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Oklahoma
College baseball week in review: Oklahoma keeps rolling, Clemson sweeps South Carolina
Oklahoma is on the rise in its first season in the Southeastern Conference. The Sooners entered The Athletic college baseball Top 25 last week at No. 23 after they beat then-No. 9 Oregon State and then-No. 3 Virginia at the Round Rock Classic.
Oklahoma remained perfect with a weekend sweep over Cal State Northridge in Norman. The Sooners rallied for a 3-2 win on Sunday after they scored 39 runs in four games over the previous five days.
Right-handed junior Kyson Witherspoon, the reigning SEC Pitcher of the Week, threw six shutout innings Friday against Northridge. Witherspoon has a 28-to-3 strikeout-to-walk ratio and 1.50 ERA in three starts, coming off an offseason in which he pitched for the USA Baseball Collegiate National Team.
Witherspoon gives the Sooners a high-end SEC ace. And his twin brother, Malachi, is a solid No. 2 for the Sooners, posting a 2-0 mark with a 1.88 ERA in three starts. He closed for Team USA last summer. The Witherspoon twins came to OU from Northwest Florida State College ahead of the 2024 season.
The Sooners’ No. 3 starter is Cameron Johnson, a top-15 national recruit in the Class of 2023 who spent his freshman season at LSU. His command continues to be an issue — he has walked 10 in 13.1 innings — but opposing hitters are batting only .204 against him in his three starts.
OU improved to 11-0, its best start since it won its first 16 games in 2011, with the three wins against Northridge. The Sooners visit Dallas Baptist on Tuesday, the most significant obstacle in the way of Oklahoma taking a 16-0 record into its SEC opener at South Carolina on March 14.
The Sooners advanced to the College World Series finals in 2022 but failed to get out of a Regional the last two seasons.
Clemson made a statement in handing rival South Carolina its first three losses of the season, sweeping the Gamecocks 5-3, 5-1 and 8-2. The opening game was played Friday at Clemson, Saturday in Greenville, S.C., and Sunday at Founders Park in Columbia, the Gamecocks’ home stadium.
Ethan Darden pitched seven scoreless innings on Saturday, allowing three hits, to win the Bob Bradley Award as Clemson’s MVP in the annual series. The Tigers are 10-1.
Columbia has enjoyed a rich recent history in baseball. The Lions have won the Ivy League postseason championship five times dating back to 2013.
They took Miami to a winner-take-all seventh game of a Regional in 2015 and won a pair of games at the Blacksburg Regional in 2022.
In Columbia’s not-so-recent history, Lou Gehrig played at the New York school.
Over the weekend, Columbia played at Oregon, the preseason Big Ten favorite. The Ducks swept the four-game series, scoring 55 runs in the first two games. Oregon won 35-1 in the opener of a Saturday doubleheader.
Columbia does not need a pity party. The Lions will be fine. They play at Georgia this week.
But the lopsided scores in Eugene serve as a canary in the coal mine for college baseball.
What is to come of the Division I format, with more than 300 teams vying for the same postseason, as the 11.7-scholarship limit disappears in the wake of the NCAA v. House settlement?
If terms of the settlement are approved next month, the roster limit will drop in 2026 from 40 players to 34. But coaches will no longer be limited by the NCAA in how they distribute scholarship money.
Rich SEC schools and other power-conference programs that invest in baseball can soar past 11.7 scholarships if they choose to pay for it. Scholarship costs will be deducted from revenue revenue-sharing allotment, expected in 2025-26 to be capped at $20.5 million.
Columbia and its Ivy League partners do not award athletic scholarships. Safe to say the Lions also won’t see any part of revenue-share dollars. And while the vast majority of college baseball players will not get rich from the House settlement, its impact and the next wave of NIL payments are sure to tip the scales further in this sport.
In fact, it all may prove to be a death knell in the bids of under-resourced programs to compete with the likes of Oregon and Georgia.
Administrations on both sides of the power structure ought to think twice about scheduling such future series.
Columbia will continue to find and develop good players. Just not enough of them to stay on the field with an elite group of power programs on track to grow more powerful.
Gardner-Webb designated hitter Dale Francis smashed four home runs on Saturday in the Runnin’ Bulldogs’ 16-14 win at Appalachian State.
