Sports
10 Takeaways From 2025 NCAA Baseball Tournament Opening Night


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(Photo by Andy Altenburger/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
The 2025 college baseball tournament started off with a bang Friday night when the regional round delivered four opening-night host upsets and several tightly contested high-major showdowns.
Here are 10 takeaways from Day 1 of the NCAA Tournament:
Vanderbilt Is Vulnerable
The same qualities that have made top-seeded Vanderbilt great this year are also what leave it exposed. Tim Corbin’s team dominates on the mound with JD Thompson and Cody Bowker leading the rotation and a deep bullpen ranking among the nation’s best behind them. But the Commodores lack offensive firepower, leaning heavily on contact hitting and athleticism to manufacture runs.
That formula nearly backfired Friday night against Wright State. Thompson struck out 12 and allowed three runs over eight innings, but Vanderbilt’s offense was stagnant until a Brodie Johnston solo homer in the seventh finally broke up a no-hit bid. Mike Mancini added another solo shot in the eighth, followed by a controversial two-run home run from Riley Nelson that was initially ruled foul before being overturned after a brief umpires meeting on the field.
Vanderbilt’s elite arms can keep it competitive in low-scoring games—and probably will. But Friday was a clear reminder of the risk in relying so heavily on that approach.
The Commodores entered the postseason ranked outside the top 150 teams nationally in runs per game, strikeout rate, batting average, on-base percentage and slugging. Teams that fit that profile have had a tougher time in the NCAA Tournament in recent years.
A Historic Night For Four Seeds
Selection Monday this year underscored the widening gap between college baseball’s high-major powers and its mid-major programs. Just four at-large bids went to mid-majors—the fewest since the NCAA adopted the super regional format in 1999.
But Friday’s opening day proved parity in the sport isn’t dead. Four regional four seeds upset their hosts, the most since 2008. Murray State beat Ole Miss 9-6, Utah Valley edged Oregon 6-5, Saint Mary’s topped Oregon State 6-4 and Columbia stunned Southern Miss 11-4.
After an unpredictable regular season, some postseason chaos was expected. Four top seeds losing on opening night still exceeded those expectations and sent several super regional favorites to the brink.
It Was Also A Rough Night For Fringe Hosts
This year’s selection committee largely got it right. There were no glaring snubs (perhaps outside of omitting a second Big East team) and no obvious mistakes above the host line. The consensus fringe host group—Alabama, Florida, TCU and Georgia Tech—had strong cases but ultimately didn’t earn the nod. Based on Friday night’s results, the committee’s judgment looks sound.
Alabama stumbled against Miami, managing just four hits outside of a three-run fourth inning, even with the Hurricanes starting AJ Ciscar instead of ace Griffin Hugus.
Florida was routed in Conway, as No.3 East Carolina chased Liam Peterson in the second inning and piled up 11 runs. Ethan Norby dominated the Gators, striking out 10 over 7.1 innings.
TCU was blitzed, as well, falling 13-1 to Southern California despite starting ace Tommy LaPour (3.0 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 1 BB, 5 K).
Georgia Tech was the lone fringe host that impressed, cruising past Western Kentucky 9-2 to reach the winner’s bracket, where it will face Murray State.
Stetson Is A Three Seed To Watch
We pegged Stetson as a three seed to watch entering the postseason after a 40-20 overall record and 24-6 mark in the ASUN. On Friday, the Hatters backed that up with an emphatic 11-2 win over NC State in the Auburn Regional.
Ace lefthander Jonathan Gonzalez fired six shutout innings with four strikeouts, while the offense provided enough cushion that head coach Steve Trimper could rest bullpen workhorse Ty Van Dyke, who owns a 1.25 ERA with 65 strikeouts over 43.1 innings.
With Auburn ahead, the path remains steep. But if Stetson’s bats continue to produce like they did against Dominic Fritton and the Wolfpack, the Hatters have enough pitching to stay dangerous.
They entered the postseason ranked No. 20 nationally in team ERA, which was easily among the best for non-one and two seeds.
Arizona State’s Win Over UC Irvine Had Big Implications
Arizona State head coach Willie Bloomquist and his team waited anxiously on Monday to find out if they had been selected to the NCAA Tournament after missing the field in each of their skipper’s first three seasons at the helm, the longest drought in program history.
Had the Sun Devils missed the field for a fourth straight year, it was a near certainty that they would have parted ways with Bloomquist and opened up a national search to fill the vacancy, according to multiple sources. And while tournament entry dramatically decreased the odds of a coaching change, it didn’t totally eliminate them. Friday’s 4-2 win over UC Irvine, however, likely did.
Movers and shakers within the ASU athletic department wanted to see how competitive the Sun Devils would be in the Los Angeles Regional before marrying themselves to any one course of action on Bloomquist’s future.
