Iowa
HUSKERS SOFTBALL Recap – A Tuesday Night Sweep of Iowa: NEBRASKA 1-7 Iowa 0-6
(Due to the doubleheader falling in the same time as the weekly softball podcast, the recap will be abbreviated.)
Bella Bacon may have gotten the high fives – very well-deserved, I might add – after a clutch 2-out double in the bottom of the eighth inning brought home Sammie Bland with the only run of the first game and a 1-0 Huskers win.
However, on a night where Husker bats were mostly silenced by Iowa’s Jalen Adams, it was Kaylin Kinney who matched Adams inning after inning to thwart the Hawkeye’s upset bid by scattering 6 hits and two walks over an 8-inning shutout of Iowa. Iowa threatened a few times, but Kinney always left them stranded, most notably in the 3rd and 6th innings where she fired strikeouts both times with runners on the corners to end things.
Finally in the 8th, the Huskers bats found their flame. Bland reached on an infield single and Sydney Gray laced one into left to put Sammie in scoring position. Two fly outs followed, but then up came Bacon, the Omaha native and Millard West grad who transferred back to her home state from Purdue with possibly her biggest hit of the year.
The Huskers had their first win of the day, but the stress levels weren’t coming down.
In Game 2, the Huskers appeared to have things well in hand after a 4-run 3rd inning highlighted by a Billie Andrews 2-run double. This was followed by Billie and Bland scoring on wild pitches.
Then, trailing 4-0, Iowa center fielder, Grace Banes – a .231 hitter with only 4 extra base hits on the season (all doubles) – decided to have the game of her life and try to steal one for Iowa all by her lonesome.
First, she drove one over the fence in left center, a solo shot which put Iowa on the board for the first time all day. Iowa scored 2 more in the 5th to cut the deficit to 1, but the Huskers answered with a run of their own when Peyton Cody knocked in Bland who was 1-2 and also walked twice. The lead was back up to 5-3.
The in the top of the 7th, up came Banes again after the first two Iowa batters reached by single and walk. After running the count to 1-2 and fouling off a couple of pitches, Banes turned on the next one and sent her second home run of the game – and season – out to left and suddenly Iowa was up 6-5 and disaster loomed for Nebraska.
With a victory now in play, Iowa went back to their ace Adams to try and nail down a critical upset against their rival. But this time, it wasn’t going to take 8 innings to get to her.
With one out, Peyton Cody walked, but Game 1’s hero Bacon popped up to short. Up came Ava Bredwell who was 0-6 on the day thus far. Apparently, it just meant she was due. After fouling a few pitches off and taking a ball, Bredwell calmly swatted the 1-2 pitch over the left field fence for the second walk-off of the day, a 7-6 win and the sweep.
The Huskers return to action against 1st place Northwestern at Bowlin Stadium in Lincoln at 5:30 on Friday evening.
Nebraska Cornhuskers
Iowa Hawkeyes
Iowa
Iowa Cubs Fall in Fifth Straight Game in 3-2 Loss to Storm Chasers
(Des Moines, IA) – The Iowa Cubs have now earned their fifth straight loss in a 3-2 bout against the Omaha Storm Chasers. Omaha takes the series victory 5-1 in the worst series from the Iowa Cubs that we have seen yet this season.
The Storm Chasers started off scoring in this game after Nick Pratto hit a home run that launched over the left-center field wall to put Omaha up 1-0 at the top of the first inning. In the top of the second inning, Storm Chaser Tyler Tolbert was able to go up to the plate with bases loaded and one out when he grounded into a double play but was still able to score the second run of the ballgame by scoring Devin Mann before the play could finish on the field to put Omaha up 2-0. Omaha would then go on to score their last run of the game in the fifth inning off a sac-fly by John Rave to left field to score Cam DeVanney from third to go up 3-0.
Iowa was eventually able to make a little run of their own on the back nine. Jake Slaughter hit a single with a runner in scoring position at third base as Tyler Gentry was able to score and bring it to a 3-1 Omaha lead at the bottom of the eighth inning. In the bottom of the ninth, David Peralta added on a solo home run to put the Cubs within one run of tying things up. That was followed up by a strikeout, field error, flyout, and a groundout to finish the ballgame.
Earning the win on the day was Carlos Hernandez who pitched in 1.0 inning while allowing no earned runs and had two strikeouts. Will Klein was able to earn the save for Omaha while pitching in 1.0 inning and allowed just one hit which was the home run. With the loss on the day was Cubbie Dan Straily who pitched in 5.0 innings while allowing all three runs and having five strikeouts.
The Iowa Cubs will return to action when they travel to Syracuse on Tuesday with the game starting at 5:00 p.m.
(Information provided by milb.com)
At Western Iowa Today, we strive for reporting accuracy. If you see a mistake or a typo, please let us know by email to news@westerniowatoday.com.
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Iowa
Mason Ellens Talks About Iowa Offer
Mason Ellens always believed he could play Power Four Football. The Illinois defensive back received that chance Friday when Iowa State offered a scholarship. It was reaffirmed two days later when Iowa also offered.