Francis, a fifth-year senior from Fort Pierce, Fla., drove in 12 runs. After he hit a grand slam in the seventh inning, Francis was denied a chance at his fifth home run when the Mountaineers intentionally walked him in the top of the ninth inning with one out.
Have a day @Too_good_dj ‼️
4 homeruns
12 RBIs
Intentionally walked, with the bases loaded. @KendallRogers @aaronfitt @d1baseball @midmajors_d1 @JoeHealyD1 @Mike_Rooney @Monty2740 @CollegeBaseCNT @Micah_CBC @GWUSports @BigSouthSports @NCAABaseball pic.twitter.com/SolDmwBSxg— Gardner-Webb Baseball (@GWUBaseball) March 2, 2025
He also homered in the first, fifth and sixth innings. Francis transferred after last season to Gardner-Webb from Division II Erskine College, where he hit .405 with 15 homers in 33 games last year. Through 13 games this season, he’s hitting .409 with seven homers, 27 RBIs and a 1.436 OPS.
Marshall McDougall of Florida State owns the NCAA record for home runs and RBIs in a game. McDougall hit six bombs and drove in 16 runs against Maryland in 1999.
Gardner-Webb dropped to 6-7 after a 9-7 loss on Sunday to App State. The 6-foot-3, 230-pound Francis, hitting in the cleanup spot, finished 1 for 3 with a single.
Gardner-Webb of the Big South has not appeared in the NCAA postseason since its move to Division I in 2003. For any host school that might draw G-W in a Regional — if the Bulldogs can find a way to win the conference tournament — there’s a big bat in the middle of that lineup to avoid.
Miami won the series finale, 13-7, against Florida on Sunday in Gainesville to hand the fourth-ranked Gators their first loss in 12 games this season.
To say their rivalry has been tightly contested through the years is an understatement.
It’s been all Hurricanes today in Gainesville. They are going to salvage the series and hand the Gators their 1st loss of the season
All-Time series is now back tied up 136-136-1 between the 2 schools pic.twitter.com/WrxTO9eAPf
— 11Point7 College Baseball (@11point7) March 2, 2025
Top-ranked Texas A&M, after a 5-0 start, lost four consecutive games but avoided a winless week with a 14-4 victory against Rice on Sunday night in the Astros Foundation College Classic. Also at Dalkin Park over the weekend in Houston, Oklahoma State beat the Aggies 4-0, and Arizona scored twice in the top of the ninth inning for a 3-2 over A&M.
Texas State beat Texas A&M 7-3 on Tuesday in College Station after the Aggies lost the finale of a three-game series against Cal Poly on Feb. 23.
Earlier in the Week, A&M learned that sophomore Gavin Grahovac, their All-America third baseman, will miss the rest of the 2025 season due to a shoulder injury.
Speaking of Arizona, Chip Hale’s team has rebounded nicely after a 0-3 start. The Wildcats, ranked No. 15 in the preseason, won seven consecutive games before losing 5-1 to Tennessee on Sunday in Houston.
Arizona beat Texas A&M on run-scoring infield singles by Easton Breyfogle and Brendan Summerhill in the decisive ninth inning on Friday. On Saturday, Arizona reliever Tony Pluta escaped a two-aboard, no-out jam in the bottom of the ninth as the Cats beat Mississippi State 6-5.
The unbeaten Volunteers were the class of the Astros Foundation College Classic. Defending national champion Tennessee (11-0) swept past Oklahoma State, Rice and Arizona. Four Tennessee relievers shut down Arizona in the de facto championship game of the event over the final seven innings.
Tennessee pitchers allowed five earned runs in three games and recorded 45 strikeouts while holding the opposition to a .204 batting average. Junior second baseman Gavin Killen hit .600 with four homers and seven RBIs in the tournament.
Kansas last played in a Regional in 2014. It’s off to a 10-1 start under third-year coach Dan Fitzgerald and opened its latest series in Lawrence with a bang. Dariel Osoria hit a walk-off grand slam on Thursday as the Jayhawks beat Omaha 12-8. The Mavericks took a two-run lead to the bottom of the ninth inning before Chase Diggins hit a game-tying, two-run shot.
Omaha, which beat then-No. 4 LSU a week earlier on the road, rebounded Friday to win 9-5, but Kansas took three of four games in the series. The Jayhawks are off to their best 11-game start since that 2014 season when they won one game at the Louisville Regional.
KU finished 31-23 overall and 15-15 in the Big 12 last year and had six players selected in the MLB Draft.
