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Tag: Florida State Seminoles

  • Florida State drops out of AP Top 25 after 0-2 start. Texas up to No. 3 behind Georgia, Ohio State

    Florida State drops out of AP Top 25 after 0-2 start. Texas up to No. 3 behind Georgia, Ohio State

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    Florida State fell out of The Associated Press college football poll on Tuesday after starting the season 0-2, becoming just the third team to go from preseason top 10 to unranked in the first regular-season poll since the rankings expanded to 25 in 1989.

    Georgia remained No. 1, receiving 57 first-place votes after starting the season with a blowout of then-No. 14 Clemson. The Tigers hung on at No. 25, but it was the second straight year they dropped at least 10 spots after losing their season opener.

    Ohio State was No. 2 with five first-place votes. No. 3 Texas and No. 4 Alabama each moved up a spot, putting three Southeastern Conference teams in the top four along with Georgia. The last time the SEC did that in a non-pandemic season was Sept. 22, 2019.

    No. 5 Notre Dame jumped two spots after opening the season with a victory at then-No. 20 Texas A&M, which fell out of the rankings.

    Florida State has been the early season’s major disappointment. The defending Atlantic Coast Conference champion lost in Dublin, Ireland, to ACC rival Georgia Tech and then dropped another league game Monday night at home to Boston College.

    No other preseason Top 25 team this year lost to an unranked opponent to open the season. Florida State did it twice as a double-digit favorite and did not receive a single vote from the AP poll panel.

    The other preseason top-10 teams to fall all the way out of the Top 25 after Week 1 in the past 35 years were Michigan in 2007 after famously losing to Appalachian State as No. 5 and Clemson in 2008. The Tigers were No. 9 but opened with a blowout loss to Alabama and tumbled out of the rankings.

    Mississippi remained at No. 6. Oregon slipped four spots to No. 7 after winning a close game with Idaho. Penn State stayed at No. 8. Missouri moved up two spots to No. 9 to give the SEC five teams in the top 10. Michigan dropped one spot to No. 10.

    Georgia Tech’s 2-0 start has the No. 23 Yellow Jackets ranked for the first time since 2015.

    Poll points

    Because Florida State started its season a week before most of the country, it moves into an exclusive club of teams that began their seasons 0-2 with each loss coming while ranked in the top 10.

    Notre Dame was the last to do it in 2022, when the Fighting Irish began the season No. 5, lost at No. 2 Ohio State in their opener, and then were beaten at home the next week by Marshall while ranked eighth. The Irish went to on finish 9-4.

    Ohio State opened the 1986 season ranked ninth and lost back-to-back games to ranked opponents, No. 5 Alabama and No. 17 Washington. The Buckeyes were No. 10 when they played the Huskies. Ohio State finished 10-3.

    The 1967 Texas team and TCU from 1952 also started 0-2 while ranked in the top 10 in both games.

    Florida State is only the second ranked team to lose twice before the first regular-season poll was released, joining Kentucky in 1951. The Wildcats went from No. 6 to No. 17 while going 1-2 to start the season, losing at No. 11 Texas and at Mississippi.

    Florida State gets a weekend off before resuming its schedule with home games against Memphis and new ACC member California before a trip to SMU followed by a home game against Clemson.

    “You’ve got a football team that nobody envisioned ever being where we are and having disappointment, having failure, but I do believe in what this team can do,” coach Mike Norvell said after the BC loss. “I believe in what this team can accomplish.”

    Moving up

    The big movers upward in the Top 25 were Miami and Southern California.

    The Hurricanes jumped seven spots to No. 12 after routing Florida at The Swamp and have their best ranking since cracking the top 10 late in the 2020 season.

    No. 13 USC moved up 10 places after beating LSU with a late touchdown Sunday night in Las Vegas. LSU dropped to No. 18.

    The Trojans started last season at No. 6, but ended up unranked after a disappointing 8-5 season with 2022 Heisman Trophy winner Caleb Williams.

    In and out

    The only other team to move into the rankings this week, along with Georgia Tech, was fellow ACC school Louisville. The Cardinals were among the top unranked voter-getters in the preseason and now sit at No. 22.

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    Conference call

    Despite Florida State and Clemson starting the season 0-3, the ACC has one more team in this week’s rankings than it did last time:

    SEC — 8 (Nos. 1, 3, 4, 6, 9, 14, 16, 18).

    Big Ten — 6 (Nos. 2, 7, 8, 10, 13, 21).

    ACC — 5 (Nos. 12, 22, 23, 24, 25).

    Big 12 — 5 (Nos. 11, 16, 17, 19, 20).

    Independent — 1 (No. 5).

    Ranked vs. ranked

    No. 3 Texas at No. 10 Michigan. The first regular-season meeting ever is a top-10 matchup at the Big House.

    No. 14 Tennessee vs. No. 24 N.C. State in Charlotte, North Carolina. Interesting SEC-ACC ranked matchup.

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  • Florida State falls to 0-2 after 28-13 loss to Boston College

    Florida State falls to 0-2 after 28-13 loss to Boston College

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Treshaun Ward totaled 138 offensive yards, including a 13-yard touchdown reception, against his former team as Boston College stunned No. 10 Florida State 28-13 on Monday night.

    Ward, a Tampa native who played at Florida State from 2019-22, had 77 yards rushing and 61 yards receiving as the Eagles (1-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) totaled 263 yards rushing.

    It was a resounding debut for BC coach Bill O’Brien, who was introduced in mid-February after Jeff Hafley’s departure to become the Green Bay Packers’ defensive coordinator.

    The Eagles’ offense produced touchdown drives of 71 yards, 68 yards and 60 yards, while also benefitting from a short field after intercepting DJ Uiagalelei iand quickly scoring a touchdown.

    Uiagalelei completed 21 of 42 passes for 272 yards and a 29-yard touchdown pass to Kentron Poitier in the third quarter, cutting BC’s lead to 21-13.

    Florida State, viewed as a contender for a spot in the 12-team College Football Playoff, dropped to 0-2 for the first time since 2021.

    TAKEAWAYS

    Boston College: Thomas Castellanos nearly pulled off an upset of Florida State in 2023, but he did it on Monday. The BC quarterback completed 10 of 16 passes for 106 yards and two touchdowns to go with 73 yards rushing.

    Florida State: A strength going into the season has instead been a weakness. The Seminoles had just 21 yards rushing on 16 carries.

    UP NEXT

    Boston College hosts Duquesne on Saturday.

    Florida State has a bye week and next hosts Memphis on Sept. 14.

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    Associated Press

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  • Wait is over: Most college football teams in Florida kick off season this week

    Wait is over: Most college football teams in Florida kick off season this week

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — It’s officially Week 1 for the college football season.

    And the Sunshine State will see its share of the action during the Labor Day weekend.

    Sure, Florida State was a part of the Week 0 kickoff, albeit a disappointing 24-21 loss to Georgia Tech that has dropped the Seminoles six spots in the AP Top 25 Poll, down to No. 16.

    FSU (0-1) will try to get back on track this week; UCF and USF both open up at home this weekend with Football Championship Subdivision teams, and No. 19 Miami and Florida have a highlight spot in the holiday schedule, squaring off Saturday night in Gainesville.

    A closer look at the games

    Thursday, Aug. 29
    New Hampshire at UCF, 7 p.m., ESPN+

    The Knights bring a lot of new looks this season, including offensive coordinator/wide receivers coach Tim Harris Jr. and defensive coordinator Ted Roof. Last year’s coordinators — Darin Hinshaw and Addison Williams — remain on staff. Overall, the Knights have more than 40 transfers. A new quarterback, fifth-year transfer KJ Jefferson out of Arkansas, will line up behind center. However, RJ Harvey is back to lead a strong running back group for UCF’s rushing offense that was ranked fourth in the nation last season with 228.2 yards per game.  And coach Gus Malzahn added to that group with Peny Boone out of Toledo and Myles Montgomery from Cincinnati to go with returning speedster Johnny Richardson. New Hampshire went 6-5 last season and is 21-14 under coach Ricky Santos.

    Saturday, Aug. 31
    No. 19 Miami at Florida, 3:30 p.m., ABC

    In the not-so-distant past, this game would have been one of the most heralded in the country, but both teams have struggled to get on track the past few seasons.  Florida coach Billy Napier has an 11-14 record, and Mario Cristobal is 12-13 at Miami. Nevertheless, it’s an intrastate rivalry, and players who are familiar with one another will want bragging rights, and it’s the first game of a home-and-home series. Quarterbacks could play a major role. Miami will start Washington State transfer Cam Ward, who threw for 3,736 yards with 25 touchdowns and ran for eight touchdowns in 2023. The Gators return Graham Mertz, who threw for 2,903 yards and 20 touchdowns. Napier will bring the most experienced and skilled team since he became coach.

    B-CU at USF, 7 p.m., ESPN+

    The Bulls begin Year 2 under Coach Alex Golesh with a stellar playmaker in junior quarterback Byrum Brown, who threw for 26 touchdowns and ran for another 11. The Bulls’ quick-strike offense also returns top runner Nay’Quan Wright (8 TDs a season ago) and record-setting receiver Sean Atkins (92 receptions and 7 TDs in 2023). Raymond Woodie Jr. is entering his second season as coach after the Wildcats went 3-8 last season. It’s unclear if the team has named a starter at quarterback. Tylik Bethea and Luke Sprague are back from last year’s team, and Micah Bowens transferred in from Charlotte.

    Monday, Sept. 2, 7:30 p.m., ESPN
    Boston College at No. 16 FSU (0-1), 7:30 p.m., ESPN

    The Seminoles will look to bounce back and avoid slipping to 0-2 in conference play. The Seminoles looked listless at times during the loss to Georgia Tech in Ireland, with new quarterback DJ Uiagalelei failing to spark sustained drives. The Seminoles’ defensive line was viewed as one of the Atlantic Coast Conference’s best but did not record a sack and allowed Tech to run at will last Saturday. FSU scored easily on its first drive, but the offensive line could not clear the way for the rushers after that. But the Seminoles can stay in the playoff hunt if they get back on track. “We’ve got to take a step as a football team and not let this one game define the outcome of what our season will be,” FSU coach Mike Norvell said.

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    Spectrum Sports Staff

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  • Lofty goals remain as Florida State kicks off college football season Saturday

    Lofty goals remain as Florida State kicks off college football season Saturday

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — It’s time.

    College football has arrived.

    There are a handful of games Saturday, notably highlighted by No. 10 Florida State taking on Georgia Tech in Dublin, Ireland.


    What You Need To Know

    • FSU faces Georgia Tech, Sat. in Ireland; Kickoff at noon EST
    • Seminoles coming off undefeated regular season, ACC crown and Orange Bowl loss to Georgia
    • Oregon State transfer DJ Uiagalelei takes over at quarterback for FSU

    Led by defensive end Patrick Payton and offensive tackle Darius Washington, the Seminoles are a popular pick to repeat as Atlantic Coast Conference champions. The Seminoles missed out on a playoff bid a season ago despite an undefeated regualr season and ACC championship.

    The biggest change for the 2024 Seminoles will be on offense where record-setter Jordan Travis will no longer be under center. Oregon State transfer DJ Uiagalelei takes over at quarterback for FSU. He’ll have fellow tranfers Malik Benson and Jalen Brown at the receiver postions, as well as a deep backfield and a still solid offensive line.  

    Florida State and Georgia Tech kick off at 12 p.m. EDT.

    Also on the slate: Norfolk State faces Florida A&M in the MEAC/SWAC Challenge in Atlanta, and SMU visits Nevada.

    With the College Football Playoff expanding from four to 12 teams this season, FSU looks to be among the heavyweights vying for postseason spots. 

    The top four seeds and a first-round bye are only available to conference champions, no matter where they are ranked.

    Seeds five through eight will host seeds nine through 12 in first-round games on campus. Those games will be played on Dec. 20 (one game) and Dec. 21 (three).

    The quarterfinals will be played in traditional marquee bowls on Dec. 31 (Fiesta Bowl) and Jan. 1 (Peach, Rose, Sugar). The semifinals also will be played in bowl games. This year, that’s Jan. 9 at the Orange Bowl and Jan. 10 at the Cotton Bowl.

