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Taryne Mowatt-McKinney hired as Mississippi State softball pitching coach, per report

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Taryne Mowatt-McKinney hired as Mississippi State softball pitching coach, per report


Taryne Mowatt-McKinney has landed on her feet. Arizona softball head coach Caitlin Lowe parted ways with her former teammate and longtime Wildcat pitching coach after the 2023 season after the Wildcats struggled in the circle for the second straight season. Mississippi State head coach Samantha Ricketts doesn’t appear worried about what happened in Tucson recently, as Extra Inning Softball is reporting that Mowatt-McKinney will be the next pitching coach for the Bulldogs.

Mowatt-McKinney was hired by former head coach Mike Candrea in October of 2017, moving former assistant coach Stacy Iveson into an administrative role to open up an on-field coaching position for the 2007 Women’s College World Series Most Valuable Player. Mowatt-McKinney was the last Wildcat pitcher to lead the program to a title, and the program was in the midst of a seven-year absence from Oklahoma City after being upset by Baylor in the super regionals in May of 2017.

The team didn’t make it back to the WCWS in her first season, but the pitching staff had a 1.94 ERA. Three of the Wildcats’ four pitchers had ERAs of 1.85 or less that season, although only Taylor McQuillin and Alyssa Denham pitched more than 30 innings. McQuillin improved from a 1.92 ERA the previous season to a 1.68 in Mowatt-McKinney’s first year.

The team finally broke through and returned to OKC in Mowatt-McKinney’s second season developing the pitchers. It was the first of three consecutive Women’s College World Series appearances by the team.

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In 2019, the staff ERA dropped yet again, going down to 1.61 as five of Arizona’s six pitchers had ERAs below 2.00 and two were below 0.50. Only freshman Vanessa Foreman broke the barrier of two earned runs with a 3.75 ERA in 9.1 innings pitched. Foreman also had the highest WHIP that season at 1.29. As a staff, the WHIP was 0.94, and opposing hitters hit just .183 against the Wildcats.

With the pandemic, 2020 was an unsettled season that ended early. In the shortened season, Arizona’s two primary pitchers—Denham and Mariah Lopez—again had ERAs below 2.00. Denham was at 1.92 in 15 appearances and Lopez even lower at 1.38 in 15 appearances.

Things started to go off track for Arizona’s pitchers in 2021. While Denham remained steady, putting together an ERA near her Arizona career average at 1.95, Lopez could not replicate what she had done in 2020. Her ERA jumped to 2.79, higher than anyone on the staff except for freshman Devyn Netz.

After being a highly-touted transfer and expected ace just the year before, Lopez fell behind utility player Hanah Bowen in the pitching pecking order, becoming the number three pitcher on the staff. Her 17 home runs surrendered were the most on the staff even though she pitched far fewer innings than either Denham or Bowen. Approximately one at-bat in every 17 ended up in a home run. The regression of Lopez inspired unrest in some of the fan base, which blamed Mowatt-McKinney for the lapse.

Still, the team made it back to Oklahoma City in what turned out to be Candrea’s final season at the helm.

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Lowe kept her former teammate on staff when she took over in the summer of 2022. The pitching took a tumble, with the Arizona staff’s ERA exploding from 2.22 the year before to 3.70 in 2022. The program chose to conceal injuries to its two top pitchers, Bowen and Netz, until the postseason. It did Mowatt-McKinney and her pitchers no favors.

Netz had a 3.45 ERA in 136 IP. She wore a boot on days she did not pitch due to a foot injury as she put up her worst numbers to date in the circle. Bowen had a 3.76 ERA in 139.2 innings, at least some of which were pitched while dealing with a hip injury. Only sophomore Jessie Fontes had an ERA below 3.45, but she pitched just 27.2 innings.

Both Netz and Bowen came on strong in the postseason, leading the Wildcats back to Oklahoma for their third straight appearance in the Women’s College World Series. Arizona couldn’t keep the momentum, though.

The Wildcats leaned heavily on Netz in 2023 after being unable to get an impact transfer before the season. Netz had the only ERA under 4.00 with a career-worst 3.88. On top of pitching 171.1 innings, Netz also hit and played first base when the Wildcats lost slugger Carlie Scupin to injury.

It was a huge task for the junior. Freshman Aissa Silva had the second-most innings with 54. No one else had more than 46.

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Mowatt-McKinney now has the chance to prove that she’s the coach who led the staff to three straight seasons of sub-2.25 ERAs rather than the one whose pitchers struggled against the pandemic, injuries, and youth in her final three seasons.

