NIL
Press Box
Before Saturday, if you knew the name Nico Iamaleava, you were either: • A Tennessee football fan. • A passing knowledge of Southeastern Conference football. So I’m not sure if many of us had heard much about him. But after Saturday, Iamaleava is the face of current college football as the quarterback has left Tennessee […]


Before Saturday, if you knew the name Nico Iamaleava, you were either:
• A Tennessee football fan.
• A passing knowledge of Southeastern Conference football.
So I’m not sure if many of us had heard much about him. But after Saturday, Iamaleava is the face of current college football as the quarterback has left Tennessee after an NIL (name, image and likeness) dispute and will enter the transfer portal when it opens Wednesday.
So who exactly is Iamaleava?
He was the No. 2 quarterback and a five-star high school recruit in the 2023 class behind Arch Manning, who went to Texas. Tennessee got Iamaleava out of Southern California, reportedly with a deal worth around $8 million, or approximately $2 million per season.
Last fall, Iamaleva started 13 games for the Volunteers. He completed just less than 64 percent of his passes for 2,614 yards and 19 touchdowns to go along with five interceptions. In the seven SEC games against teams that aren’t named Vanderbilt, Iamaleva threw for five touchdowns.
Those aren’t stats that make me think that’s a $2 million quarterback, but to be fair, Iamaleava did lead Tennessee to 10 wins and a spot in the expanded College Football Playoff. And with one year of experience, that $2 million to be spent this fall could look like a bargain as a down payment for the the potential that could be seen on the field this fall.
Unfortunately for Tennessee, that appears to be exactly what Iamaleava and his camp/advisors/family thought as well. Iamaleava skipped practice Friday as the Volunteers finalized preparation for Saturday afternoon’s spring game and reportedly cut off communication with Tennessee coaches.
ESPN reported Friday that Iamaleva was looking for a new NIL package worth around $4 million each year. I’m going to guess that didn’t go over very well with the Tennessee athletic department and their people let his people know it.
And Iamaleava’s time in Tennessee was done.
“It’s the state of college football,” Tennessee coach Josh Heupel told The Vol Network on Saturday. “At the end of the day, no one is ever bigger than the program. That includes me, too. We’ve got an opportunity. We’ve got a bunch of guys that will give their all for Tennessee.”
In the time of NIL and having people to make your deals, it wouldn’t be a big surprise that after Tennessee said no to $4 million, some other school’s people said to Iamaleava’s people they just might find that acceptable. That despite the fact the transfer portal doesn’t open, remember, until Wednesday.
Among the schools rumored to be in the hunt for Iamaleava’s services are UCLA and USC, so the quarterback could be returning home. But do the Bruins or the Trojans have the money? Are they willing to take the potential black eye of signing a player who just bolted from his team?
Who am I kidding? It’s the availability of money.
That black eye would clear up the first time Iamaleava led the team to a victory. Winning cures everything.
The Volunteers were left to play a redshirt freshman and a true freshman to play quarterback Saturday in their spring game. So it looks like they might be in a bit of trouble behind center this fall.
But before we start to feel too much sympathy for the predicament Iamaleava has left the Volunteers’ football program in, remember this. As Heupel said, “We’ve got an opportunity.”
I’m sure Tennessee has people who can talk to people in the next couple of days and I wouldn’t be shocked if sometime in the next week or so, the Volunteers have found themselves a veteran starting quarterback in the portal that may not have entered this weekend with a plan to leave his current school. But money talks.
It’s the cycle of life in modern day college football and like it or not, it’s not going anywhere.
NIL
Middle Tennessee falls to NM State 5-4
Next Game: at New Mexico State 4/26/2025 | 5 PM Apr. 26 (Sat) / 5 PM at New Mexico State History LAS CRUCES, N.M. — Middle Tennessee softball suffered a defeat to the NM State Aggies on Friday, April 25 in game one of the series. The score was 5-4. […]

LAS CRUCES, N.M. — Middle Tennessee softball suffered a defeat to the NM State Aggies on Friday, April 25 in game one of the series. The score was 5-4.
