NIL
This week on Trib HSSN for week of April 14, 2025
By: Don Rebel Sunday, April 13, 2025 | 8:44 PM Chaz Palla | TribLive Norwin’s Jake Knight scores behind Hempfield catcher Ian Kovalcik Monday, March 31, 2025 at Norwin High School. We go hopping into the midway point of the spring sports regular season filled with great egg-citement this week on the TribLive High School […]

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Sunday, April 13, 2025 | 8:44 PM
We go hopping into the midway point of the spring sports regular season filled with great egg-citement this week on the TribLive High School Sports Network.
Trib HSSN will have video and audio coverage of WPIAL baseball, softball, boys and girls lacrosse and boys volleyball.
Plus the Rebel Yell podcasts will include baseball and softball player and team of the week podcasts as well as diamond updates with a check of the baseball and softball sections Saturday, all on Trib HSSN.
Monday, April 14
Video Stream: Rebel Yell Podcast featuring WPIAL Baseball Player of the Week interview on TribHSSN.TribLive.com
Video Stream: Rebel Yell Podcast featuring WPIAL Softball Player of the Week interview on TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Canon-McMillan at Mt. Lebanon at 4:15 p.m. on the TribLive High School Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Latrobe at Franklin Regional at 4 p.m. on Westmoreland Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Allderdice at New Castle at 4 p.m. on Lawrence County Sports Net at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Connellsville at McKeesport at 3:45 p.m. on the Connellsville Falcons Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Albert Gallatin at Laurel Highlands at 4 p.m. on WMBS-AM 590, WMBS-FM 101.1 at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Apollo-Ridge at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart at 5:30 p.m. on the OLSH Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball – Central Catholic at North Allegheny at 7 p.m. on the North Allegheny Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball Video Stream – North Allegheny at Hempfield at 4 p.m. on Westmoreland Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball Video Stream – Kiski Area at Latrobe at 3:30 p.m. on LHTC Media at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball Video Stream – West Mifflin at Elizabeth Forward at 4:15 p.m. on MVI Live at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Girls Lacrosse – Shady Side Academy at North Allegheny at 7 p.m. on the North Allegheny Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
Tuesday, April 15
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – South Fayette at Upper St. Clair at 7 p.m. on the TribLive High School Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Franklin Regional at Latrobe at 7 p.m. on LHTC Media at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Elizabeth Forward at Belle Vernon at 4 p.m. on MVI Live at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Mt. Pleasant at Yough at 4 p.m. on Westmoreland Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball Video Stream – Seneca Valley at Hempfield at 4 p.m. on Westmoreland Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball Video Stream – Carlynton at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart at 5:15 p.m. on the OLSH Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Boys Lacrosse Video Stream – Norwin at Upper St. Clair at 7 p.m. on the TribLive High School Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
Wednesday, April 16
WPIAL Boys Lacrosse Video Stream – The Hill Academy (Canada) at Upper St. Clair at 7 p.m. on the TribLive High School Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball Video Stream – Butler at Norwin at 4 p.m. on Westmoreland Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball Video Stream – Steel Valley at Charleroi at 4 p.m. on MVI Live at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball – Canon-McMillan at North Allegheny at 4 p.m. on the North Allegheny Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Boys Volleyball – Penn-Trafford at North Allegheny at 7 p.m. on the North Allegheny Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
Thursday, April 17
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Woodland Hills at Norwin at 4 p.m. on Westmoreland Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Mt. Pleasant at Laurel Highlands at 4 p.m. on WMBS-AM 590, WMBS-FM 101.1 at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Girls Lacrosse Video Stream – Armstrong at Latrobe at 7:30 p.m. on LHTC Media at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
Friday, April 18
Video Stream: Rebel Yell Podcast featuring WPIAL Softball Team of the Week interview on TribHSSN.TribLive.com
Video Stream: Rebel Yell Podcast featuring WPIAL Baseball Team of the Week interview on TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball Video Stream – Chartiers-Houston at Yough at 4 p.m. on MVI Live at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Softball Video Stream – Laurel at Neshannock at 4 p.m. on Lawrence County Sports Net at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
Saturday, April 19
Video Stream: Rebel Yell Podcast with an update on the latest from the WPIAL baseball and softball fields on TribHSSN.TribLive.com
WPIAL Baseball – Penn-Trafford at North Allegheny at noon on the North Allegheny Sports Network at TribHSSN.TribLive.com
NIL
It’s time to give Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz his flowers
In a college football world driven by NIL, the transfer portal, and an ever-changing College Football Playoff landscape, constants and consistency are words that seem to have less to do with the sport ever year. The exception is Kirk Ferentz and Iowa Football. Ferentz will turn 70 years old in August and kick off his […]

In a college football world driven by NIL, the transfer portal, and an ever-changing College Football Playoff landscape, constants and consistency are words that seem to have less to do with the sport ever year.
