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Best women’s college basketball transfer portal fits: MiLaysia Fulwiley at LSU and more

More than 1,500 Division I women’s basketball players entered the portal this season, including nearly 300 power conference players — that’s an average of four players per power conference team. With most of the top transfers finding their landing spots, it’s time to look again at the landscape of the sport. The best players in […]

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More than 1,500 Division I women’s basketball players entered the portal this season, including nearly 300 power conference players — that’s an average of four players per power conference team.

With most of the top transfers finding their landing spots, it’s time to look again at the landscape of the sport. The best players in the portal had a chance to improve their future team’s ceilings, locate a better spot for themselves or receive more NIL money. But from a basketball perspective alone, some of these fits — especially those who seem to be the perfect puzzle piece on some national title and conference title contending teams — were just … chef’s kiss.

Let’s examine five players (in alphabetical order) who seem to be perfect fits at their new programs:

MiLaysia Fulwiley, LSU

2024-25 stats (at South Carolina): 11.7 PPG, 2.8 RPG, 2.0 APG, 1.5 SPG (19 minutes per game); 43 percent FG, 26 percent 3-point FG

Fulwiley’s transfer to LSU makes an already great SEC rivalry that much spicier (Thank you, basketball gods). This fit is pretty dang appealing for other reasons as well. The duo of Flau’jae Johnson and Mikaylah Williams gave the Tigers a high-octane playmaking backcourt. Adding Fulwiley? Yeesh. Talk about showtime in Baton Rouge.

Transition time has slowly ticked upward in Kim Mulkey’s four seasons at LSU. Last season, the Tigers spent nearly a quarter of their possessions in transition, and with the addition of Fulwiley to the Johnson-Williams backcourt, I’m assuming that number will go even higher. All three players can create or score in transition, and adding Kate Koval (Notre Dame) as a center who is ready to run the floor gives them a dump-off option in the paint, too. It’s a role that Fulwiley, in her limited minutes, played well at South Carolina, as 45 percent of her scoring and 39 percent of her assists came in transition.

Fulwiley also gives the Tigers versatility in their pick-and-roll game. They often used high screening actions last season with Aneesah Morrow at the four. If LSU goes small and runs Jada Richard at the point, bumping Fulwiley-Johnson-Williams to the two through four, then Williams becomes the player setting high-ball screens. Though she doesn’t have the same inside presence as Morrow, her ability to step out and knock down 3s makes this pick-and-roll option with ballhandlers like Fulwiley or Johnson a fun two-player game. Last season, Williams acted as a ball screener only four times, including twice when she hit 3-pointers. So, LSU can see how this new wrinkle changes its offensive schemes, considering pick-and-rolls and spot-ups were the Tigers’ most common possessions in half-court play. With Fulwiley as the ballhandler (and ability to score at all three levels, including — like below — in the midrange) and Williams as the screener (and Johnson off-ball), defenses will be forced into a true pick-your-poison.


Gianna Kneepkens, UCLA

2024-25 stats (at Utah): 19.3 PPG, 5.0 RPG, 3.0 APG (30 minutes per game); 50.4 percent FG, 44.8 percent 3-point FG

At Utah — both under Lynne Roberts (who departed early last season for the vacant L.A. Sparks job) and current coach Gavin Petersen — Kneepkens played in a unique offense that basically ignored the midrange. In fact, Kneepkens has attempted exactly 89 midrange jumpers in her career (roughly eight percent of her total shots). UCLA doesn’t skew quite this extreme, but it isn’t exactly a midrange-loving team — only 12 percent of its field goal attempts were midrange shots last season.

Timea Gardiner was last season’s most efficient 3-point shooter, knocking down nearly 40 percent of her attempts, but Kneepkens’ 45 percent 3-point shooting (with a 63 percent effective field goal percentage) will give UCLA’s offense a secondary counterweight to Lauren Betts in the post, which should benefit both players. Kneepkens is better than almost anyone in the nation on either wing or in the left corner, which will allow the Bruins to set her up to force defenses to shade more to her. That also will open driving lanes for Kiki Rice and provide more space in the paint for Betts. More than one-third of her 3-pointers last season came from catch-and-shoot scenarios, off which she shot 48 percent, mostly because of her quick release.

Because defenses had to respect her elite 3-point shooting, Utah also loved running Kneepkens off high screens. If defenders went under, she could step back and knock down a triple, but she also has the size and ballhandling to attack the basket. (Most of her limited midrange shots also came in these scenarios when she decided to stop and pop.)