The Blue Raiders (23-25, 10-12) led for much of the game vs. the Aggies (23-24, 10-12), but failed to hold the lead in the sixth and seventh innings. Middle Tennessee jumped out to a 1-0 lead on an Addy Edgmon RBI double that scored Ava Tepe, before Macie Harter drove Edgmon home on an RBI single to bring the score to 2-0.
MTSU added on to the lead in the fifth inning with another RBI from Macie Harter, her 10th of the season. In the sixth inning, Ava Brooks ripped another RBI single past the second basemen to score Lilly Pendergrast. The Aggies then scored three runs in the bottom of the inning before scoring two more in the bottom of the seventh to end the game.
By the Numbers
- 22: Addy Edgmon leads the team with 22 extra-base hits after tallying two doubles today.
- 38: Ava Tepe was hit by the 38th pitch of her career, setting a new program record.
Up next
The Blue Raiders will take on the Aggies for game two tomorrow at 5:00 pm CT. The game will be streamed on ESPN+ and live stats will be available at Stat Broadcast.
FOLLOW THE BLUE RAIDERS
Follow Middle Tennessee Softball on social media on Facebook (Blue Raider Softball), Twitter (MT_Softball) and Instagram (@mt_softball).
NIL
University of Memphis
BOCA RATON, Fla. – Memphis (17-31, 4-18 AAC) softball dropped the opening game of its series against RV Florida Atlantic (39-9, 18-4 AAC), 24-2, Friday evening at Joan Joyce Field. “I was proud of Drue Thomas for competing and coming up with a big first-inning home run,” said head coach Trena Prater. “You have to […]

“I was proud of Drue Thomas for competing and coming up with a big first-inning home run,” said head coach Trena Prater. “You have to tip your hat to FAU for taking advantage of our mistakes. We have to be better in the circle; we walked and hit too many batters. We have to find a way to keep the ball in the park and play error-free defense. We have to want it every pitch, offensively and defensively.”
HOW IT HAPPENED
- The Tigers established a lead in their fourth at-bat of the contest, as Drue Thomas sent a shot to left field for a two-run home run.
- Florida Atlantic regained the lead in the bottom half of the frame, bringing nine runs home on just three hits.
- The first run for FAU came on a fielder’s choice with a defensive error.
- The next three runs came around on bases-loaded walks.
- Kylie Hammonds recorded FAU’s first hit of the contest in her second at-bat, as the Owls batted around in the first.
- Kylie Channell followed up with a single that brought two more runs home.
- A close play with a fielding error on a ball hit by Jesiana Mora brought Channell home for the ninth run of the inning.
- An infield single legged out by Destiny Johns scored Mora for FAU’s 10th run.
- The Owls added a run in the second inning on an RBI double by Kylie Hammonds.
- FAU tallied four runs in the third inning.
- Jesiana Mora began the bottom of the third inning with a solo home run.
- An RBI single by Destiny Johns followed by a two-run home run by Bella Cimino gave FAU a 15-2 lead.
- In the bottom of the fourth inning, the Owls put up seven more runs.
- Emily Ching hit a two-RBI double to right center in the bottom of the fourth inning to give the Owls a 15-run lead.
- Ching had entered as a defensive replacement during the previous inning.
- An infield single off the bat of Bella Cimino brought home Florida Atlantic’s third run of the inning.
- Corin Dammeier recorded an RBI single in the next at-bat, scoring Abby Ota.
- Ota had also entered as a defensive replacement.
- An RBI fielder’s choice off the bat of Yani Guzman, who entered as a pinch hitter, made the score 20-2 in favor of FAU.
- Kylie Channell brought in her second and third RBI of the game with a single to left field.
- Emily Ching recorded her second hit on a two-RBI single.
- Ching finished the inning with two hits and four RBI.