The exception is Kirk Ferentz and Iowa Football.
Ferentz will turn 70 years old in August and kick off his 27th season at the helm of Hawkeye football just a few weeks later. Both his age and longevity are rarities in today’s game, and that longevity does not happen without a certain level of consistent success.
It’s time for us as college football fans to collectively recognize and respect what Kirk Ferentz has done.
Ferentz took over Iowa football in 1999. Bill Clinton was still in office. If you’re keeping score, we’ve had five different presidents and six different presidencies during Ferentz’s tenure in Iowa City. That alone is a solid bar room conversation starter.
In terms of actual coaching accolades, Kirk Ferentz has three Big Ten division titles and two Big Ten conference championships to his name. He was the AP and Walter Camp National Coach of the Year in 2002 and won the Bobby Dodd, Eddie Robinson, and Woody Hayes National Coach of the Year awards in 2015.
He has also won the Big Ten Coach of the Year award four times.
Ferentz has only had three losing seasons during his 26 years as Iowa’s head coach, and one of those was a result of losing a bowl game to finish with a 6-7 record. When you take out the shortened Covid season of 2020, Iowa averages just shy of 8 wins a season during his tenure. That would be an impressive run for an entire program over that span, let alone a single head coach.
Perhaps his most impressive accomplishment is turning Iowa football into an NFL factory despite its geographic recruiting advantages. Ferentz, his staff, and his system have mastered the art of player development. There are currently 38 former Iowa players on NFL rosters or in NFL camps. Of those 38 players, 20 of them were 3-star recruits according to 247 Sports. Four of them were 2-stars.
Iowa football rarely beats itself on Saturday. Instead, they sit back and wait for opponents to make a mistake. More often than not, the Hawkeyes jump all over that mistake in the form of one big play that turns the tide in their favor.
Kirk Ferentz has given Iowa football and its fans an identity. They are the model of consistency and toughness in college football. They know exactly who they are, and in a world of coaching carousels, you can’t put a price tag on that.
There will be a lot of questions about coaches, teams, players, and playoffs when the 2025 college football season kicks off this August. Thanks to Kirk Ferentz, there will be few questions from anyone about what to expect from a football standpoint in Iowa City, IA.
For us college football purists and old souls, Kirk Ferentz is the last remaining relic from the game we fell in love with. It’s time for the collective college football watching nation to acknowledge and respect what he has done before he leaves the sport.`
NIL
2025 NCAA Softball Tournament: Super Regional matchups officially set
The first stage of the NCAA Tournament has concluded, and we are one step closer to crowning a champion of college softball. Following an exciting Regional round this weekend, the Super Regionals are set. The second stage of the tournament will feature eight best of three series between Regional champions. These matchups will begin play […]

The first stage of the NCAA Tournament has concluded, and we are one step closer to crowning a champion of college softball. Following an exciting Regional round this weekend, the Super Regionals are set.