An All-American for the Sun Devils as a player who also spent time as a professional with the Diamondbacks, Bloomquist has done as good a job as any coach in his region—if not the nation—at acquiring standout talent. ASU entered the 2025 season with more top 200 draft talent than any other Big 12 team, but was one of the last four teams to make the field of 64.
If they play to their potential in Los Angeles this weekend, they’re surely capable of reaching a super regional for the first time since 2011.
Player Of The Day
Plenty of players made strong cases. Wright State’s Cam Allen threw six no-hit innings against top-seeded Vanderbilt. Tre Phelps fell a triple shy of the cycle with two home runs in Georgia’s 20-4 rout of Binghamton. Caden Aoki spun eight innings of one-run ball in Southern California’s blowout win over TCU. But, for me, the standout was North Carolina righty Jake Knapp, who earned the first win of the 2025 NCAA Tournament against Holy Cross.
North Carolina stuck to its normal rotation order, aiming to shut down its regional’s four seed and save its bullpen. The 97 mph-throwing Knapp delivered 8.1 shutout innings with just four hits allowed on 119 pitches.
Knapp has been dominant atop the Tar Heels’ rotation all season, posting a 1.98 ERA with 85 strikeouts and just 16 walks over 95.1 innings. Opponents are hitting just .186 against him. He’ll turn 25 in August, which limits his draft stock, but his performance this year makes him a clear senior sign candidate if not a middle-round money-saver.
Oklahoma Pitched Off & Won Big
Skip Johnson took the opposite approach from North Carolina, adjusting his rotation based on matchups to open the tournament. Instead of going with usual weekend ace Kyson Witherspoon, Oklahoma started his twin brother, Malachai Witherspoon, on Friday against Nebraska.
Malachai delivered: nine strikeouts over six shutout innings in a 7-4 Sooners win, setting up Kyson to face a much tougher North Carolina lineup on Saturday.
It’s a fascinating strategy test. North Carolina stuck to its rotation, allowing Knapp to dominate a four seed while saving the bullpen. Oklahoma shuffled the deck, holding its ace for the marquee matchup. Saturday will offer an interesting datapoint in how the approach plays out.
The NCAA Tournament Always Sets Up For Early Litmus Tests
One of the best parts of the NCAA Tournament is how it inevitably pits standout mid-major automatic qualifiers against major conference powers—an early litmus test for those lower-seeded teams’ true potential.
Here are three that I’m eager to watch on Saturday:
- Texas vs. UTSA
- LSU vs. Dallas Baptist
- Arkansas vs. Creighton
UTSA knocked off Texas in a midweek meeting earlier this season, while LSU already holds a win over Dallas Baptist. Arkansas and Creighton will meet for the first time this year, with the Blue Jays entering at 42 wins.
UTSA, coming off one of the best seasons in program history, now looks to take the inside track to its first-ever super regional berth.
Michael Earley Will Remain Head Coach At Texas A&M
This takeaway isn’t about an on-field result, but it may have been Friday’s most significant development: Michael Earley is staying at Texas A&M.
After missing the NCAA Tournament as the preseason No. 1—the first coach to do so since 1991—and finishing with just 11 SEC wins despite a highly-touted, NIL-fueled roster, many believed Earley was headed for dismissal. That speculation ended abruptly when athletic director Trev Alberts issued this statement:
“Earlier today I met with Coach Earley to discuss the state of our baseball program. I appreciate Mike’s work in taking a holistic view of what changes need to be made so that we have a baseball program that meets our high standards. Baseball success is critically important to Texas A&M. I am confident in Mike’s ability to execute the needed change and fully support his vision going forward.”
What those “needed changes” entail remains to be seen. The Aggies pitched well for much of the season under pitching coach Jason Kelly and were undeniably talented, but their offense—Earley’s domain—often struggled.
Texas A&M will continue to pour resources into its baseball program, giving Earley a clear path to right the ship. But two consecutive failures? It’s hard to imagine the job wouldn’t open after that. He’s the early leader on the 2026 hot seat.
One More Non-Division I Tournament Note
I’m going to break the rules one more time because this deserves acknowledgment as one of the most unbelievable feats of the 2025 baseball season. It’s a run so ridiculous we may never see it again.
LSU-Shreveport secured the NAIA national championship Friday night, capping off a perfect 59-0 season, playoffs included. It marked the program’s first-ever national title and completed a season that will be nearly impossible to match.
Sports
Central’s Parrott named a finalist for the conference scholar-athlete award
PELLA—Recent Central College graduate Addison Parrott has been named a finalist for the American Rivers Conference’s Johana Olson Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award.
Parrott is among three finalists for the Johanna Olson Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award, along with Nebraska Wesleyan University track and field athlete Avery Decker and Simpson College women’s soccer/track and field athlete Madison Hays.