- Emily Ching hit a two-RBI double to right center in the bottom of the fourth inning to give the Owls a 15-run lead.
- Memphis was sent down in order to end the game.
NOTABLES
- FAU’s 10-run first inning stands as the highest single-inning run total allowed by the Tigers this season.
- The 22-run margin of defeat is tied for the largest in program history.
- It is tied with a 22-0 loss to Wichita State during the 2022 season.
- All four of Memphis’ pitchers appeared in the contest with Taniyah Brown taking the loss, moving to 4-6 on the season.
- Drue Thomas finished with a 1-for-2 performance, hitting a two-run home run for Memphis’ only runs of the game.
- Ariel Davis recorded Memphis’ only other hit of the evening, going 1-for-1 with a sacrifice bunt.
- Kennedy Semien reached on a walk and scored on Thomas’s home run in the first inning.
- Zoe Adebayo‘s six-game streak of reaching base is snapped after failing to reach in two at-bats.
UP NEXT
The Tigers look to rebound in game two of the series tomorrow at 1 p.m. CST. The game will be broadcast on ESPN+.
HOW TO FOLLOW THE TIGERS
For complete information on Memphis Tigers Softball, visit www.GoTigersGo.com and follow the team’s social media channels on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook.
NIL
SB Drops Game Two Against BYU, 4-3
By Jerry Hill Baylor Bear Insider WACO, Texas – Twice in the final innings, Baylor softball was poised to close out BYU and clinch a huge series win Friday night at Getterman Stadium. But the Bears “let it slip away,” giving up two runs each in the sixth and seventh inning in falling […]

Baylor Bear Insider
WACO, Texas – Twice in the final innings, Baylor softball was poised to close out BYU and clinch a huge series win Friday night at Getterman Stadium.
But the Bears “let it slip away,” giving up two runs each in the sixth and seventh inning in falling to the Cougars, 4-3, to split the first two games of a crucial three-game series.
After freshman Karynton Dawson hit a two-run home run in the bottom of the sixth to put Baylor (24-24, 9-11) back on top, 3-2, the Cougars (30-13, 12-8) answered again with a 2-spot in the top of the seventh off Lillie Walker (10-8).
“We had opportunities earlier, I thought, that we didn’t take advantage of. But honestly, I never felt comfortable, because I know what they do,” Baylor coach Glenn Moore said. “They never throw the towel in. . . . I thought we played our hearts out and certainly answered with KD’s home run, but we came out on the short end.”
That’s a tough pill to swallow for a team with its NCAA Tournament hopes on the line, coming into the weekend with its RPI ranking at No. 55. BYU is on the bubble as well at No. 46, even before Thursday’s 2-0 loss in the series opener.
“That’s what’s so disappointing is you get that close to knocking one more (win) out of the way and let it slip away,” Moore said. “There’s a lot of people that think the winner of this series is going to be the final team taken from the Big 12. I think there’s too much to happen between now and then to make that decision . . . but this is a huge series for both of us.”
Baylor freshman Sadie Ross took a no-hitter into the fifth inning, retiring the first 13 batters she faced before giving up a one-out single up the middle by Keila Kamoku. With a pair of runners in scoring position after a two-base error, Ross got out of it when Bre Thomas lined out to first to end the inning.
No such luck in the sixth.
This time, Walker came out of the bullpen with runners at second and third and nobody out. She got the lead runner at home on a grounder to short, but Lindy Milkowski delivered a game-tying RBI single to right and Kamoku gave BYU its first lead of the series with a sac fly to right.
“I guess that’s the sad part of what happened here today,” Moore said. “This would have been another marquee win for (Ross). She pitched well enough to get the win, and we couldn’t hang on to it for her. But certainly, it’s promising to see her do this against good hitters.”
In the bottom of the sixth, cleanup hitter Turiya Coleman reached on a one-out bunt single and went all the way around to third on a throwing error by the catcher.
