Nebraska
Nebraska Softball Is Back: A Preview
Guess what time it is? That’s right, it’s Nebraska Softball time and I know we’re all excited for it. Nebraska sets their sights on Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, hoping to get off on the right foot.. or left, whichever one.
Puerto Vallarta College Challenge
The Huskers will play four games in three days in Mexico, they will face two top 15 teams in their first two games. Nebraska will first square off with #7 Washington on Thursday at 6:30 pm (Central) and then #11 Duke on Friday at 12:30 pm (Central). The Red Team will also see Long Beach State on Friday at 3:00 pm (Central) and finally will finish their games on Saturday with Utah Valley at 10:30 am (Central).
All games during the Puerto Vallarta College Challenge can be watched on FloSoftball ($) by purchasing a subscription. A monthly subscription is $29.99, while an annual one is $150.
The Huskers are returning all but three players from last year, when Nebraska went 36-22. NU made the NCAA Tournament in 2023, advancing to the regional final to post a top 20 national finish while receiving votes in the final top 25 poll.
Preseason Honors
It was probably no surprise that the Huskers were already getting ranked in the preseason or maybe it was, regardless, it’s real and it’s happening. Nebraska received a ranking in all four major polls; 13th (D1 Softball), 15th (Softball America), 17th (ESPN.com/USA Softball), and 18th (NFCA). The Huskers will start of the season ranked 18th, which is the first time since 2018 Nebraska has earned a preseason ranking.
Billie Andrews, Jordy Bahl, and Katelyn Caneda all received individual preseason rankings as well. Andrews, a senior shortstop, was ranked the No. 42 (D1 Softball) and No. 56 (Softball America) Overall Player in the country as well as the No. 5 (D1 Softball) and No. 6 Softball America) Shortstop in the country. Bahl, the Oklahoma transfer, was ranked the No. 2 player nationally and No. 2 pitcher in the country, was named to the preseason watch list for the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year award, and was also tabbed as a preseason first-team All-American by D1 Softball and Softball America. Caneda, only a sophomore, was ranked the No. 9 second baseman in the country by D1 Softball.
The Returners
Like stated before, Nebraska is returning a good majority of their team from last year and are adding quite the newcomer class. Here’s a look at what Nebraska is returning.
Abbie Squire, who unfortunately will miss the 2024 season due to injury, was still named one of the captains for the year. Coach Rhonda Revelle had this to say about Squire, “Abbie’s an even better leader this year than she was a year ago just simply by the work she’s put in.” Revelle also added, “That she (Squire) is leading every way she can and is intent on making a difference for the team.”
Billie Andrews, is back after leading Nebraska with 16 homers, 29 extra base hits, 50 runs, 28 walks, a .677 slugging average, and a .441 on base percentage. Andrews is sixth in school history in extra base hits and seventh in homeruns.
Katelyn Caneda, returns after leading NU with a .366 batting average in 2023. That average was the third highest mark by a freshman in school history, while Caneda was the first freshman to lead in average since 2013.
Brooke Andrews led Nebraska in RBIs with 45 last season and was second on the team with a .575 slugging percentage.
Caitlynn Neal hit .307 last season and led NU with 14 doubles.
Sydney Gray is a career .305 hitter, she batted .313 in 2022 with eight doubles, 11 homeruns, and 45 RBIs.
Ava Bredwell, who was the 2022 Freshman of the Year, hit .285 last season and was second on the team with 36 runs scored.
Sophomores Talia Tokheim, Alina Felix, and Ashley Smetter are back after being productive despite limited action in their freshman season. Tokheim hit .359 with 10 extra base hits in only 39 at bats before an injury ended her season. Felix started 10 games and hit .259 and scoring seven runs. Smetter was 3-for-8 in limited at bats with one double.
Dakota Carter, Mckinley Malecha, Abbey Newlun and Haidyn Warner all had at bats in 2023.
Kaylin Kinney is also back this year after her season ending injury in 2023. Kinney will give Nebraska another strong arm in the circle, she had a 0.84 ERA before she missed the rest of her season.
