Mississippi
Bryce Cunningham throws complete game shutout for Vanderbilt baseball vs Mississippi State
Bryce Cunningham threw a complete game shutout to open Vanderbilt baseball’s series with a 4-0 win over Mississippi State.
Cunningham allowed just two hits and two walks with four strikeouts in the victory. It was the Commodores’ second complete game shutout of the season, as Devin Futrell also threw one in a win over Illinois State in March.
“I think it was a mindset, just attacking them best I could, trusting my defense ultimately in a showdown tonight,” Cunningham said.
Cunningham threw a season-high 122 pitches. Coach Tim Corbin said that he considered pulling Cunningham from the game and that the final batter of the game, when the Bulldogs’ Connor Hujsak popped up to third base, would’ve been Cunningham’s last regardless.
Vanderbilt is playing shorthanded on the pitching staff as JD Thompson is suspended for use of a foreign substance and Ethan McElvain is not on the active roster for the weekend due to a back injury, leaving the Commodores with 12 available pitchers.
Vanderbilt (31-11, 11-8 SEC) got home runs from Jonathan Vastine and Alan Espinal in the first inning to get out to an early lead, then later tacked on runs with a Colin Barczi RBI groundout and an RJ Austin sacrifice fly. Mississippi State (27-15, 10-9) only got a runner into scoring position once, when Hujsak doubled in the seventh inning and went to third on an error.
Cunningham got a groundout to end that threat.
The Bulldogs’ starter, Khal Stephen, put up a strong performance himself. In 7⅓ innings, he allowed four runs with one walk and six strikeouts. At one point, he retired 15 Vanderbilt batters in a row.
“The seventh inning, that was kind of a balancing act because Stephen went through us 1-2-3, I think it was three times in a row, may have been four, but when he did it in the (sixth), you could feel the momentum start to sway,” Corbin said. “So when Bryce stranded the first and third, that was a big moment for us, just to kind of maintain order in the game.”
SHORTHANDED STAFF Unpacking Vanderbilt’s pitching options for Mississippi State series after suspension, injuries
Aria Gerson covers Vanderbilt athletics for The Tennessean. Contact her at agerson@gannett.com or on Twitter @aria_gerson.
Mississippi
It’s 2,350 miles long, spans 31 US states and is home to a 100kg animal with a tongue that looks like a worm | Discover Wildlife
The Mississippi River flows for around 2,350 miles through the heart of the US. It drains an area of 1.2 million square miles – that’s roughly 40% of the country – and at certain points is 11 miles wide. It is North America’s second longest river, behind the Missouri River.
Rising from Lake Itasca in Minnesota, the Mississippi winds southwards through a range of environments, draining water from 31 US states before reaching its delta at the Gulf of Mexico in Louisiana.
The sheer size of the river and the diversity of habitats it passes through make it a refuge for a huge range of animal species, including more than 260 fish, 326 birds, 50 mammals and at least 145 amphibians and reptiles, according to the National Park Service.
There are many weird and wonderful animals living within the Mississippi’s vast waters, but surely one of the strangest is the alligator snapping turtle.
This prehistoric-looking reptile is massive. It can weigh up to 100kg and males can grow well over half a metre long, making it the largest freshwater turtle in North America.
And as if its size wasn’t enough, the alligator snapper has a host of other characteristics that make it one of the Mississippi’s most striking creatures, including a dark, spiky shell (known as carapace), a brick-like head and a sharp, hooked beak. With such a formidable appearance, it’s easy to see how the turtle got its ‘alligator’ name.
But perhaps the turtle’s most curious feature is a worm-like appendage found on its tongue, which it uses as a lure to catch prey, such as fish, amphibians and invertebrates. Alligator snappers are also quite happy scavenging for food.
More amazing wildlife stories from around the world
Mississippi
Mississippi House of Representatives passes bill to make NIL earnings non-taxable
NIL money comes with a price. More specifically, a tax bill.
The Mississippi legislature is trying to reduce that burden for college athletes who play there.
Via Bea Anhuci of the Mississippi Clarion Ledger, the Mississippi House of Representatives has passed a bill that would exempt NIL earnings from state income tax.
It’s a recruiting tool for Ole Miss and Mississippi State, one that would put the Mississippi schools on equal footing with other states that host SEC universities. Florida, Tennessee, and Texas have no state income tax, and Arkansas carved out NIL earnings from the state’s income tax burden in 2025.
Mississippi currently charges a four-percent tax on anyone making more than $10,000 per year.
NIL earnings remain subject to federal income tax.
The bill will have to also pass the Mississippi Senate, and the governor would then be required to sign it into law.
Mississippi
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