Parrott graduated with a 3.85 cumulative grade point average as a sociology and psychology major with a minor in religious studies. She is now in graduate school to achieve her master’s in clinic mental health counseling from Liberty University (Va.).
A distance runner at Central, Parrott tallied third All-American performances between cross country and track and field. In 2024, she became the first Central female to win the American Rivers Conference cross country title, earning league Most Valuable Performer honors. She also won the indoor 5,000-meters title at the 2025 conference meet.
Parrott was a two-time College Sports Communicators Academic All-District selection. She was a member of the American Rivers Academic All-Conference six times across track and field and cross country. She also earned USTFCCCA All-Academic honors five times.
The league awards were established in 2000-01. Central student-athletes have received the men’s award five times and the women’s award three times. Central’s most recent winner was NCAA Today’s Top 10 Award and Gagliardi Trophy winner Blaine Hawkins in 2021-22.
Sports
Indiana volleyball gains new addition in Tennessee transfer Keondreya Granberry
Indiana volleyball’s historic season came to end after a loss to the University of Texas at Austin on Dec. 12 in the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA Tournament. However, since the loss, the Hoosiers have already begun assembling their roster for next season.
Indiana gained a new asset to its roster in middle blocker Keondreya Granberry, according to an Instagram post Tuesday. The 6-foot-3 University of Tennessee transfer was sidelined for most of her senior season in 2025 with an injury. However, in 2024, Granberry averaged 1.93 kills and .93 blocks per set while maintaining a .455 average hitting percentage.
She finished her Tennessee career ranked second all-time in career hitting percentage at .372 and ranked eighth in program history in career blocks per set.
After the 2025 season came to end, the Hoosiers lost valuable pieces to their roster in outside hitters Candela Alonso-Corcelles and Jessica Smith, middle blocker Madi Sell and opposite hitter Avry Tatum.
In turn, Indiana is bringing in a nationally ranked freshman class for the second consecutive season. As of National Signing Day (Nov. 12), all three incoming freshmen in setter Mallory Matheny, outside hitter Sara Snowbarger and defensive specialist Ellie Hepler were ranked top 60 in the Prep Volleyball Rankings.
The NCAA Women’s Volleyball winter transfer portal opened Dec. 7 and will close Jan. 5. In that window, Indiana volleyball will look to continue stacking pieces to replenish the highly talented 2025 roster that led the Hoosiers to a 25-8 overall record and first NCAA Tournament appearance in 15 years.
Sports
UTA Volleyball Adds Two Transfers to 2026 Roster
ARLINGTON, TEXAS – The UT Arlington volleyball program welcomed two transfers, Erica Dellesky and Karisa Martin, to its 2026 signing class, Tania Schatow announced on Wednesday.
ABOUT THE RECRUITS
ERICA DELLESKY
S, 5-10, Junior
Katy, Texas/Obra D. Tompkins HS—Virginia Tech
Erica Dellesky, a 5’10 setter from Katy, Texas, joins UTA after an impressive start to her collegiate career at Virginia Tech. In 52 matches and 167 sets played, Dellesky has totaled 629 assists and 214 digs.
In high school, Dellesky was a four-year letterwinner at Obra D. Tompkins High Schol and the program’s all-time career assists leader. She totaled more than 2,000 career assists, along with 911 digs and 132 service aces. Dellesky was a two-time undefeated District 6A champion and a three-time Academic All-District selection. As a senior, she earned a spot on the 2022-23 AVCA Phenom Watch List, was named team captain and MVP and received Preseason Second Team All-America honors.
“We are so excited to have Erica join the team. From the first phone call we had, I had a feeling she would be a great fit with this group. She is a setter that has great location on her sets, while showing the ability to keep the tempo,” Schatow stated. “Her experience in the ACC will be great to have in our gym, while building connections with our hitters this Spring. I am looking forward to working with her as we grow and advance our offense.”
KARISA MARTIN
RS, 6-1, Junior
Monroe, Washington/Monroe HS—Bellevue College
Karisa Martin, a 6’1 rightside hitter from Monroe, Wash., comes to UTA after spending two seasons at Bellevue College. In her collegiate career, Martin is a four-time NWAC Region Offensive Player of the Week, a two-time NWAC First Team selection and a 2025 NWAC All-Tournament Second Team honoree.
Before college, Martin competed at Monroe High School and played club volleyball for Seattle Juniors and Sudden Impact Volleyball Club.
“I had a very similar feeling while taking to her on the phone that she would fit in perfectly with the team we are building. She is a physical lefty, that has proven her ability to terminate at a high level,” Schatow said. “She finished her career at Bellevue College with a hitting percentage over 0.300 and over 2 kills per set. I am looking forward to integrating her into our offense this Spring.”
