Oklahoma
Base errors, home runs dooms FSU softball in Game 1 of NCAA Super Regional at Oklahoma
Florida State softball struggled offensively and defensively against the Oklahoma Sooners in its loss in Game 1. Now the Seminoles are in a must-win situation to stay in the NCAA Softball Tournament.
Watch: FSU softball coach talks about facing OU in NCAA Softball Tournament
Before leaving for Super Regionals, Lonni Alameda talks about returning to her Oklahoma, her alma mater. Freshman Isa Torres is excited for her expierence.
No. 15 Florida State softball couldn’t afford any mistakes.
Especially against the defending Women’s College World Series champs, No. 2 Oklahoma Sooners.
On Thursday evening, FSU dropped to OU 11-3 in Game 1 of the NCAA super regional. The game ended in a run-rule, following a walk that secured the Sooners’ victory.
With missed opportunities to score on base, the Sooners (50-6) took advantage of the Seminoles’ (45-14) costly errors.
The Seminoles only recorded four hits but managed to find ways to get on base. Oklahoma’s defense was not rattled.
The miscues on base led to missed opportunities for the Seminoles to make it a competitive game. Even when the Seminoles loaded the bases twice, Oklahoma’s defense would follow through with two different double plays, making the Seminoles settle for less than what they would’ve hoped.
The Seminoles have been battle-tested all year, going through adversity such as injuries and starting five freshmen.
Head coach Lonni Alameda downplayed any pressure her Seminoles face going into the best-of-three series, noting that they must execute defensively despite being at a disadvantage.
“So I don’t feel they feel the pressure of producing, and we even talked about it earlier that they just got to keep doing what they’re doing,” Alameda said. “And we have a very potent lineup, so you know if they can do that any inning, good things can happen.”
The Seminoles, led by Devyn Flaherty, were able to tie it at two in the top third. Flaherty finished the night with two RBI following an RBI single from the senior. Jahni Kerr gave FSU’s third and final run in the Top 5 to extend the game for one more inning.
FSU softball’s pitching defense struggled against Oklahoma
Oklahoma hit four home runs on its home field.
Half of them came from infielder Alyssa Britto, who led the Sooners with three RBI after the game. Tiare Jennings and Kinzie Hansen also homered for the Sooners.
“I mean, we have to keep them off balance, and so we’ll make an adjustment tonight,” Alameda said. “(That) is making sure we do a better job mixing that change-up in there.”
Freshman Ashtyn Danley was the losing pitcher. In two innings, she allowed five runs, six hits and three hits. Alameda emphasized that the pitching defense must improve.
“You know, it’s been a pitching defense thing all season long,” Alameda said. “So I don’t think that we can hang our heads by any means on the outside. Like, we’ve got to be able to make some adjustments.
“We’ll go back and watch the tape learn try and see if we could be a little bit better tomorrow.”
What’s next for FSU softball?
To keep their WCWS hopes alive, the Seminoles must avoid a clean sweep by the Sooners and force it to Game 3.
FSU will return to Loves’ Field on Friday at 8 p.m.
Peter Holland Jr. covers Florida State athletics for Tallahassee Democrat. Contact him via email at PHolland@Gannett.com or on X @_Da_pistol.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma State expected to lose talented EDGE to transfer portal
Oklahoma State EDGE Kyran Duhon plans to enter the NCAA transfer portal, On3 has learned. Duhon was a member of the 2024 recruiting class.
Duhon spent one year at Oklahoma State, logged 16 total tackles (eight solo) across nine games. He began his career at UTEP, where he had a productive true freshman season, Duhon finished 2024 with 43 total tackles, including seven sacks and two PBUs.
At UTEP, his one season there resulted in second team All-Conference USA honors. He was also named to the On3 True Freshman All-America Team as well as the the Conference USA All-Freshman team.
However, Duhon’s stay in Stillwater didn’t go as expected. Oklahoma State finished the season with a 1-11 record, which included the Cowboys firing longtime head coach Mike Gundy after a 1-2 start. Doug Meacham was named interim head coach but ended the year 0-9.
Eric Morris has since been named as the program’s next head coach. He comes from North Texas, which finished with an 11-2 record and a trip to the American Conference championship game this past season. However, it doesn’t appear that Duhon will be sticking around during the changing of the guard at Oklahoma State this offseason.