“She’s a power hitter, a great hitter, and you don’t expect it out of that type of hitter,” Moore said of Coleman, who had a pair of bunt singles in Thursday’s 2-0 win. “But she’s been doing it for so long, I don’t know how it surprises people. It was a good bunt. She’ll catch you sleeping, for sure.”
Dawson followed a hit that traveled a few feet in front of the plate with a towering two-run shot down the rightfield line that traveled 213 feet for her second home run of the season.
“It felt great, honestly, to do it on Senior Weekend for my seniors,” Dawson said. “I’m just doing what I can to help them, because they’ve helped me.”
Staked to a 3-2 lead and facing the bottom of the order in the seventh, Walker was in prime position to pick up her second win of the weekend and 11th of the season. But the Cougars loaded the bases with nobody out on a pair of hits and a walk, scoring the tying run when Hailey Morrow was hit by a pitch.
Freshman Ilove’a Brittingham is still hitless for the weekend, going 0-for-5, but she came through with a sacrifice fly to right that scored Miranda Mansfield with the go-ahead run.
“I think Lillie’s been carrying us for so long, to beat her up over one bad outing for a couple of innings wouldn’t be fair to her,” Moore said. “I just like to give credit to what adjustments they made for her. Certainly, it changes the whole look whenever you bring her in from the left side and the lower velocity. So, I just tip my hat more so to what they did than what she didn’t do.”
Baylor freshman Faith Piper, who was 3-for-3 for the night, gave the Bears a chance in the bottom of the seventh with a one-out double to the gap in left-center field. She moved up to third on a fly to right by Presleigh Pilon, but Kaysen Korth picked up her fifth save when she retired Brooklyn Carter on a grounder to first base.
The Bears will try to bounce back in Saturday’s 12 p.m. series finale, when 11 seniors will be recognized in a postgame ceremony.
“Every game is big at this point,” Dawson said, “so we’re going to come out ready to go.”
WACO, Texas – Baylor Softball dropped game two of the three-game series against BYU, 4-3, Friday night at Getterman Stadium. The Bears are now 24-24 on the season and 9-11 in Big 12 play.
THE RUNDOWN
Sadie Ross started the game in the circle retiring the first 13 Cougars of the game before allowing a hit in the top of the fifth inning.
The Bears tried to threaten early after Shaylon Govan walked in the first and Abi Flores singled in the second but that would be it until the third when the Bears struck first.
After a leadoff double from Faith Piper in the bottom of the third, Presleigh Pilon moved her to third on a sacrifice bunt. Brooklyn Carter then laced a single up the middle to bring home Piper and give Baylor the 1-0 advantage.
With its first hit of the game in the top of the fourth, BYU threatened with runners on second and third after a single and a Baylor fielding error, but the Bears were able to work out of the jam.
BYU battled back in the top of the sixth, after capitalizing on a hit batter, a walk and a couple of hits to go ahead 2-1.
In the bottom half of the sixth, Turiya Coleman laid down a bunt to put one on for Karynton Dawson who launched her second home run of the season over the wall in right center to put Baylor back up 3-2.
Continuing the lead changes, BYU plated two runs on a double and bases loaded hit-by-pitch in the top half of the last inning to again put the Cougars on top, 4-3.
Baylor tried to tie things up in the bottom of the seventh when Piper roped a one-out double to the wall in left centerfield before moving to third on a fly out but an unassisted groundout ended the Bears’ chance at the comeback.
HIGHLIGHTS
- The Bears out-hit the Cougars 7-5
- Faith Piper went 3-for-3 at the plate with two doubled and a run scored
- Four other Bears recorded hits
- Karynton Dawson hit her second home run of the season, a two-run shot
- Brooklyn Carter picked up an RBI
- Shaylon Govan drew two walks
- Sadie Ross pitched five scoreless innings, only allowing two hits
- BYU evened the three-game series 1-1
- The Cougars now hold the all-time record over the Bears 6-5
UP NEXT
The Bears will face BYU for game three of the three-game series Saturday, April 26 at 12 p.m. at Getterman Stadium.