    This season’s championship game will be played at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Jan. 20, by far the latest a college football season has ended.

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    Associated Press

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  • Clemson looks to regain championship form after last season’s struggles, early schedule is stacked

    Clemson looks to regain championship form after last season’s struggles, early schedule is stacked

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    CLEMSON, S.C. (AP) — Clemson coach Dabo Swinney told anybody who’d listen to buy stock in his team last fall after the Tigers won five straight games after early struggles.

    It won’t take long to see if Swinney’s latest bit of braggadocio has legs. For now, Swinney likes how his team has handled business heading into a season where they hope to once more contend for the Atlantic Coast Conference championship and the College Football Playoff.

    Swinney said his guys have shown chemistry, leadership and accountability to understand and not repeat the mistakes that got them off to a 4-4 start and eliminated their title hopes.

    “All those things, they all check the boxes,” Swinney said. “Now, we got to get out on the field, got to put the work in, get better and find a way to win some games on the field.”

    Clemson’s season will likely again be defined its first few weeks. The 14th-ranked Tigers open in Atlanta against No. 1 Georgia, the national champions in 2021 and 2022. Three weeks later, Clemson hosts No. 24 North Carolina State and two weeks after that the Tigers go to No. 10 Florida State.

    Win them all and Swinney looks like a genius chasing another national title. Lose them all and questions about Swinney’s stewardship will continue to grow, like a year ago when a call from “Tyler from Spartanburg” on Swinney’s radio show touched off a loud defense of his program and perhaps sparked the team’s closing rally.

    Swinney boiled it all down to poor decisions and turnovers that Clemson reduced during its last five wins. The Tigers were causing the mistakes down the stretch instead of making them and Swinney hopes that’s the way it will go early.

    Klubnik’s growth

    Quarterback Cade Klubnik was a focal point of miscues and poor choices in his first full season as a starter. Along with 12 interceptions, he had a costly fumble in an overtime loss to Florida State and failed on fourth down — trying to make something happen on his own — in an overtime loss at Miami.

    Klubnik thinks his second season as a starter and in offensive coordinator Garrett Riley’s system will play dividends.

    “Less interceptions, less sacks, being able to make big-time plays with either my legs or throwing the ball downfield,” he said.

    Deep core of receivers

    The buzz of the offseason has been about the influx of young receivers or injured players at that position coming back healthy. The result could be the deepest group of wideouts at Clemson since the days of Mike Williams, Tee Higgins and Justyn Ross had the school referred to as “Wide Receiver U.”

    Bryant Wesco and T.J. Moore are the newcomers, fast, strong and able to stretch the field. Adam Randall appears healed from a broken hand.

    Tyler Brown, a freshman who led the team in catches and receiving yards last year, had nagging injuries of his own through the season. And Antonio Williams, a freshman breakout player two years ago, played only five games due to ankle and foot injuries.

    All look healthy and productive.

    Defensive stand

    The Tigers had one of the country’s top defenses, allowing 288.2 yards a game, ranking eighth in the nation. Expect that to continue this season with Barrett Carter back at linebacker and a stacked line led by ends Peter Woods and T.J. Parker.

    Clemson will miss first-round NFL cornerback Nate Wiggins, but have sophomore safety Khalil Barnes leading the secondary.

    Kicking game

    Last year, Swinney called Jonathan Weitz at the beach to return to school when kicker Robert Gunn struggled. He is hopeful Gunn, who continued kicking off after Weitz returned, has put his field-goal struggles aside. The Tigers have added Nolan Hauser, a freshman considered the nation’s No. 1 kicking prospect.

    The schedule

    Besides facing three ranked teams in the first six weeks, the Tigers have a home game in October against Virginia and coach Tony Elliott, who was co-offensive coordinator on both of Swinney’s national title teams, a Nov. 2 game against Louisville and the regular-season closer against rival South Carolina at home Nov. 30.

    —-

    Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football

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  • Single-A Florida State League Glance

    Single-A Florida State League Glance

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    Kristóf Rasovszky of Hungary has wrapped up Olympic swimming events in the Seine River by winning the men’s 10-kilometer marathon race.

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  • Ranking CFB teams better off (Texas), worse off (USC), or same (Nebraska) in new era

    Ranking CFB teams better off (Texas), worse off (USC), or same (Nebraska) in new era

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    There has been much discourse since the latest round of realignment and media deals that every team in the ACC and the Big 12 should want to be in the Big Ten or SEC, because those conferences make the most money. But the fans themselves aren’t seeing a dime of it. Their lone concern is whether their team wins on Saturday — and more money hardly guarantees more victories.

    With college football undergoing a massive facelift in 2024 — bigger conferences, an expanded College Football Playoff — every fan base in the country should be asking just one question: Is any of this going to help us win games?

    For example: Oklahoma will make a lot more money in the SEC than it would have in the Big 12. But it also faces a much tougher path to a national championship, whereas Kansas State’s chances of reaching the CFP have increased due to the Big 12’s bigger field and the loss of Oklahoma and Texas.

    So what about your school? Does its chances of success increase, decrease or remain the same in the sport’s new world order?

    To assess, I’ve given all 67 power-conference schools a score between minus-5 and positive-5. The score is solely about a team’s ability to win, and does not take into account the team’s current coaching staff or roster. Scoring a 0 means the school is neither better nor worse off. A score from 1 to 5 ranges from mildly better to far better, and -1 to -5 ranges from mildly worse to … uh oh.

    ACC

    SMU: +5

    Has there been a bigger realignment winner in the last 30 years? SMU had not finished in the Top 25 in four decades at the time it got the call up to the big leagues last September. Now it comes in with momentum after finishing last season No. 22.

    Clemson: +3

    Dabo Swinney’s 2015-2020 teams had to be near-perfect to reach the four-team CFP; his 11-2 ACC title squad in 2022 would have earned a top-4 seed. His aloof portal approach doesn’t help his cause, but it doesn’t factor into this score.

    Florida State: +3

    The irony of FSU trying to sue its way out of the ACC is that the new system works in its favor. Would it rather be the best team in the ACC and earn a top-4 seed and a first-round bye, or the fourth-best team in the SEC and live on the bubble?

    Louisville: +2

    Louisville has upside. The school has the resources and recruiting footprint to be a regular ACC and CFP contender, and it helps that Louisville is no longer trapped in a division with Florida State (which it does not play this season) and Clemson.

    Miami: +2

    The U has been stuck in the mud for two decades, but it began flexing its muscle as soon as NIL went into effect in 2021. The program has most of the elements needed to be a 12-team CFP regular, provided the right coach is in place.

    Virginia Tech: +2

    The Hokies would have made a 12-team CFP nine times in a 16-year span (1995-2010) under Frank Beamer. They may never replicate that level of consistency, but there’s no reason they can’t become a semi-regular contender again.

    NC State: +1

    The Wolfpack have not won a conference title since 1979. That might be a tad more attainable now that they’re no longer in the same division as Florida State and Clemson. (At least elsewhere, Wolfpack vibes are high.)

    Georgia Tech: 0

    Recruiting has always been challenging for the Yellow Jackets, made even more so now by NIL. But based on its history, Georgia Tech could make an occasional CFP appearance. It would have gone in 1990, 1998 and 2009, and would have been the first team out in 2014.

    North Carolina: 0

    This unquestioned basketball school has been long considered a sleeping giant in football but has yet to wake up. If it finally does, it will more likely be due to an inspired head-coaching hire than the various changes to the sport.

    Pittsburgh: -2

    Pitt is nearly 50 years removed from its national heyday, but it did win the ACC in 2021, which would have garnered a 12-team berth. But star receiver Jordan Addison’s jump to USC the following spring was a window into new NIL reality.

    Syracuse: -2

    It’s early, but new coach Fran Brown has discovered there’s money in the banana stand. Landing Ohio State QB Kyle McCord raised eyebrows. More broadly, though, it’s hard to argue the new landscape does much to benefit the Orange.

    Virginia: -2

    Arguably the one thing UVA had going for it was the mediocrity of the ACC Coastal Division, which it won in 2019 while going 9-3. Now, the Cavaliers — who last finished in the Top 25 back two decades ago — risk falling into deep irrelevance moving forward.

    Wake Forest: -2

    The tiniest school in Power 4 has more donor support than one might assume, and it’s not a championship-or-bust fan base. But reaching a 12-team CFP could be largely unattainable. Will programs like this be able to sustain interest?

    Boston College: -3

    BC is the type of school that suffers in a world of roster-poaching and NIL deals. Success will also be increasingly defined by Playoff appearances, and the Eagles have finished in the top 12 only twice since World War II.

    Duke: -3

    Duke just lived through the downside of its new reality. It lost coach Mike Elko to an SEC school after just two seasons and quarterback Riley Leonard went to Notre Dame, likely for a seven-figure NIL deal.

    Stanford: -4

    The Cardinal will always attract recruits that covet that degree. But the school’s admissions process limits it to taking only a few transfers a year, which creates a big disadvantage in the new landscape. And like Cal, the ACC is not ideal.

    Cal: -5

    Serious question: Would Cal have been better off getting Washington State/Oregon State’d? An already lagging program must now compete in a far-away Power 4 conference while receiving 30 percent of its money (and without SMU’s boosters).

    GO DEEPER

    Feldman’s CFP 12-team projection: Why I like Miami, PSU and Texas

    Big Ten

    Ohio State: +4

    Only once in the past 19 seasons have the Buckeyes lost more than two regular-season games. That means they would have made a 12-team Playoff all but once in the past 19 seasons. And probably pulled off an extra national title or two.

    Michigan: +3

    For the most part, Michigan will still be Michigan. The Big House will still pack in 110,000. The season will still be defined by whether it beats Ohio State. But a 12-team Playoff field certainly doesn’t hurt.

    Penn State: +3

    Had the 12-team Playoff been in place all along, James Franklin would have made five appearances in his first 10 seasons. The format is ideal for programs like PSU: not quite “elite,” but has the resources to compete nationally.

    Michigan State: +2

    While the Spartans only made the four-team CFP once, they could have made a 12-team field as many as five times from 2011-21. They also get Ohio State off the books in 2025 and 2026 after having played the Buckeyes in 14 consecutive seasons.

    Oregon: +2

    The Ducks are the best-positioned of the four West Coast schools joining the Big Ten. They recruit nationally and have Phil Knight’s war chest. While national titles have remained elusive, regular CFP appearances are realistic.

    Maryland: +1

    The Terps are free! They are no longer stuck in the Big Ten East, where their ceiling would forever be 7-5 and fourth place out of seven. But the upside may be limited until the school’s donors make a bigger splash in the NIL world.

    Rutgers: +1

    Like “rival” Maryland, Rutgers is finally out from under the Big Ten East. It’s also doing surprisingly well in NIL. The program’s ceiling may still be limited to 8-4 or so, but that would still be much better than its first decade in the conference.

    Nebraska: 0

    It may be tougher for the Cornhuskers to contend for Big Ten championships in a bigger league. But right now, that’s not even the target, given they haven’t even reached a bowl game in eight years. How much worse can it get?

    Wisconsin: -1

    The program has long churned out double-digit wins by “holding serve” against most of the conference while occasionally punching up against Ohio State or Michigan. That could become harder with the arrival of USC, Oregon and Washington.

    Illinois: -2

    This program has struggled to find its footing for more than two decades, and nothing about this new world helps it. If anything, it will be tougher. Right out of the gate, the Illini face Penn State, Michigan and Oregon this season.

    Indiana: -2

    The good news: no more getting clobbered by Ohio State, Michigan and Penn State in the Big Ten East. The bad news: Indiana, long known for apathy in football, is not likely to be as flush in NIL money as most of its competitors.

    USC: -2

    While it didn’t play like one for most of the past 15 years, USC was the most prestigious program in its former conference. In the Big Ten, it will be, at best, the third banana to Ohio State and Michigan, and possibly fifth behind Penn State and Oregon.

    Washington: -2

    The Huskies were the class of the Pac-12 the last two seasons, but it helped not to have an Ohio State or Michigan in their league. Now they have both, plus USC, Oregon and Penn State. Will the brief Kalen DeBoer era go down as an outlier?

    Minnesota: -3

    It’s unfortunate for the Golden Gophers that they have yet to reach the Big Ten Championship Game, because now it may never happen. A Playoff berth is not impossible, but Minnesota has had one top-10 season in the past 60 years.