The second stage of the tournament will feature eight best of three series between Regional champions. These matchups will begin play on May 22 and conclude on May 26, if a game three is necessary. The winners of these two cities will meet in Oklahoma City at the 2025 Women’s College World Series later this month.
One of the biggest storylines to follow coming into the tournament is whether or not Patty Gasso and the Oklahoma Sooners can win a fifth-straight NCAA Championship. In their first-year in the SEC, they won the regular season outright and were co-SEC Tournament champions with Texas A&M after a weather delay turned into a cancellation of the conference championship game. Their road to the College World Series is not yet paved, though, and they’ll have some stiff competition if they want to achieve the ultra-rare five-peat.
2025 NCAA Softball Super Regional matchups
Eugene Super Regional: Liberty vs. No. 16 Oregon
Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD
Norman Super Regional: No. 2 Oklahoma vs. No. 15 Alabama
Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD
Gainesville Super Regional: No. 3 Florida vs. Georgia
Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD
Fayetteville Super Regional: No. 4 Arkansas vs. Ole Miss
Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD
Tallahassee Super Regional: No. 5 Florida State vs. No. 12 Texas Tech
Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD
Austin Super Regional: No. 6 Texas vs. No. 11 Clemson
Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD
Knoxville Super Regional: No. 7 Tennessee vs. Nebraska
Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD
Columbia Super Regional: No. 8 South Carolina vs. No. 9 UCLA
Game 1: TBD
Game 2: TBD
Game 3 (if necessary): TBD
All times ET.
2025 Women’s College World Series
May 29 through June 5 or 6 at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
NIL
Agencies are taking a bigger role in connecting their clients with the fashion world
Fashion and sports have been connected for decades, evolving from simple brand deals for shoes and shirts to becoming a way for some of the world’s biggest agencies to leverage their clients’ love of wearing elaborate and extravagant outfits. From the biggest players in the space such as CAA, Klutch and Wasserman, to independent agencies […]


Fashion and sports have been connected for decades, evolving from simple brand deals for shoes and shirts to becoming a way for some of the world’s biggest agencies to leverage their clients’ love of wearing elaborate and extravagant outfits. From the biggest players in the space such as CAA, Klutch and Wasserman, to independent agencies such as Priority Sports, agencies are increasingly making more moves into fashion as a long-term play for clients and, ultimately, cultural capital.
“Obviously, fashion helps lead pop culture and sets a tone for the zeitgeist in the entertainment community,” said CAA fashion agent Elizabeth Mitchell. “So we help make the connectivity between [clients] and the actual fashion platform — whether that be a product line, capsule, runway show, all of those types of things — just to help identify a conversation between parties and so, ultimately, everybody can monetize it.”
CAA Sports features clients including active NBA players Jalen Green of the Houston Rockets, Jaren Jackson of the Memphis Grizzlies and Kyle Kuzma of the Milwaukee Bucks, as well as retired legends Dwyane Wade and Venus and Serena Williams. CAA provides access to marquee brands and big events, often finding connective tissues between divisions under the CAA umbrella.
In a similar vein, Rich Paul’s Klutch Sports has begun diving deeper into fashion with the addition earlier this year of a dedicated individual to lead that department in-house, though it asked that her name not be made public. It’s a shift from resorting to using outside firms to advise on deals and collaborations. Those employees at Klutch often work closely with United Talent Agency, a Klutch partner, and its fashion division. Most recently, Klutch client and Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts attended the 2025 Met Gala on behalf of British luxury fashion house Burberry.
“You look at someone like Jalen and he’s incredible for us,” said Eric Eways, head of marketing for Klutch. “He had a lot of creative freedom in that event for picking out his outfit, and it’s another way to show him without the helmet and a little bit of his personality, especially with his significant other. It was still him, just in a different light.
“But [fashion] is something that he also just frankly enjoys. It’s not about necessarily a marketing play tied to it, but more about expressing himself.”
The rise of social media deserves some credit for the increased connection between brands and athletes. Brands can get a quick bump from athletes repping them on game day, and athletes can cultivate their own images through social media platforms, especially Instagram.