She heads to a team that had its own struggles last season. The Bulldogs finished 28-25, even with the Wildcats in the loss column but with one fewer win. They went out in the first game of the SEC Tournament and were the only SEC team not to make the NCAA Tournament.

The staff, which featured seven pitchers, had a collective ERA of 3.13. They spread the innings out with no one pitching more than 79.1 innings and three pitching at least 70 innings. Only one of the Bulldogs’ primary pitchers had an ERA under 3.00 with Josey Marron’s 2.38 leading those who pitched more than 60 innings. Bri Bower had a 1.11 ERA but pitched just 6.1 innings.



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As Climate Threats to Agriculture Mount, Could the Mississippi River Delta Be the Next California? – Inside Climate News

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As Climate Threats to Agriculture Mount, Could the Mississippi River Delta Be the Next California? – Inside Climate News


This story was originally published by The Tennessee Lookout.

A smorgasbord of bright red tomatoes and vibrant vegetables line the walls of Michael Katrutsa’s produce shop in rural Camden, Tennessee. What began a decade ago as a roadside farm stand is now an air-conditioned outbuilding packed with crates of watermelon, cantaloupe and his locally renowned sweet corn — all picked fresh by a handful of local employees each morning.

The roughly 20-acre farm west of the Tennessee River sells about half of its produce through his shop, with the rest going to the wholesale market.

Farms like Katrutsa’s make up just a sliver of roughly 10.7 million acres of Tennessee farmland largely dominated by hay, soybeans, corn and cotton. Specialized machines help farmers harvest vast quantities of these commodity “row crops,” but Katrutsa said the startup cost was too steep for him. While specialty crops like produce are more labor-intensive, requiring near-constant attention from early July up until the first frost in October, Katrutsa said he takes pride in feeding his neighbors.

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The World Wildlife Fund sees farms in the mid-Mississippi delta as ripe with opportunity to become a new mecca for commercial-scale American produce. California currently grows nearly three-quarters of the nation’s fruits and nuts and more than a third of its vegetables. 

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But as climate change compounds the threats of water scarcity, extreme weather and wildfires on California’s resources, WWF’s Markets Institute is exploring what it would take for farmers in West Tennessee, Mississippi and Arkansas to embrace — and equitably profit from — specialty crop production like strawberries, lettuce or walnuts. 

Specialty crops make up only 0.19% of the region’s farm acreage, but their higher sale value allows them to generate 1.08% of the region’s agriculture revenue, according to WWF’s May report, called The Next California, spearheaded by Markets Institute Senior Director Julia Kurnik. She argues that there’s an opportunity to proactively create more inclusive, higher-yield business models on existing farms, preventing natural ecosystems from being unnecessarily transformed into farmland.

But shifting produce growth to the Mid-Delta comes with hurdles: it requires buyers willing to try new markets, understanding of new crops’ diseases and needs, specialized equipment like cold storage and lots of expensive hands-on labor.

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“It is not as simple as a farmer simply putting new crops in the ground,” Kurnik said.

Early Adopters Put Idea to the Test

Sixth-generation Arkansas farmer Hallie Shoffner is putting WWF’s models to the test through a nonprofit called the Delta Harvest Food Hub. The hub works with Black and women farmers to pilot the scalability of growing specialty crops in the Delta region, starting with specialty rice.

Shoffner grows basmati, jasmine, sushi rice, sake rice seeds and more on her 2,000-acre, century-old farm located in an unincorporated town outside Newport, Arkansas. She’s skeptical about a full switch to produce, but sees specialty rice products as “low-hanging fruit” easily adopted in the mid-Delta, where commodity rice is already widely grown.

The United States is the fifth-largest rice exporter in the world, and Arkansas is the country’s top producer, with other Mississippi River valley states not far behind. But the majority of specialty rice is grown in California or imported from East Asian countries.

Sixth-generation Arkansas farmer Hallie Shoffner grows specialty rice like basmati, jasmine and sushi rice, on her farm near Newport, Arkansas. Credit: Phillip Powell/Arkansas TimesSixth-generation Arkansas farmer Hallie Shoffner grows specialty rice like basmati, jasmine and sushi rice, on her farm near Newport, Arkansas. Credit: Phillip Powell/Arkansas Times
Arkansas rice farmer Hallie Shoffner runs the nonprofit Delta Harvest Food Hub, which works with farmers to pilot the scalability of growing specialty crops in the Delta region, starting with specialty rice. Credit: Phillip Powell/Arkansas TimesArkansas rice farmer Hallie Shoffner runs the nonprofit Delta Harvest Food Hub, which works with farmers to pilot the scalability of growing specialty crops in the Delta region, starting with specialty rice. Credit: Phillip Powell/Arkansas Times
Sixth-generation Arkansas farmer Hallie Shoffner grows specialty rice like basmati, jasmine and sushi rice, on her farm near Newport, Arkansas. Credit: Phillip Powell/Arkansas Times

“We are forward-thinking farmers who want to change, who want to do something different,” Shoffner said. “We want to make more money, because we know we cannot make as much money as small farms in the current agricultural economy.”