– BaylorBears.com –
NIL
No. 25 Owls Set Run Record in Series Opener
Next Game: Memphis 4/26/2025 | 2 p.m. ESPN+ Apr. 26 (Sat) / 2 p.m. Memphis History BOCA RATON, Fla. – In a historic offensive showing, the No. 25 Florida Atlantic softball team set a program record in runs with a 24-2 victory over Memphis to open its final […]

BOCA RATON, Fla. – In a historic offensive showing, the No. 25 Florida Atlantic softball team set a program record in runs with a 24-2 victory over Memphis to open its final home series of the 2025 season on Friday evening.
The Owls (38-9, 18-4) exploded out of the gate with 10 runs in the bottom of the first inning and did not let up, culminating with nine additional runs in the fourth to break the school’s record that stood for 30 years.
After falling behind 2-0 in the top of the first, junior pitcher Autumn Courtney and senior Gabby Sacco combined to keep the Tigers (17-31, 4-18) scoreless the rest of the way.
The Tigers began the outing with a two-run home run in the game’s opening frame before Courtney recorded her second strikeout to retire the side.
In what has become a common occurrence, redshirt sophomore outfielder Kylie Hammonds recorded a leadoff walk for the first of 15 plate appearances in the bottom of the first inning. With a single to second base, junior third baseman Jesiana Mora logged the game’s first RBI. Four consecutive walks loaded the bases to bring in three more runs.
Back-to-back hits from Hammonds and sophomore shortstop Kiley Channell brought home four. Freshman Destiny Johns logged the last hit of the inning, scoring Mora for the second time to put double digits on the board.
The Owls added a run off an RBI double from Hammonds in the bottom of the second.
Bats then returned in the third frame with homers from Mora and sophomore Bella Cimino to give FAU their season high of 15 runs.
With the run-rule already in reach, Florida Atlantic kept their foot on the gas in the bottom of the fourth, with 12 consecutive base runners to open the inning. Several freshman Owls received opportunities off the bench, most notably Emilie Ching who launched a double to right center field for her first career hit to score two.
A two-run single from Channell put 22 on the board, breaking the previous record of 20. FAU added the final two runs with Ching’s second hit of the inning. The defense went one-two-three in the top of the fifth to put the history-making game officially in the record books.
Coach Clark after a record-breaking night#WIP
pic.twitter.com/4KoTu8RUGx
— Florida Atlantic Softball (@FAUSoftball) April 26, 2025
- Florida Atlantic now has six run-rule wins in American Athletic Conference play and 12 during the season, the most since its debut campaign in 1995.
- 17 total hits by the Owls are the most in a game by the team since 2015.
- Mora tied the single-game program record with five runs. She also takes the team’s lead in home runs on the season with eight and added two stolen bases to remain a perfect 16-for-16 in attempts.
- 11 different FAU batters recorded an RBI, led by Ching with four. Hammonds, Channell, and Cimino each had three.
- Hammonds has reached base in 17 consecutive games and 44 out of 48 appearances in 2025.
- Courtney had five strikeouts in three innings of work and is up to 144 total on the season, upping her AAC lead to 34 more than second place.
Game two’s first pitch is scheduled for Saturday at 2 p.m. on ESPN+.
For the Owls’ complete schedule, click HERE. To follow the team socially, visit @fausoftball, or for the most up-to-date information, go to www.fausports.com.
NIL
If GSR Arena is built, Nevada basketball dreaming big. Final Four big
Nevada Sports Net columnist Chris Murray is known to be a bit wordy, so we’re giving him 1,000 words (but no more than that) every Friday to share his thoughts from the week that was in the world of sports. * STEVE ALFORD APPROACHED the podium where Alex Meruelo was standing inside Lawlor Events Center […]

Nevada Sports Net columnist Chris Murray is known to be a bit wordy, so we’re giving him 1,000 words (but no more than that) every Friday to share his thoughts from the week that was in the world of sports.