Sarah Harness is another pitcher coming back, who appeared in 31 games last season with 25 starts, posting a 10-5 record with a 3.40 ERA.
The Newcomers
Jordy Bahl comes back home after two incredible seasons at Oklahoma. Bahl was a first-team All-American and Big 12 Pitcher of the Year in both 2022 and 2023. She owns an insane 44-2 career record and a 0.99 ERA in the circle with a 3.50 batting average.
Peyton Cody, the sixth year transfer, started 139 games and posted a .319 batting average with 29 doubles, 20 homeruns, and 100 RBIs in her five years at St. John’s.
Bella Bacon, an Omaha native, transfers to Nebraska after spending her freshman year at Purdue. Bacon played in 26 games and had an average of .250 with a .381 on base percentage with the Boilermakers.
Freshman Samantha Bland starred for Chino Hills High School in California and with the Corona Angels. Bland was a two-time league MVP and two-time Los Angeles Times all-star for Chino Hills.
Emmerson Cope, a freshman from Topeka, Kansas, was a two-time Kansas 6A Pitcher of the Year. The nation’s No. 26 overall recruit, Cope posted a 14-3 record with a 1.50 ERA as a senior while batting .577 with 15 homeruns and 43 RBIs.
Elisa Gulfin was a standout pitcher for Saint Paul High School in California. She was the Del Ray League Pitcher of the Year and a first-team all-league and all-area selection.
Caitlin Olensky is Nebraska’s first left handed pitcher since 2018 and is just the second player from New Jersey to play for Nebraska. Olensky was ranked as the nation’s No. 60 overall recruit after posting a 0.92 ERA and .449 career batting average at Montville High.
Lincoln native Malia Thoms was a four-time all-conference and four-time all-state selection for Waverly High School. She was tabbed as the No. 42 recruit in the country by Extra Inning Softball.
Quick Hitters
Billie Andrews has started 159 consecutive games at shortstop. Andrews also has six games with multiple home runs in her career, the Nebraska record for most multi-homer games is seven held by Tristen Edwards.
Jordy Bahl carries a 27.1-inning scoreless streak into this season. She did not allow a run over her final six appearances last season, all of which were in either an NCAA Super Regional or Women’s College World Series game. Bahl has not allowed a run in 50 of her 71 career appearances, while allowing one run or less in 60 of her 71 career appearances.
Caitlynn Neal enters the season with 93 career hits, seven shy of 100.
Rhonda Revelle is three wins shy of recording 1,100 win as a Husker.
Nebraska’s Notable Games
Nebraska will play a very strong schedule, the brunt of that coming very early on. The Huskers will face eight currently ranked teams #7 Washington, #10 UCLA, #11 Duke, #13 Utah, #15 Oregon, #16 Arkansas, #20 Northwestern, and #24 San Diego State.
The Big Ten is no cake walk either, but these early games will give Nebraska Softball fans a look into what to expect and where the team matches up.
A reminder that Nebraska opens up their season in Puerto Vallarta against #7 Washington at 6:00 pm (Central). The games can be watched on FloSoftball, if a subscription is purchased, you can also listen to Nate Rohr on the call available at Huskers.com/listen or on the official Huskers app.
Nebraska
Nebraska MBB arrives back in Lincoln to sea of Husker fans
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – Nebraska men’s basketball returned home on Sunday after defeating Vanderbilt in the NCAA Tournament and advancing to the program’s first Sweet 16.
Hundreds of Nebraska fans flocked to the Lincoln Airport to welcome the team home. Cheers rung out in the arrivals area of the airport as the team came out.
The players took time to sign autographs, take photos, and celebrate with the Husker fans who came to welcome them home. The team then got on their bus to return to Nebraska’s training facility.
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Nebraska
Nebraska’s Sweet 16 joy, Vanderbilt’s agony were a centimeter from reversal
OKLAHOMA CITY — Out of the locker room and into the Paycom Center hallway, the Nebraska contingent went, traces of delirium on their faces and drips of water rolling off their mussed follicles. It had been almost 20 minutes since the game of their lives, the game of this NCAA Tournament, the game that will always be remembered by Nebraska and Vanderbilt fans — in very different ways — was won on the tiniest of bounces.
