Oklahoma
No. 3 Oklahoma Hosts Kentucky in Final Tuneup Before Texas
NORMAN — There’s no place like home.
No. 3 Oklahoma is excited to get to spend an entire weekend at Love’s Field after spending much of the last two weeks on the road.
The Sooners first traveled to Memphis before rolling to Oxford for a three-game series with Mississippi.
How to Watch Oklahoma vs. Kentucky
- Game 1: Thursday, 6:30 p.m., SEC Network+
- Game 2: Friday, 1 p.m., SEC Network+
- Game 3: Saturday, 11 a.m., SEC Network+
OU then trekked to Baton Rouge to battle LSU, before finally returning to Love’s Field to roll past Wichita State on Tuesday night.
Oklahoma senior Isabela Emerling acknowledged that the consecutive weekends spent on the road take their toll, but at this stage in the year, you have to find a way to push those thoughts to the side.
“It’s just not letting those outside factors get too big,” Emerling said on Tuesday. “And acknowledging that when you’re feeling tired, not suppressing it. Acknowledge it, kind of take it for what it is and then get over it.”
One emotional lift for the team has been the return of associate head coach and pitching coach Jennifer Rocha.
Patty Gasso’s longtime assistant rejoined the program for the LSU series, and on top of getting back into her typical work flow, she’s just excited to get back to working with her pitching staff.
“I think they’ve done well,” Rocha said on Tuesday. “Again, I think we have a really young, inexperienced ‘Oklahoma’ staff. And so this is really their first season. (Kierston Deal) is our most experienced pitcher on our staff. Two transfers coming in, and a young Audrey Lowry still and Berkley (Zache). So just getting them reps. I think they got a lot of good reps early in the season. I think we’re trending up right now, to answer your question shortly.
“We’re trending up, and still a lot of room to grow. So they’re doing a lot of good things right now. So I’m anticipating that we’re only going to continue to get better.”
Oklahoma’s (35-3, 8-1 SEC) pitching staff will have to contend with a Kentucky lineup this weekend that has plenty of pop.
The Wildcats (22-16, 1-11) are hitting .288 as a team, but they’ve launched 46 home runs.
But OU’s power has been overwhelming at Love’s Field.
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In Tuesday’s victory over the Shockers, Oklahoma moved to sixth all-time for home runs in a season after just 38 games.
Freshman phenom Kendall Wells set the SEC single-season home run record in the win, and she has the NCAA freshman record of 30 bombs — which is shared by Jocelyn Alo (2018), Lauren Chamberlain (2012) and Kelly Majam (2010) — in her sights.
“Kendall came in more ready than any hitter I’ve ever seen, and that is what we’re witnessing right now,” Gasso said on Tuesday.
Thursday’s series-opener will get going at 6:30 p.m. at Love’s Field, but the start time for Friday’s contest has been brought forward to 1 p.m.
Oklahoma
NBA: San Antonio Spurs 108-123 Oklahoma City Thunder –
In the series opener Wembanyama became the youngest player in NBA history to score 40 points and make 20 rebounds in a play-off game as the Spurs won 122-115.
He finished with 21 points and 17 rebounds in game two, which the Spurs lost 122-113.
“My shooting splits aren’t terrible,” said 22-year-old Wembanyama.
“I need to facilitate better, rebound the ball better, push their defence a little bit further and see how much they need to help with my team-mates and feed them.”
The Thunder scored 76 points off the bench at Frost Bank Center in game three, the most in a conference finals game since the 16-team play-off format was introduced in 1984.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the NBA’s Most Valuable Player for two seasons in a row, scored 26 points and made 12 assists for the Thunder, while Jared McCain scored 24.
Game four takes place at the same venue on Sunday (01:00 BST, Monday).
The winners of the Western Conference finals will meet the New York Knicks or the Cleveland Cavaliers in the NBA Finals, starting on 4 June.
The Knicks lead 2-0 in the Eastern Conference finals before game three at Rocket Arena in Cleveland on Saturday (01:00 BST, Sunday).
Oklahoma
What happened at the saltwater disposal well blowout near I-40 and Calumet in Oklahoma?
The Oklahoma Corporation Commission said it is monitoring a saltwater disposal well blowout near Interstate-40 and Calumet after the incident was reported Friday morning.