“All everyone is talking about is the tunnel walk. Athletes have created an environment for them to be special and branded, and some are really intentional with their look. They work with stylists amd tag brands on social media,” said Circe Wallace, Wasserman executive vice president of Women’s Sports, Olympics and Action Sports. “You’re even seeing brands reach out for opportunities in the tunnel.”
When it comes to forging brand deals and collaborations, it starts with authenticity. Sometimes, athletes will wear fashion items without an official deal with a particular brand, making it easier for agencies to pitch a partnership.
Priority client and 76ers guard Miles McBride had been interested in apparel from luxury fashion house Acne Studios long before he joined the NBA in 2021. By the time he was finally in the league, he had begun wearing Acne products through tunnel walks, which helped the agency reach out about teaming up.
“Miles loves Acne Studios,” said Alex Shaw, Priority Sports’ marketing manager. “Sometimes the players won’t even tell us. But if I see that he’s wearing something a lot, I’ll reach out to that brand, send it to their PR group and show them that he’s been wearing them authentically and spending his own money.
“That then builds the relationship. Some opportunities do come across our desk, but we’re usually pretty intentional and aggressive about trying to get out there.”
NIL
Chattanooga Mocs Extend Championship Coach
Story Links CHATTANOOGA—The Chattanooga Mocs and Dan Earl agree in a lot of ways. The biggest is the desire for him to be a long-term solution for the historically proud program. The Mocs announce the 6-year extension of Earl’s contract after a regular season Southern Conference title and run to the team’s first NIT Championship. […]

CHATTANOOGA—The Chattanooga Mocs and Dan Earl agree in a lot of ways. The biggest is the desire for him to be a long-term solution for the historically proud program. The Mocs announce the 6-year extension of Earl’s contract after a regular season Southern Conference title and run to the team’s first NIT Championship.
“Dan is a proven commodity,” Vice Chancellor for Athletics Mark Wharton began. “We had great faith in who he was as a leader around this time three years ago when we hired him. That faith has been rewarded well beyond wins and championships. We are excited to get this new agreement completed to reward him and his staff for jobs well done.”
Earl’s 2024-25 edition tied the school record in wins with 29 matching another SoCon Championship team from 2015-16. They marched through their NIT bracket winning at Middle Tennessee, at home over Dayton and on the road again at Bradley. That led to Indianapolis where Loyola Chicago and UC Irvine were dispatched in just the second national tournament title in school history (1977 NCAA DII).
He is 68-38 (.642) over his three seasons with a 34-20 (.630) mark in SoCon play.
“Very appreciative of (interim) Chancellor (Robert) Dooley and Mark Wharton,” Earl added. “Chattanooga has quickly become home. My family loves it here, and the city has truly embraced us in a very special way.
“This extension is as much about the players and staff as it is me. From the guys who came with us from VMI to all the additions, be it from high school, junior college or out of the portal, they’ve embraced our culture, developed as people and players, and gone on to great success here and are prepared for bright futures.
‘I am also thankful to have such a good working relationship with Mark (Wharton) and for his friendship. His support and leadership have been instrumental in our program’s success, and I deeply value our partnership.”
At a fluid time in college athletics, Earl and his staff excelled in roster construction. Between returning starters in guards Trey Bonham and Honor Huff to go with reserves and redshirts in Sean Cusano, Noah Melson, Ryan Lopez and Collin Mulholland, the program added 4-year transfers Bash Wieland (Bellarmine), Frank Champion (DII-North Georgia), Jack Kostel (DII-Alabama-Huntsville), Makai Richards (Pacific) and game-winning shot maker Garrison Keeslar (DII-Walsh) along with freshmen Latif Diouf, Parker Robison, Liam Vitters, Houston Holland and Isaiah Otyaluk.
That group not only won 29 games, but they did it when it mattered most. Twenty-one of the triumphs came after the calendar flipped to 2025 including a 12-game win streak that fell just two shy of tying another school record. Huff (578), Bonham (554) and Wieland (502) became the first trio in school history to tally 500 points in the same season.