    Northwestern: -3

    The new world may not be kind to overachiever programs like Northwestern. While it regularly makes bowl games and posts occasional Top 25 seasons, it has not finished high enough to make a 12-team CFP since 1996.

    Purdue: -3

    Not likely to contend for Playoff berths whether the field is four or 12. Purdue’s goal is to get to bowl games, and reaching six wins becomes harder without the benefit of a Big Ten West schedule.

    Iowa: -4

    The Hawkeyes have made a living out of grinding out mediocre Big Ten West foes while losing 42-3 to Michigan or 54-10 to Ohio State. In an 18-team league with no more unbalanced divisions and three incoming Top-25 recruiting schools, Iowa could be in for a reckoning.

    UCLA: -4

    Almost nothing about the new world does the Bruins any favors. UCLA is a basketball school whose donors have done little to support football’s NIL efforts. It is joining a conference full of big brands and football-first fan bases. Not a recipe for success.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Maryland in the Big Ten: From ‘what are we doing?’ to ‘amazing decision’

    Big 12

    BYU: +5

    The Cougars have finally climbed the mountaintop after spending their entire history either in a non-power conference or as an independent. They now have direct access to the CFP, and won’t finish ranked 16th with just one loss, as happened in 2020.

    Cincinnati: +4

    The Bearcats’ dream season in 2021 does not have to be an aberration going forward, as they won’t have to go undefeated to make the Playoff. And power-conference status should help them land more recruits in their fertile city and state.

    Houston: +4

    After nearly 30 years in the post-Southwest Conference wilderness, the Cougars are back in a major conference alongside old rivals Baylor, Texas Tech and TCU. But achieving consistent success in the Big 12 is hardly a given after up-and-downs in the AAC.

    UCF: +4

    Like BYU, Cincinnati and Houston, UCF got its Power 4 life raft, and it’s not like the Knights were struggling beforehand. They’ve reached three BCS/CFP bowl games since 2013. The only question is how they’ll fare as a geographic outlier in the new Big 12.

    Baylor: +2

    Since 2013, the Bears have won three Big 12 titles and reached four BCS bowls but have fallen short of reaching the CFP. In a 12-team field, all of those teams would make it. And that was with Texas and Oklahoma in the conference.

    Kansas State: +2

    K-State could thrive in the new world. It would have made the 12-team CFP four times since 2011. It has sneaky-good NIL support. The biggest challenge will be revenue-sharing. Only three public Power 5 schools made less in 2022.

    Oklahoma State: +2

    Mike Gundy has fielded eight double-digit win teams, all of which would have been 12-team CFP contenders. Most of those teams lost to Oklahoma, against which Gundy is 4-15. The Cowboys no longer have to deal with the Sooners.

    TCU: +2

    The Frogs would have made a 12-team field three times since 2014, and, thanks to the Metroplex, they have the highest recruiting ceiling among the holdovers.

    Colorado: +1

    Anything would be better than the Buffs’ abysmal 13-year tenure in the Pac-12. The Buffs get back into the Texas footprint, which they benefitted from in the old Big 12. But the school still faces an uphill climb in the NIL world, with or without Deion Sanders.

    Texas Tech: +1

    The Red Raiders have largely flailed since the late Mike Leach’s 2009 ouster, but it’s not for lack of resources and fan support. Getting out from under Texas could help, and while CFP berths might be infrequent, they’re attainable.

    Iowa State: 0

    The Cyclones, who have not won a conference championship since 1912, will still have all the same evergreen challenges. They could benefit from a more level version of the Big 12, but they’ll still have to perpetually overachieve.

    Kansas: 0

    The same Iowa State blurb can be applied to Kansas, which has finished ranked roughly once per decade. An expanded Playoff gives the Jayhawks slightly more hope for glory, but 2007 seasons may remain incredibly rare.

    Utah: -1

    Utah enters its new league as strong as any of its programs, but man, did the Utes have a good thing going in the Pac-12. Not only did they reach four league title games in five years, but they could lord their Power 5 membership over rival BYU. No more.

    West Virginia: -1

    The Mountaineers have lost a great deal of their identity since leaving the old Big East for the Big 12 in 2012, and the further dilution of the conference won’t help. But they did at least gain their first geographic partner when Cincinnati joined.

    Arizona: -2

    Joining the Big 12 was great for Arizona basketball. Probably not so much for football, where it has little in common with schools in football-crazed Texas. History suggests the Wildcats will rarely contend for a spot in the Playoff.

    Arizona State: -3

    ASU president Michael Crow had to be dragged kicking and screaming into the Big 12. The pro-market school has little in common with the likes of Texas Tech and Oklahoma State, which, unlike the Sun Devils, have rabid fan bases.

    go-deeper

    GO DEEPER

    Welcome to the new Big 12: Featuring Deion, parity, shifts in playing styles

    SEC

    Alabama: +4

    I don’t expect post-Nick Saban Alabama to make a 12-team CFP nearly every single year, like I do Ohio State, simply because of the depth of the SEC. But it’s still one of a small handful of programs built to succeed in any era.

    Georgia: +4

    Now, even Georgia’s “down” seasons might still end in CFP berths. Kirby Smart would currently have seven straight, up from three in eight seasons. Between Smart and Mark Richt, the Bulldogs would have 13 since 2001.

    LSU: +3

    The Tigers have won three national championships this century, but they might have played for even more were there a 12-team field. They would have made nine by now. Of course, they may also fire coaches more frequently for missing the Playoff.

    Texas: +3

    Unlike rival Oklahoma, Texas has won just three conference titles this century, so that shouldn’t be the measuring stick. But Mack Brown showed what the ceiling can be. He would have reached eight 12-team CFPs in a decade.

    Florida: +2

    Florida must play Georgia every year while mixing in Texas and Oklahoma. But a 12-team Playoff could prove a godsend; the Gators would have made the postseason three consecutive times under Dan Mullen and 10 times since 2000.

    Ole Miss: +2

    Ole Miss has not won the SEC since 1963. Oklahoma and Texas won’t make it any easier. But the program can make the 12-team CFP, and its NIL collective has become one of the models in the sport.

    Tennessee: 0

    The Vols are still playing rivals Alabama, Florida and Georgia for the next two seasons while adding Oklahoma. That’s rough. But Tennessee’s collective is strong, and it has the resources and recruiting cachet to reach occasional CFPs.

    Auburn: -1

    A drawing of the history of Auburn football arcs like a roller coaster, with brief spurs of national supremacy mixed in between long stretches of middle-of-the-pack. And the league just added two more above-the-middle historical programs.

    Missouri: -1

    Missouri would have reached 12-team fields in 2007, 2013 and 2023. That development is good. But the Tigers have benefitted at times from being in the SEC’s easier division, which is now gone, and they are .250 all-time against Oklahoma and Texas.

    Arkansas: -2

    On the bright side, Arkansas gets old rival Texas back. On the downside, the Razorbacks have yet to win the SEC in its 32 years of membership, and it’s not getting easier. They would have reached a 12-team CFP three times in those 32 years.

    Texas A&M: -2

    The best thing the Aggies had going for them in the SEC was that Texas wasn’t in it. Alas. The return of annual matchups with the Longhorns should be fantastic for entertainment purposes but could make for a tougher schedule.

    Kentucky: -3

    Mark Stoops is on track to have a statue sculpted for taking the Wildcats to eight straight bowl games, but those Gator and Music City bowls might not feel as significant in the new world. They also may become harder to reach with no SEC East.

    Mississippi State: -3

    The Bulldogs have finished above .500 in SEC play this century just once, in 2014 with Dak Prescott. The SEC getting bigger, and possibly moving to nine conference games, is likely to be unkind for State.

    Oklahoma: -3

    From 1938-2021, the Sooners claimed a Big 8/Big 12 championship in 47 of those 83 seasons. No major program in the country has more league titles. Realistically, OU will not come close to enjoying that level of dominance in the SEC.

    South Carolina: -3

    Save for that one three-year peak under Steve Spurrier from 2011-13, the Gamecocks have rarely lived in the top half of the SEC. Now they’re losing the SEC East. It will become even more difficult to maintain relevance.

    Vanderbilt: -4

    Vanderbilt was already stuck playing the worst cards in the SEC deck. Now there’s a whole new set of challenges stacked against their deck: the bigger SEC, the importance of NIL and roster poaching from the portal.

    The rest

    Notre Dame: +2

    Some might fixate on the fact that the independent Fighting Irish can never get a first-round bye in the new system, but that misses the larger point: They could reach many more CFPs. They would have made five in Brian Kelly’s 12 seasons.

    Oregon State and Washington State: -5

    There’s no sugarcoating it: Two historic Power 5 programs have been relegated to de facto Group of 5 status, playing de facto Mountain West schedules. And unlike actual G5 schools, they have no guaranteed access to the Playoff.

    All Group of 5 programs: -3

    For the first time in history, one of these schools is guaranteed to compete for a national championship every year. But that does not offset the further irrelevance — nor the pain of Power 4 schools poaching all of their best players.

    Bigger takeaways

    1. As usual, the biggest changes to the sport almost always mostly benefit the “big boys” the most. Outside of the former G5 programs moving up, the biggest beneficiaries are the Alabamas, Georgias and Ohio States of the sport. There are, however, a few exceptions: Oklahoma and USC fall into the “be careful what you wish for” category.
    2. And while the Big 12 is currently scrounging for any additional penny it can raise, no conference had a higher percentage of on-field gainers. That’s because Playoff berths are now attainable for the likes of Oklahoma State, Kansas State and TCU.
    3. Only two of the former Pac-12 schools (Oregon and Colorado) got a positive score, as most are entering their new conferences begrudgingly. It will never not be stupefying to think about how Pac-12 leadership screwed it up so badly.

    (Top illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Photos: Sam Wasson, Kevin C. Cox, Scott Taetsch, Brett Deering / Getty)

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    The New York Times

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  • Florida State’s CWS run ends at the hands of No. 1 Tennessee

    Florida State’s CWS run ends at the hands of No. 1 Tennessee

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    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Tennessee fell flat in its two previous College World Series appearances and in between there was the crushing loss in NCAA super regionals as the No. 1 national seed.

    All that has led to this year’s Volunteers putting themselves in position to play for the program’s first national title beginning Saturday.

    Tennessee is heading to the CWS finals for the first time in the modern era after it knocked out Florida State with a 7-2 victory on Wednesday to win its bracket.

    Zander Sechrist held the Seminoles (49-17) scoreless for six innings and the Volunteers struck for four early runs to become the first No. 1 national seed since 2009 to advance to the best-of-three finals.

    “We always say before something happens, something happens,” coach Tony Vitello said. “There’s been a lot of build-up into the successes we’ve had this year and the failures, too, to be honest with you. And it’s been fun to be a part of.”

    Tennessee’s win assured an all-SEC finals for the second straight year and third time in four. The Volunteers (58-12) will play Texas A&M or Florida.

    The Southeastern Conference will have at least one team in the finals for the 15th time in 16 years. Seven SEC teams have made it since 2009. The fact Tennessee hadn’t been among them had become more frustrating on Rocky Top in recent years. The Vols’ 209 victories and 559 home runs since the start of the 2021 season are the most of any Division I program, after all.

    Tennessee made it to a one-game final in its first CWS appearance in 1951, losing 3-2 to Oklahoma. In those days, there were no preliminary rounds in the NCAA Tournament; teams were selected for the CWS based on regular-season performance.

    The Vols broke through under Vitello after winning a combined one of five games in trips to Omaha in 2021 and 2023. In 2022, they lost a three-game super regional to Notre Dame team at home.

    “That’s a good team in the other dugout, clearly,” said second-year FSU coach Link Jarrett, who coached the Notre Dame team that knocked out the Vols two years ago. “Well-constructed, variety of arms, physical offensively, dynamic, athletic. They made some exceptional plays. You could basically go around the diamond and make note of the exceptional plays they made.”

    FSU freshman John Abraham (5-2) was making his first start since April 9 and third of the season. He struggled with his control and faced only five batters before getting pulled with one out.