Yet as they walked toward a postgame news conference late Saturday night to discuss it all, they passed a tunnel leading into the arena and were greeted with screams. Nebraska fans with seats around the tunnel spotted them, because thousands of Nebraska fans were still in their seats, reveling, the music still thumping in the arena, as if some kind of encore would be happening.
As if Nebraska 74, Vanderbilt 72 — won and lost several times by both teams until Braden Frager’s layup went for Nebraska and Tyler Tanner’s halfcourt shot went in and out for Vanderbilt — weren’t enough.
OH. MY. GOODNESS.
NEBRASKA IS IN FRONT 😱 #MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/bHX87XMzCu
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 22, 2026
“Heyyyy!” Nebraska’s Rienk Mast yelled to the fans, giving them a point as the Cornhuskers kept marching, and dripping, and laughing.
Mast gave teammate Pryce Sandfort a slap on the back as Sandfort said to Frager, of the winning basket made possible when Sandfort zipped a pass to him: “I was so close to pulling that 3. Oh my God. And you were wide open.”
And Mast sat and listened as coach Fred Hoiberg told the assembled media: “You guys have no idea how invasive that (left knee) procedure that Rienk went through. … More than anything, I’m just happy for him because you see the joy. It was hard.”
It took everything for South Region No. 4 seed Nebraska (28-6) to survive the greatness of Tanner and No. 5 seed Vanderbilt (27-9), earning the first Sweet 16 in program history and a Thursday date in Houston with No. 1 seed Florida or No. 9 seed Iowa. It took the 15,000 or so fans in red in the arena, making it feel much more like a Big Ten home game in February than a March Madness setting.
It took hot shooting early, clutch shooting late, eight missed Vanderbilt free throws, four scorers in double figures and the ability to summon composure through the fatigue and panic as Vanderbilt turned a 10-point deficit into a five-point advantage with 5:34 to play.
It took Mast taking over in timeout huddles to make sure the Cornhuskers didn’t lose that composure.
“That’s what he does,” Nebraska’s Cale Jacobsen said of Mast, who also had 13 points, five rebounds and four assists.
The 6-foot-10, 250-pound senior from Groningen, Netherlands, is only on this team because he had to miss all of last season recovering from knee surgery. As the Lincoln Journal-Star recently reported, it was far beyond a typical knee surgery — it was a cartilage transplant from a cadaver to alleviate a condition called osteochondritis dissecans.
And there was ample risk that his knee would reject the tissue, and a long time period of Mast rehabilitating but not knowing for sure. Just as so many things had to come together for the Cornhuskers to follow up the program’s first NCAA Tournament win with another, Mast’s successful recovery was a central part of a team coming together that could make that kind of history.
This NCAA Tournament, like the last one, has been light on Cinderella stories and heavy on big brands and big favorites rolling. Saturday night at Paycom Arena was the Big Ten vs. the SEC, the top two money hoarders in an industry guided by their hoarding.
But it was also two groups of players and coaches as endearing as your average mid-major No. 13 seed. It was little Tanner, the lightly regarded 2024 recruit, dropping 27 and nearly one of the greatest shots in NCAA Tournament history. It was little Sam Hoiberg, on his birthday (and the birthday of twin and Nebraska manager Charlie), extending his career with so many gutty plays. It was big Mast in the middle of it all, a guy who probably shouldn’t be playing, facilitating and narrating for his team.
“He’s one of the best leaders I’ve ever been around,” Sam Hoiberg said. “My dad said it to you guys, the most disciplined player, and it’s all true. I live with Rienk, I see it every single day, how disciplined he is. But he’s such a good dude, too.”
That dude zipped a pass to Berke Buyuktuncel with 2:08 left for his fourth assist to give Nebraska back a 68-67 lead. Then AK Okereke drilled a corner 3-pointer for Vanderbilt. Then Mast tried to take the lead right back with his fourth 3-pointer but it missed — into the hands of Hoiberg, who tied the game with the rare diminutive point-guard putback.