Earl’s extension is not the only news for the program’s staff. Ander Galfsky and Scott Greenman are elevated to associate head coach with Logan Dahms moving from special assistant to assistant coach alongside Ricardo Rush, Jr. Director of basketball operations Alan Treakle is adding assistant coach duties as well.
“Ander, Scott, Logan and Alan have been with me from the start,” Earl shared about his staff. “I am super appreciative of their efforts as well as Ricardo who was a great addition in year two. We don’t get a regular season conference championship or win the NIT without their tremendous work as the team behind our team.”
NOTABLE
- Earl’s 68 wins are the most by any Mocs coach in their first three seasons with the program ahead of Mack McCarthy (62), Murray Arnold (61) and Ron Shumate (59).
- The squad is currently tied with national runner-up Houston for the longest current road win streak in the country at 10.
- The 2024-25 squad won 17 of its final 18 contests.
- Earl’s five postseason wins ranks second in school history behind Shumate (11).
- Another amazing streak, Earl’s Mocs have won 10 straight games when trailing at the half.
ACTION ITEMS
- To check out the 2025-26 roster construction, go here.
- For $25 deposits on 2025-26 season tickets, go here.
- To give to the Mocs Club, go here. To contribute to the Flock NIL collective, go here.
- To get involved in sponsorships with Mocs Sports Properties, go here.
GoMocs.com is the official website of the Chattanooga Mocs. Buy officially licensed gear in our online store. The Mocs can also be followed on their official Facebook page or Twitter. Find out how to join the UTC Mocs Club and support more than 300 student-athletes by clicking here. Check out the Mocs on the Mic podcast here.
NIL
Transfer portal or 'speed dating'? How Alabama baseball flipped 2025 roster with 13 additions
Some of Alabama baseball‘s biggest contributors during the 2025 season were plucked straight from the transfer portal. “The scary part of the transfer portal is you can crush your culture really quick if you start bringing the wrong people in,” Crimson Tide coach Rob Vaughn told the Tuscaloosa News. Vaughn admits his recruiting process is […]

Some of Alabama baseball‘s biggest contributors during the 2025 season were plucked straight from the transfer portal.
“The scary part of the transfer portal is you can crush your culture really quick if you start bringing the wrong people in,” Crimson Tide coach Rob Vaughn told the Tuscaloosa News.
Vaughn admits his recruiting process is “probably a little bit slower than most,” but it’s a decision made on good advice. Former St. John’s manager Ed Blankmeyer once told Vaughn and his assistants:
“It’s never the guy you don’t get, it’s the guy you get that you shouldn’t have got.”
Who’s the best competitor? Which guys are tough, and know the difference between toughness and grit? Vaughn wants those guys.
“The truest competitors for me are the ones that say, ‘Hey, whatever I’ve got today is good enough to beat you. I don’t have to have my A stuff. I’m good enough to beat you with my C stuff,’ ” Vaughn said.
Without that mentality, Vaughn says there’s “no chance” to survive in the SEC.
Why Alabama baseball coach Rob Vaughn thinks the transfer portal is like ‘speed dating’
Recruiting high schools is easier for Vaughn, who likes having the extra time to do the homework compared to shopping for transfers.
“The portal is like speed dating,” Vaughn said. “There’s times kids get in the portal. We talk to him. Two hours later, they’ve already got five offers and six visits lined up. We have to operate in it. If you don’t, you’re gonna get passed.”
Alabama was a hot date to swipe right on last portal season, as thirteen players on the current roster chose to leave programs around the country, whether little-known community colleges or iconic Ivy Leagues, and join the Crimson Tide.
Which Alabama baseball transfers will make their first trips to the SEC Tournament?
