Georgia
How Jalin Flores’ mindset helped Texas baseball take SEC series from Georgia
Jim Schlossnagle: What to know about Texas baseball coach
Four things to know about Texas baseball coach Jim Schlossnagle
Texas baseball shortstop Jalin Flores walked to the plate in the seventh inning of Saturday’s game against Georgia with a stat line full of mishaps.
He’d committed an error in the first inning that enabled the Bulldogs to plate the game’s first run. And he’s struck out in all three of his at-bats, giving him five whiffs in the series.
So what was the Longhorns’ star feeling as he dug in with two runners on and Texas down by two runs?
“Those at-bats happened a second ago, a million years ago, so they don’t really affect you going into the next one,” Flores said. “Knowing that those two guys got on before me, the crowd was into it at that moment, I’m just trying to have fun and play baseball and do my job as well.”
Flores roped a 3-1 pitch from Georgia’s Kolten Smith off the wall in center field, scoring both Easton Winfield and Ethan Mendoza and erasing what had been a four-run deficit for the Longhorns.
Fun achieved.
Will Gasparino followed up with another two-run double two batters later, giving the Longhorns the lead for good in a game they eventually won 7-4.
Texas coach Jim Schlossnagle praised Flores for his professionalism on Friday night, when he made a handful of key defensive plays despite taking an ugly 0-for-4 at the plate. The same traits helped him deliver in a crucial moment for the Longhorns (25-4, 10-1 SEC) on Saturday after six difficult innings.
“He’s a professional,” Schlossnagle said Saturday. “He doesn’t feel good, he has emotions too. But he’s got (assistant coach Troy Tulowitzki) there, and Troy helps him through all that stuff. But part of being a real player is being able to separate defense from offense, and knowing that the most important at-bat you have is the next at-bat.”
Together with Gasparino, Flores completed the comeback that Jaquae Stewart began when he launched a two-run homer to right for his first career long ball. That big swing came in the fifth inning, and served as Texas’ first hit of the game against Georgia starter Brian Curley, who had been dominating.
By contrast, Texas starter Luke Harrison struggled early. He gave up four runs ‒ three of which were earned ‒ in the first four innings.
With the way the two starting pitchers were trending, Schlossnagle already had Sunday’s game in mind as he managed his pitching staff.
“The decision was to leave Harrison in there and not burn (Max) Grubbs and have him ready for tomorrow, but then Stewart hit the homer and kind of gave us a little life,” Schlossnagle said.
And Harrison did enough to keep the Longhorns close. He struck out a career-high nine Bulldogs (29-4, 8-3) in 5⅔ innings of work before Schlossnagle finally went to Grubbs. He kept Georgia, which leads the country in home runs, within UFCU Disch-Falk Field’s outfield walls, too.
“I think mixing it up, just keeping them off-balance was going well for me,” Harrison said. “Using the cutter, slider and introduced a curveball today, so that was fun.”
Grubbs stranded a Georgia baserunner in the sixth, then needed just 10 batters to record nine outs as he secured the win and lowered his ERA to 1.27 on the season.
His work, and the length provided by Harrison, allowed the Longhorns to keep swingman Ruger Riojas rested. He’ll get the start for Texas as it looks for the sweep on Sunday (2 p.m., SEC Network+).
Reach Texas Insider David Eckert via email at deckert@gannett.com. Follow the American-Statesman on Facebook and X for more. Your subscription makes work like this possible. Get access to all of our best content with this tremendous offer.
Georgia
Georgia Power customers to see modest savings under new rate plan approved by PSC
The Georgia Public Service Commission this week approved a plan expected to reduce utility bills for Georgia Power customers by a few dollars a month.
The commission said the change will generate about $285 million in total annual savings for Georgia Power customers, or roughly $50 per year — about $4.04 per month — for the average residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt-hours a month.
The Georgia PSC voted Thursday to lower overall rates as part of the approved plan.
Georgia Power Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Tyler Cook said the decision will provide “real savings for Georgia families and businesses as the heat of summer begins and energy use increases.”
“At Georgia Power, our teams work every day to run our business efficiently and keep reliable and affordable energy flowing to our customers,” Cook said.
Cook said the outcome followed months of work between Georgia Power and PSC staff, including reviews, public hearings and input from residents and intervenors.
The approved plan is tied to a stipulated agreement reached earlier this month involving two cases filed with the PSC in February, the Fuel Cost Recovery case and the Storm Cost Recovery case. Those cases addressed recovering fuel costs used to generate electricity and expenses tied to restoring power after storms.
Georgia Power said its rates remain, on average, about 15% below the national average and that it is still on track to provide additional annual savings of about $102 per year for typical residential customers beginning in 2029.
Georgia
Georgia PSC votes to lower Georgia Power utility rates
ATLANTA – The Georgia Public Service Commission approved a stipulated agreement on Thursday to lower utility rates for Georgia Power customers starting June 1.
The regulatory body voted to pass the deal without changes, establishing how the utility can bill for fuel costs and storm damage restoration expenses.
State regulators approve rate cuts
What we know:
The Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC) voted 3-2 to reject several utility cost amendments before ultimately passing the overall deal. Under the approved agreement, a typical residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt-hours per month will see monthly bills decrease by roughly $4.03 to $4.04. Total annual savings across all 2.8 million Georgia Power customers are projected to reach approximately $285 million.
The deal reduces how much money the utility can recover from its customer base for storm expenses by nearly 60%, dropping the revenue requirement from $270 million down to $109 million. The agreement also extends the amortization of storm recovery costs, largely tied to Hurricane Helene in 2024, to 67 months, caps natural gas advance purchases at 20% over a 36-month window, and cuts $13 million from the company’s original fuel recovery estimates.
Accountability questions remain unresolved
What we don’t know:
While the PSC agreed to launch a separate investigation into how fuel costs are allocated, officials have not yet confirmed how much large industrial operations will be forced to pay in future rate cases. Consumer advocacy groups argue that massive data center companies are driving up fuel costs for everyday ratepayers without paying for the infrastructure upgrades they require. Critics note that it remains unclear if a future utility asset structure will successfully shift financial burdens away from residential homes.
The Source: The information in this story was gathered from official press releases issued by the Georgia Public Service Commission and Georgia Power, as well as previous FOX 5 Atlanta reporting.
Georgia
St Louis CITY2 Goalkeeper Lucas McPartlin Called Up to U.S. U-19 MNT Domestic Training Camp in Fayetteville, Georgia | St. Louis SC
St Louis CITY2 goalkeeper Lucas McPartlin has been called up to the U.S. U-19 Men’s National Team for their upcoming domestic training camp in Fayetteville, Georgia from June 1-10, led by head coach Gonzalo Segares. McPartlin will be representing the U.S. for the first time in his youth national team career. McPartlin is the first CITY SC goalkeeper in club’s history to get a national team call up.
The U.S. U-19’s will face Argentina in back-to-back matches on June 5 and 7, then close out their final match against Japan on June 9.
McPartlin has been a member of St Louis CITY2 since 2025 and made his professional debut against Sporting KC II in August 2025, earning his first professional clean sheet in a 3-0 win. The Missouri Native has made seven starts and appearances for CITY2 this season, earning three clean sheets and making 24 total saves, with a 3-1-3 record. McPartlin spent time with CITY SC in both preseason camps this year and has been a regular in first team training this year.
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