* STEVE ALFORD APPROACHED the podium where Alex Meruelo was standing inside Lawlor Events Center this week to add his thoughts on the proposed Grand Sierra Resort Arena where his Nevada basketball team would play. Alford said the Wolf Pack needed the facility “desperately,” adding it was a case of survival for Nevada athletics as it tries to keep up in the increasingly expensive game of college athletics. Alford said he’s been in constant conversation about the facility project with Meruelo, the GSR’s owner. “I’ve had a crazy amount of talks with him and he’s about undefeated, he’s about national championships; I love that,” Alford said as the 50 people in attendance laughed. “That’s all true,” Meruelo chimed in.
* THE EXPECTATIONS WEREN’T set quite so high by university president Brian Sandoval, who speaking a couple minute earlier, said the Final Four was a goal, perhaps half-jokingly. Obviously, this trio, plus the others who spoke, were selling the vision and the potential. They had to aim high painting that vision. Nevada basketball has had great teams before but never gotten past the Sweet 16, the level it reached in 2004 and again in 2018. Since Alford took over six years ago, the Wolf Pack has twice reached the NCAA Tournament but not advanced, March being a painful month for Nevada fans during his tenure thus far. Could a new state-of-the-art $435 million arena change that?
* NEVADA MEN’S BASKETBALL has settled in as a good-but-not-championship-level Mountain West program post-Eric Musselman, going 113-75 overall and 61-48 in league under Alford with two 20-win seasons in six years. It’s harder now than ever before to win at the mid-major level with unprecedented transfers and unlimited name, image and likeness payments. If you have a great basketball player at a school like Nevada enjoy him for one season because that’s how long you’ll have him. Mid-major schools like Nevada need something that separates it. This arena, if built, could be a much needed spark for the program, which the Wolf Pack and this community have poured more money and emotional investment into than any other.
* THE DILEMMA — and there’s always a dilemma — is the public-money request. GSR Arena will only be built, the resort has said, if it gets $68 million in tax-increment financing toward phase one’s $786 million price tag (the arena alone is estimated at $435 million). That’s a 9 percent public subsidy of the total cost. That’s a reasonable ask when looking at the funding models of other arena/stadium builds in Nevada. Of course, Meruelo is a billionaire who a year ago this month sold his NHL team back to the league for $1 billion. Would I like to see him use that money to build this arena with no public money? Yes. Does it pencil out for Reno if he does get that TIF funding? Almost certainly. We’ll see if that handout is approved May 7.
* ASSUMING IT IS and the arena is built, Nevada basketball could become a West Coast juggernaut again like it was under Trent Johnson/Mark Fox and again under Musselman. And it’s not just because of the arena. Meruelo was one of the Wolf Pack’s early investors in NIL and remains so, helping to bankroll Nevada basketball’s player salaries (let’s be real, that’s what NIL is). If the team played on his property, that NIL money should only increase. He’d want a great team playing in a great arena and be wise to pay for such a team if he’s asking for undefeated national championship seasons. Imagine what could happen if he and a couple other boosters funded a $5 million-per-year roster. The Final Four doesn’t seem as outlandish.
* MERUELO SAID DURING that meeting with Wolf Pack boosters this week that basketball was his “first love,” and he did once try and buy the Atlanta Hawks before that deal fell apart, which has been the story of his life at the big-league professional level. With the Coyotes now sold, Meruelo could go all-in from a sports perspective on the Wolf Pack as well as his American Hockey League team, currently in Tucson and slated to move to Reno if GSR Arena is built. Meruelo could put his full sports focus, financially and emotionally, on the Wolf Pack. While I’m not saying that will happen, one big-time donor can push a program a far distance if so inclined.