Richie Bonomolo Jr., CF, junior
Previous school: Wabash Valley College
Before Alabama, Bonomolo helped Wabash Valley advance to its fourth consecutive JUCO World Series in 2023 and earned second-team All-American honors after a standout freshman season.
Bryce Fowler, RF, redshirt junior
Previous school: Pearl River C.C. (2024), Southern Miss (2022-23)
In Poplarville, Miss. at Pearl River, Fowler got comfortable as a leadoff hitter and worked himself among the all-time leaders with 88 hits, the second most in a season in program history.
JT Blackwood, RHP, junior
Previous school: Wallace State
When Blackwood wasn’t getting called out of the bullpen, he was often the midweek starter for the Crimson Tide, which went undefeated in the midweek during the 2025 regular season. In two seasons at Wallace State, he had the most innings pitched.
Carson Ozmer, RHP, graduate
Previous school: Penn
Ozmer leads all Division I closers with 16 saves, picking up two in one day in the series finale double-header against Georgia. All four years he was at Penn, Ozmer was a two-way starter and earned honorable mention All-Ivy League honors twice.
Aeden Finateri, RHP, senior
Previous school: Georgia Tech
Finateri came to Tuscaloosa after three seasons at Georgia Tech, where he appeared in 58 games and made 23 starts, finishing his career with an 8-9 record with three saves and 172 strikeouts
Brennen Norton, INF, senior
Previous school: Jacksonville State
Norton left Jacksonville State on a high note. As a junior, he achieved a career-best .327 average with 13 home runs and 44 RBIs, seeing him add First Team All-Conference USA honors to his resume.
Garrett Staton, DH/2B, redshirt senior
Previous school: Samford
Staton missed 21 games after suffering a broken finger on Feb. 18 when he was hit by a pitch, putting a delay on Crimson Tide fans seeing all the reasons why he earned preseason All-American honors. Since returning to the lineup on March 25, Staton has lived up to the hype, recording at least one RBI in 13 of his 25 starts.
Jason Torres, 3B, junior
Previous school: Miami
Named to the Golden Spikes Award Midseason Watch List, Torres impressed during his stint in South Florida. At Alabama, he’s started all but one game on the hot corner and is one of the Crimson Tide’s top home run contributors.
More first-timers that joined Alabama’s 2025 roster from the portal
- Beau Bryans, LHP, junior: previously Jones College
- Packy Bradley-Cooney, RHP, senior: previously Campbell (2024), CCBC Essex (2022-23)
- Danny Heintz, RHP, redshirt senior: previously Penn
- Zach Kittrell, RHP, junior: previously Pensacola State College
Which new SEC transfer returns to Hoover, but with the Tide instead?
Brady Neal, C, junior
Previous school: LSU
Sidelined by a back injury, Neal’s career as LSU’s starting catcher hit a roadbump in 2023. Now, he splits time behind the plate with fellow SEC transfer Will Plattner. The nine-hole hitter, Neal leads Alabama with an 18.4% walk rate.
Emilee Smarr covers Alabama basketball and Crimson Tide athletics for the Tuscaloosa News. She can be reached via email at esmarr@gannett.com.
NIL
Husker softball has a Bahl in Baton Rouge, winning region in commanding fashion
Onward to Knoxville. And when you have Jordy Bahl on the trip, you’ll take your chances. Find a good seat on that plane for Ava Kuszak too. And Samantha Bland. OK, it was a dominating weekend by all involved. Nebraska punched its ticket to the best-of-3 Super Regionals next week against Tennessee by taking out Southeastern […]

Onward to Knoxville.
And when you have Jordy Bahl on the trip, you’ll take your chances. Find a good seat on that plane for Ava Kuszak too. And Samantha Bland. OK, it was a dominating weekend by all involved.
Nebraska punched its ticket to the best-of-3 Super Regionals next week against Tennessee by taking out Southeastern Louisiana 8-0 in six innings on Sunday. It marked three ‘run rule’ victories over three days. Not a bad little weekend in Baton Rouge.