    Tennessee was up 4-0 when Burke singled in a run in the second and he finished the scoring in the ninth when he hit his 20th home run of the season. That made the Vols the first team in Division I history to have five players with at least 20 homers. They have a nation-leading 178, nine behind the Division I record set by LSU in 1997.

    Burke got a couple fastballs, a changeup and a surprise slider from Conner Whittaker.

    “It was nasty, a back-foot slider. I told him, ‘Good pitch,’” Burke said. “I did that just so I could get it again because I knew it was coming. I fouled a fastball off and I kind of knew that pitch was coming. I was prepared for it. I got my barrel on it.”

    Sechrist (5-1) came into the game 3-0 in his previous four starts with an 0.78 ERA and 18 strikeouts in 23 innings. His scoreless streak in the NCAA Tournament ended at 17 1/3 innings when Daniel Cantu and Alex Lodise hit back-to-back homers in the seventh.

    In a CWS marked by jaw-dropping defensive plays, Tennessee’s Kavares Tears made one equal to teammate Hunter Ensley’s against North Carolina on Sunday.

    Tears chased down Marco Dinges’ deep drive to right center to end the first inning, catching the ball while crashing into the wall, his sunglasses and hat flying off.

    Tears, the Vols’ regular right fielder, made his first start in center since April 23 because Ensley suffered a lower-body injury when he caught Antony Donofrio’s deep fly to center just before crashing into the wall. Ensley was the designated hitter against the Seminoles. and went 1 for 4.

    “K.T.’s catch set the tone, especially in the first inning,” Sechrist said. “I know our offense scored in the top of the first, but he set the tone right there.”

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    Associated Press

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  • Hults helps Florida State hold off North Carolina at College World Series

    Hults helps Florida State hold off North Carolina at College World Series

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    OMAHA, Neb. — Connor Hults pitched 4-1/3 innings of shutout relief to thwart North Carolina’s comeback bid, and Jaxson West and Max Williams hit back-to-back homers in the ninth for insurance as Florida State defeated the Tar Heels 9-5 in an elimination game at the College World Series on Tuesday.


    What You Need To Know

    • Florida State turned back North Carolina 9-5 in a College World Series elimination game
    • Connor Hults pitched 4-1/3 shutout innings in relief to keep the Tar Heels at bay
    • The Seminoles play another elimination game Wednesday against top-seeded Tennessee
    • Jaxson West of FSU had four hits in five at-bats

    The Seminoles (49-16) will play top-seeded Tennessee on Wednesday afternoon. They would have to beat the Volunteers then, and again Thursday to reach the finals for the first time since 1999.

    The Tar Heels (48-16) lost consecutive games for the first time since mid-April and went 1-2 in their first CWS since 2018.

    Though FSU and North Carolina are both from the Atlantic Coast Conference, this was their first meeting since the Tar Heels swept a three-game series to end the 2022 regular season.

    Florida State led 3-1 after chasing both Aidan Haugh (4-3) and Matthew Matthijs in the third inning. The Tar Heels called on Dalton Pence, who extended his NCAA Tournament shutout innings streak to 14-1/3 innings before five singles in six at-bats led to four runs in the fifth inning, giving the Seminoles a 7-1 lead.

    North Carolina scored four runs in the bottom half. With two runners on, Vance Honeycutt greeted Conner Whittaker with his fourth homer in five games, and Jackson Van De Brake followed with an RBI single to make it a two-run game.

    Hults (3-1) got the last out of the inning and retired 12 of 15 batters in his longest outing of the season. He never was in trouble. Honeycutt singled leading off the seventh, but was erased in a rundown between first and second base. After Van De Brake doubled in the eighth, Hults coaxed two groundouts. He walked Alex Madera to start the ninth inning but sandwiched a strikeout between two groundouts to end the game.

    West, the No. 9 batter for FSU, had a career-high four hits in five at-bats. His homer was his second in four games and just his third of the season.

    Williams hit his fifth homer in eight NCAA Tournament games and has 14 for the season.

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    Associated Press

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  • Ferrer homers twice as FSU knocks Virginia out of CWS

    Ferrer homers twice as FSU knocks Virginia out of CWS

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    OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Jaime Ferrer hit two homers, Carson Dorsey turned in a third straight strong start, and Florida State bounced back from a gut-wrenching loss two days earlier to stay alive in the College World Series with a 7-3 win over Virginia on Sunday.

    The Seminoles (48-16) have won at least one game in five straight CWS appearances since 2010 and will play Tuesday against the loser of Sunday night’s North Carolina-Tennessee matchup.

    The Cavaliers (46-17) went 0-2 in Omaha for the second straight year and have lost six straight CWS games since 2021.

    Florida State was coming off a 12-11 walk-off loss to No. 1 national seed Tennessee in its CWS opener Friday night. Many in garnet and gold thought the Seminoles were robbed of a win when a check-swing call that could have ended the game instead went Tennessee’s way before Dylan Dreiling’s game-winning hit.

    FSU coach Link Jarrett said Friday’s outcome left him with a terrible headache that lasted well into Saturday, and he was concerned about how his team would respond.

    “This probably was the best game we played this year,” Jarrett said. “That sums up what’s in that dugout. It’s not easy to go to bed after that, not a pleasant day. To watch them play their best game, that’s a thrill I’ll never forget here. That’s beyond an experience I’ve ever had here, just the response.”

    Ferrer connected on Virginia starter Jay Woolfolk’s first pitch of the fourth inning and launched a wind-aided fly into the left-field bullpen off Joe Savino for a three-run shot in the fifth. Ferrer has three homers in two CWS games, five in his last four games and 22 for the season.

    Ferrer has driven in four runs in back-to-back games, making him the first player with multiple games with four or more RBIs in a single CWS since Southern California’s Robb Gorr in 1998, according to ESPN.

    Dorsey (8-4), who allowed three runs and struck out seven, was lifted for Brennen Oxford after giving up a base hit to start the eighth. In three NCAA Tournament starts, Dorsey has yielded five earned runs and struck out 20 in 21 innings.

    All four of Dorsey’s pitches were working at a high level, particularly his curve, and he leaned on the breaking more than usual.

    “We saw it work early in the game and we decided to stay with it,” he said. “No need to change what’s working.”

    The left-hander held the Cavaliers scoreless until the seventh, when the ball popped out of Ferrer’s glove as he tried to make a sliding catch of Henry Godbout’s liner to left. That allowed Ethan Anderson to score from second, and Casey Saucke followed with an RBI single.

    Woolfolk (4-2) left in the fourth after he tweaked his right knee on the pitch Ferrer drove out for his first homer of the game. Athletic trainer Brian McGuire made a mound visit, and Woolfolk threw some warmup pitches to see if he could continue. He got an out and walked Drew Faurot, prompting another visit from McGuire. This time Woolfolk came out and Savino relieved.

    “Freak accident,” an emotional Woolfolk said. “I feel fine. I feel great now. Just something that happened. I wish I could have kept going.”

    It was a difficult ending for Woolfolk, originally a two-sport athlete who was expected to compete for the starting quarterback’s job on the football team in 2023. He announced a month before fall camp that he would give up football to focus on baseball, and he was a weekend starter the first month of the season.

    He struggled with his control and went to the bullpen, but coach Brian O’Connor gave him another opportunity to start in the postseason and he turned in two of the best performances of his career in regionals and super regionals. He was sharp Sunday until he got hurt, striking out three while retiring the first six FSU batters.

    The game was delayed more than five minutes in the eighth inning after home plate umpire Linus Baker was shaken up when a foul ball into the dirt behind the plate bounced into his right knee and up under his mask’s chin pad. Medical personnel tended to Baker and gave him the OK to continue and equipment staff checked his mask before play resumed.

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    Associated Press

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  • Dreiling’s hit in 9th gives Vols 12-11 walk-off win over Seminoles in CWS

    Dreiling’s hit in 9th gives Vols 12-11 walk-off win over Seminoles in CWS

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    OMAHA, Neb. — Florida State will play to avoid elimination from the College World Series on Sunday night after dropping its opener to top-seeded Tennessee 12-11 on Friday night.


    What You Need To Know

    • Florida State lost to Tennessee 12-11 in both teams’ first game at the College World Series
    • The Volunteers’ Dylan Dreiling punched in the winning run with a single in the bottom of the ninth inning
    • A check-swing call for Tennessee’s Blake Burke in the ninth kept the Vols in the game 
    • The Seminoles play Virginia in an elimination game on Sunday
    • The Vols’ Christian Moore became the first player to hit for the cycle at the tournament since 1956.

    Dylan Dreiling’s single into the left-center field gap drove in the go-ahead run in the bottom of the ninth inning as Tennessee rallied to beat Florida State, capping a night when Christian Moore became the first player in 68 years to hit for the cycle at the College World Series.

    Tennessee (56-12) will play North Carolina in a Bracket 1 winner’s game on Sunday night. Florida State (47-16) will meet Virginia in an elimination game in the afternoon.

    The Volunteers overcame sloppy defensive play and poor pitching, ratcheting up their high-powered offense another notch at the end to win their first CWS opener in five appearances since 2001.

    Moore went 5-for-6 for the Volunteers while becoming the first player to hit for the cycle at the CWS since Minnesota’s Jerry Kindall did it against Mississippi in 1956.

    Tennessee, which trailed 9-4 in the fifth inning, overcame its biggest deficit to win on the road or at a neutral site since coming from five runs down to win at UC Irvine in 2017.

    The Vols, in the CWS for a second straight year and third in the past four, trailed 11-8 entering the bottom of the ninth. Kavares Tears, who homered earlier, tripled leading off and scored on a sacrifice fly.

    Moore came to bat with two outs and a runner on base and was down to his last strike against Brennen Oxford (2-1) when he doubled into the left-field corner.

    “It was a fight, me against him, mano a mano,” Moore said. “I guess I won that.”

    That brought up Blake Burke, who delivered the tying single up the middle after he might have caught a break when third-base umpire Shawn Rakos signaled Burke checked his swing on a pitch with two strikes.

    “It was a check swing, and I didn’t go,” Burke said. “Just kept battling and that was the result.”

    FSU coach Link Jarrett’s body language in the dugout indicated he didn’t agree with the check-swing call. He did not directly address the play after the game. Had the call gone the other way, the game would have been over, and FSU would have won.

    “You guys saw the game,” he told reporters. “I need to watch every pitch of this game again. There’s factors in this that affect the outcome of the game, and I can’t tell from 90 feet away on the side what was going on with some of the things that occurred. Every pitch matters in these games, and you saw the result of this.”

    Burke moved to second on Billy Amick’s single off Oxford, and then Dreiling drove in the winning run on the second pitch from Connor Hults.

    Nate Snead (10-2), the sixth Tennessee pitcher, got the win after holding the Seminoles scoreless on one hit over the last 2-1/3 innings.

    The Seminoles took a 9-4 lead in the fourth inning when Jaime Ferrer hit a two-run home run, the first of the College World Series and his 20th of the season.

    After Tennessee scored off homers in fifth and sixth innings, Marco Dinges put FSU up 11-7 with a two-run double in the seventh inning. 

    Moore, the Vols’ leadoff man and a projected top-15 pick in the amateur draft next month, started his big night with a triple, his first since 2022, into the right-center gap in the first inning. He doubled in the second, singled in the fourth and drove the ball 440 feet to straight-away center for his 33rd homer of the season leading off the bottom of the sixth.

    “The whole game, I tried to get on base and set the tone,” Moore said. “I really, to be honest, didn’t know I did it (hit for the cycle).”

    The Vols’ first walk-off win of the season came after a grinding first half of the game. They committed three errors in a game for only the second time this season. The three errors also matched their most in 21 all-time CWS games. Tennessee pitchers combined to allow 13 hits, walk a season high-tying nine and hit a batter.

    The top-seeded Vols came to Omaha with a school-record 173 homers and averaging 9.2 runs per game for the season and 10.7 for the NCAA Tournament. Burke said it was only a matter of time before the offense cranked up.

    “We threw a bunch of jabs the whole game,” he said, “and landed the big punch in the ninth.”

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    Associated Press

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  • With only SEC and ACC teams, College World Series might offer glimpse of future

    With only SEC and ACC teams, College World Series might offer glimpse of future

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    OMAHA, Neb. — The College World Series begins Friday, and only two conferences will be represented on the game’s biggest stage for the first time since the event expanded to eight teams in 1950.

