Oklahoma
OU Baseball: Ole Miss Salvages Series Split With Oklahoma
Oklahoma’s winning formula against Ole Miss didn’t hold up Sunday in the series finale against the Rebels.
OU took the first two games of their first-ever SEC meeting with Mississippi with excellent starting pitching, good bullpen work, timely hitting and reliable defense.
But in losing 7-3 on Sunday at L. Dale Mitchell Park, the Sooners didn’t get enough of either one.
Starting pitcher Malachi Witherspoon threw just 4 2/3 innings and gave up five earned runs (six total) on seven hits and a walk.
Witherspoon (3-6) took the loss as he struck out seven and left throwing just 88 pitches.
Witherspoon left trailing 6-2 in the fifth, and the Rebels added just one run the rest of the way against the OU bullpen.
Meanwhile, Oklahoma scrapped together just seven hits — three from leadoff man Jason Walk, two of which were triples.
The Rebels used starter Mason Nichols for just 1 2/3 innings — he allowed three hits and three walks among the 11 batters he faced — before Mason Morris came in and twirled 3 2/3 innings of one-run ball.
The Oklahoma defense also committed two errors on the infield on the day.
No. 21-ranked Oklahoma fell to 32-14 overall and 13-11 in SEC play, while the No. 18 Rebels improved to 33-15 and 13-11.
OU opened the scoring by getting to Nichols early in the first inning.
Walk tripled to lead off the game, then scored on Easton Carmichael’s RBI single up the middle for a 1-0 lead.
Ole Miss tied it with a run of their own in the second as Austin Fawley hit his seventh home run of the season with a leadoff shot to left field.
The Rebels then took control with two runs in the third, one in the fourth and two in the fifth.
Luke Cheng opened the third with a double down the right field line, and Mitchell Sanford reached on an error by Kyle Branch at second. Luke Hill followed that with an RBI single to right that scored Cheng for a 2-1 lead. After Witherspoon recorded back-to-back strikeouts, Isaac Humphrey reached on a throwing error by Mason Hamlin at first base that allowed Sanford to come home and make it 3-1.
After Witherspoon got another strikeout to start the fourth, Ole Miss tacked on another run when Campbell Smithwick opened with a single to center field. Cheng’s groundout moved Smithwick 90 feet, and Sanford’s RBI single to center sent him home for a 4-1 lead.
OU made it 4-2 in the bottom of the fourth as Hamlin led off with a single up the middle. After Dasan Harris and Dawson Willis struck out, Hamlin stole second, and Walk brought him home with a single through the right side.
Walk, however, was caught in a rundown for the third out.
The Rebels added two more when Humphrey tripled with one out and Judd Utermark’s grounder scored him. After a pitching change sent Witherspoon to the showers, Hayden Federico singled to left to bring Utermark home for a 6-2 lead.
Both teams scored a single run in the seventh.
Fawley greeted OU reliever Michael Catalano with a double down the left field line, and he came home on Humphrey’s single to right.
In the bottom of the inning, Walk hit his second triple of the day with one out, and Trey Gambill’s flyout to center was deep enough to easily score Walk and make it 7-3.
The Sooners have just six games left in the regular season — three next weekend at Kentucky, and three the following weekend against Texas — before SEC Tournament play begins May 21.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma County commissioners weigh state audit of jail trust amid detention center woes
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA. (KOKH) — An investigative audit into the Oklahoma County Criminal Justice Authority; it’s something the Oklahoma County Board of Commissioners is considering.
Fox 25 has been covering issues with the Oklahoma County Detention Center for years, from failed inspections to staffing issues and missed paychecks.
The issues had members of the Jail Trust recommending last June they undergo a performance review. Now, in a letter recently issued, county commissioners are asking State Auditor Cindy Byrd to look into the county Criminal Justice Authority, also known as the jail trust. But whether it’s tied to those ongoing issues remains unclear.
“I really wouldn’t know. I wouldn’t know where to begin with that. I just wouldn’t even want to speculate, honestly,” said Commissioner Myles Davidson.
Commissioner Davidson told FOX 25 if the audit were to happen, it wouldn’t be cheap.
“To go into a budget that we’re extremely tight on, and start adding hundreds of thousands of dollars, and time, these audits don’t happen overnight. I don’t know that we would have an answer to any question we could possibly ask before the budgetary cycle is over,” said Davidson.
