NIL
HookC Battles For First Place at St. John’s
Story Links QUEENS, N.Y. – The UConn baseball team (23-17, 8-4 BIG EAST) battles for first place in the BIG EAST with a three-game set at St. John’s (20-17, 6-3 BIG EAST). The series has been altered due to inclement weather on Saturday. The series kicks off with a doubleheader on […]
QUEENS, N.Y. – The UConn baseball team (23-17, 8-4 BIG EAST) battles for first place in the BIG EAST with a three-game set at St. John’s (20-17, 6-3 BIG EAST).
The series has been altered due to inclement weather on Saturday. The series kicks off with a doubleheader on Friday, April 25 at 1 p.m. and finishes with the series finale on Sunday, April 27 at 1 p.m.
The Huskies and Red Storm are tied atop the BIG EAST standings with Xavier (8-4) and Creighton (6-3).
UConn enters the series riding a season-long 10-game win streak after defeating UMass and Army in the midweek.
The UConn pitching staff ranks 31st in the country with 9.9 strikeouts per nine this season. The last five games the UConn pitchers have recorded double digit strikeout efforts with 17 total games this year. 11 UConn pitchers have more strikeouts than innings pitched this season. Ian Cooke leads the Huskies with 53 strikeouts, Pudvar has 52 and Afthim has 40.
The Huskies rank 12th in the country with 100 stolen bases this season. Caleb Shpur leads the way with 30 bags, ranking eighth nationally. Sam Biller has 16 SB, Rispoli with 14, Minick with 10, Daniels with 9 and Dougherty with 8. The 100 stolen bases with 15 games to play already ranks 7th most in program history.The Huskies are averaging 2.50 stolen bases per game.
Rob Rispoli has been a spark at the top of the UConn order this season. The shortstop has been named to the Brooks Wallace Watch List, an award given to the best SS in college baseball. The redshirt freshman is hitting .324 with a team best .474 on-base percentage. The UConn SS leadd the team with 26 walks and 13 hit by pitches. He has also stolen 14 bases this year.
Ryan Daniles has had a breakout junior senior after dealing with injuries his first two seasons in Storrs. He is currently in a hot stretch with four home runs in the last three games. He registered his first career multi-homer game against Army with a two-run HR and grand slam to total a career-high six RBI. The Meriden, CT native is hitting .339 with 38 runs scored (tied for team lead), 10 doubles (leads team), two triples, eight home runs and 38 runs batted in. The infield/outfielder has a .447 OBP.
In the series finale at FAU, Daniels hit the go-ahead two-run home run in the 10th inning to lift UConn to its first win of the year. The home run was part of the first career four-hit game for the infielder/outfielder. Daniels followed up that performance with a game-tying home run against No. 14 Vanderbilt to eventually earn the Huskies a ranked win.
Sophomore Tyler Minick has already taken a big jump from his freshman to sophomore year. The Reading, Pa. native is hitting .346 batting average, 12 home runs and 41 runs batted in. The corner INF has a career-high with 18 walks and is slugging at a .692 clip. Minick recorded a multi-homer game in the series opener against Seton Hall. The sophomore already has four career grand slams with two of them this season (FAU & Creighton).
Long time Husky Bryan Padilla registered his 200th career hit with a double in the 8th inning against Creighton in the series opener. Padilla becomes the 24th Husky in programa history to reach the 200-hit mark. The Brooklyn, N.Y. native has played in 212 games with the Huskies and racked up 212 career hits including 24 home runs. The infielder has scored 139 runs, driven in 150 runs and walked 109 times.
Games Played
Chris Winkel, 2017-21 243
Billy Ferriter, 2010-2013 242
Mike Nemeth, 2008-11 241
Bobby Melley, 2013-16 241
Bryan Daniello, 2013-16 224
John Topaa, 2016-19 222
Pat Mahoney, 2005-08 217
LJ Mazzilli, 2010-13 212
Bryan Padilla, 2022-25 212
Hits
Mike Nemeth, 2008-11 331
LJ Mazzilli 2010-13 295
Bobby Melley, 2013-16. 290
Billy Ferriter 2010-13 288
George Springer, 2009-11 242
Pierre LePage, 2008-10 237
John Toppa, 2016-19 237
Dennis Donovan, 2004-07 236
Pat Mahoney, 2005-08 233
Clarke Caudill, 1997-00 232
Todd Rosenthal, 1989-92 227
Anthony Prato, 2017-19 227
Chris Winkel, 2017-21 222
Vinny Siena, 2013-15 221
Bryan Daniello, 2013-16. 212
Bryan Padilla, 2022-25 212
Walks
Sean Irey, 1991-94 143
Jack Sundberg, 2013-16 134
Mike Nemeth, 2008-11 134
Bobby Melley, 2013-16 132
George Springer, 2009-11 128
Bryan Padlla, 2022-2025 109
UConn closer Brady Afthim has been one of the top closers in the country. The RHP is ranked No. 15 by D1Baseball.com on the top 100 closers list. He has been named to the NCBWA Stopper of the Year Watch List.