Rhonda Revelle’s program will be making their first appearance in the Super Regionals in 11 years.
“You can get your adrenaline pumping in all the things that competitors do when it’s time to play, but there’s a real peace in knowing that every day this team has invested in themselves,” Revelle said.
Bahl allowed just one hit in her six innings pitched while also going 2-for-2 at the plate, including a leadoff home run in the first inning. At that point she had hit four home runs in her four official at-bats at this regional.
She added a lowly single to her stat line later. Sarcasm implied. Although it was a surprise when the ball didn’t go over the fence off her bat for once.
“I’ve said this all along when we people asked me questions about Jordy … I just am not surprised. I never would say, ‘Oh, I think she’s going to do this, this and this.’ But when she does do this, this and this it never surprises me. Because what is so cool about her, a lot of athletes could learn so much from her. She immerses herself in the moment. She’s not focused on numbers, accolades. She’s focused on one mission and it’s … doing whatever she can to help the team win. And she’s just talented enough that she can do a lot of things to help the team win.”
Kuszak did her own damage to the Lions, including a game-winning single in the sixth inning with the bases loaded to stop the game from going the full seven innings. Bland also had four RBI with three hits, including a double in the second inning to add two runs to the two NU had in the first. Her single in the fourth inning also brought in one of three runs that frame as NU moved to a comfortable 7-0 lead before putting the game to bed in the sixth.
Nebraska had beaten Southeastern Louisiana 14-1 in five innings on Saturday and took down UConn 10-2 in six on Friday.
Because of those stress-free games, Bahl was needed for only six innings of pitching the first two days. So she was fresh on Sunday and looked it. Bahl retired the first 13 batters before the Lions picked up a single for their only base runner of the day. NU’s star two-way player finished with 10 strikeouts.
Now the Huskers take on No. 7 Tennessee, which dispatched of the Big Ten’s Ohio State 5-0 on Sunday.
It was a long time ago but Nebraska did play the Volunteers in the first game of the season, with the Huskers winning 7-1.
The stakes are much higher this time. It’s a best-of-3 to go to the Women’s College World Series.
“I would say the postseason, it’s a grind. At the very beginning of the regional it seems like you’re so far away from the World Series and then three days later there’s only 16 teams left,” said Bahl, who was on two national championship teams at Oklahoma. “On our journey we have one goal. It’s not to make it to regionals or make it to Supers or make it to the World Series, it’s to win the World Series.
“So it’s a blessing to be able to win a regional with this team, but we know the work isn’t done and we’re just blessed to have the opportunity to go to Knoxville.”
Postgame notes courtesy of Paige Trutna of Nebraska Communications:
The Huskers’ 2025 regional title is the ninth in program history.
NU now has 100 doubles on the season, along with its 106 home runs. The 2025 Huskers are the 11th team in history with 100+ doubles and 100+ homers in the same season.
With her solo homer in the first inning, Jordyn Bahl put her season home run total at 23, which is a new program record. The previous record of 22 was set by Ali Viola in 1998.
Bahl also stands at 69 runs this season, which is a school record. Bahl’s mark beat the previous record of 66 set by Kiki Stokes in 2015.
Bahl hit four home runs in three games during the regional round. The last time a Husker hit 4+ homers in a regional was Hailey Decker in 2014.
Bahl notched 10 strikeouts on the day for her 10th double-digit strikeout game of the season.
In the Baton Rouge Regional, Bahl went 5-for-5 with four home runs, seven walks, eight runs and seven RBIs at the plate, while going 2-0 in the circle, allowing just one run and two hits in 12.0 innings with 16 strikeouts.
Nebraska has had 17 innings this season with multiple home runs after hitting two homers in the first inning.
NU had six run-rule victories in its NCAA tournament history entering this weekend. The Big Red run-ruled its opponent in all three games this weekend.
Ava Kuszak extended her hit streak to 14 games with her first-inning home run.
Nebraska has 26 run-rule wins on the season, which is the most in school history.
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