    The Southeastern Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference each are sending four teams, the SEC for the fourth time since 2015 and seventh overall and the ACC for the first time since 2006.


    What You Need To Know

    • The 2024 College World Series opens Friday with eight teams 
    • But only two conferences, the SEC and the ACC, are represented
    • Florida, Florida State, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina State, Texas A&M and Kentucky are the teams; see capsules below
    • Since 2014, 50 of the 80 CWS teams have been from the SEC (31) or ACC (19)
    • Some coaches at smaller schools say they are struggling to compete because of NIL deals and unlimited transfers

    Their exclusivity this year hints at an even greater concentration of power in the sport as college athletics moves into an era when players, already able to transfer around freely, can make more money than ever, scholarship limits are likely to be removed and the richest schools pour more resources into facilities.

    The CWS opens Friday with an all-ACC matchup between North Carolina (47-14) and Virginia (46-15) and Tennessee (55-12) of the SEC playing Florida State (47-15) of the ACC. Games the next day match Kentucky (45-14) of the SEC against the ACC’s North Carolina State (38-21) and Texas A&M (49-13) against Florida (34-28) in an all-SEC meeting.

    College baseball has never been better, coaches and administrators say. The shortening of the amateur draft since the COVID-10 pandemic has kept talented older players in school, regular-season television coverage has expanded and attendance has increased.

    “I honestly believe we’re probably in a golden age of college baseball right now,” American Baseball Coaches Association Executive Director Craig Keilitz said.

    Beneath the surface, there is concern the transformation of college athletics will further reduce the number of programs capable of competing at the highest level.

    Baseball already is top heavy. The SEC has claimed four consecutive national championships and nine of the past 14, and has had at least one team in 14 of the past 15 finals. Since 2014, 50 of the 80 CWS teams have been from the SEC (31) or ACC (19).

    Part of the sport’s charm has been the ability of smaller programs to occasionally rise up and challenge the big-name brands, scenes familiar to fans of the March Madness basketball tournaments.

    Evansville, which had one of the oldest rosters in the country this year, came within one win of going to Omaha by extending its super regional against overall top-seeded Tennessee to three games. Oral Roberts made it to the CWS last year and won a game. Stony Brook was here, along with Kent State, in 2012. Coastal Carolina, then in the Big South, won the national title in 2016.

    “Those are the teams you root for,” Cal State Fullerton coach Jason Dietrich said. “Not to say you don’t root for the other schools, but you love the underdog, the teams that don’t have the bells and whistles.”

    Transfers and tender

    As with other sports, the transfer portal and athletes’ ability to earn endorsement money through name, image and likeness deals have turned baseball on its head.

    Florida State, Kentucky and Texas A&M each went into their super regionals with five players in their everyday lineups who started at other Division I schools. The number was two for North Carolina, NC State and Tennessee and one for Virginia.

    Kentucky had the most Division I transfers on its roster with 12; NC State had the fewest with five.

    Baseball receives only 4.8% of overall NIL spending, according to Opendorse, and is far behind the top three sports — football, men’s basketball and women’s basketball. The top 25 NIL earners in baseball are making an average of $45,000 per year.

    But with most players receiving a partial scholarship because of the current NCAA limit of 11.7 per team, any income helps offset the cost of attendance. Schools offering the most NIL money through their donors naturally get the best players.

    Since July 1, 2021, the average estimated annual NIL spending per SEC baseball team was $820,000 to $920,000, based on more than 150,000 NIL transactions disclosed through or processed by Opendorse, a company that works with dozens of schools and more than 40 collectives on NIL activities. A number of SEC teams are said to be spending well into the millions.

    The average NIL spending in the ACC is half that of the SEC but still ranks second among all conferences.

    If scholarship limits are removed, which is the expectation, deep-pocketed programs could choose to fully fund their programs.

    This year, each program can divvy up 11.7 scholarships among 32 players. If all 32 get full rides in the future, the chasm between the haves and have-nots in the sport surely will deepen. And there could be additional money for baseball players in the major conferences as part of the revenue-sharing plan proposed in the NCAA’s antitrust case settlement.

    Ripple effects

    Dietrich grew up in Southern California and remembers when the small-budget Titans were one of college baseball’s best programs. Fullerton has appeared in 18 CWS, most recently in 2017, and won four national titles, tied for fifth most.

    Dietrich can’t offer the amenities of the major-conference schools and must recruit players who often need a year or two of seasoning. Fullerton has smaller NIL money available compared with larger programs, so Dietrich is susceptible to losing the players he develops and can land larger endorsement deals elsewhere.

    Fullerton went to an NCAA regional last year but lost three starting position players and its best reliever to the draft and then had another everyday starter and a bullpen arm join five teammates in the transfer portal. The Titans were 16-38 this season.

    “We’re doing everything we can,” Dietrich said. “Our goal is to go to Omaha and compete for a national championship. We see there are some obstacles ahead, but that’s just the way it is.”

    Big Ten-bound UCLA is one of the biggest brands on the West Coast but has struggled since making a regional in 2022. Eleven players went into the portal the next two cycles, and most were difference-makers like pitchers Thatcher Hurd and Gage Jump (both to LSU).

    Personnel losses to the portal and the draft left Bruins coach John Savage relying on one of the most freshmen-heavy rosters in the country. He noted the physical mismatch between his 18-year-old freshmen against the opponent’s 24-year-old seniors. The result was a last-place finish in the Pac-12 this year.

    Retiring Coastal Carolina coach Gary Gilmore said he’s not against the idea of NIL money for athletes. He is against the lack of guardrails around it, especially with booster-funded collectives at the big schools spending freely and rules that allow players to transfer as often as they like without penalty.

    “If Major League Baseball, the NBA and NFL had a system where everyone was a free agent every year, do you realize what chaos it would be?” Gilmore said. “If you did it in baseball, it would be the Yankees, Red Sox, Dodgers and Texas. The rest of the teams couldn’t compete. That’s what is going on right now. There’s not a level playing field.”

    Teams playing for 2024 national championship

    A look at the eight teams competing in the College World Series, which starts Friday at Charles Schwab Field. (Capsules in order of CWS opening games. Coaches’ records through super regionals):

    Virginia (46-15)

    • Coach: Brian O’Connor (885-368-2 in 21 years at Virginia and overall).
    • Road to Omaha: Won Charlottesville Regional — Beat Penn 4-2, beat Mississippi State 5-4, beat Mississippi State 9-2. Won Charlottesville Super Regional — Beat Kansas State 7-4, beat Kansas State 10-4.
    • 2024 record vs. CWS teams: 3-4 (2-1 vs. North Carolina, 1-2 vs. N.C. State, 0-1 vs. Florida State).
    • Last CWS appearance: 2023.
    • All-time record in CWS: 13-12 in six appearances (won national title in 2015).
    • Meet the Cavaliers: C Jacob Ference (.354, 17 HRs, 43 RBIs), 1B Henry Ford (.339, 17, 68), 2B Henry Godbout (.370, 9, 46), SS Griff O’Ferrall (.332, 5, 51), 3B Eric Becker (.363, 8, 46), LF Harrison Didawick (.297, 23, 68), CF Bobby Whalen (.370, 2, 35), RF Casey Saucke (.343, 14, 64). Starting pitchers: Evan Blanco (8-3, 3.69 ERA), RHP Jay Woolfolk (4-1, 5.95), RHP Joe Savino (3-2, 3.18). Relievers: RHP Chase Hungate (7-1, 3.71), LHP Owen Coady (1-1, 5.94), LHP Angelo Tonas (3-0, 3.96), RHP Aidan Teel (2-2, 7.88), LHP Blake Barker (2-1, 7.31), RHP Ryan Osinski (4-1, 4.80), RHP Matt Augustin (2-0, 4.28).
    • MLB alumni: Ryan Zimmerman, Ricky Horton, Javier Lopez, Mark Reynolds, Phil Gosselin, Sean Doolittle, David Adams, Pavin Smith.
    • Short hops: Brian O’Connor grew up across the Missouri River from Omaha in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and he has participated in the CWS as a pitcher (1991, Creighton), assistant (2002, Notre Dame) and head coach. … Virginia is in CWS for second straight year and third time in four years. … The Cavaliers’ .336 season batting average is the best among teams in Omaha. … Their 116 homers are 33 more than the previous program record of 83, set last year.
    • Quotable: “We’ve got excellent young men who represent this uniform the right way and they’re tigers. They’re just completely relentless with everything they do. You won’t be able to get the smile off my face that they have the opportunity to go back to Omaha. I’m very, very confident we’ll be ready to play whenever they tell us to play and believe we’ll have a deeper run than we had last year.” — O’Connor.

    North Carolina (47-14)

    • Coach: Scott Forbes (153-87, four years at North Carolina and overall).
    • Road to Omaha: Won Chapel Hill regional — Beat LIU 11-8, beat LSU 6-2, beat LSU 8-4, beat LSU 4-3 in 10 innings. Won Chapel Hill super regional — Beat West Virginia 8-6, beat West Virginia 2-1.
    • 2024 record vs. CWS teams: 2-4 (1-2 vs. Virginia, 1-2 vs. N.C. State).
    • Last CWS appearance: 2018.
    • All-time record in CWS: 18-23 in 11 appearances.
    • Meet the Tar Heels: C Luke Stevenson (.283, 14 HRs, 58 RBIs), 1B Parks Harber (.341, 20, 63), 2B Alex Madera (.301, 2, 34), SS Colby Wilkerson (.282, 3, 33), 3B Gavin Gallaher (.337, 8, 38), LF Casey Cook (.339, 18, 76), CF Vance Honeycutt (.314, 26, 65), RF Anthony Donofrio (.338, 7, 52), DH Alberto Osuna (.285, 14, 56). Starting pitchers: RHP Jason DeCaro (6-1, 3.89 ERA), LHP Shea Sprague (3-1, 4.00), RHP Aidan Haugh (4-2, 4.53). Relievers: LHP Dalton Pence (4-1, 2.04, 8 saves), RHP Matthew Matthijs (12-4, 3.65), RHP Ben Peterson (3-2, 4.97), RHP Matt Poston (5-2, 5.25), LHP Kyle Percival (4-0, 2.42), RHP Connor Bovair (1-0, 3.71), RHP Cameron Padgett (1-0, 4.91).
    • MLB Alumni: Michael Busch, Cooper Criswell, Tim Federowicz, Zac Gallen, Matt Harvey, Chris Iannetta, Andrew Miller, Colin Moran, Mike Morin, Ryder Ryan, Kyle Seager, Jacob Stallings, Trent Thornton, Adam Warren.
    • Short hops: The Tar Heels’ 47 wins are their most since they had 48 in 2009. … They scored the winning run or runs on their last at-bat in three of their five NCAA Tournament wins. … Honeycutt broke his school single-season home run record when he belted his 26th in the super regional-clinching win. … Matthew Matthijs’ 12 wins lead the ACC and are ranked third nationally.
    • Quotable: “I’m really happy for this team, these players. I’ve been fortunate enough to be in Omaha, and these guys haven’t. My whole goal, I just want to get these guys there because they deserve to be there.” — Forbes.