Afthim has appeared in 15 games for UConn this year and is 1-1 with eight saves and leads the team with a 1.40 ERA. In 25.2 innings, the Windham, Maine native has allowed four earned run and struck out 40 batters while holding opponents to a .218 average against. The tri-captain has now appeared in 85 games, ranking 4th all-time in program history. The 16 career saves he has registered is 9th all-time.
Saves
Justin Willis, 2021-23 28
Mike James, 2001-04 22
Kevin Vance, 2009-11 21
Patrick Ruotolo, 2014-16 20
David Erickson, 2005-09 20
Jacob Wallace, 2017-19 19
Matt Karl, 2005-08 18
P.J. Poulin, 2016-18 16
Brady Afthim, 2022-2025 14
Appearances
Dan Feehan, 2010-13. 96
David Erickson, 2005-09 87
CJ Dandeneau, 2016-19 87
Brady Afthim, 2022-2025 85
Ian Cooke has struggled to start his 2025 campaign but the 2024 BIG EAST Pitcher of the Year has looked strong in seven relief appearance. The New Milford, Conn. native has pitched 20.0 innings, allowed three earned runs, walked five and struck out batters. Cooke closed out the middle game of the series at Xavier with 3.0 shutout innings to earn his first save of the year. In BIG EAST play, Cooke has recorded three saves and one win with all four of those outings lasting 3.0 innings or more. The senior has logged 200.2 career innings and recorded 15 wins on the mound for the Huskies. He currently has 231 strikeouts, ranking sixth in program history.
Strikeouts
Mason Feole, 2017-19 278
Tim Cate, 2016-18 270
Anthony Kay, 2014-16 263
Ian Cooke, 2022-2025 252
RHP Sean Finn has become a back end of the bullpen piece for the Huskies this season. The RHP leads the team with five wins in 13 appearances and four starts. The Warrington, Pa. product has a 3.10 ERA in 20.1 innings and struck out 31 while holding opponents to a .200 batting average against.
Against Seton Hall, Finn earned a pair of wins out of the bullpen to help the Huskies sweep the series. He combined for 5.1 innings with just two hits, 0 earned runs and struck out 11.
Greg Shaw III has been another Manhattan transfer (Pudvar) that has made his impact felt in his first season in Storrs. The RHP leads the staff with 19 appearances and has a 4.11 ERA. In 35.0 innings, he has 31 strikeouts and held opponents to a .233 batting average against. Shaw earned his first save as a Husky by closing out the series finale at UNC Greensboro and earned his first win with 3.0 innings of work at Boston College.
CF Caleb Shpur has been one of the best CF’s in the country according to defensive runs saved. The East Canaan, CT native is third amongst CF’s with 9.70 defensive runs saved this season.
The UConn outfielder also leads the team and the BIG EAST Conference with 30 stolen bases after stealing 26 bases a year ago. The 30 stolen bases is 8th in the nation and is also climbing the single-season list for most stolen bases in a UConn single season.
Stolen Bases
Dennis Dwyer, 1993………….. 40
David Smith, 2023……………. 39
Dennis Dwyer, 1994………….. 39
Nick Ahmed, 2010 ……………. 34
Billy Ferriter, 2010 ……………. 33
Jack Sundberg, 2015 ………… 33
George Springer, 2010 ………. 33
George Springer, 2011 ………. 31
Jon Gorrie, 2002 ……………… 31
Brian Specyalski, 1989………. 31
Caleb Shpur, 2025……………. 30
NIL
Athletic programs’ culture more important than ever | News, Sports, Jobs
While waiting for the House v. NCAA settlement to conclude, I, like many other college football fans, had to finally accept that the amateurism model, in place for over a century, has come to an end. The settlement ruling, which has been five years in the making, results from the 2020 class-action antitrust lawsuit filed […]

While waiting for the House v. NCAA settlement to conclude, I, like many other college football fans, had to finally accept that the amateurism model, in place for over a century, has come to an end.
