No. 13 Texas A&M softball team combines for no-hitter against Prairie View A&M

The Aggies dropped in the rankings this week and will certainly be rising back up next Monday following a combined no-hitter on Tuesday.

The Texas A&M softball team dropped in the rankings this week and whether they pay attention to them or not, they will certainly be rising back up on Monday following a combined no-hitter on Tuesday against Prairie View A&M.

The No. 13 Aggies (29-7) beat the Panthers (16-15) by a final score of 10-0 in five innings at Davis Diamond, triggering the 10-run mercy rule. Texas A&M scored 2 runs in the first frame, 1 in the second and 7 in the third.

Junior right-handed pitcher Emily Leavitt (7-1) and graduate student RHP Brooke Vestal teamed up to toss the no-hitter. Leavitt started in the circle and pitched the first 4.0 innings, striking out 7 batters on 58 pitches. Vestal pitched the final frame and allowed 1 walk with 3 Ks on 21 pitches.

Freshman designated player Mya Perez went 2-for-2 with 3 runs batted in and 1 walk. Junior shortstop Koko Wooley was 2-for-3 with 2 runs scored, 1 double, 1 triple, 1 RBI and 1 stolen base.

The Aggies recorded their 11th shutout of the season Tuesday, which ranks eighth-most in the country. Next up for Texas A&M is a three-game SEC series at home versus Kentucky, beginning Friday at 6 p.m. CST.

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.

Rockets rookie Amen Thompson finds strength, role model in older brother Troy Thompson Jr.

“He is the blueprint and role model, for me,” Amen Thompson says of his older brother. “Growing up in Oakland, my family tried to keep me away from certain things, and he was a big part of that.”

HOUSTON — As Amen Thompson walked into Toyota Center for his introductory press conference, he was led by his family. The group consisted of his parents, Maya and Troy Thompson Sr.; his identical twin brother, Ausar, who was drafted one spot after Amen by the Detroit Pistons; and older brother Troy Thompson Jr., one of his biggest inspirations to play basketball.

Laying the foundation for the siblings’ hard work and dedication, Troy, who is eight years older than his younger brothers, was a very skilled high school player. After taking off a year after graduation, he chose to stay close to home and attended City College of San Francisco in 2014. He made the team as a walk-on and received 11 offers to play Division I basketball during his time there.

Halfway through his first year, he wrote down his goals. One of them was to continue his playing days and education at an historically black college or university (HBCU).

Thompson Jr.’s first choice was Howard University. Instead, he selected Prairie View A&M University, which is located 47 miles outside of Houston, to finish his final two years of eligibility from 2016 through 2018.

“I wrote down that I wanted to get 10 Division I offers, and at least one of them be an HBCU,” Thompson Jr. said. “I have family members that went to Prairie View, and it has a little nostalgic vibe with (his parents). I didn’t know a lot about PV until I got there. It was so welcoming, and it was a great experience for me. It helped me become a man. It was a good experience.”

Sharing those experiences with his younger siblings was one of the things that kept them motivated to continue following their dreams of making it into the NBA. Thompson Jr. tried out for Sacramento’s NBA G League affiliate, the Stockton Kings, in 2019, but he was not selected for the roster after the final cuts.

“Growing up, I didn’t even know that I was the influence I was,” Thompson Jr. said of being an inspiration to his brothers.

Yet, he was instrumental in the futures of Amen and Ausar, who decided to skip college and play two years at Overtime Elite, where they could strictly focus on basketball. The decision paid off. Amen Thompson was selected by the Houston Rockets with the No. 4 pick in the 2023 NBA draft, and Ausar was taken with the fifth pick of the draft.

“He is the blueprint and the role model for me,” Amen said of his older brother. “Growing up in Oakland, my family tried to keep me away from certain things, and he was a big part of that because he went through that stuff. Seeing where he was able to get in basketball made me believe that I could do anything.”

 

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Game One Recap: Softball – No. 24 Texas A&M vs Prairie View A&M

The Aggies clock out early with a five-inning run-rule victory over Prairie View A&M

The Aggies took care of business during their midweek game carrying over the momentum from their series win over South Carolina. No. 24 Texas A&M (30-17) beat Prairie View A&M (23-17) 12-0 run ruling them to end the night early.