Before college, Duhon was the No. 1,706 overall player in the class, and was recruited as the the No. 165 linebacker during the cycle, per the Rivals Industry Rankings, which is a proprietary algorithm that compiles ratings and rankings from all four primary recruiting media services. He was ranked as the No. 242 overall player out of Texas.
Once the NCAA transfer portal opens on Jan. 2, players can officially enter their names in the NCAA transfer portal and go on to initiate contact with their preferred schools. The portal will be open for 15 days and close on Jan. 16.
Notably, players who are on teams competing in the national championship game are allowed five extra days to make their portal decision. The College Football Playoff championship game will be played on Jan. 19, so the players on those teams will be allowed until Jan. 24 to enter the portal and choose their next school.
To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma man doing target practice in back yard charged in fatal shooting of neighbor
A man in Oklahoma is facing a manslaughter charge after he allegedly shot a woman several blocks from his home while firing a gun he got himself for Christmas at an energy drink can in his back yard.
As told in court documents reviewed by NBC News, the death of Sandra Phelps at the hands of Cody Wayne Adams illustrates how deadly the consequences can be when those engaging in the US’s prevalent gun culture do so unsafely. Adams’s back yard was not equipped to stop bullets from leaving the property and striking unsuspecting people in the surrounding area, according to authorities.
Phelps was sitting under a covered porch with family on Christmas and holding a child in her arms when they heard gunshots north of the house, said an affidavit laying out the circumstances of Adams’s arrest.
“Sandra commented that someone got a new gun for Christmas and then shortly after Sandra said ‘ouch’ and collapsed,” the affidavit said. It said there were no more gunshots after that.
Emergency personnel were dispatched to Phelps’s address at about 3.15pm Thursday, the Stephens county sheriff’s office said in a statement.
“We later received a call stating an individual had just received a gun for Christmas and was target practicing in his backyard and that they believed it would be pointing in the direction of the scene,” the sheriff’s office statement added.
“Investigators went to the reported address and spoke with an individual [who] confirmed he was shooting a target in his back yard and that he had heard that someone has died from a gunshot wound a couple of roads over.”
That individual was Adams, 33, who showed deputies a Red Bull can in his back yard that he had been shooting with his handgun, according to the affidavit justifying his arrest.
Authorities allegedly concluded that the vantage point from where Adams was shooting aligned with the angle of the bullet that killed Phelps. They also determined the home lacked a suitable shooting backstop meant to protect those in the surrounding area from being struck by stray bullets.
“Adams became visibly upset and began to cry” when he learned of Phelps, the affidavit added. He was arrested on a count of first-degree manslaughter and later released on a $100,000 bond.
In the US, unintentional deaths from firearms are a small percentage of gun deaths in the country. But they occur four times more often in the US than in comparable countries – and most involve a handgun.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma man accused of shooting neighbor dead during Christmas target practice
What began as Christmas Day target practice in an Oklahoma neighborhood ended in tragedy when a stray bullet fatally struck an elderly woman as she sat on her front porch holding a baby.
Cody Wayne Adams, 33, has been charged with first-degree manslaughter after firing the fatal shot, according to a probable cause affidavit obtained by ABC News.
The woman, whose identity was not disclosed, was sitting on the front porch with family members at a home on County Road 1800 on Thursday afternoon when she was shot from several blocks away, the Stephens County Sheriff’s Office said in a press release.
According to the affidavit, the victim was seated on a love seat and holding a baby in her left arm when she was struck in her right upper arm. The bullet then entered her chest cavity.
Family members told the responding deputy that they had heard someone firing five to seven gunshots and that the victim had “commented that someone got a new gun for Christmas” and shortly afterward “said ‘ouch’ and collapsed,” the affidavit stated.
As investigators canvassed nearby properties north of the shooting, deputies found that all but one home had “suitable shooting backstops or firing locations,” according to the affidavit. The only exception was Adams’s home.
Adams allegedly told deputies that he had been shooting a Glock 45 he recently bought for himself for Christmas, using a Red Bull can as a target in his backyard, according to the affidavit.
When a deputy told Adams he suspected the shooting may have caused the woman’s death, Adams “became visibly upset and began to cry,” the affidavit stated.
Adams made his first court appearance Friday. A judge set his bond at $100,000, according to online court records. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for February 26, 2026.
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