UCLA fans should be thrilled (and opponents terrified) about the potential of a Kneepkens-Betts two-player game. UCLA didn’t need to expand Betts’ game outside of the paint, but Bruins coaches say the midrange game is in her wheelhouse. If coach Cori Close can put one of the nation’s best 3-point shooters and the nation’s best center (with an extended range) into some high two-player situations, it’s dangerous. Betts has better size and hands than anyone Kneepkens has played with thus far. Then, consider Rice or Gabriela Jaquez off ball and ready to slash, or Gardiner standing by in the left deep corner (where she shot 44 percent from beyond the arc). I’m scratching my head trying to figure out how opponents will stop this. Let them cook, Cori!


Oluchi Okananwa, Maryland

2024-25 stats (at Duke): 10.1 PPG, 5.3 RPG, 1.8 APG, 1.8 SPG (22 minutes per game); 47.3 percent FG, 30 percent 3-point FG

Most players on this list joined more fully-formed teams, but Maryland reloaded almost entirely from the portal once again to replace losses of Shyanne Sellers, Sarah Te Biasu and Christina Dalce to graduation or the WNBA.

Okananwa makes it onto this list because coach Brenda Frese has perfected the art of adding multiple key transfers and continuing to chug along. Even with the additions of Yarden Garzon and Gracie Merkle (who both will likely play large roles), Frese can quickly get these transfers to mesh with the returners and one another fairly quickly.

To best understand the impact Okananwa can have, look no further than her three-game stretch during Duke’s ACC tournament title run last season. She averaged 16 points, seven rebounds and two assists per game while shooting 65 percent, including a blistering 6 of 8 from beyond the arc.

Unlocking Okananwa’s offensive potential and giving her a bit more pace to play with is a recipe for expanding her game and getting the Terrapins back into the top third of the Big Ten after losing so much following a Sweet 16 run.

I’m particularly excited to see Okananwa as Maryland’s best perimeter defender. The Terrapins aren’t exactly known for stout defense (Frese would much rather just outscore opponents), but Okananwa best fits into Maryland’s identity because of her steal-and-score or steal-and-create abilities. Getting out in transition with Smikle and Garzon provides Maryland a fun transition game. Last season, the Terrapins were one of the Big Ten’s best transition teams, shooting 51 percent and scoring nearly a quarter of their points there. Her defensive quickness and understanding of correct defensive positioning should steal a few possessions every game for Maryland.


Madina Okot, South Carolina

2024-25 stats (at Mississippi State): 11.3 PPG, 9.3 RPG, 1.1 BPG (23 minutes per game); 65 percent FG

The Gamecocks added two impressive players — Okot and Ta’Niya Latson — through the portal. As a go-to scorer and proven ballhandler, Latson’s addition is exciting, but I love the prospect of 6-foot-6 Okot elevating South Carolina’s chances to win a national title.

The Gamecocks’ interior defense last season didn’t quite meet the standard of the previous few seasons, and some of that can be chalked up to uber-athletic Ashlyn Watkins missing most of the season with an ACL tear. In her absence, Chloe Kitts and Sania Feagin did a nice job, but there was a noticeable difference from South Carolina’s typical fierce rim-protecting presence when Dawn Staley utilized Kamilla Cardoso and Aliyah Boston.

Opp. PPSA at rim

  

Opp. FG% at rim

  

2024-25

0.87

43.60%

2023-24

0.79

39.30%

2022-23

0.78

39.10%

2021-22

0.81

40.40%

2020-21

0.88

43.80%

2019-20

0.74

37.20%

Opp. PPSA = Opponents’ points per scoring attempt at the rim

Okot is still a bit raw. Despite one season of eligibility remaining, she has played only one season of Division I hoops, after competing her first two seasons of college ball in Kenya. But she has the physical gifts and foundational tools for Staley’s staff to mold her into a polished, effective rim protector and interior presence who can clear space on the outside for shooters like Latson, Raven Johnson and Tessa Johnson to be as effective as they were during the 2023-24 season when Cardoso roamed the interior.

Offensively, Okot moves well and runs the floor nicely for someone of her size, and she’ll benefit from playing with multiple skilled, unselfish passers. On a team as deep as South Carolina, Okot won’t need to score 20 points per game, but she will need to make open shots.