The settlement ruling, which has been five years in the making, results from the 2020 class-action antitrust lawsuit filed by Arizona State swimmer Grant House and Texas Christian University women’s basketball player Sedona Prince, along with other student-athletes.
I found it particularly interesting that the lawsuit was led by House and Prince, who do not participate in the top revenue-producing sports.As a swimmer, House participates in an Olympic sport, and swimming, along with sports like tennis and golf, will not benefit as much from the $20.5 million that schools will be allowed to share with athletes.
Women’s Division I basketball does generate a respectable profit, with NCAA figures for the 2019 season calculated at $600 million, and the NCAA will begin paying women’s teams “performance units” for their participation in the tourney for the upcoming season, with $15 million being awarded. The units will increase to $20 million for the 2026-27 season, then jump to $25 million the following year. Schools will receive payments on a continuous three-year basis in 2026. Men’s basketball teams have profited from performance units since 1991, and the men’s tournament brought in over $900 million for the 2024-25 season. Schools will continue to rake in millions of dollars from March Madness and the expanded College Football Playoff, but with the $20.5 million cap that will be split among student-athletes, the lion’s share of these profits will go to the major money-making sports of football and men’s basketball in the Power Four conferences, although female basketball stars like the University of Southern California’s JuJu Watkins and Louisiana State University’s Flau’jae Johnson should also see their earnings rise. Stars in these sports will continue to prosper financially from lucrative name, image and likeness deals made possible by the 2021 NCAA v. Alston ruling.
Athletes who played before the Alston decision will be compensated back to 2016, as U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken approved a whopping $2.8 billion — which will be disbursed within 10 years — to reimburse those who competed before the current NIL era. As a Buckeye fan and alumna, I was very sorry that the stars of Ohio State’s 2014 national championship football team will not be able to cash in on their past laurels. I can only imagine the millions Cardale Jones, our third-string quarterback who led us to the title, would have made from his storybook run. Wideout Braxton Miller would have sold thousands of T-shirts with his signature spin move from his breathtaking performance against Virginia Tech that season. I’m sure many college athletes who won championships before 2016 are pondering what could have been if they had been allowed to accept endorsements. The House ruling will permit colleges and universities to pay student-athletes starting July 1, and as this next phase begins, the newly formed College Sports Commission will oversee NIL transactions and enforce new rules for the Power Four conferences. One significant benefit of the commission’s oversight is that it will be able to determine if athletes are seeking much more from university collectives than what their market value says they are worth, and many football coaches are hoping for a change to the transfer portal, which is currently open twice a year.
Knowing that the House settlement was inevitable, I have mixed feelings about this new era of college sports that continues to evolve. While I believe athletes should be paid fairly, direct payments from schools and NIL will take some focus away from academics and personal development. I continue to assert that the culture in athletic programs will now be more important than ever, and smaller schools probably have an advantage here in that NIL deals and revenue sharing will not be massive for their student-athletes.
NIL
New State Law Gives LSU Tigers Leg Up In Revenue Sharing
© Kirby Lee/Imagn Audio By Carbonatix As we move into the revenue sharing era of college sports, schools are getting more creative to find ways to generate more income. For some schools, that includes working with the state legislature, as is the case with a new law in Lousiana. Alex Schiffer of Front Office Sports reports that the state […]


© Kirby Lee/Imagn

Audio By Carbonatix
As we move into the revenue sharing era of college sports, schools are getting more creative to find ways to generate more income. For some schools, that includes working with the state legislature, as is the case with a new law in Lousiana.
Alex Schiffer of Front Office Sports reports that the state of Lousiana is set to raise taxes on sports betting in order to distribute additional funds to its 11 state-sponsored universities, including the LSU Tigers.
The new bill, which must first be signed by governor Jeff Landry, is expected to raise more than $24 million. Landry is a Louisiana-Lafayette graduate but seemingly a big fan of the Tigers. Last football season, Landry backed a push to return a live tiger to the sidelines of games in Tiger Stadium.
LSU Tigers Set To Land Major Pay Day Thanks To New Louisiana Sports Gambling Tax
According to Schiffer, the new bill stands to raise the state’s 15% tax on online betting profits to 21.5%.