Davidson said that cycle ends June 1. Instead, he’s suggesting they look into existing audits to see if there’s any useful information there first.
“I would simply say that we need to look at the audits that have been submitted already to the state auditor that the jail trust has already paid for, and then if we have questions about those, we need to bring in that auditing agency and question them. We do have the authority to do that,” Davidsons said.
However, Davidson isn’t sure they have the authority to request this audit.
“When it comes to statute, we have to have it lined out, expressly in statute that we have this authority, and every county commissioner across the state has to abide by that,” he said.
Davidson said they’ll be meeting Monday to find out whether or not they do have the authority to request this audit. He told FOX 25 the Oklahoma County District Attorney’s office reached out to folks with Cindy Byrd’s office and was told the audit would cost $100,000, adding that she’s so swamped that she can’t do it this calendar year.
FOX 25 also reached out to Jason Lowe’s office but they said they have no comment.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma lawmakers vote to rename turnpike in honor of Toby Keith
OKLAHOMA CITY (KSWO) — Oklahoma lawmakers have voted to honor country music artist and Oklahoma native Toby Keith.
House Concurrent Resolution 1019 recognizes Keith’s lasting impact on music and proposes renaming a planned turnpike in his memory.
The concurrent resolution was authored by Rep. Jason Blair, R-Morgan, and Sen. Lisa Standridge, R-Norman.
The planned route will extend from Interstate 44 east to Interstate 35, then continue east and north to I-40 at the Kickapoo Turnpike.
Copyright 2026 KSWO. All rights reserved.
Oklahoma
What could happen if Oklahoma State Superintendent becomes an appointed position
Governor Kevin Stitt has said he wants the State Superintendent of Education to be a governor-elected position instead of an elected one. Political analyst Scott Mitchell examines what this would mean for the state.
Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt is urging lawmakers to send a state question to voters that would make the state superintendent an appointed position, as he named Lindel Fields of Tulsa to the role and announced a turnaround team to help implement his education agenda.
Is the State Superintendent an elected role?
Yes, the State Superintendent of Education is still an elected role. Elections are scheduled for Nov. 3, 2026.
Cons of making the superintendent an appointed position
Mitchell said making this position appointed could cause distrust among some Oklahomans
“Over the years, we’ve seen that capture of regulatory sort of is easy to do when you have term limits, then lobbies become more powerful, and they have all the history. It’s very complicated.
He also said if the position were to be elected, they would likely have the same agenda as the governor.
“Yes, and I think the governor would be absolutely saying, ‘Yes, they’re going to do what I want them to do.’”
Changing how the superintendent is chosen changes what the founding fathers set.
“Voters are going to have to say yay or nay if it gets to them, is whether or not we want to change the way that the founding fathers set up the way that we make sure that power is not concentrated in Oklahoma,” he said.
Is Ryan Walters’ term the reason Stitt wants to make this position appointed?
Mitchell said he believes the former State Superintendent played a role in the government wanting to appoint this position.
During his time as superintendent, Walters was known to have multiple controversies. He resigned in 2025, allowing Stitt to appoint Lindel Fields.
“His impact on this, even though he’s gone, is certainly evident,” said Mitchell. “Walters left midstream, right? And so the governor had a chance to appoint someone. Well, it wasn’t just an appointment; it was chaos before and relative calm and competency after. And that has given the governor an opening for people to see with their own eyes. Yeah, you can put somebody in, we’re talking about Lindel Fields, that appears to get up every day, not trying to find some, get a click on social media, but rather to do his job. And across the board, for the most part, this guy’s getting thumbs up.
Stitt said electing Fields has already given him some leverage since he has been well perceived so far.
“That allows a governor to say, Look, I’ve got some standing, some leverage to go to the voters and say, let’s put expertise as the main reason that a person’s there, not because they were able to win an election because they had some sort of populist or dramatic ideas.”
Who is running for Oklahoma State Superintendent?
Republican Ballot
- Sen. Adam Pugh
- John Cox
- Rep. Toni Hasenbeck
- Ana Landsaw
Democrat Ballot
- Craig Mcvay
- Jennettie Marshall
Independent
To learn more about each candidate, click here.
A full breakdown of candidates in the 2026 Oklahoma State Superintendent race, including party affiliation, background and key education priorities.
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