Arkansas left-hander Parker Coil hurled an immaculate inning on Sunday in the Razorbacks’ 4-3 win against Charlotte. Coil threw nine pitches in the eighth inning, all for strikes, to fan the side.
Strike three. Strike six. Strike nine.
Sit back and enjoy all nine pitches from @parker_coil‘s immaculate inning 😇 pic.twitter.com/P6p5gcKoYq
— Arkansas Baseball (@RazorbackBSB) March 2, 2025
Even more impressive, Portland’s Ryan Rembisz threw a perfect game — on just 90 pitches! — against Seattle on Tuesday in an 8-0 win for the Pilots. Rembisz, a senior lefty, struck out 12 to complete the 21st nine-inning perfecto in Division I history.
The game at Joe Etzel Field in Portland was attended by 165 people — all of them witnesses of history.
(Photo of Kyson Witherspoon: Alonzo Adams / Imagn Images)
Oklahoma
Kish Eager To See ‘Strongest Version Of Oklahoma Wrestling’ – FloWrestling
The tests immediately started for Roger Kish’s Oklahoma squad.
The Sooners saw what no other team did for its opening dual — four-time defending national champion Penn State.
Then the injuries. Several starters out.
Eight freshmen or sophomores thrown into a hostile Bryce Jordan Center resulted in a 45-0 Nittany Lions win last Friday. Only for the then-#20 Sooners to scoot over to Bucknell less than 24 hours later and beat the Bison, 18-12.
“I would say the most disappointing piece of that was not being able to get the matchups we were really hoping to see and allow some other guys the opportunity to go in an arena like that and compete,” Kish said. “However, the guys that did go out and compete, I thought they competed hard, and we just got outwrestled in a lot of areas. I think it was a great learning moment for them.”
The third-year Oklahoma coach hopes early-season hurdles will soon dissolve as the Sooners seek a second consecutive winning season and their next batch of All-Americans since 2024.
The Sooners host Indiana at 2 p.m. CT Sunday.
“I would suggest that once all of these guys are back and going, you can see the strongest version of Oklahoma wrestling,” Kish said. “I believe there will be a lot of excitement.”
A lineup with just three returning starters but packed with impact transfers and multiple Big Board recruits fill out the lineup for the Sooners.
“I was really happy with the group to be able to bounce back off a hard night and then go back 24 hours later with Bucknell,” Kish said. “It was kinda nice to see the growth between Friday night and Saturday night then being able to come back here on Monday and sit down with the team and discuss some of the highlights and lowlights and things we did well.”
Holdovers
Kish didn’t arrive in Norman alone when the Sooners plucked him from North Dakota State in May 2023.
He brought several Bison, with seniors Juan Mora (heavyweight), DJ Parker (197) and Mannix Morgan (174) as the remaining bunch.
Their final season brings the biggest goals.
Mora seeks his first NCAA Championships qualification after he finished sixth at the 2025 Big 12 Championships. He tallied four ranked wins across a 12-9 mark a season ago.
Parker and Anthony started their senior campaigns with titles at the Tiger Style Invite.
Mora, ranked #24, then dropped a 5-2 decision against Penn State’s #10 Cole Mirasola on Friday then stopped Bucknell’s #27 Lucas Lawler via the same score.
“(Mora and Parker) are two guys that are just part of our family,” Kish said. “That relationship piece is very, very nice. I am really proud of those two guys. What they do well is I think they bring a lot of leadership abilities. They have a great way of helping guys come together as a team and keeping guys built up and holding guys accountable.”
Parker, a two-time NCAA qualifier at 184, reached the blood round in Philadelphia in 2025, thanks to two consecutive bonus-point wins on the backside.
Parker, ranked 14th, took a 13-3 loss to Connor Mirasola on Friday, then beat Bucknell’s #13 Dillon Bechtold, 6-5.
“I think when they made the transition to Oklahoma, they had the ability to kinda navigate and learn their way around this program and here they are a couple years in and really developed into some great young men,” Kish said. “Really, really proud of them.”
Big Brand
OU’s history and tradition speaks for itself.
Seven team national championships, 67 individual national champions and 278 All-Americans.
That pedigree and status in a wrestling-rich state consistently attracts top talent.