Texas A&M wasted no time putting runs on the board. After a flurry of walks, hits, and throwing errors the Aggie loaded the bases for Julia Cottrill. She hit a single to center field to score Koko Wooley then a fielder’s choice off a Morgan Smith infield hit scored Amari Harper. Two more walks plated Trinity Cannon that was followed up by a double by Allie Enright bringing in

Rylen Wiggins and Cottrill. The final score of the inning was off a fielding error putting Gracyn Coleman across the plate for a 6-0 lead.

The Aggie added a solo run in the third inning, but in the bottom of the fourth inning, they finished the Panthers off. It was very similar to the first inning a hit and multiple walks loaded the bases. A Wiggins sac fly brought in Cannon, then a Riley Valentine double-scored Aiyana Coleman. Enright got her second double of the night scoring two more runs. The 12th run came from a single up the middle by Grace Uribe for a 0-12 lead going into the top of the fifth inning.

Emiley Kennedy went three up and three down to run-rule the Panthers and keep the no-hitter intact.

Final Score: Aggies 12, Panthers 0 – W: Kennedy, Emiley (9-4); L: Rojas, J (7-2)

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes, and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on Twitter: @whosnextsports1

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How to Watch: Baseball – Texas A&M vs Prairie View A&M

Texas A&M will welcome Prairie View A&M in a midweek showdown at Blue Bell Park

After going 2-1 winning their third straight SEC series Texas A&M (24-14) will face Prairie View A&M (14-21) in a midweek game at Blue Bell Park. The Aggies scored 31 over the past weekend and look to keep those bats working on Wednesday.

Texas A&M owns a 13-0 record over the Panthers since 2009. In the last two games, the Aggies ran Prairie View off the diamond outscoring them 52-4. Over the course of the series, there has only been one game that was close, and that came in 2010 when the Aggies won 7-5 when Prairie View put runs on the board in the ninth inning trying to make a comeback but ultimately failing.

The history between these two baseball programs tells us that we can expect double digit runs from the Aggies en route to a dominate win, however, the inconsistency from the mound could also present mulitple opportunities for the Panthers to make it interesting.

MIDWEEK GAME

Wednesday, April 19th – 6 pm

Texas A&M: TBA

PVAM: RHP Elijah Breeden

WAYS TO FOLLOW THE GAME

TV: SEC Network

Radio: Locally Sports Radio 1150/93.7 The Zone

Social: Follow the @AggiesBaseball Twitter for updates

Internet: 12thMan.com / 12th Man Mobile app for live play-by-play

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes, and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on Twitter: @whosnextsports1

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Prairie View A&M ‘trusts the process’ to PGA Works team title; NCAA’s up next

At the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, the Panthers caught overnight leaders Howard University and then fended off Alabama State.

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. – Prairie View A&M men’s golf coach Kevin Jennings never talks about winning.

“I put on the back of our T-shirts, ‘Trust the Process,’ and it’s strange how things work out from time to time,” said Jennings after his team wrapped up the school’s first team title at the PGA Works Collegiate Championship on Wednesday. “Yeah, it’s a great feeling.”

On a warm, windswept day, the Panthers erased a one-stroke deficit at the Players Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass, first catching overnight leaders Howard University and then fending off Alabama State to capture the title by four strokes. Prairie View shot 18-over 306 in the final round, an effort bettered only by Alabama State (303). Florida A&M and Howard, finished third and fourth, respectively.

If it is true that winning breeds winning, the Panthers are on a roll, having recently secured its third consecutive Southwestern Athletic Conference Golf Championship. When the victory string began in 2018—last year’s conference championship was canceled due to COVID-19—it marked the school’s first conference title since 1979.

“This is a good group,” Jennings said. “The other two championships that we won in our conference, the SWAC, they were a different type of win. We had ‘leaders,’ so to speak. At conference (this year), we were down 10 strokes after one round, they got it back to one stroke after two rounds – just like this – and that’s another reason I have confidence in my guys. They understand what to do and how to do it. And they went out and got it done, and it was truly a team effort.”

Lorenzo Elbert Jr., led the way with a final-round 2-over 74. Jordan Stagg’s round best exemplified the no-quit attitude of the Panthers. He overcame a triple-bogey at the par-5 ninth at TPC Sawgrass to shoot 3-under 33 on the second nine, including a chip-in for eagle at 16 and a birdie at the island-green 17th, en route to shooting 3-over 75.