The commodity farming that dominates Delta agriculture makes the economic success of farmers largely dependent on the market prices of rice, corn, soybeans, wheat and other crops, Shoffner said. This incentivizes farms to grow larger to ensure they turn a profit even when prices are low, like they are now. But smaller farms struggle to stay afloat.

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Shoffner said her vision for developing specialty crop markets in Arkansas will be through more collaboration between many smaller farms to diversify crop production and produce for large contracts together. She’s also exploring possibilities for expanding chickpea, sunflower, sesame and pea production in Arkansas.

And while she’s at it, Shoffner is working to make agriculture more equitable.

“As a white farmer who is a sixth generation farmer, I realize that I have inherited a large amount of land that systematically disenfranchised Black farmers,” Shoffner said. “And it is my responsibility to acknowledge that, and leverage what I’ve been given to help others.”

Her project, Delta Harvest, has a contract to grow specialty rice with a large company and she’s working with several Black farmers. She was too small to do it by herself, so they are doing it cooperatively.

Finding the Right Markets

In Mississippi, efforts to shift some of California’s sprawling specialty crop industry to the Mid-Delta drew skepticism from some farmers—even those with established specialty crop operations.

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For the past 20 years, Don van de Werken has co-owned a 120-acre blueberry and tea farm in Poplarville, Mississippi, distributing much of its crops to buyers in his county and nearby cities.

Van de Werken questioned whether there would be enough regional demand to sustain a scaled-up specialty crop industry in Mississippi, noting that the success of his own enterprise hinges on targeting hyper-local markets like New Orleans. Shipping vegetables, fruits and other produce to buyers outside the Delta region would quickly become cost prohibitive for local farmers, van de Werken said.

“The problem we have, not just in Mississippi but the mid South in general, is we just don’t have the population base,” said van de Werken, who is also president of the Gulf South Blueberry Growers Association. “We don’t want our blueberries to go to Maine or Seattle. We want to focus our produce in a regional market.”

To make growing specialty crops worthwhile, Mississippi farmers would need to identify nearby buyers willing to purchase the new products on a consistent basis, van de Werken said. While selling goods directly to retail grocery chains like Kroger is often difficult, farmers could reduce financial risks by signing purchasing agreements with regional brokers like Louisiana-based Capitol City Produce.

“Anybody that puts anything in the ground is already taking a risk, but you want to minimize that risk,” he explained. “If you can prove to the brokers and the buyers that they can make money doing this, then the farming will come.”

The WWF report investigates ways to distribute risk across the supply chain to make selling to new markets easier on farmers, and works to connect buyers with Mid-Delta farmers. 

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AgLaunch, a Memphis-based nonprofit that guides farmers in innovation, estimates that adding specialty crops to the Mid-Delta region could spur $4.6 billion in added revenue and 33,000 jobs. But while commodity crop prices are readily available on the Chicago Board of Trade, the specialty crop market is generally not so transparent. Large, vertically integrated companies usually dictate contract terms, AgLaunch President and farmer Pete Nelson said.

AgLaunch helps build “smart contracts” that allow multiple farmers to produce on a contract, helping them secure higher quantity deals with proper compensation as a collective. 

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Purdue College of Agriculture professor Fred Whitford said the idea of farming cooperatives that help smaller farmers carve out space in a large-quantity market is more than 100 years old. Whitford compared commodity producers to retail giants like Walmart, which make money by selling in bulk. Small producers are more like Ace Hardware, he said.

“Maybe the smaller folks have an ability to make more off their land by going to a specialty crop,” he said.

New Challenges Need New Solutions

Farmers who embrace specialty crops will face hurdles before they make it to the market.

Growing produce can be more profitable but “easier said than done,” Whitford said. “It’s nice on paper … but boy, in reality, you’re going to have to keep an eye on this crop, whatever you’re growing, because one slip up … then you have lost a lot of money.”