Then Tanner sliced through the Nebraska defense as he did all night, a layup for a 72-70 lead with 58 seconds left. Then Hoiberg tried to answer with a drive, missing — into the hands of Mast, whose putback tied it with 37 ticks left. One more Nebraska stop, Sandfort rebounding a Chandler Bing miss, set up the final sequence.
Sandfort to a cutting Frager. Tanner from behind halfcourt, then to the court on his back, both hands to his face.
“Hit every part of the rim,” Fred Hoiberg said.
“I think it took me a half a second to register it didn’t go in, and then I just screamed in elation,” Sam Hoiberg said.
“I just about died,” Sandfort said.
“Like, I just went completely blank,” Mast said.
This close…. 🤏#MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/lEtY7T1WX1
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 22, 2026
As for Tanner, when asked if he thought it was going in, he could only nod his head. The devastation on the Vanderbilt side was exactly as you’d expect. And for Vanderbilt fans, this one might occupy a higher spot on a list that includes Matthew Fisher-Davis mistakenly fouling Northwestern’s Bryant McIntosh with his team up and 17 seconds left … and the Murray State buzzer-beater in 2010 … and Roy Hibbert’s obvious but uncalled travel in 2007 … and that 1993 loss to Temple …
“This is going to take a long time for myself and this team to get over,” said Vanderbilt coach Mark Byington, who has worked wonders in two seasons.
“They were so close to being in our shoes,” Jacobsen said of the Commodores. “My heart goes out to those guys.”
But his guys are moving on, and might be as Cinderella-like as any group left in this thing. A few feet away from Jacobsen, Mast was holding court with reporters. He moved some chairs out of the way to create space. He started to grab one for himself, stopped and said: “Nah, I don’t need it.”
“This is unbelievable,” Mast said. “Like, ‘Oh my God, we really did this. … Last year was pretty tough. But like throughout that whole year, this is what you work toward. I’m so grateful to stand where I’m at right now.”
Nebraska
Extreme heat continues to strike Southwest US and even Nebraska needs a cold drink
Parts of California and Arizona were under extreme heat warnings again Saturday while sweltering summerlike weather even stretched as far north as Nebraska just a day into spring.
Temperatures at or above 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.7 C) were forecast in the Southwest, closing a remarkable week of record-breaking heat. Experts say April, May and June are likely to be hotter than normal almost everywhere in the U.S.
Win Marsh said the heat was a reason to return home early to Utah after she and her husband, Stephen, hiked 170 miles (273 kilometers) over two weeks in Arizona, starting at the Mexico border. Their goal was to complete more than 800 miles (1,287 kilometers) on the Arizona Trail.
“We know our limits,” Marsh, 63, said Saturday. “We can’t hike when our bodies can’t cool down. There’s no shade out there, and water sources are drying up. … We promised our kids we wouldn’t do sketchy stuff. We’re not out there for a search-and-rescue event.”
The National Weather Service predicted 100 degrees (37.7 C) in Tucson, Arizona. The Yuma Desert, a desert community in southwestern Arizona, was headed toward 105 degrees (40.5 C), a day after reaching 112 (43.3 C) — a record for the highest March temperature in the United States.
Two places in Southern California also hit that temperature Friday. Experts say triple-digit days typically arrive by May, not March.
In the Midwest, temperatures exceeding 90 (32.2 C) were predicted across Nebraska, followed by a big drop to the 50s and 60s Sunday. A red flag warning was posted, which means a higher risk for wildfires. Parts of Texas were also at 90 or higher Saturday.
“This heat is likely to break many long-standing records from over a century ago across the area,” the National Weather Service in Omaha, Nebraska, said.
All evacuation orders were lifted in areas affected by Nebraska’s Cottonwood and Morrill fires, which have burned more than 1,200 square miles (3,118 square kilometers) for days but are largely contained, the state Emergency Management Agency said. The areas are dominated by range and grassland.
March’s heat would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change, according to a report Friday by World Weather Attribution, an international group of scientists who study the causes of extreme weather events.
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