    Florida State (47-15)

    • Coach: Link Jarrett (70-46 in two seasons at FSU; 371-244 overall in 12 seasons).
    • Road to Omaha: Won Tallahassee Regional — Beat Stetson 7-2, beat UCF 5-2, beat UCF 12-4. Won Tallahassee Super Regional — Beat UConn 24-4, beat UConn 10-8, 12 innings.
    • 2024 record vs. CWS teams: 5-1 (3-0 vs. Florida, 1-1 vs. N.C. State, 1-0 vs. Virginia).
    • Last CWS appearance: 2019.
    • All-time record in CWS: 30-46 in 23 appearances.
    • Meet the Seminoles: C Jaxon West (.263, 2 HRs, 26 RBIs) or McGwire Holbrook (.268, 2, 16), 1B Daniel Cantu (.311, 8, 40), 2B Drew Faurot (.294, 6, 28), SS Alex Lodise (.276, 7, 41), 3B Cam Smith (.402, 16, 56), LF Jaime Ferrer (.319, 19, 58), CF Max Williams (.301, 13, 43), RF James Tibbs III (.374, 28, 94), DH Marco Dinges (.321, 15, 66). Starting pitchers: LHP Jamie Arnold (11-3, 2.77 ERA), LHP Carson Dorsey (7-4, 4.67), RHP Connor Whittaker (5-0, 4.75). Relievers: LHP Brennen Oxford (2-0, 2.94, 6 saves), RHP John Abraham (5-1, 4.24), LHP Connor Hults (2-1, 4.45), LHP Andrew Armstrong (5-0, 6.98), RHP Joe Charles (1-0, 6.52), RHP Noah Short, 1-1, 7.71), RHP Ben Barrett (1-0, 5.27), LHP Brady Louck (1-1, 7.06), LHP Rowan Hudson (0-1, 9.20), RHP Yoel Tejeda Jr. (1-2, 5.95).
    • MLB Alumni: Buster Posey, J.D. Drew, Stephen Drew, Kevin Cash, Doug Mientkiewicz, Paul Sorrento, Deion Sanders, Richie Lewis, Luis Alicea, Terry Kennedy, Johnny Grubb, Dick Howser.
    • Short hops: Jarrett is taking his second school to the CWS. His Notre Dame team made it in 2022. He played in three CWS as an FSU shortstop in the 1990s. … Tibbs, the ACC player of the year, hit three homers in the 10-8, 12-inning super regional-clinching win over UConn. His 28 homers are FSU’s most since Marshall McDougall hit 28 in 1999. … The Seminoles’ 24-win improvement extends the largest year-over-year jump in program history. … The Seminoles have homered in 15 consecutive games and in 57 of 62.
    • Quotable: “There are a lot of things that come at you when you’re in Omaha. There are a lot of interviews, a lot of distractions, a lot of people. The first opening weekend in Omaha is right up there with an experience at an NFL Super Bowl playoff-type game, the Final Four, Augusta. It’s that. And they’re going to feel it, and I’m probably more prepared for it now because of what I had to go through in Omaha in 2022.” — Jarrett.

    Tennessee (55-12)

    • Coach: Tony Vitello (290-111 in seven years at Tennessee and overall).
    • Road to Omaha: Won Knoxville Regional — Beat Northern Kentucky 9-3, beat Indiana 12-6, beat Southern Mississippi 12-3. Won Knoxville Super Regional — Beat Evansville 11-6, lost to Evansville 10-8, beat Evansville 12-1.
    • 2024 record vs. CWS teams: 5-1 (2-0 vs. Kentucky, 2-1 vs. Florida, 1-0 vs. Texas A&M).
    • Last CWS appearance: 2023.
    • All-time record in CWS: 9-12 in six appearances.
    • Meet the Volunteers: C Cal Stark (.231, 10 HRs, 28 RBIs), 1B Blake Burke (.376, 19, 56), 2B Christian Moore (.375, 32, 71), SS Dean Curley (.273, 12, 46), 3B Billy Amick (.313, 23. 64), LF Dylan Dreiling (.320, 20, 64), CF Hunter Ensley (.292, 11, 45), RF Kavares Tears (.330, 18, 55), DH Dalton Bargo (.294, 8, 27). Starting pitchers: LHP Chris Stamos (3-0, 4.02 ERA), RHP Drew Beam (8-2, 4.44), LHP Zander Sechrist (4-1, 3.26). Relievers: RHP AJ Causey (13-3, 3.77), LHP Kirby Connell (4-1, 3.98), RHP Nate Snead (9-2, 3.34, 5 saves), LHP Andrew Behnke (3-1, 3.12), RHP JJ Garcia (3-0, 3.97), RHP Aaron Combs (2-1, 2.65).
    • MLB alumni: Todd Helton, Phil Garner, Rick Honeycutt, Luke Hochevar, R.A. Dickey, Joe Randa, Mike Difelice, Bubba Trammell, Chris Burke, Mike Lincoln, Steve Searcy, Nick Senzel.
    • Short hops: The Vols’ 173 home runs are a school record and second most in Division I history behind LSU’s 188 in 1997. … This is the Vols’ second straight CWS and third in four years. … Seven home runs in super regional-clinching win tied a school record. … The Vols have hit at least six home runs in six games. … The Vols are averaging 10.7 runs and 4.33 home runs per game in NCAA Tournament. … Billy Amick, Christian Moore and Cal Stark each have four homers in the tournament.
    • Quotable: “Omaha is real fun to go to. If you don’t play that well, it ain’t that fun.” — Vitello.

    North Carolina State (38-21)

    • Coach: Elliott Avent (1,036-613 in 28 years at NC State; 1,260-826 in 36 years overall).
    • Road to Omaha: Won Raleigh Regional — Beat Bryant 9-2, beat South Carolina 6-4, beat James Madison 5-3. Won Athens Super Regional —Beat Georgia 18-1, lost to Georgia 11-2, beat Georgia 8-5.
    • 2024 record vs. CWS teams: 5-3 (2-1 vs. North Carolina, 1-1 vs. Florida State).
    • Last CWS appearance: 2021.
    • All-time record in CWS: 5-5 in three appearances.
    • Meet the Wolfpack: C Jacob Cozart (.300, 19 HRs, 53 RBIs), 1B Garrett Pennington (.348, 18, 65), 2B Matt Heavner (.264, 10, 33), SS Brandon Butterworth (.250, 7, 31), 3B Alec Makarewicz (.380, 22, 80), LF Luke Nixon (.260, 14, 29), CF Eli Serrano III (.297, 9, 39), RF Noah Soles (.221, 5, 22), DH Alex Sosa (.226, 6, 24). Starting pitchers: RHP Sam Highfill (7-2, 5.06 ERA), Dominic Fritton (3-6, 7.35), RHP Logan Whitaker (3-1, 6.06). Relievers: RHP Jacob Dudan (4-2, 4.40), RHP Derrick Smith (3-1, 4.50), RHP Andrew Shaffner (0-0, 5.56), LHP Ryan Marohn (4-2, 3.97), RHP Hollis Fanning (2-1, 7.41), RHP Carson Kelly (1-0, 9.64), RHP Shane Van Dam (4-0, 4.58), LHP Cooper Consiglio (5-4, 4.97), RHP Jaxon Lucas (1-0, 9.43).
    • MLB Alumni: Carlos Rodon, Trea Turner, Andrew Knizner, Mike Caldwell, Dan Plesac, Tim Stoddard, Greg Briley.
    • Short hops: Third CWS appearance since 2013. The 2021 Wolfpack were one win away from making the finals when the NCAA removed them from the CWS because of COVID-19 protocols. … Their .332 team batting average in NCAA Tournament is best among CWS teams. … Alec Makarewicz has five of his team’s 17 doubles in the tournament. … Pennington hit two of his four NCAA Tournament home runs in super regionals.
    • Quotable: “Not that it ever gets old going to Omaha. Yes, I want to go again. Yes, I want to eat at the Drover restaurant. I’ve kept that menu up probably three weeks.” — Avent, referring to the iconic Omaha steakhouse.

    Kentucky (45-14)

    • Coach: Nick Mingione (261-164 in eight years at Kentucky and overall).
    • Road to Omaha: Won Lexington Regional — Beat Western Michigan 10-8, beat Illinois 6-1, beat Indiana State 5-0. Won Lexington Super Regional — Beat Oregon State 10-0, beat Oregon State 3-2.
    • 2024 record vs. CWS teams: 3-3 (1-2 vs. Tennessee, 2-1 vs. Florida).
    • Last CWS appearance: First appearance.
    • All-time record in CWS: 0-0.
    • Meet the Wildcats: C Devin Burkes (.250, 3 HRs, 35 RBIs), 1B Ryan Nicholson (.299, 21, 61), 2B Emilien Pitre (.298, 9, 56), SS Grant Smith (.248, 5, 34), 3B Mitchell Daly (.302, 6, 44), LF Ryan Waldschmidt (.346, 14, 46), CF Nolan McCarthy (.286, 7, 39), RF James McCoy (.228, 6, 25), DH Nick Lopez (.350, 6, 50). Starting pitchers: RHP Trey Pooser (7-1, 3.46 ERA), RHP Mason Moore (9-3, 4.93), LHP Dominic Niman (8-2, 6.24). Relievers: LHP Jackson Nove (1-0, 5.46), RHP Cameron O’Brien (3-0, 3.94), RHP Robert Hogan (1-0, 2.58), RHP Ryan Hagenow (2-0, 1.96), RHP Johnny Hummel (3-0, 3.49, 7 saves), LHP Evan Byers (3-1, 5.32).
    • MLB Alumni: Jeff Abbott, Joe Blanton, Kyle Cody, Sean Hjelle, Paul Kilgus, Jason Kipnis, Jim Leyritz, James Paxton, JT Riddle, Chris Rusin, Terry Shumpert, Mark Thompson, Brandon Webb.
    • Short hops: The Wildcats tied with Tennessee for the SEC regular-season title. … Their 45 wins ties for the most in school history (2012). The Wildcats have consecutive 40-win seasons for first time. … Their 2.00 team ERA and 4.6 hits allowed per nine innings in NCAA Tournament rank first. … Pitchers have allowed four runs over the past 39 innings.
    • Quotable: “You know you’re confident in getting (to Omaha) with your squad. But, man, when it actually happens, it’s like you look around and you’re like, ‘We’re going to Omaha!’ It’s crazy. It’s crazy.” — Burkes.

    Texas A&M (49-13)

    • Coach: Jim Schlossnagle (131-60 in three seasons at Texas A&M; 942-453 in 23 seasons overall).
    • Road to Omaha: Won College Station regional — Beat Grambling 8-0, beat Texas 4-2 in 11 innings, beat Louisiana-Lafayette 9-7. Won College Station Super Regional — Beat Oregon 10-6, beat Oregon 15-9.
    • 2024 record vs. CWS teams: 1-3 (1-2 vs. Florida, 0-1 vs. Tennessee).
    • Last CWS appearance: 2022.
    • All-time record in CWS: 4-14 in 7 appearances.
    • Meet the Aggies: C Jackson Appel (.330, 10 HRs, 40 RBIs), 1B Ted Burton (.295, 9, 43), 2B Kaeden Kent (.302, 3, 21), SS Ali Camarillo (.297, 7, 35), 3B Gavin Grahovac (.306, 22, 63), LF Caden Sorrell (.264, 10, 36), CF Travis Chestnut (.272, 12, 41), RF Jace LaViolette (.314, 28, 77), DH Hayden Schott (.331, 8, 59). Starting pitchers: LHP Ryan Prager (8-1, 3.10 ERA), LHP Shane Sdao (5-1, 2.96), RHP Justin Lamkin (2-2, 5.73) or RHP Brad Rudis (6-0, 2.29). Relievers: RHP Chris Cortez (9-3, 2.83), RHP Tanner Jones (3-1, 6.33), RHP Brock Peery (2-1, 3.60), LHP Kaiden Wilson (0-1, 8.31), RHP Zane Badmaey (3-0, 2.70), LHP Evan Aschenbeck (6-1, 1.66).
    • MLB Alumni: Davey Johnson, Chuck Knoblauch, Scott Livingstone, A.J. Minter, Doug Rau, Ross Stripling, Mark Thurmond, Michael Wacha.
    • Short hops: The Aggies will be without projected top-five draft pick Braden Montgomery, who broke his right ankle in the super regional opener. … The Aggies have drawn a nation-high 396 walks. … Their pitching staff leads the country with 11 shutouts. … Travis Chestnut leads NCAA Tournament with four of the Aggies’ 13 stolen bases. … Aschenbeck’s 1.66 ERA and 0.80 walks plus hits per innings pitched (WHIP) are the best in the country. … Schlossnagle is among 13 coaches to lead multiple schools to a CWS. He led TCU to five CWS.
    • Quotable: “I never take it for granted. Nolan Ryan went to the World Series his rookie year and never went back. I’ll remind our players of that. You never know when you’ll get a chance to go back. I’ve never been part of the championship series or won it, so I’d like to do that.” — Schlossnagle.