“The thought of what their future looks like here at Oklahoma, they understand that they are going to be taken care of and treated very well as athletes but also in doing so, building a strong network and preparing these guys for life after college sports,” Kish said. “Making sure that they have access to success following.”
Kish’s roster features 11 transfers, including 149-pounder Jack Gioffre (an NCAA qualifier at Virginia), heavyweight Bradley Hill (an NCAA qualifier at Iowa), 165-pounder Peyten Kellar (a 157-pound All-American with Ohio in 2024), 184-pounder Brian Soldano (a two-time NCAA qualifier at Rutgers), 141-pounder Tyler Wells (a two-time NCAA qualifier at Minnesota) and 157-pounder Rafael Hipolito Jr. (an ACC champion and NCAA qualifier at Virginia Tech).
The Sooners also boast three consecutive ranked recruiting classes (#8 in 2024, #17 in 2025 and 2026).
“Really excited about where we are headed and the direction of this program, it has been a lot of fun to see,” Kish said. “I think that has been a really impactful idea for us as coaches. And as we get into year three, you are able to build a core of young guys here that are motivated and excited to be here.
Steady Building
One of Kish’s splashy additions wasn’t a recruit.
Kish hired 2017 Penn State national champion Mark Hall as OU’s director of operations in May of 2024.
Hall enters his second season in Norman, and offers more than travel planning, budgeting and team organizational skills.
“I say this about all the coaches, I just think the level of care that, not only Mark, but all the coaches have for the athletes is tremendous,” Kish said. “The knowledge of the sport is through the roof and the ability to get out and work through the positions with all these guys and being on the mats every day with them.”
The Sooners finished 8-4 overall a season ago, including a 4-4 mark in Big 12.
Hall’s hire became the freshest after former NDSU assistants Cam Sykora and Austin Marsden followed Kish from Fargo.
“Having these guys on the mats every day, wrestling drilling and sparring with these guys and allowing them to just be mentors and pick their brains consistently has been really a great advantage,” Kish said.
Oklahoma
If Oklahoma is Going to Course Correct, Defense is the First Priority
NORMAN — Against Gonzaga, Oklahoma was crushed on the glass and in the paint. The Sooners were never able to gain footing while the Bulldogs punished their interior defense and general toughness — causing Porter Moser to explicitly call for his wings to be more decisive going for a rebound.
Then OU traveled to Sioux Falls, SD to take on Nebraska where the Cornhuskers caught fire late in the first half, never to look back.
Two losses where Oklahoma was dominated inside in one and on the perimeter in the other. Now, Moser is calling upon himself to get his team to return to a better defensive mindset.
“It starts with me,” Moser said on Wednesday. “We got to get our defense back. That’s a (Moser) coached team that I put out there. Usually has a better defense, and it’s being addressed.”
The Sooners are staring at a two-game home stand against Oral Roberts on Thursday (7 p.m., SEC Network+) and Alcorn State on Sunday (1 p.m., SEC Network+) where they will have an opportunity to get back on track defensivley.
“I think ORU does a phenomenal job of moving,” Moser said. “They move and they cut. They have great little movement, great little actions. They’ve got great shooters. They’re really trying to shoot a lot of threes.”
Moser’s right — Oral Roberts likes to shoot a lot of threes. Glancing at their percentages (a hair under 30% from three) will give you the impression that there’s little cause for concern for the Sooner perimeter defense.
But the Golden Eagles lead the Summit League in three-point attempts by a large margin. To date, Oral Roberts has launched 195 threes, with North Dakota State’s 158 good enough for second. Needless to say, Oklahoma will have its hands full from the sheer number of attempts.
“We need habits off the ball right now,” Moser said. “We need habits off the ball and rebounding. It’s instinct. Those are two off-the-ball things that we’ve not done in those two losses.
“I do believe our defense is going to get better, get fixed, starting with me and continue to grow a lot of new guys coming together,” Moser added.
Moser’s passion is apparent when he pontificates about coaching better and inspiring better defensive efforts. But as any coach will tell you, it comes down to the players executing. Moser can tell them what to do, but he doesn’t want to see players with their “head’s above their feet, relaxing.”
Xzayvier Brown will be called upon to lead that effort on the perimeter defensively.
“Every detail and possession is important,” Brown said. “This team is very mature and not dwelling on the loss.”
Brown stressed that the team focused on defense immediately following the loss to Nebraska. His 20 points against the Cornhuskers helped keep the Sooners afloat — along with Nijel Pack’s season-high 27-point performance — but he understands that this team is built to defend.