I can’t wait to see how Staley’s crew uses Okot defensively. She’ll be facing some SEC posts for a second season, so she has the knowledge base of her opponents’ games, but the Gamecocks’ defensive scheme should free her to make even more plays at the rim. Already, she’s great at finding her assignment in transition and providing help (as seen below) while recovering to make big plays. Her size offers a change from 6-1 Kitts and 6-3 Joyce Edwards, but it’ll be fun to see how the Gamecocks can zero in on getting her into better initial defensive positioning and helping off the ball to create turnovers.


Serah Williams, UConn

2024-25 stats (at Wisconsin): 19.2 PPG, 9.8 RPG, 2.4 APG, 2.3 BPG (32 minutes per game); 49.3 percent FG

The national champs lost Paige Bueckers but return Azzi Fudd, Sarah Strong, Ashlynn Shade, KK Arnold … the list goes on. The Huskies also bring in freshman Blanca Quiñonez, a 6-2 Ecuadorian forward who has been playing professionally in Italy for the last four years. She might just be the front-runner for Freshman of the Year.

Adding a 6-4 former Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year who averaged a double-double last season is a case of the rich getting richer. Williams was perhaps the most sought after player in the portal, but she’s a perfect fit on both sides of the ball for the Huskies. She’ll bring a consistent inside presence that UConn lacked last season, while also allowing Strong to continue to roam all three levels offensively.

Williams spent about half her possessions posting up for Wisconsin last year, and even as the Badgers’ focal point, she was still super efficient, scoring 0.92 points per possession off each post up. (By comparison, Kiki Iriafen scored 0.97 points in each post up last season for USC.) Williams seals well and finds good positioning, even when she doesn’t get the ball on her first open look, and she’ll benefit from receiving crisper passes from better passers at UConn.

She also could be the Huskies’ best pure post defender in a minute, and their best rim protector/shot blocker since Olivia Nelson-Ododa. The Huskies were an exceptionally strong defensive team last season, but against top competition, they could’ve performed better by limiting paint scoring and keeping opponents off the offensive glass. (They were outrebounded on O-boards during the postseason.). Williams averaged more than seven defensive boards per game. She’ll be a much more disciplined, active player in the interior who can log heavy, physical minutes, which will alleviate some of the burden stemming from UConn posts’ foul troubles.

(Photo of MiLaysia Fulwiley: Eakin Howard/Getty Images)



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Steve Sarkisian blasts reporter for ‘irresponsible reporting’

As a blueblood program, the Texas Longhorns undoubtedly have the resources to build a powerhouse in Austin. But according to head coach Steve Sarkisian, the recent estimates of the program’s NIL budget have been wildly overstated. Last month, Kirk Bohls of the Houston Chronicle reported via an anonymous source that Texas is set to spend […]

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Sean Miller addresses speculation Big East teams will have advantage in revenue sharing model

With revenue sharing seemingly on the horizon, much of the discussion surrounds football. However, basketball is set to get a nice piece of the pie. There has been speculation about, specifically, the Big East, maybe getting a bigger cut than other power conferences due to a lack of football presence. Someone who might know is […]

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With revenue sharing seemingly on the horizon, much of the discussion surrounds football. However, basketball is set to get a nice piece of the pie. There has been speculation about, specifically, the Big East, maybe getting a bigger cut than other power conferences due to a lack of football presence.

Someone who might know is Sean Miller, the former Xavier head coach. Now leading Texas in the SEC, he was asked about the Big East possibly having a financial advantage. He did not appear too convinced, saying there is still a lot of unknowns.

“You hear that but me coming from there, I think if we’re here speculating on that toward that on them, they would be equally be speculating on what we’re doing down here,” Miller said at SEC Spring Meetings. “It comes back to this awkward, unknown part. You just truly don’t know, it is truly speculation.

“I know what you’re talking about but one of the other things I feel like is part of the SEC, certainly the University of Texas, is that you’re moving toward the future. You’re certainly going to be at the table. That’s a comforting feeling. There are other times where conferences, as much as they want to feel that way, they can’t because of the model we’re in and the power of football.”

Xavier actually did sport a football team once upon a time. However, in 1973, the school decided to shut down the program and there has not been much talk of revitalization. Basketball has been the key focus ever since and will continue to be so moving forward.

The same can be said for the majority, if not all, of the Big East teams. UConn football is currently in the FBS while Villanova competes at the FCS level. Even so, those two still consider basketball its No. 1 priority from an athletics standpoint. National championships have been produced in recent years as well.

Quite different from the situation Miller walked into. Texas is one of college football’s top programs and Steve Sarkisian currently has things rolling. The Longhorns will be a popular preseason No. 1 selection if not a national championship prediction.