In Tennessee, Katrutsa grew strawberries in addition to his other crops for 10 years, but last April, a hail storm pulverized his entire field, leaving him with nothing. He’s not growing strawberries this year, and he might not plant them again — he’s not sure if he can find enough labor to make it work.

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He grows many types of produce so if one fails, it’s less catastrophic. He sources seedlings from a neighboring state (it’s cheaper than growing from seed) and plants five times each season to maximize yield.

He works with a consultant to help identify diseases and how to treat them. Tomatoes are the most challenging, Katrutsa said. Some of his tomato plants withered this year due to bacterial wilt that flourishes in wet soil and high temperatures and has few effective chemical remedies.

Carolyn Preble helps out farmer Michael Katrutsa at the farm shop, which stocks the more than 20 acres of produce Katrutsa grows in rural Camden, Tennessee. Credit: John Partipilo/Tennessee Lookout

Chemical treatments pose other challenges. In Shaw, Mississippi, Michael Muzzi relies on a range of herbicides to grow soybeans and other feed grains on his 2,000-acre farm. Once sprayed, herbicides like Liberty and Dicamba remain in the ground and can drift in the air, which is hazardous to specialty crops, like tomatoes, that aren’t resistant.

“You’re not going to be able to spray [those herbicides] on specialty crops,” Muzzi said.  “You’d have to have something that’s chemically tolerant.”

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Growing fruits and vegetables on a farm with previous heavy herbicide use would require insulating those crops from chemical runoff — a feat that could only be reliably achieved by leaving whole acres of land unused for years, he said.

AgLaunch is exploring innovative ways to address these problems. For some farmers, this means helping make their existing row crops more efficient using farmer-incubated technology, adding local value by growing specialty crops or taking on processing, Nelson said. 

Then there’s disruption with higher risk: farmers can partner with agriculture automation technology startups, allowing them to field test their products and collect data in exchange for farmer equity in the startup companies. If the startup succeeds, the farmer shares in the benefits.

“It’s not as simple as, ‘Hey, we should grow tomatoes,’” Nelson said. “It’s how you think about the whole value chain and make sure the farmer is protected. Make sure it’s not an opportunity just to grow a crop, but it’s an opportunity to own part of the processing or to build new products.”

Kurnik said WWF isn’t trying to recruit farmers to start growing specialty crops – they just want Mid-Delta farmers to have the information they need to make informed decisions. In terms of acreage, row crops “dwarf” specialty crops in the United States. A small percentage shift would mean a significant change in the level of specialty crops in the Delta.

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“We don’t need everyone to want to jump on board tomorrow,” she said. “They would flood the market if they did.”

This story is a product of the Mississippi River Basin Ag & Water Desk, an independent reporting network based at the University of Missouri in partnership with Report for America, with major funding from the Walton Family Foundation. Disclosure: The Next California report was also funded by Walton. 

About This Story

Perhaps you noticed: This story, like all the news we publish, is free to read. That’s because Inside Climate News is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. We do not charge a subscription fee, lock our news behind a paywall, or clutter our website with ads. We make our news on climate and the environment freely available to you and anyone who wants it.

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Two of us launched ICN in 2007. Six years later we earned a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting, and now we run the oldest and largest dedicated climate newsroom in the nation. We tell the story in all its complexity. We hold polluters accountable. We expose environmental injustice. We debunk misinformation. We scrutinize solutions and inspire action.

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Mississippi man dies of an apparent overdose in MDOC custody in Rankin County

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Mississippi man dies of an apparent overdose in MDOC custody in Rankin County


A 41-year-old man incarcerated at Central Mississippi Correctional Facility in Rankin County died Thursday of an apparent overdose.

Mississippi Department of Corrections Commissioner Burl Cain confirmed the death in a news release.

The man was identified as Juan Gonzalez. According to prison records, he was serving a four-year sentence on multiple convictions in Hinds County and was tentatively scheduled for release in May 2025.

“Because of the unknown nature of the substance, the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency and the Mississippi Department of Health were notified,” MDOC reported.

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The investigation into Gonzalez’s death remains ongoing.

This is a developing story and may be updated.



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Mississippi high school football scores for 2024 MHSAA Week 2

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Mississippi high school football scores for 2024 MHSAA Week 2


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Here is our Mississippi high school football scoreboard, including the second week of the season for MHSAA programs.

THURSDAY

Heidelberg 14, Quitman 8

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Independence 20, Byhalia 6

Myrtle 47, Potts Camp 18

North Pontotoc 41, Water Valley 19

Okolona 40, Calhoun City 0

Provine 16, Lanier 6

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