    Florida (34-28)

    • Coach: Kevin O’Sullivan (715-347 in 17 years).
    • Road to Omaha: Won Stillwater Regional — Beat Nebraska 5-2, lost to Oklahoma State 7-1, beat Nebraska 17-11, beat Oklahoma State 5-2, beat Oklahoma State 4-2. Won Clemson Super Regional — Beat Clemson 10-7, beat Clemson 11-10 in 13 innings.
    • 2024 record vs. CWS teams: 4-8 (0-3 vs. Florida State, 2-1 vs. Texas A&M, 1-2 vs. Tennessee, 1-2 vs. Kentucky).
    • Last CWS appearance: 2023.
    • All-time record in CWS: 25-26 in 13 appearances (won national title in 2017).
    • Meet the Gators: C Brody Donay (.250, 12 HRs, 27 RBIs), 1B Jac Caglianone (.411, 33, 68) or Luke Heyman (.247, 16, 49), 2B Cade Kurland (.251, 14, 41), SS Colby Shelton (.257, 20, 55), 3B Dale Thomas (.228, 3, 20), LF Tyler Shelnut (.264, 15, 50), CF Michael Robertson (.255, 2, 25), RF Ashton Wilson (.327, 2, 14), DH Heyman or Donay. Starting pitchers: LHP Pierce Coppola (0-4, 9.16 ERA), RHP Liam Peterson (3-4, 5.97), LHP Jac Caglianone (5-2, 4.71). Relievers: RHP Jameson Fisher (5-0, 4.35), LHP Cade Fisher (3-3, 7.24), RHP Brandon Neely (3-4, 5.45), RHP Jake Clemente (2-0, 5.68), LHP Frank Menendez (1-0, 4.96), RHP Luke McNeillie (4-6, 7.20), RHP Ryan Slater (5-2, 6.70), RHP Blake Purnell (0-0, 7.78).
    • MLB alumni: Pete Alonso, Harrison Bader, David Eckstein, Mark Ellis, Dalton Guthrie, Jonathan India, A.J. Puk, David Ross, Brady Singer, Mike Stanley, Brad Wilkerson, Mike Zunino.
    • Short hops: The Gators’ .548 winning percentage is tied for lowest by a team entering the CWS. Bradley was 17-14 (.548) entering the 1950 CWS. … Caglianone’s 73 career homers are two behind active leader Tommy White of LSU. … O’Sullivan has led Gators to Omaha in nine of past 14 postseasons. … The Gators are 36-0 in their past 36 NCAA Tournament games in which they have owned a multi-run lead in the seventh inning or later, according to ESPN.
    • Quotable: “Going through the struggles and having every game matter the last two or three weeks of the year probably toughed us up a little bit.” — O’Sullivan.

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  • FSU advances to College World Series; Florida tops Clemson in Game 1

    FSU advances to College World Series; Florida tops Clemson in Game 1

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — James Tibbs III hit his third home run of the game, a two-run shot in the top of the 12th inning, and Florida State defeated UConn 10-8 on Saturday, sweeping the Tallahassee Regional for a berth in the College World Series.

    After Max Williams led off the 12th with a single and Cam Smith flied out, Tibbs drove a 1-0 pitch deep over the fence in right field for the go-ahead runs. In the bottom of the inning, Conner Whittaker allowed a two-out single but struck out Paul Tammaro to end it and send the eighth-seeded Seminoles to Omaha, Neb., for the 24th time. They have never won the national championship.

    Tibbs’ dramatic home run was his third two-run shot of the game. It was his 31st home run of the season and his 100 RBI are tied for first in the nation. He went 5-for-6 with six RBI on Saturday. Williams had three hits and scored twice.

    In the top of the ninth, Florida State (47-15) loaded the bases on a walk, a single and an error. Then Drew Faurot lifted a fly to left field and Jordan Williams scored from third. The next two batters flied out to end the inning.

    UConn’s Matt Malcolm tied it with a leadoff home run in the bottom of the ninth.

    Connecticut (35-26) loaded the bases with two outs in the sixth inning. Luke Broadhurst laced a double to center field, scoring three runs and giving the Huskies a 7-6 lead. Earlier, he had an RBI-single in the first inning and a two-run home run in the fifth. He finished 4-for-5 with six RBI.

    In the top of the eighth, Jaxson West tied it up with a leadoff home run to right field.

    There were eight home runs in the game, six by Florida State.

    In Game 1 of the matchup on Friday, FSU set NCAA super-regional records for the most runs scored in a game and largest margin of victory in a 24-4 victory. Jaime Ferrer hit two of Florida State’s five home runs, and Tibbs III and Marco Dinges each added four RBIs. The Seminoles drew 15 walks and struck out just once. Five of their 18 hits were homers, including two-out shots by Dinges and Williams. Smith and Tibbs each drew two-out, bases-loaded walks in the third inning for an 8-0 lead.

    Caglianone’s 32nd HR helps Florida beat host Clemson 10-7 in Game 1

    CLEMSON, S.C. — Jac Caglianone hit his 32nd home run of the season to spark Florida’s seven-run fifth inning, and the Gators beat Clemson 10-7 on Saturday to win Game 1 of the best-of-three Clemson Super Regional.

    Florida (33-28) can clinch a berth in the College World Series with a win in Game 2 on Sunday.

    Caglianone, a former standout at Tampa’s Plant High, hit an 0-1 pitch over the wall in left field for a three-run home run to give the Gators the lead for good before Michael Robertson’s RBI single capped the explosion and made it 9-4 in the top of the fifth.

    Tristan Bissetta hit a solo shot for Clemson (44-15) in the home half of the inning, and Jarren Purify scored on a sacrifice fly before a groundout by Blake Wright drove in Alden Mathes in the bottom of the sixth to pull the Tigers within 9-7.

    Caglianone, a projected top-10 pick in the upcoming MLB draft, finished 2-for-4 with a walk. Dale Thomas went 2-for-5 with an RBI, and Tyler Shelnut hit a solo homer for Florida.

    Jimmy Obertop drew a two-out walk to load the bases before and advanced to second, while Mathes scored on a wild pitch. Bissetta walked to again load the bases, and Jack Crighton took four consecutive balls to get Wright home and give Clemson a 2-0 lead in the top of the first.

    Purify led off the second inning with a triple and scored on a wild pitch to make it 3-0, and after Ashton Wilson’s sacrifice fly drove in Cade Kurland to get Florida on the scoreboard in the top of the third, Obertop led off the home half of the inning with a homer to make it 4-1.

    Mathes finished 3-for 5-with two runs for the Tigers.

    Brandon Neely came on in the sixth and pitched four scoreless innings, giving up a hit and a walk while striking out seven for Florida to earn his fourth save of the season.

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  • FSU wins NCAA Tallahassee Baseball Regional; Florida stays alive in Stillwater

    FSU wins NCAA Tallahassee Baseball Regional; Florida stays alive in Stillwater

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Max Williams hit a three-run home run to cap a nine-run fifth inning, and No. 8 national seed Florida State went on to defeat UCF 12-3 on Sunday night to claim the championship at the Tallahassee Regional of the NCAA Baseball Tournament.

    The Seminoles (45-15) advance to the super regionals, which begin on Friday.

    Jack Zyska, who hit the go-ahead home run in UCF’s win over Stetson earlier in the day, went deep to stake the Knights (37-22) to a 2-0 lead in the first inning. That score held until the fifth, when FSU scored nine runs on five hits.

    Cam Smith hit a two-run home run with one out to get the big inning rolling. Three batters later, Jaime Ferrer laced a two-run double down the left-field line. Jaxson West delivered a two-out, two-run single and Williams followed with his three-run blast.

    The Knights scored single runs in the sixth and seventh innings. Then Florida State wrapped it up with a three-run seventh, the only hit coming on Marco Dinges’ single to shortstop.

    Earlier in the day, UCF had defeated Stetson 5-2 in an elimination game.

    Florida stays alive in Stillwater, Okla., regional

    STILLWATER, Okla. — Ashton Wilson went 3-for-4 with two runs, Colby Shelton hit a three-run home run and Florida beat host Oklahoma State 5-2 Sunday night to remain alive at the Stillwater Regional.

    Florida again plays the Cowboys (42-18), who beat the Gators 7-1 Saturday to knock them into the elimination bracket, for the regional title on Monday.

    After Jac Caglianone walked to lead off the inning and Wilson followed with a single, Shelton hit a three-run home run over the wall in right field to ignite a four-run sixth for the Gators that capped the scoring.

    Florida starter Cade Fisher gave up two runs — one earned — on five hits and two walks with four strikeouts over 3-1/3 innings. Luke McNeillie came on and walked a batter before he was replaced by Brandon Neely, who struck out a career-high 11 and allowed a hit and three walks over 5-2/3 innings to improve to 3-4 this season.

    Colin Brueggemann hit a one-out double and scored when Tyler Wulfert reached on an error to give the Cowboys a 2-1 lead in the bottom of the fourth inning.

    Nolan Schubart hit a two-out single in the bottom of the first and scored three pitches later when Zach Ehrhard hit an RBI double to right field that gave Oklahoma State a 1-0 lead.

    Earlier in the day, the Gators routed the Nebraska Cornhuskers 17-11 in an elimination game.

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  • Florida State, Florida, UCF open with NCAA baseball regional victories

    Florida State, Florida, UCF open with NCAA baseball regional victories

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla.  — Carson Dorsey allowed two runs, one earned, and struck out seven over 8-2/3 innings to lead host Florida State to a 7-2 victory over Stetson on Friday in the opening round of the NCAA Tallahassee Regional Baseball Tournament.

    The Seminoles (43-15), seeded No. 8 nationally, move on to face the UCF on Saturday.

    Dorsey (6-4) scattered nine hits and walked only one. The junior college transfer barely missed pitching his first complete game, exiting after a single and Florida State error in the ninth.

    Stetson (40-21), which won the ASun Conference Tournament, got a runner to third before reliever Brennen Oxford struck out Yohann Dessureault to end the game.

    Florida State added to what was already the largest turnaround in the nation, winning 20 more games than last season.

    The Seminoles jumped out with solo homers in the first two innings from Daniel Cantu and Max Williams, who opened with a leadoff shot over the right-field fence in the bottom of the first.

    Marco Dinges went 2-for-4 with a walk, and Jaime Ferrer also had two hits for the Seminoles. James Tibbs III drew four walks and scored three runs.

    Sundean’s pinch-hit RBI in 9th lifts UCF over Alabama

    Pinch-hitter Andrew Sundean’s two-out, RBI single in the ninth inning broke a 7-all tie and sent second-seeded UCF to an 8-7 victory over No. 3-seeded Alabama in the Tallahassee Regional at the NCAA Tournament. Jack Zyska led the inning off with a walk and was moved to second on a sacrifice bunt by Danny Neri. After Alabama reliever Alton Davis II got the second out on a fly ball, Sundean sent a single to left to bring home Zyska with the winning run.

    Alabama (33-24) got a two-out single in the bottom of the ninth. But UCF reliever Kris Sosnoski got William Hamiter on a groundout to end the game.

    It was a back-and-forth game, with Snell giving Alabama a 3-2 lead with a three-run homer in the first. UCF rallied with for a 6-5 lead in the fifth on RBI doubles by Matt Cedarburg and Zyska. Alabama tied the game a final time, 7-7, on Hodo’s RBI single in the eighth.

    Sosnoski (1-0) pitched the final two innings for the victory. Davis (4-2) took the loss for Alabama.

    UCF (36-19) will take on top-seeded and home-standing FSU on Saturday.

    Alabama plays Stetson to avoid elimination.

    Wilson’s hot hitting powers Florida past Nebraska

    Ashton Wilson doubled three times and hit his first home run for Florida, and the Gators opened the NCAA Stillwater Regional with a 5-2 victory over Nebraska. Wilson made just his fifth start of the season, all since May 16, after transferring from Charleston Southern. His two-run double in the third inning gave the Gators (29-27) the lead for good, and his homer to left field in the ninth put them up three runs.

    Freshman starter Liam Peterson (3-4) allowed two runs on four hits, walked three and struck out seven over 5-1/3 innings for the Gators, who will play Saturday against the winner of Friday night’s game between Niagara and Oklahoma State.

    Big Ten pitcher of the year Brett Sears (9-1) gave up three runs on 10 hits and a walk in five innings and took his first loss. The Cornhuskers (39-21), in their first regional since 2021, will play the Niagara-Oklahoma State loser in an elimination game on Saturday.