Miller is still not ready to say the Big East has an advantage, though. He still sees plenty of advantages to being a head coach inside the SEC, getting a few more answers on the big picture questions.



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Which awards has Texas Tech softball’s NiJaree Canady won this year?

NiJaree Canady on Texas Tech softball’s series win over Oklahoma State NiJaree Canady on Texas Tech softball’s series win over Oklahoma State OKLAHOMA CITY — NiJaree Canady continued to collect more individual accolades Wednesday ahead of the Texas Tech softball team’s debut in the Women’s College World Series. Canady was named the National Fastpitch Coaches […]

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OKLAHOMA CITY — NiJaree Canady continued to collect more individual accolades Wednesday ahead of the Texas Tech softball team’s debut in the Women’s College World Series.

Canady was named the National Fastpitch Coaches Association’s pitcher of the year and was a unanimous first-team All-American selection, the organization announced in a press conference at Devon Park. Canady has now won back-to-back NFCA pitcher of the year awards — the only player in history to do so — after earning the accolade in 2024 while at Stanford.

This marks another first for the Texas Tech softball program as Canady is the first player to earn first-team All-American honors from the NFCA. Tech previously had four honorees: Sandy Butler (1998) and Amanda Renfro (2001) were second-team selections while Jessica Harwell (2018) and Karli Hamilton (2019) were third-team honorees.

Canady joined Texas Tech last summer out of the transfer portal and has spearheaded the Red Raiders to a record-breaking year, featuring the team’s first regular-season and tournament Big 12 titles, the first home regional, regional title, Super Regional title, and WCWS appearance in program history.

“Just getting to the World Series by itself is hard,” Canady said during the NFCA press conference, “but definitely kind of with the new team environment. I’m so grateful to be back.”

More awards for Texas Tech softball’s NiJaree Canady

Earlier Wednesday, Canady was named the unanimous choice for pitcher of the year by the USA TODAY Sports Network. Awards were voted on by college softball beat writers throughout the network.

The list of awards for Canady continues to grow. She was previously named the pitcher of the year by the Big 12 Conference at D1Softball, earning first-team All-American status from both entities.



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Record, Star Players and Path to Oklahoma City

The path to Oklahoma City for the Women’s College World Series (WCWS) is a long one filled with ups and downs over the course of a grueling softball season. For the eight teams that run through the gauntlet and qualify for the WCWS, the reward is a shot at a national championship. All that stands […]

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The path to Oklahoma City for the Women’s College World Series (WCWS) is a long one filled with ups and downs over the course of a grueling softball season.

For the eight teams that run through the gauntlet and qualify for the WCWS, the reward is a shot at a national championship. All that stands in each team’s way are seven other programs vying for the same title.

All the records have reset, and we’re back to a double-elimination setting for these eight programs. That means every at-bat is crucial. Every swing, every strikeout, every hit matters more.

For upperclassmen, this is their swan song. For underclassmen, the WCWS is something of a crash course in grit, determination and greatness. For fans? It’s high-intensity fun.

When all is said and done, seven teams will leave empty handed and one will leave ecstatic, on the top of the college softball mountain. So let’s break down the field.

No. 2 Oklahoma Sooners

Record: 50-7
Head Coach: Patty Gasso (1,565-359-2)
Best WCWS Result: National champions (eight times)

The Sooners stumbled in the middle of the season after jumping out to an incredible 28-0 start. Oklahoma lost to Tennessee, Alabama and Florida before figuring it out, but as a result the Sooners finished with their most losses since 2017.

That being said, the Sooners are peaking at the right time. They’ve outscored their tournament opponents 45-7 (with a .414 batting average) and ace Sam Landry is 5-0 with a 0.88 ERA in her last five outings.

No. 3 Florida Gators

Record: 48-15
Head Coach: Tim Walton (1,109-302)
Best WCWS Result: National champions (two times)

The Gators have an explosive offense. Among the eight teams remaining, Florida is second in on-base percentage (.447), third in slugging percentage (.596), second in home runs (107) and first in walks (295).

Pitching has been a question mark at time for the Gators, but ace Keagan Rothrock was the 2024 SEC Freshman of the Year award winner and has been brilliant for most of the year.

No. 6 Texas Longhorns

Record: 51-11
Head Coach: Mike White (746-203-3)
Best WCWS Result: Runner-up (two times)

Experience is an invaluable asset when it comes to the WCWS. The Longhorns have plenty of it. Of nine Texas players with at least 100 at-bats this season, eight of them have played in the WCWS.