“In both (losses) there were spurts where we played good defense, but there were also spurts where we didn’t,” Brown said. “We’re trying to put a full game together on defense.”
Oklahoma has the blueprint, they just need to put it together. Oral Roberts will offer a chance to redeem the porous perimeter defensive effort from last Saturday.
Oklahoma
College football roundtable: Is SEC’s last CFP spot Oklahoma’s to lose?
In our college football writers’ roundtable, beat writers Lia Assimakopoulos and Shawn McFarland and columnist Kevin Sherrington tackle trending issues surrounding the sport. You can follow them on X at @Lassimak, @McFarland_Shawn and @KSherringtonDMN.
This week, our writers discuss the College Football Playoff paths for Texas and Oklahoma, UNT’s impressive turnaround and more.
Oklahoma made it through the toughest part of its schedule with road wins over Tennessee and Alabama and appears to be firmly in the CFP picture. With the Sooners out of the SEC Championship hunt and with two home games remaining against Missouri and LSU, do they have a clear path to the CFP?
Assimakopoulos: If Oklahoma wins its final two games against Missouri and LSU, it should have a pretty good chance. The committee wouldn’t surprise anyone by picking five teams from the SEC. Texas A&M and Georgia are locks. Ole Miss and Alabama have pretty good odds. Then, teams like Oklahoma, Texas and Vanderbilt are in the running for what could be that last spot. If Texas beats Texas A&M, it may get a bit complicated, and the committee may have to choose between the two. But as it currently stands, Oklahoma has the most convincing resume.
McFarland: It’ll depend entirely on how many SEC teams the committee grants entry to. League commissioner Greg Sankey wants a 16-team bracket but, until the sport inevitably moves in that direction, the conference can’t sneak half of its member schools in. That brings us back to Oklahoma. The Sooners are part of a three or four-team glut within their own conference. Texas A&M and Georgia are close to locks, Alabama and Ole Miss have second priority and the Red River rivals (plus Vanderbilt, because why not) are third. The SEC had three representatives in last year’s bracket. They may need to squeeze in four or five if the Sooners — regardless of how they finish — want to play.
Sherrington: Clearly they do if they win those last two games, which would give them 10. They’re in the second tier of SEC contenders – with Texas and Vanderbilt – behind Texas A&M, Georgia, Alabama and Ole Miss. Five SEC teams in the CFP is a distinct possibility. The only thing that screws this up for the Sooners is if Texas also wins its last two. But if I were betting now, I’d go with OU.
Even after falling to Georgia, some have posed the question whether Texas is still in the CFP hunt. Will the selection committee be forced to put Texas in the top 12 if it finishes the regular season with a win over No. 3 Texas A&M?
Assimakopoulos: I don’t think the committee is forced, by any means, to put a three-loss team in the playoff, and Texas faces an uphill battle. There’s certainly a chance that the Longhorns could get lucky and secure one of the lower seeds in the playoff if they beat Texas A&M, but they’ll need some other things to go their way, like Oklahoma and Vanderbilt losing. Even though they beat those teams head-to-head, their overall record is still worse. I assume it will also come down to how many teams in the Big 12, ACC and SEC are worthy of bids. Wouldn’t count on it for Texas.
McFarland: The math doesn’t favor Texas, and at the very least, it’d need help (in other words: collapses) from its conference pals to have a shot. The fact of the matter is there were six SEC teams ranked above the Longhorns in Sunday’s AP Top 25 poll. Texas would have head-to-head wins vs. half of them, though, if it beats A&M next week. Is that enough to convince the committee if the Longhorns, Vanderbilt and Oklahoma are left to fight for what may be the last of five playoff berths for the conference? Maybe. I wouldn’t bank on it, though.
Sherrington: The optics of a 25-point loss to Georgia weren’t good. Texas hasn’t been good on the road this year, with its only wins over Kentucky and Mississippi State. The Longhorns’ best win remains at the State Fair. Remains to be seen if the committee still takes that into consideration if Oklahoma has the better record. They’ll surely move the Sooners ahead of Texas after Oklahoma’s upset of Alabama. Will that hold if both teams win their last two games? Depends on how the committee feels about Texas taking down an undefeated team and how they look doing it. As noted, I like OU’s chances better.