Additionally, “A quarter of the tax revenue, estimated to bring in $24.3 million, would be split evenly among the state’s 11 public universities that play in Division I football conferences. The money won’t be used for direct NIL payments
“Instead, it must be used for ‘for the benefit of student athletes,’ which includes scholarships, facility enhancements, and insurance, among other uses. The money could help free up other resources within the athletic department as schools adjust their books for revenue sharing.”
Meanwhile, the Tigers have emerged as one of the strong NIL players in college football. On3 Sports, led by five-star wide receiver Tristen Keys, currently ranks LSU’s 2026 class No. 2 in the country. Keys recently inked a lucrative NIL deal with Adidas, which is interesting given LSU’s current apparel deal with competitor Nike. Especially given the fact that Keys took a weekend visit to Tennessee, which is rumored to move from Nike to Adidas following the 2025-26 academic year.
NIL
Diego Pavia details how NIL offers have changed throughout college career
Diego Pavia has seen the NIL era of college football grow into what it is today as one of the biggest beneficiaries of it. The Vanderbilt quarterback has an estimated valuation of $1.6 million according to On3, making money that was unimaginable to college athletes only a few years ago. Even he wasn’t always raking […]


Diego Pavia has seen the NIL era of college football grow into what it is today as one of the biggest beneficiaries of it. The Vanderbilt quarterback has an estimated valuation of $1.6 million according to On3, making money that was unimaginable to college athletes only a few years ago.
Even he wasn’t always raking in that kind of cash in the early days of NIL. Pavia began his college career at the JUCO level in 2020, before NIL laws had even been passed. It wasn’t until he arrived at New Mexico State in 2022, one year after the first season of NIL, that he got his first deal.
But, as he explained in an appearance on the Bussin’ with the Boys podcast, that was paltry compared to what he was pulling in now. Despite starting eight of 12 games for the Aggies in the 2022 season, Pavia wasn’t even the highest paid player on his own team.
“First crack in the NIL game I was getting paid $1,400 at New Mexico State per month and I was pissed because Eli Stowers was getting paid $3,000 a month and he played tight end and I played quarterback,” Pavia said. “I’m like, ‘Man, f*** that. I need to go harder.’ It all worked itself out.”
Pavia found his form over the back half of his first season at New Mexico State, setting him up to enter 2023 as the clear starter. He would go on to throw for 2,973 yards and 26 touchdowns to nine interceptions while also rushing for 923 yards and seven scores.
The Aggies finished 10-5 that season and Pavia saw the dividends from his big year in the transfer portal. He was not only being offered a monthly pay that was in the six figures range, but gifts in addition to the payments as well.
“Coming from that $1,400 to these others schools were offering my like a car, houses and big time money. It’s like, ‘Holy sh*t,’” Pavia said. “…I would have stayed at New Mexico State for $100,000. Then at Vandy, the quarterback they just brought in, they paid him way over $100,000 and they offered me $150,000, but I didn’t know that. I’m going from $1,400 to $150,000? I’m like, ‘Sign me up.’ So that’s how I took it last year.”
There was some question of whether Pavia would have any eligibility remaining for 2025 because he had played five seasons already. However, the NCAA ruled to grant a waiver to players that did not count their JUCO seasons against eligibility, opening the door for him to play one more year.
Now he’ll get to continue reaping the benefits of NIL as he looks to lead Vanderbilt to its first ever College Football Playoff appearance. But even with all the money coming in, he has been smart with his finances thanks to his family and resources at the school.
“Vanderbilt does a good job of bringing in ex-players or alumni that are big-time people who work in the business. They come back and tell us about (financial literacy). We have probably 8-9 meetings on it. ..,I give it all to my mom and she handles it. So I’ve never touched a dime of my NIL.”
NIL
Ole Miss baseball transfer portal tracker
OXFORD, Miss. (WLBT) – Ole Miss baseball fell short after its loss to Murray State in the Oxford Regional earlier this month, but head coach Mike Bianco has already made some moves to improve the roster for the 2026 season. Who has transferred to Ole Miss so far? LHP Junior Grant Richardson (Grand Canyon) Richardson […]


OXFORD, Miss. (WLBT) – Ole Miss baseball fell short after its loss to Murray State in the Oxford Regional earlier this month, but head coach Mike Bianco has already made some moves to improve the roster for the 2026 season.
Who has transferred to Ole Miss so far?
LHP Junior Grant Richardson (Grand Canyon)
Richardson missed the 2025 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery.