That experience is probably what kept the Longhorns from panicking after going 7-7 in their final 14 games of the season and then being on the verge of elimination against Clemson in the super regionals.

Teagan Kavan, Citlaly Gutierrez and Mac Morgan were electric to start the season, but have faltered of late. However, the Longhorns will need these three (who are exceptionally experienced) to buckle down and get back to their dominant ways.

No. 7 Tennessee Lady Volunteers

Record: 45-14
Head Coach: Karen Weekly (1,130-354-2)
Best WCWS Result: Runner-up (two times)

Depending on who you ask, the Lady Volunteers might just have the best player in the country in pitcher Karlyn Pickens (although this is debatable and Texas Tech would definitely take exception). The junior hurler is 24-9 with a 1.00 ERA this season, despite pitching against a who’s-who of hitters across college softball.

Tennessee will need her to be at her very best, too—on nine different occasions, the Lady Vols have scored one or fewer runs.

No. 9 UCLA Bruins

Record: 53-11
Head Coach: Kelly Inouye-Perez (871-220-1)
Best WCWS Result: National champions (13 times)

Dating back to 1982, the Bruins have missed the WCWS just nine times. That seemed so undoable that we double and triple-checked it to make sure.

That shows you just how consistently great the Bruins have been.

The 2025 Bruins aren’t necessarily a group of sluggers, but still feature a great lineup. In fact, among tournament teams, UCLA has three players in the top five in extra-base hits: Jordan Woolery, Megan Grant and Savannah Pola.

No. 12 Texas Tech Red Raiders

Record: 50-12
Head Coach: Gerry Glasco (349-99)
Best WCWS Result: N/A (first appearance)

If Pickens isn’t the best player in the nation, then NiJaree Canady is. After spending two years at Stanford, compiling a 41-10 record and 0.67 ERA, Canady joined the Red Raiders and didn’t miss a beat.

She’s currently 29-5 with a 0.89 ERA (the best in the nation) and 276 strikeouts. Canady simply doesn’t get into jams very often, and when she does her stuff is so nasty she can get out of them with relative ease.

Which is great for the Red Raiders, because their lineup might be the weakest of the teams in Oklahoma City.

No. 16 Oregon Ducks

Record: 53-8
Head Coach: Melyssa Lombardi (238-114)
Best WCWS Result: Third Place (two times)

Texas A&M stumbled and Oregon pounced. The Aggies were the No. 1 overall seed, but were upset in stunning fashion by the Liberty Flames. The Ducks had very little interest in taking part in a Cinderella story and quickly dispatched the Flames in two games.

The Ducks have two pitchers (Lyndsey Grein and Elise Sokolsky) who can be handed the ball in any situation and succeed. At the plate, they have nine players with 100+ at bats this season, seven of whom have an on-base percentage at least .415.

They’re also nightmares on the base paths. Only three teams in the WCWS have stolen 72 or more bases, but Oregon clocks in with 172 of them.

The only real downside to Oregon is that the team strikes out a lot. And in the WCWS, where every team is throwing its ace, things could get dicey.

More on Sports Illustrated



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Florida Atlantic University Athletics

BOCA RATON, Fla. – Autumn Courtney of the Florida Atlantic softball team has been named the fifth All American in program history. The junior pitcher was selected to the NFCA All-American Third Team, as announced by the organization on Wednesday.    Courtney adds the accolade to one of the most impressive seasons in Owls history (45-12) […]

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BOCA RATON, Fla. Autumn Courtney of the Florida Atlantic softball team has been named the fifth All American in program history. The junior pitcher was selected to the NFCA All-American Third Team, as announced by the organization on Wednesday. 
 
Courtney adds the accolade to one of the most impressive seasons in Owls history (45-12) on both an individual and team basis. After being named to the NFCA Gulf All-Region First Team, she led Florida Atlantic to its first NCAA Regional victory since 2016, her 24th win of the season. 
 
In her first campaign as an Owl, Courtney finished with a record of 24-4, tied for 11th in the nation in wins, to go with an ERA of 2.03, 32nd nationally. She struck out 172 batters, 30th most in Division I and the most by an FAU pitcher since fellow All-American Kylee Hanson in 2016. Courtney also conceded just 3.97 hits per seven innings, the fourth lowest in the nation.  
 