A spokesperson for the commission said personnel were sent to the site shortly after the incident was reported on Friday.
The commission said it will continue to monitor the site, evaluate conditions, and determine whether additional action is necessary.
The commission said the operator hired a third-party company to assist with containment and cleanup efforts.
This is a developing story.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma’s Emerald Ash Borer problem is growing. One farmer says he saw it coming.
An invasive beetle that can kill ash trees within three years has been confirmed in Wagoner County and is affecting landowners in Creek County, Oklahoma, forestry officials say.
The emerald ash borer — a shiny green beetle roughly the size of a penny — kills trees by burrowing under the bark and cutting off water and nutrients. Experts warn it is only a matter of time before it reaches more communities, including Tulsa.
What is the emerald ash borer and why is it so destructive?
The emerald ash borer is an invasive beetle, originally from eastern Asia, that targets ash trees. Unlike native pests, it did not evolve in North American ecosystems, which means local trees have no natural defenses against it, and there are no native predators to keep its population in check.
Dieter Rudolph, a forest health specialist with the Oklahoma Forestry Department, explained the threat this way:
“A lot of our native pests, they’ve got their own checks and balances. They’re part of the ecosystem. Trees have their own defenses against them. They’ve got predators. So with this non-native, it just doesn’t have that because it didn’t evolve in this ecosystem — so it’s able to grow populations at a much faster rate without anything keeping it down. And then all the ash trees, they just don’t know what to do.”
Once inside a tree, the beetle’s larvae eat the wood just beneath the bark, severing the pathways the tree uses to move water and nutrients. On their own, individual beetles do limited damage. But populations grow quickly, and the cumulative effect is fatal.
When was it first found in Oklahoma, and where has it spread?
The emerald ash borer was first detected in Oklahoma in 2016. Since then, it has been confirmed in multiple counties, primarily in the southeastern part of the state. The most recent find was in Creek County, where a landowner spotted the beetle on their property and reported it to the forestry department. Officials say they expect to confirm additional counties when trap checks are conducted around June.
How did one Creek County farmer find out his trees were affected?
Don Bruce has farmed land just outside of Bristow for 31 years. About three years ago, he began noticing his ash trees dying. After seeing a post from the Oklahoma Forestry Department on social media, he called the number listed. A forestry specialist was on his property within an hour, setting up monitoring traps. The diagnosis came back: emerald ash borer, with 99 percent certainty.
The news wasn’t good.
“They said after they start, it takes three years for one to die. But after they get in the first year, there’s no cure. And from then on, there’s no saving them — you’ll lose them,” Bruce said.
Is there any way to save an infected tree?
Largely, no. Rudolph says that by the time the beetle is detected, an infestation is typically well established.
“We can catch it before the trees start dying, so we can start our messaging,” he said. “But that area in itself is usually pretty much close to — if not past — the point of no return.”
Preventative chemical treatments are available, but they must be injected by a certified applicator and only last two to three years. They can slow or prevent new infestation but will not reverse existing damage. Officials say there is currently no cure once a tree is significantly infested.
What should homeowners look for?
Forestry officials say warning signs include a thinning canopy, dying branches, small D-shaped exit holes in the bark, and woodpecker activity on the trunk. Catching an infestation early can help slow the damage, though officials caution that visible symptoms often appear late in the process.
How does it spread, and can it be stopped?
Moving firewood is one of the primary ways the emerald ash borer spreads. Beetles can lay eggs in cut wood, and when that wood is transported to a campsite, another property, or another county, the beetles emerge in a new location. Officials are urging people not to move firewood.
The beetle is also a capable flier, covering roughly 10 to 20 miles per year on its own. Forestry officials say the insect is not currently confirmed in Tulsa County, but that its arrival there is a matter of when, not if.
How is Don Bruce handling it?
Bruce says he has come to accept that his ash trees will not survive. He hopes the forestry department can use the findings from his property to advance research toward a solution. In the meantime, he says the experience has reinforced what he already believed about the land.
“God gave it to us, and it’s our time to just take care of it,” he said. “Just be vigilant of your land, take care of your land, and appreciate what you have.”
What should you do if you spot one?
Anyone who believes they have spotted an emerald ash borer is urged to take a photo and report it to Oklahoma Forestry Services.
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