North Texas was ranked in the AP top 25 poll for the first time since 1959 and controls its CFP destiny. Everybody knows about Eric Morris and Drew Mestemaker, but who has been the Mean Green’s unsung hero?
Assimakopoulos: While the Mean Green offense is making headlines, UNT’s new defensive coordinator Skyler Cassity has helped the defense make key strides contributing to its success. Cassity came over from Sam Houston and his defense is allowing 10 points per game fewer than last year’s and leads the nation in turnover margin per game at +1.4. Outside of the loss to USF, the defense has been solid and the difference from prior UNT teams.
McFarland: How about quarterback’s coach Sean Brophy? Morris (rightfully so) garners the lion’s share of attention as it pertains to the signal caller science at North Texas. Brophy has been alongside him at each of the last three stops and has been able to help assist in the development of every passer from Cam Ward to Chandler Morris to Menstermaker.
Sherrington: Tempted to nominate Caleb Hawkins, the freshman running back, who rushed for five touchdowns against Alabama-Birmingham, giving him 16 on the ground and 19 overall. He’s a key part in Morris’ offense, the nation’s most prolific. But UNT’s ability to generate turnovers – 24, leading all FBS –is the difference. That kept them in the game against South Florida for a half. Skyler Cassity, in his first season at UNT after coaching defense for Sam Houston’s 10-win team last year, will be a hot commodity this off-season, as will Eric Morris. And Hawkins. And Mestemaker.
Marcel Reed had maybe the worst half of his career against South Carolina. He rebounded to lead the Aggies to the largest comeback in program history. Did Reed help or hurt his Heisman case?
Assimakopoulos: No player, even a Heisman winner, is going to have a perfect season, and since Texas A&M won in the end, I don’t think one bad half will do much to hurt Reed. As long as the Aggies keep winning, his case gets stronger, but I still think the gap is too large to close, with Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza and Ohio State’s Julian Sayin having much better odds.
McFarland: He helped his case because the Aggies remain undefeated and that’ll go a ways once it’s time to vote. He hurt his case — or, at the very least, stagnated it — because he whiffed on an opportunity to pad his stats, win emphatically and close the gap between him, Ohio State’s Julian Sayin and Indiana’s Fernando Mendoza. If each of the three finish with undefeated records, and team success cancels out, then Sayin and Mendoza have stronger statistical cases. A no-doubter against a stout Longhorns defense, though, could provide a significant boost.
Sherrington: Looked like a wash to me. Reed is at his best as a runner, as we saw on the first drive of the second half against South Carolina, when, on fourth and 12, he made not just one but two Gamecocks whiff in the open field. He’s not as good when he can’t set his feet to throw. But any quarterback of an undefeated team will get serious consideration.
TCU appears to be in freefall, losing two straight and three of its last five games. What is going wrong in Fort Worth?
Assimakopoulos: TCU is starting to unravel on and off the field, and it’s tough to point to one area where things are going wrong. Last week, TCU’s defense allowed BYU to score on its first seven possessions. The offense has been one-dimensional under Josh Hoover without enough of a run game. Plus, Sonny Dykes is losing the fan base and didn’t help himself when asked what he may say to the fan base that is upset with the direction of the program: “People can say what they want to say.” Most teams find their stride by November and play their best football months into the season. TCU’s year has been the opposite.
McFarland: It’s a lack of execution, which is kind of a lazy answer, but the results suggest decent raw numbers and talent haven’t correctly translated. The Horned Frogs have the fifth-best defense and sixth-best offense in the Big 12, per Pro Football Focus, but that hasn’t materialized at a consistent rate. Look at their recent stretch of games: They allowed 14 unanswered points to lose against Iowa State, allowed a not-great West Virginia team to get back into the game in the second half of a win, nearly blew a victory against Baylor and coughed up an advantage late in the Arizona State loss. Save for a fourth-quarter vs. Colorado, they haven’t looked entirely comfortable since their nationally televised win against UNC.
Sherrington: No running game. The Horned Frogs rank near the FBS basement in rushing at 122 yards per game, virtually tied with SMU. The difference is that, unlike Kevin Jennings, Josh Hoover isn’t a dual threat. As defenses have adjusted to TCU’s one-dimensional attack, Hoover’s passer rating has declined from week to week. After averaging 36.3 points in a 5-2 start, they’ve averaged 17.7 in their last three games, two of them losses.
Find more college sports coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
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