With four American Athletic Conference Pitcher of the Week awards and two additional honorable mentions, Courtney was the unanimous AAC Pitcher of the Year as well as a selection to the First Team. She later earned a spot on the conference’s All-Tournament team after allowing just one hit and no earned runs to go with seven strikeouts in a complete game performance in the semifinals.
 
Arriving for her junior year after two seasons in Queens, Courtney achieved 500 career strikeouts in her eighth appearance as an Owl on February 22. She later earned her 50th career victory on March 28 against UTSA.
 
This marks the first time in program history in which Florida Atlantic has earned an All-American honor in back-to-back seasons, with Courtney following Trinity Schlotterbeck in 2024.  
 
FOLLOW THE OWLS
To follow the team socially, visit @fausoftball, or for the most up-to-date information, go to www.fausports.com.
 



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Where Alabama lands in Top 25 college baseball polls, rankings entering NCAA Tournament

Alabama baseball is coming off its best regular season in the recent history of the program. With a roster that includes a top MLB draft prospect heading into next year in shortstop Justin Lebron, Alabama (41-16) reached 40 wins in a regular season for the first time since 2002. Advertisement Dropping two of three to […]

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Alabama baseball is coming off its best regular season in the recent history of the program.

With a roster that includes a top MLB draft prospect heading into next year in shortstop Justin Lebron, Alabama (41-16) reached 40 wins in a regular season for the first time since 2002.

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Dropping two of three to the Florida Gators to close the regular season and then losing on Day 2 of the SEC Tournament to Tennessee cost Alabama a shot at a host site regional for the 2025 NCAA Tournament, but the Crimson Tide got a pretty favorable postseason draw regardless. They’re in the Hattiesburg Regional featuring No. 16 overall seed and host Southern Miss (44-14).

To look at it another way, Alabama essentially finished one spot below the host seed line and drew the lowest-seeded team of the 16 regional hosts. The Crimson Tide join the Miami Hurricanes (31-24) and Columbia Lions (29-17) from the Ivy League in Hattiesburg, only about two and a half hours by car down Interstate 59 from Tuscaloosa.

Here’s where Alabama baseball ranks in this week’s Top 25 polls entering the NCAA Tournament.

NCBWA updated Top 25 ranking for Alabama baseball

In the latest Top 25 poll from the NCBWA (National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association), Alabama fell four spots to No. 19 following their 15-10 loss to Tennessee at the SEC Tournament in Hoover. The Crimson Tide enter the NCAA Tournament ranked one spot below No. 18 Northeastern (48-9) and one spot ahead of No. 20 UC Irvine (41-15).

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Southern Miss, which placed second in the Sun Belt regular season standings to Coastal Carolina and was runner-up in their conference tournament, is ranked No. 13.

LSU (43-14) tops the NCBWA poll at No. 1, followed by North Carolina (42-12) at No. 2, Vanderbilt (42-15) at No. 3, and Texas (42-14) at No. 4. Arkansas (43-13) rounds out the top five.

The SEC has 10 teams in the NCBWA poll as regionals begin, the most of any conference. The ACC is second with five teams in the NCBWA’s poll.

D1 Baseball updated Top 25 ranking for Alabama

D1 Baseball has Alabama at No. 24 in their new rankings, down one spot from last week. UC Irvine ranks one spot ahead of the Tide, while Kansas rounds out the top 25.

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UNC topped D1 Baseball’s rankings at No. 1. The Tar Heels were also No. 1 in this week’s USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll and are the No. 5 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. Alabama is ranked No. 20 in the Coaches Poll, up one spot from last week.

Baseball America, Perfect Game ranking for Alabama

Baseball America and Perfect Game did not unveil new rankings after conference tournaments. In the most recent Baseball America poll on May 19, Alabama was ranked No. 18 following the regular season. The Crimson Tide were No. 20 in Perfect Game and No. 16 in The Athletic’s rankings.

Alabama’s regional schedule

The Crimson Tide, the No. 2 seed in the Hattiesburg Regional, opens the 2025 NCAA Tournament against No. 3 seed Miami at Pete Taylor Park Friday. First pitch is scheduled for 2 p.m. CT. The game can be seen on ESPN2. As the higher seed, Alabama will be the designated home team against Miami.

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After Alabama-Miami, Southern Miss will face No. 4 seed Columbia at 6 p.m.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama Crimson Tide news, notes and opinion.

This article originally appeared on Roll Tide Wire: Alabama baseball’s ranking in Top 25 poll entering NCAA Tournament





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