hill Regional, the 2021 College World Series and the 2022 Knoxville Super Regional under Vitello.

PHOTOS: A look at Tony Vitello through the years

Every SEC baseball team’s 2023 resume ahead of NCAA Tournament

Below is a schedule for the 2023 NCAA Tournament Clemson Regional.

Dylan Dreiling discusses home run performance versus Lipscomb

Dylan Dreiling discusses his home run performance versus Lipscomb.

No. 2 Tennessee (15-3) defeated Lipscomb, 10-0, Tuesday at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

The contest ends a 15-game homestead for the Vols.

Tennessee improves to 30-13 versus in-state opponents under sixth-year head coach Tony Vitello. The Vols were 6-1 versus in-state opponents in 2022.

The Vols entered the contest ranked No. 2 in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll for the fourth consecutive week.

Freshman Dylan Dreiling served as Tennessee’s designated hitter versus Lipscomb. He went 1-for-3, recording one home run, two RBIs, two runs and one walk against the Bisons.

Following the contest, Dreiling met with media and discussed his home run performance. Dreiling’s media availability can be watched below.

Tony Vitello recaps Vols’ win versus Lipscomb

Tony Vitello recaps the Vols’ win versus Lipscomb.

No. 2 Tennessee (15-3) defeated Lipscomb, 10-0, Tuesday at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

The contest ends a 15-game homestead for the Vols.

Tennessee is 30-13 versus in-state opponents under sixth-year head coach Tony Vitello. The Vols were 6-1 versus in-state opponents in 2022.

Tennessee will open Southeastern Conference play Friday at Missouri for a three-game series.

First pitch for Friday’s series-opener between the Vols and Tigers is slated for 7 p.m. EDT (SEC Network+).

Game No. 2 is scheduled to start at 3 p.m. EDT on Saturday, while Sunday’s series finale is slated for 2 p.m. EDT. Both contests can be watched on SEC Network+.

Following the Vols’ win versus Lipscomb on Tuesday, Vitello met with media. Vitello’s media availability can be watched below.

Tennessee-Lipscomb baseball projected starting pitchers

A look at Tennessee-Lipscomb baseball projected starting pitchers.

Tennessee (14-3) is ranked No. 2 in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll for the fourth consecutive week.

The Vols will host Lipscomb on Tuesday at Lindsey Nelson Stadium. First pitch is slated for 5 p.m. EDT and can be watched on SEC Network+. Zack Nelson (PxP) will be on the call.

Tennessee is 29-13 versus in-state opponents under sixth-year head coach Tony Vitello. The Vols were 6-1 versus in-state opponents in 2022.

PHOTOS: Tennessee plays Tennessee Tech with wood bats at Smokies Stadium

Tennessee-Lipscomb all-time series:

Overall: Tennessee leads, 12-2
in Knoxville: 9-1
in Nashville: 2-1
at Neutral sites: 1-0
Last meeting: Tennessee won, 5-1 (April 5, 2022)

Tennessee-Lipscomb projected starting pitchers:

Tennessee: LHP Zander Sechrist (0-0, 0.93 ERA)

Lipscomb: LHP Noah Thompson (2-0, 2.31 ERA)

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Notre Dame on pace for worst conference season in program history

This is a conference season to remember for all the wrong reasons, and it could sink lower.

After decades of independence, Notre Dame joined the Big East for the 1995-96 season. It proved to be an adjustment as the Irish went 4-14 during their first conference schedule. That was as bad as it got in conference play until the 2018-19 Irish stumbled to a 3-15 ACC record. Now, only four years later, the Irish are on pace for something even more putrid.

Through eight ACC games, or 40% of the conference schedule, the Irish are 1-7, and they earned that lone win by the skin of their teeth. If this pace keeps up, they’ll finish 3-17, which would give the program its worst conference winning percentage ever at .150. Given that a second game with Georgia Tech and one with Louisville, the only teams you objectively can say are as bad, if not worse than the Irish, remain on the schedule, that’s not out of the question.

The eye test should have seen this coming. Except for the win over Michigan State, no nonconference win looked particularly impressive. Sure, the Irish had a few double-digit wins sprinkled in there, but the season began with single-digit victories at home against blue-blood opponents Radford and Youngstown State, followed soon after by a one-point home win against the almighty Lipscomb. Perhaps those raised flags, but how many actually believed it?

As the losses pile up, so do the calls for [autotag]Mike Brey[/autotag] to retire or be fired. Frankly, you can’t blame Irish fans for wanting either one. His “get old, stay old” philosophy for this season has backfired. Having a bunch of veteran players fresh off two NCAA Tournament wins and a highly-touted recruit in [autotag]JJ Starling[/autotag] should have worked, but everything that could go wrong has.

The worst part is this is happening with the knowledge that the Irish are going to have a lot of unproven talent in next year’s rotation. Except for Starling and [autotag]Ven-Allen Lubin[/autotag], no underclassman has played nearly enough for fans to say they’re excited for the 2023-24 season. With the window of opportunity not stretching beyond this season, this was the last chance for success for this group. Instead, it’s going out with a whimper.

It’s hard to pinpoint exactly what needs to happen to label the rest of the season a success. Right now, just avoiding the standing for program conference futility is the most reasonable. That speaks volumes and specifically means a disappointing tempering of expectations. However, there’s not much else you can do when it’s become almost certain that this year’s Irish will not play beyond the ACC Tournament.

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