#BuckEm
FOLLOW THE MAVS
For the latest news on UTA Volleyball, log on to UTAMavs.com or stay connected to the Mavs on social media. Follow the Mavericks on Twitter @UTAMavsVB, on Instagram @UTAMavsVB and on Facebook at Facebook.com/UTAMavsVB.
Sports
County Partners with Santa Barbara Volleyball Club on Indoor Facility | Local News
A new four-court indoor volleyball facility is moving into the Goleta Valley.
The Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved a 15-year lease for the facility with youth sports nonprofit Santa Barbara Volleyball Club.
The agreement allows the club to demolish the current duplexes and storage sheds at 4550 Hollister Ave., adjacent to the Page Youth Center and Fire Station 13, to build the 18,400-square-foot steel facility.
Alongside the courts, there will be restrooms, reception, storage and 18 parking spots, one of which will be an ADA-compliant space, all funded through donations and community fundraising.
SBVC’s lead on the demolition will save costs for the county, as it will not have to pay anything for this project. Additionally, the club will not pay rent during the lease in exchange for the facility’s construction.
Construction is expected to start in 2026 and will not be completed until 2027, according to Matt Riley, SBVC executive director.
“The new gym will address a long-standing shortage of indoor court space in the region and will allow SBVC to expand programming, reduce reliance on shared school facilities, and increase access for local families,” he said in a statement.
The site has been formerly used to house county departments that were in the process of relocating.
However, the buildings are not suitable for county use, Kirk Lagerquist, general services director, wrote in a letter to the board. If SBVC did not propose to take over the space, the county would be responsible for abatement and demolition.

Instead, it will be transformed into a modern space for the community and local youths to promote health and wellness while reducing county liability with the unsafe structures, Lagerquist added in the letter.
The project still needs to acquire a conditional-use permit from the county Planning & Development Department.
“This project represents a major investment in the future of youth sports in Santa Barbara,” Riley said.
Sports
Three Wildcat Volleyball Standouts Name CSC Academic All-District
ELLENSBURG, Wash. – Three Central Washington University volleyball student-athletes were named to the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Division II Academic All-District Women’s Volleyball Team. This will be Scottie Ellsworth’s second time earning Academic All-District while Ellie Marble and Kayleigh-Shay Chang both will earn the honor for the first time.
The 2025-26 Academic All-District Women’s Volleyball teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the court and in the classroom. The CSC Academic All-America program separately recognizes women’s volleyball honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA.
Student-athletes selected as CSC Academic All-America finalists will advance to the national ballot to be voted on by CSC members. First-, second- and third-team Academic All-America honorees will be announced January 13, 2026.
The Division II and III CSC Academic All-America programs are partially financially supported by the NCAA Division II and III national governance structures to assist CSC with handling the awards fulfillment aspects for the 2025-26 Divisions II and III Academic All-America programs. The NAIA CSC Academic All-America program is partially financially supported through the NAIA governance structure.
Ellsworth, an AVCA Honorable Mention All-American and a three-time Academic All-GNAC honoree, owns a 3.99 GPA in Elementary Education. Marble, a First Team All-GNAC and two-time Academic All-GNAC honoree, has a perfect 4.0 GPA in Physical Education & School Health. Chang, an Honorable Mention All-GNAC and Academic All-GNAC honoree this season, has a 3.75 GPA and is undeclared on a major.
The entire CSC Academic All-District list can be found HERE
Sports
CSC Announces 2025 Women’s Volleyball Academic All-District
NEW YORK – A total of seven CUNY Athletic Conference women’s volleyball student-athletes were named to the 2025-26 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District Team for NCAA Division III announced Tuesday afternoon.
The 2025-26 Academic All-District® Women’s Volleyball Team, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom.
To be eligible for CSC Academic All-America® honors, a student-athlete must maintain at least a 3.50 grade-point average, be a sophomore, junior, or senior, and be a starter or significant reserve.
Academic All-District® honorees advance to the CSC Academic All-America® ballot. First-, second, and third-team Academic All-America® honorees will be announced on January 13, 2026.
CUNY Athletic Conference
2025-26 CSC Women’s Volleyball Academic All-District
Karolina Lundqvist, Baruch
Ruti Joshi, Brooklyn
Malia Reyes, Brooklyn
Ivanna Zamora Sanchez, CCNY
Alex Overcamp, John Jay
Hailey Waugaman, John Jay
Maritza Argueta, Medgar Evers
For the latest news on the CUNY Athletic Conference, log on to cunyathletics.com – the official site of the CUNY Athletic Conference. Also, become a follower of the CUNYAC on Instagram (@CUNYAC), Twitter (@CUNYAC) and YouTube (@CUNY Athletic Conference), and “LIKE” Us on Facebook (CUNY Athletic Conference).
Sign up to receive the latest CUNY Athletic Conference news delivered right to your email inbox HERE.
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