“I kind of knew it was coming because there would be other schools that would come in and they would tell my head coach (Chad Hetlet) that there’s no way they could get their hands on me because they thought I’d be be a Power Four player eventually,” Ellens told HN.
Bigger schools have been recruiting him for the last year, including Iowa. The Hawkeyes have visited with him at the school multiple times. They were back at Glen Ellyn (IL) Glenbard West High on Thursday for a workout.
“I think that’s what’s really got their attention,” Ellens said.
It’s been a big spring on the track for Ellens. He’s run the 100 meters in 10.77 seconds and the 200 in 21.89. That speed has complemented an impressive junior year highlight video.
In addition to standing out on offense and defense, Ellens proves that he’s an electric returner. That’s a bonus on the recruiting trail.
“Most coaches do mention that to me. That’s been a big part for me because that shows that I can move well and shows my speed as well,” he said.
Ellens (5-11, 155) entered the week having built strong relationships with Ohio and Miami (OH). Other MAC and FCS schools also offered scholarships. While he’s open to all the schools interested in him, he said he favors Iowa and Iowa State right now.
“I’m looking to take official visits to Iowa State and Iowa. I’m also focused on track and getting better times to send out to (college) coaches,” Ellens said.
Ellens spoke with Iowa assistant Seth Wallace about officially visiting the Hawkeyes the weekend of June 21. That’s when the program welcomes a large group of its verbal commitments and top targets.
Iowa State still is working out a date for his official visit. It could happen within a week or two of the Hawkeye stop.
Ellens heads into his official visits knowing what’s most important to him.
“I think I’m going to focus mostly on how the coaches treat their players and how well and how hard they coach them. That’s kind of the big thing for me,” he said.
Ellens is undecided about a college major. He’d like to study something that keeps him involved in sports.
Rivals, On3 and 247 did not yet rank Ellens at the time this story was published. Prep Red Zone rated him as the No. 40 player overall in Illinois for ’25.
Iowa
Brody Brecht Strikes Out 13 in Iowa Win
It’s not really a cliché when Brody Brecht says he takes everything one pitch at a time.
It’s an approach that is now making him, as his coach described it, a “really polished pitcher.”
Brecht matched a career high with 13 strikeouts, allowing just two hits and one run over eight innings in Iowa’s 9-2 win over Northwestern on Saturday at Duane Banks Field.
The Hawkeyes (27-18 overall, 12-8 Big Ten) clinched the series against the Wildcats (13-29, 2-15) behind Brecht, who is putting together an impressive run to close the regular season.
Brecht (3-2), over his last three starts, has struck out 36 in 22 ⅔ innings, allowing just five hits, three runs (two earned) and eight walks in that stretch.
“I continue to preach the mental side of the game — just control what I can control,” Brecht said. “Take it one pitch at a time — it’s been a big focus for me.”
Iowa coach Rick Heller appreciates that approach.
“I just think from a confidence standpoint, from a focus standpoint, he’s in a great place right now,” Heller said. “He isn’t putting the weight of the world on every pitch. He’s just going out and playing and having fun and helping the team, not worrying about anything but the next pitch. That’s great to see, because that hasn’t always been the case.”
Brecht’s confidence could be seen early. Northwestern’s Preston Knott doubled into the right-field corner on Brecht’s second pitch of the game. Knott ended up scoring — he moved to third base on Bennett Markinson’s fly ball to right field and scored on Jackson Freeman’s sacrifice fly. But those two outs started a streak of 12 consecutive hitters retired by Brecht.
Brecht was consistently working ahead of the hitters during that run.
“That’s the name of the game — getting ahead,” he said. “When you get ahead, the chase rates go up.”
Brecht finally got a lead in the fifth inning, when Iowa scored three runs off a bases-loaded walk, a sacrifice fly, and a double steal.
Brecht had six of his strikeouts in the three innings after the Hawkeyes had taken the lead.
“He was in control the entire time, I felt like,” Heller said. “He’s in a really good zone right now. When he would hit a little spell when he wasn’t getting ahead, he stepped back, found a way to get back in the zone. When we did score, he had shutdown innings.
“He was just really, really in control. That was the third one in a row where he looked like a really polished pitcher.”
Iowa got a run in the sixth on Raider Tello’s run-scoring single, then broke open the game in the eighth with five runs. Andy Nelson had a two-run double, Tello drove in a run with a double, then Reese Moore hit a two-run home run.
“I was really happy,” Heller said. “There were so many quality at bats today where there was no reward. To finally have it break through shows you that the mentality was right.”
Brecht’s long outing — he threw 115 pitches — allowed Heller to conserve his bullpen for Sunday’s series finale. Heller had planned on using Ben DeTaeye in the eighth if Brecht needed help, and then Jack Young in the ninth, but the big lead allowed him to save both.
“That was exactly what we needed to be in good shape for tomorrow’s game,” Heller said.
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