“It was a rough start, but a good finish,” Stagg said.

“He and I had a little conversation between 9 and 10, ‘let’s get focused, let’s hit fairways and greens and trust the process.’ And we were able to hit more greens and more fairways and things started to happen,” Jennings said. “Sure enough, he was able to chip in at 16 and hit it tight at 17 – I’m sure he’ll remember that shot with a Sunday pin. He made a great up and down on 18, a true testament to the short game. Short game is like defense – it wins championships. And that’s a testament to what we work on every day, that’s what we start practice with.”

Isaiah Wilson (77) and Zane Brooks (80) rounded out the scoring for the Panthers. (Christian Latham’s score didn’t count.)

“That’s the thing about this team, it’s a true team effort,” said Jennings, who already was flashing his SWAC championship ring. “No one individual played the best that he can play, nor did all of them play the best that they can play. However, collectively, they got it done.”

Not only did the Panthers collect a trophy before leaving TPC Sawgrass, but they learned their season would continue at the NCAA Southwest Regional at the University of New Mexico, May 17-19. Prairie View A&M alum and PGA member Eric Clark, who was the tournament’s first medalist in 1987, may have summed up best what winning the PGA Works meant to the school when he said, “I might be happier than our team.”

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Cameron Champ leads efforts to establish golf scholarships at Prairie View A&M

Cameron Champ, along with Chevron, have established a pair of golf scholarships at Prairie View A&M, an HBCU in Texas.

Cameron Champ finished T-19  in his Masters debut last week, but his biggest takeaway from his first trip down Magnolia Lane wasn’t how he fared at Augusta National.

It happened on Monday of Masters week, when chairman Fred Ridley paid tribute to Lee Elder 45 years after he became the first Black man to play in the Masters. Ridley announced Elder would Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player for the the first tee of the 2021 Masters as an honorary starter. He also introduced the Lee Elder Scholarship, a pair of scholarships in Elder’s name that will be awarded annually to one man and one woman who compete on the golf teams at Paine College, a Historically Black College and University located in Augusta, Geogia.

Cameron Champ was so inspired that he wanted to do something as well. On Thursday, Prairie View A&M University, an HBCU in Prairie View, Texas, announced a $40,000 donation from the Cameron Champ Foundation and Chevron Corporation to establish two scholarship funds for student-athletes on its men’s and women’s golf teams.

More: Champ brings grandfather’s legacy to Augusta, looks to inspire
Black Lives Matter: Cameron Champ speaks out on racial injustice

“When Lee Elder walked on the Augusta grounds, it sent a message: ‘We belong,'” said Champ. The scholarship fund is named in memory of Cameron Champ’s grandfather, Mack “Pops” Champ.

“My grandfather had such an incredible influence on my life and always inspired me in many ways,” added Champ. “I’m so grateful for Pops introducing me to the game of golf, but also for teaching me that there’s so much more to life than golf. He always stressed the importance of giving back and paying it forward. Last week, Augusta National Golf Club Chairman Fred Ridley addressed how access and opportunities are still barriers to the game, and he hit the nail on the head when he said that the time to do more is now. That really sparked this idea, and I thought, what better way to honor PaPa Champ than to take up the challenge to do more, right now.”

Cameron Champ
Cameron Champ wears one white and one black shoe with messages written in support of Black Lives Matter at the 2020 BMW Championship at Olympia Fields Country Club. (Photo by Brian Spurlock-USA TODAY Sports)

The Cameron Champ Foundation’s mission is to transform the lives of youth from underserved and underrepresented communities through a focus on athletics, academics and healthy living.

“Mack Champ was born in Columbus, Texas, in a segregated neighborhood with limited resources. His determination to fight against systemic racism and discrimination fuels our work,” said Cameron Champ Foundation Board Chair, Glenn Weckerlin. “We recognize that the pandemic has disproportionately impacted communities of color and has placed a heavy burden on the university and its already stretched funding. We are thankful that we can collaborate with such a historic institution to provide deserving student-athletes from diverse backgrounds opportunities that they might not otherwise have. We are delighted to contribute to student dreams and hope our actions will inspire others to follow suit—the time is now.”