In 2024, he came out of the bullpen for his first six appearances of the season and then started his final eight games.
He finished that season with a 5-1 record with a 3.73 ERA. He struck out 70 batters against 30 walks in 50.2 innings as a sophomore.
OF Junior Daniel Pacella (Illinois State)
Pacella had an impressive junior season with the Redbirds, earning an All-MVC First-Team selection.
He started all 56 games in 2025, finishing the year with a .355 batting average with 20 home runs, two triples, 19 doubles, and 59 RBIs.
OF Junior Tristan Bissetta (Clemson)
The 2025 season was cut short for Bissetta due to injury, but he still managed to finish with a .227 batting average with three home runs, two doubles, and 16 RBIs in just 31 games.
LHP Freshman Wil Libbert (Missouri)
Libbert is coming off his redshirt-freshman season with the Tigers, where he threw more innings than any pitcher for Missouri in the 2025 season.
He finished the season with a 6.04 ERA with 55 strikeouts against 33 walks in 53.2 innings pitched.
Who has transferred out of Ole Miss so far?
LHP Junior Ryne Rodriguez
RHP Sophomore Cole Ketchum
C Sophomore Campbell Smithwick
OF Senior Connor Chisolm
OF Freshman Jackson Miller
RHP Freshman Hudson Mattox
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Louisiana is poised to hike its sports betting tax to help colleges pay their athletes
Louisiana is poised to hike taxes on sports betting to pump more than $24 million into athletic departments at the state’s most prominent public universities. Legislation pending before Gov. Jeff Landry would make Louisiana the first state to raise taxes to fund college sports since a judge approved a landmark settlement with the NCAA allowing schools to […]

Louisiana is poised to hike taxes on sports betting to pump more than $24 million into athletic departments at the state’s most prominent public universities.
Legislation pending before Gov. Jeff Landry would make Louisiana the first state to raise taxes to fund college sports since a judge approved a landmark settlement with the NCAA allowing schools to directly pay athletes for use of their name, image and likeness (NIL). Anticipating the court’s approval, Arkansas this year became the first to waive state income taxes on NIL payments made to athletes by higher education institutions.
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More states seem almost certain to adopt their own creative ways to gain an edge — or at least keep pace — in the rapidly evolving and highly competitive field of college sports.
“These bills, and the inevitable ones that will follow, are intended to make states ’college-athlete friendly,’” said David Carter, founder of the Sports Business Group consultancy and an adjunct professor at the University of Southern California. But “they will no doubt continue to stoke the debate about the `perceived’ preferential treatment afforded athletes.”
Duplantis raises his pole vault world record to 6.28 meters in front of home fans in Sweden
The new NCCA rules allowing direct payments to college athletes kick in July 1. In the first year, each Division I school can share up to $20.5 million with its athletes — a figure that may be easier to meet for big-time programs than for smaller schools weighing whether to divert money from other purposes. The settlement also continues to allow college athletes to receive NIL money from third parties, such as donor-backed collectives that support specific schools.
Louisiana bill sponsor: `We love football’
The Louisiana legislation won final approval just two days after a judge approved the antitrust settlement between the NCAA and athletes, but it had been in the works for months. Athletic directors from many of Louisiana’s universities met earlier this year and hashed out a plan with lawmakers to relieve some of their financial pressures by dividing a share of the state’s sports betting tax revenue.
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The biggest question for lawmakers was how large of a tax increase to support. The initial proposal sought to double the state’s 15% tax on net proceeds from online sports betting. But lawmakers ultimately agreed on a 21.5% tax rate in a compromise with the industry.
One-quarter of the tax revenue from online sports wagering — an estimated $24.3 million — would be split equally among 11 public universities in conferences with Division I football programs. The money must be used “for the benefit of student athletes,” including scholarships, insurance, medical coverage, facility enhancements and litigation settlement fees.
The state tax money won’t provide direct NIL payments to athletes. But it could facilitate that indirectly by freeing up other university resources.
The legislation passed overwhelmingly in the final days of Louisiana’s annual session.
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“We love football in Louisiana – that’s the easiest way to say it,” said Republican state Rep. Neil Riser, who sponsored the bill.
Smaller universities are feeling the squeeze
Many colleges and universities across the country have been feeling a financial squeeze, but it’s especially affected the athletic departments of smaller schools.
Athletic departments in the top Division I football conferences take in millions of dollars from media rights, donors, corporate sponsors and ticket sales, with a median of just 7% coming from student fees and institutional and government support, according to the Knight-Newhouse College Athletics Database.