    The Gators, the national runners-up to LSU last year and in their 16th consecutive regional, went ahead 1-0 when leadoff man Cade Kurland hit Sears’ third pitch over the left-center field fence. Nebraska got that run back in the bottom of the first, but Wilson’s double down the left-field line in the third restored the Gators’ lead.

    Gabe Swansen’s homer in the sixth pulled the Huskers within 3-2. The Gators got their final runs on Kurland’s single in the eighth and Wilson’s first home run since April 16, 2023, when he played for Charleston Southern.

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  • Oklahoma tops FSU 4-2, knocks Seminoles out of NCAA Softball Super Regionals

    Oklahoma tops FSU 4-2, knocks Seminoles out of NCAA Softball Super Regionals

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    NORMAN, Okla. — Kasidi Pickering went 2-for-4 with a home run, Maya Bland threw two perfect innings of relief, and Oklahoma defeated Florida State 4-2 Friday night, sweeping the best-of-three Norman Super Regional and stretching its win streak to a record 17 consecutive games in NCAA Tournament play.


    What You Need To Know

    • Oklahoma sends Florida State home from NCAA Softball Super Regionals
    • Jaysoni Beachum and Kalei Harding homered for the Seminoles for the team’s only runs in a 4-2 loss
    • The Sooners clinched their fourth trip in a row to the Women’s College World Series
    • Oklahoma also had pounded FSU 11-3 on Thursday in the best-of-three-game series

    Oklahoma (54-6) clinched its eighth trip to the Women’s College World Series in program history and its fourth in a row.

    The Sooners beat Florida State 2-0 in a best-of-three series to win the 2023 WCWS. They also pounded the Seminoles 11-3 on Thursday night.

    After Jayda Coleman flied out to lead off the top of the third inning, Tiare Jennings singled to right, advanced to second on a wild pitch and moved to third on a passed ball. Ella Parker walked on four pitches in a row, and Jennings scored when, a couple of pitches later, Parker was caught in a pickle and tagged out.

    Florida State’s Jaysoni Beachum led off the bottom half of the inning with a homer to make it 1-1.

    Coleman led off the fifth inning with a single and, after Jennings lined out, moved to third on a single down the line in right by Parker. Coleman scored and Parker took second on a wild pitch. After Alyssa Brito lined out, Pickering hit a two-out, two-run homer that made it 4-1.

    Kalei Harding hit a solo shot in the bottom of the fifth that cut the Seminoles’ deficit to two.

    Karlie Keeney (6-1) came on in relief of Kierston Deal with one out in the third and pitched 2-2/3 innings, allowing a run on three hits to earn the win. Bland pitched the sixth and seventh innings without allowing a baserunner to notch the save.

    Mimi Gooden came on in the sixth inning for Florida State (46-16) and allowed two runs on three hits over 1-2/3 innings, taking the loss for the Seminoles, runners-up at the 2023 and 2021 WCWS.

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  • Florida, Florida State softball advance to NCAA Super Regionals

    Florida, Florida State softball advance to NCAA Super Regionals

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    FLORIDA — Florida State and Florida are headed to the NCAA Super Regionals later this week after winning their Regional tournaments over the weekend.

    FSU, seeded No. 15, will head to the Norman (Okla.) Super Regional, where it will take on No. 2 Oklahoma at 7 p.m. Thursday in a best-of-three rematch of last year’s national championship. Fourth-ranked Florida will face Baylor at noon Friday to start the best-of-three Gainesville Super Regional.

    The Seminoles advanced to their 10th super regional round in 11 years by going 3-0 at the Tallahassee Regional. To wrap up the Tallahassee title, they pounded Auburn 10-4 at the Seminole Softball Complex. Earlier in the tournament, FSU edged Chattanooga 3-2 on Friday and then outslugged UCF 5-1 on Saturday.

    The Gators pounded South Alabama 9-1 on Sunday to wrap up its undefeated run in the Gainesville Regional. Florida also had defeated South Alabama 9-1 on Saturday and shut out Florida Gulf Coast 6-0 on Friday.

    Florida universities were well-represented at the Regionals, with UCF, Florida Atlantic and Florida Gulf Coast University also competing. But they all were in the same two regionals, and only one team could advance out of each. 

    UCF rallied past Auburn 11-6 in Game 1 but then fell to Auburn 2-1 Saturday night after its loss to FSU earlier in the day. FAU lost to South Alabama 1-0 on Friday and to FGCU 3-2 on Saturday. FGCU fell to South Alabama 5-1 later Saturday.

     

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    Spectrum Sports Staff

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  • Judge pumps brakes on FSU lawsuit against ACC

    Judge pumps brakes on FSU lawsuit against ACC

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A Leon County judge is pumping the brakes on Florida State University’s lawsuit against the Atlantic Coast Conference, ruling that the university must amend its lawsuit within a week before the case moves forward in court, if at all.


    What You Need To Know

    • A judge on Monday ordered the pair into mediation and gave FSU a week to refile its lawsuit
    • FSU is suing to exit the ACC without fees, though the court must first determine its jurisdiction
    • The ACC believe it’s home state of North Carolina is the proper forum
    • The judge reminded attendees the case is “not over”

    Second Judicial Circuit Judge John Cooper made the bench ruling Monday in Tallahassee while weighing the conference’s effort to dismiss the lawsuit. 

    The judge’s order will require the two parties to attend a mediation within 120 days. The order also stipulates that FSU must refile its complaint with “clear language” in seven days, excluding weekends and holidays.

    “I want to make sure everyone understands this case is still going on,” said Cooper. “It’s not over.”

    Hanging in the balance is a multi-million-dollar media rights deal between FSU and ACC, plus $130 million in exit fees the university may owe the ACC if they split. 

    The total exit price, per FSU: roughly $572 million. FSU sued the conference in January, calling the fees “draconian” and the existing media deal “weak.” 

    “The ACC has negotiated itself into a self-described ‘existential crisis,’ rendered itself fiscally unstable and substantially undermined its members’ capacity to compete at the elite level,” the lawsuit reads. “In doing so, the ACC violated the contractual, fiduciary and legal duties it owed its members.”

    They’re accusing the ACC of breach of contract, trade restraint and failure to perform, accusations that underscore the university’s frustrations over their media earnings through the ACC.

    “It wasn’t until Florida State read that other conferences may be getting more money for media rights agreements… that they started to complain,” said Amber Nunnally, an attorney representing the ACC. 

    The judge’s refile request comes as the court is trying to determine whether it’s got jurisdiction over the case, as the ACC is based in North Carolina. North Carolina is also where the conference preemptively filed a lawsuit against FSU, just a day after the university’s board voted to sue the ACC.

    Lawyers for FSU, however, argue otherwise. Peter Rush, an attorney representing FSU, described Florida State University and University of Miami as “citizens” of Florida. He also accused the ACC of drawing “daggers.”

    “That’s hardly the harbinger of happy future family gatherings,” Rush told the judge.

    The ACC, meanwhile, maintains that North Carolina is the proper forum. They’re accusing FSU of trying to score an “advisory opinion” through the lawsuit, given that they’ve yet to exit the conference and that a ruling in the case would likely impact their decision to stay or go.

    “Florida State is now asking you to invalidate the contract they believe no longer serves them,” said an ACC attorney. 

    There are no scheduled hearings between FSU and the ACC as of Monday. The ACC is contracted to hold FSU’s media rights till 2036.

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    Jason Delgado

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  • Judge advances Florida State exit lawsuit against ACC

    Judge advances Florida State exit lawsuit against ACC

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    TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A Leon County Judge upheld Florida State University’s lawsuit against the Atlantic Coast Conference on Tuesday, while also accusing the ACC of “forum shopping” against the Tallahassee-based school.


    What You Need To Know

    • FSU’s lawsuit in Florida against the ACC is moving forward
    • The judge denied the ACC’s motion to pause the case until a judge resolves their suit against FSU in North Carolina
    • The Leon County Judge accused the ACC of forum shopping
    • Forum shopping is the legal practice of targeting one court over the other in hopes of more favorable odds

    As FSU athletics seeks to exit the ACC, the two parties are feuding over a multi-million-dollar media deal and a roughly $130 million dollar exit fee — an amount hovering in the ballpark of $500 million.

    The high-profile disagreement resulted in two lawsuits: one filed by FSU against the ACC in Florida. The other filed preemptively by the ACC in its home state of North Carolina, which happened just days before the FSU board approved its plan to file suit.

    Attorneys for the ACC asked the judge Tuesday to pause or dismiss the case until their lawsuit in North Carolina is resolved. The court, however, denied the motion and accused the conference of shopping forums.

    Forum shopping is the legal practice of targeting one court over the other in hopes of more favorable odds.

    “There’s only one reason you would want to engage in forum shopping and that’s because the forum you just shopped is better than the other place,” said Second Judicial Circuit Judge John Cooper.

    FSU is accusing the ACC of financial mismanagement and a “draconian” exit fee, among other things, thus they should exit the conference without financial penalty.

    “This is Florida State’s money,” said FSU attorney Peter Rush. “This is Florida State’s team. This is Florida State’s media rights.”

    The ACC, meanwhile, is suing back in a North Carolina court, maintaining that their contract with FSU is binding. They also note that they sued first, which they claimed should place the case in North Carolina’s hands under Florida law.

    “We served first,” said ACC attorney Alan Lawson in his ending arguments. Lawson served previously as a Florida Supreme Court Justice.

    The cases’ outcome poses large implications for the ACC, among the largest collegiate conferences in the nation. It also comes as schools in recent years have begun gravitating toward conferences with more lucrative deals. 

    With both the Florida case and the North Carolina case in motion, questions remain about how the two parties may resolve their issues if the courts publish opposing opinions.

    The next hearing in Florida is scheduled for April 22.

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    Jason Delgado

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  • FSU’s 2nd-half surge fuels 86-76 victory over Virginia Tech at ACC Tournament

    FSU’s 2nd-half surge fuels 86-76 victory over Virginia Tech at ACC Tournament

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    WASHINGTON — Jamir Watkins scored 12 of his career-high 34 points in the final three minutes, Jalen Warley added 18 points and ninth-seeded Florida State pulled away in the second half to beat No. 8-seeded Virginia Tech 86-76 on Wednesday in the second round of the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament.


    What You Need To Know

    • FSU defeated Virginia Tech 86-76 Wednesday in the second round of the ACC Tournament
    • Jamir Watkins led the Seminoles with 34 points, a team record in the tournament
    • Next up for ninth-seeded FSU is top-seeded North Carolina at noon Thursday
    • Sean Pedulla scored 24 points for Virginia Tech

    Watkins was 9 of 15 from the field and 14 of 17 at the free-throw line to set a program record for points in an ACC Tournament game. He also had 11 rebounds and four steals. Warley made 8 of his 10 shots as Florida State shot 54% from the field.

    Virginia Tech was 4-of-17 shooting in the opening 17 minutes of the second half. The Hokies also finished with 13 turnovers, leading to 25 points for the Seminoles.

    Florida State (17-15) advances to play top-seeded and fourth-ranked North Carolina in the quarterfinals at noon Thursday. The Seminoles dropped both regular-season meetings with the Tar Heels, 78-70 on the road and 75-68 at home. Florida State hasn’t beaten North Carolina since the 2020-21 season.

    Tyler Nickel sank a long 3-pointer with 7 minutes, 28 seconds left to tie the score at 57, but Virginia Tech did not make another field goal until Sean Pedulla’s basket with 2:42 remaining to pull within 71-62.

    Florida State took advantage of back-to-back Virginia Tech turnovers with layups by Warley and Primo Spears to take a 63-58 lead with 5:01 left. Another steal under the basket led to Warley’s fast-break layup to make it 68-58 at 3:06.

    Each team turned it over on an inbounds play, and Watkins was fouled before making two free throws at 2:49. Watkins added two more free throws at 2:30 and had an alley-oop dunk at 2:11 for a 74-65 lead.

    Spears finished with 10 points for the Seminoles.

    Pedulla scored 24 points, Nickel added 18 and MJ Collins had 15 for Virginia Tech (18-14).

    Both teams shot 55% or better from the field in the first half. Virginia Tech shot 64% (16 of 25), despite going 4 of 11 from 3-point range, in the first half before finishing at 49%.

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    Associated Press

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