* THIS IS WHY I’ve argued NIL is not a death sentence for college athletics or mid-majors. Fans of those schools are upset because they continually lose players. But don’t blame the players for wanting to maximize their market value. Blame the schools for not being able to produce the revenue to keep players. Schools that tap into that revenue can become really good, really fast. The dream, if you’re a Nevada basketball fan, is this arena is built and there’s a billionaire backer attached who will do what it takes and is incentivized to achieve a Final Four dream. Will this all happen? We don’t know. But the combination of the arena and an NIL benefactor is tantalizing.
* THE WOLF PACK’S who’s who was at this week’s gathering at Lawlor Events Center with athletic director Stephanie Rempe calling the arena a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” Sandoval saying of the arena’s potential “this bus stops once” and Alford adding it would push the basketball program and university to another level. With Final Four dreams, this arena not being built would be a crushing blow to the Wolf Pack athletic department. Its construction wouldn’t guarantee anything in future competitiveness, but it not being built would be the same-old, same-old, and Nevada can’t afford that.
Columnist Chris Murray provides insight on Northern Nevada sports. Contact him at crmurray@sbgtv.com or follow him on Twitter @ByChrisMurray.
NIL
Central Michigan University
MOUNT PLEASANT, Mich. – Six teams get to play extra MAC softball after May 4th, and Central Michigan will be one of those teams. Team 47 has clinched a spot in the 2025 Mid-American Conference Tournament with other happenings around the league on Friday afternoon. This marks the 14th straight tournament appearance for the […]

Team 47 has clinched a spot in the 2025 Mid-American Conference Tournament with other happenings around the league on Friday afternoon. This marks the 14th straight tournament appearance for the Chippewas, and the 31st appearance of all time.
Central Michigan Softball has appeared in 31 of the 32 tournaments hosted by the Mid-American Conference since 1982.
There have been 16 tournaments where eight teams qualify, nine where six qualify, and seven where four qualify.
Most recently, in 2022 and 2023, four teams qualified and the Chippewas were one of those teams.
McCall Salmon, in her 6th year as the head coach for Central Michigan has taken the Chippewas to tournaments in the 2022, 2023, 2024 and now 2025 seasons, as there was not a tournament held in 2020 or 2021.
The second place Chippewas entertain Ohio this weekend at Margo Jonker Stadium, the first place team in the conference.
The Chippewas boast the best batting average as a team in the Mid-American Conference heading into the final stretch, their 364 hits as a team is good for 2nd in the conference, along with their 70 doubles. Central Michigan has drawn 170 walks in the 2025 season, which is the best in the conference and holds Team 47 holds best fielding percentage.
Carly Sleeman, who recently became the single season record holder for with 49 RBI in her sophomore year, ranks 1st in the conference with those 49 RBI, 2nd with a .793 slugging percentage, a 1.278 OPS, and 16 home runs, 4th with 28 drawn walks, 5th with 51 hits, and 7th with a .378 batting average.
Freshman London Williams enters the series against Ohio with the 4th best slugging percentage in the MAC, .647, and the 5th best OPS (1.080) and home run total (10).
Allyssa Hollo, who is having a breakout senior season on the offensive side of the ball, ranks 2nd in the conference with 13 doubles this season.
Maddison Diekman and Maddie Springer rank 6th with five sacrifice bunts, and Keira Tolmie’s three sacrifice flies rank her 3rd.
In the circle, CMU also holds the top ten spot in 22 different areas.
Mackenzie Langan holds the 2nd place spot with her 2.79 ERA, the 11 wins she has collected in the 2025 season is good for 4th best, a .256 batting average against and 70 strikeouts rank her 5th, and her 100.3 innings pitched are the 10th most in the conference.
The Mid-American Conference Tournament is set to be held May 7-10 at Firestone Stadium in Akron, Ohio. Six teams will make the tournament in 2025, and the No. 1 and No. 2 seeds receive a first round bye.
For the latest news and updates on CMU Softball, follow the team on X (@cmusoftball) and Instagram (@cmichsoftball).
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