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But the remaining schools in Division I football bowl conferences got a median of 63% of the revenue from such sources last year. And schools without football teams got a median of 81% of their athletic department revenues from institutional and governmental support or student fees.
Riser said Louisiana’s smaller universities, in particular, have been struggling financially and have shifted money from their general funds to their sports programs to try to remain competitive. At the same time, the state has taken in millions of dollars of tax revenue from sports bets made at least partly on college athletics.
“Without the athletes, we wouldn’t have the revenue. I just felt like it’s fairness that we do give something back and, at the same time, help the general funds of the universities,” Riser said.
Other states are investing in college sports
Louisiana would become the second state behind North Carolina to dedicate a portion of its sports wagering revenues to colleges athletics. North Carolina launched online sports wagering last year under a state law earmarking part of an 18% tax on gross gaming revenue to the athletic departments at 13 public universities. The state’s two largest institutions were excluded. But that might be about to change.
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Differing budget plans passed by the state House and Senate this year both would start allotting sports betting tax revenue to the athletic programs at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and North Carolina State University. The Senate version also would double the tax rate. The proposals come a year after University of North Carolina trustees approved an audit of the athletics department after a preliminary budget projected about $100 million of debt in the years ahead.
Other schools also are taking actions because of deficits in their athletic departments. Last week, University of Kentucky trustees approved a $31 million operating loan for the athletics department as it begins making direct NIL payments to athletes. That came after trustees in April voted to convert the Kentucky athletics department into a limited-liability holding company — Champions Blue LLC — to more nimbly navigate the emerging financial pressures.
Given the money involved in college athletics, it’s not surprising that states are starting to provide tax money to athletic departments or — as in Arkansas’ case — tax relief to college athletes, said Patrick Rishe, executive director of the sports business program at Washington University in St. Louis.
“If you can attract better athletes to your schools and your states, then this is more visibility to your states, this is more potential out-of-town economic activity for your state,” Rishe said. “I do think you’re going to see many states pursue this, because you don’t want to be the state that’s left exposed or at a disadvantage.”
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Gage Wood shares his mindset during no-hitter: ‘I didn’t want to go home’
The Arkansas Razorbacks didn’t plan on playing in an elimination game, but that’s where they found themselves in the College World Series after an opening loss. There, starting pitcher Gage Wood had the Razorbacks get on his back, as he went out and pitched the third no-hitter in College World Series history against Murray State […]

The Arkansas Razorbacks didn’t plan on playing in an elimination game, but that’s where they found themselves in the College World Series after an opening loss. There, starting pitcher Gage Wood had the Razorbacks get on his back, as he went out and pitched the third no-hitter in College World Series history against Murray State to stay alive.
After the game, Wood shared that he wasn’t necessarily feeling any pitcher working better than normal during warmups. Instead, his performance came from simply not wanting to get eliminated just yet.
“Don’t throw a slider,” Gage Wood said. “I throw a curveball. I throw a cutter. But, no, the only special thing was I didn’t want to go home. That’s it.”
For Gage Wood, it was one of the greatest pitching performances in the history of college baseball. He had 19 strikeouts in the no-hitter. The MLB record for strikeouts in a game is 20. Roger Clemens did it twice and Kerry Wood did it once. There are six instances of 19 strikeout games as well. Gage Wood did that while also throwing a no-hitter. In fact, he was one hit by pitch in the eighth inning away from being perfect.
After losing the perfect game, some pitchers may have been pulled with an increasing pitch count. However, Arkansas head coach Dave Van Horn explained why that wasn’t happening in the elimination game.
“I’ll be the first one to say it: There’s nothing being said or talked about our dugout whatsoever. We’re just going to let him roll,” Van Horn said. “There was no chance he was coming out after eight.”
In his career, Wood has received and will likely receive more game balls. Perhaps none will ever be as special as this one, though, and as he explained he gave it to his father to share, saying, “I said, ‘Happy late Father’s Day.’”
Next, Arkansas is set to take on either LSU or UCLA. That game was delayed part of the way through due to weather. If it ends up being LSU, the Razorbacks will be again matched with a team that has already beaten them in Omaha this season.
Gage Wood is widely regarded as a future first round pick. However, after pitching on Monday, it’s going to be a few days before he’s available for Dave Van Horn and Arkansas to use in another College World Series game. Instead, they’ll need to rely on their other arms.
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