The No. 23 Ole Miss Rebels fall short of a late-inning comeback as the No. 21 Oklahoma Sooners came away with a 5-3 win at L. Dale Mitchell Baseball Park in Norman (Okla.) in Game 2.
Oklahoma came out firing as Easton Carmichael opened the scoring with a two-run home run down the left field line and was quickly followed by Mason Hamlin’s RBI fielders choice to give the Sooners a 3-0 lead after one.
Ole Miss put themselves on the board in the second as catcher Austin Fawley hit home run No. 14 on the season to cut the deficit to just two runs.
The Rebels had a chance to cut into the lead a little more as Luke Hill advanced on a pick-off play and a wild pitch to land him at third, but Sooners starter Cade Crossland produced a big strikeout to end the inning and keep the Sooners up 3-1.
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The Rebels once again looked threatening after a defensive mistake by Oklahoma, but once again the Sooners worked out of it and kept the game 3-1 heading into the bottom of the fourth.
The Sooners extened their lead as Carmichael launched his second homer of the game off Riley Maddox; making it 4-1 in the fifth.
Oklahoma tacked on one more in the fifth as Dawson Willis drew a bases loaded walk before Walker Hooks produced a ground out to end the inning with Oklahoma ahead 5-1 through five innings.
After nine consecutive Rebels being retired, Ole Miss opened the seventh with a leadoff walk and a double to put two runners in scoring position before Isaac Humphrey dropped a single right over the glove of the third baseman; knocking in both to make it 5-3 Oklahoma.
The Rebels continued to look threatening as they loaded the bases with just one out, but a roped 5-3 double play off the bat of Judd Utermark ended the Rebels inning heading int the stretch down a pair of runs.
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Both offenses stayed quiet and that provided the Sooners with a chance to turn to closer Dylan Crooks for the second straight day for another save opportunity.
After a pair of two-out hits, Crooks tallied a strikeout to end the game as the he clinched the series victory for the Oklahoma Sooners with a 5-3 win.
The Rebels and Sooners’ series finale will take place on Sunday with first pitch scheduled for 2 p.m. CT.
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SPENCER, Okla. (KOKH) — Rep. Stephanie Bice (R-CD5) was in Spencer on Thursday to present city leaders with a $500,000 check.
The federal funding, part of Community Project Funding, will be used to update the city’s water infrastructure.
Rep. Bice’s stop in Spencer was just one stop on her “Bringing Oklahoma Dollars Home” tour.
Spencer city leaders said it was nice to have a Congresswoman working for them so they could make updates that wouldn’t be made possible without the federal funding.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Nijel Pack scored 24 points shooting 5 for 10 from 3-point range and Oklahoma beat South Carolina 86-74 in an opening-round game of the SEC Tournament on Wednesday.
The 11th-seeded Sooners (18-14) advance to play sixth-seeded Texas A&M on Thursday.
Derrion Reid scored 20 points on 6-of-8 shooting, Tae Davis 18 shooting 7 of 10 and Xzayvier Brown 14 shooting 6 of 7. Oklahoma shot 60% (30 of 50).
Kobe Knox scored 20 points, Mike Sharavjamts 19 and Meechie Johnson 14 for 14th-seeded South Carolina (13-19). The Gamecocks shot 41% (25 of 61).
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South Carolina built a 29-19 in the game’s first 10 minutes and the Gamecocks led 39-28 after Knox made a 3-pointer with 5:24 before halftime.
Down the stretch, the Sooners outscored South Carolina 14-3 to tie it at 42 at halftime. Oklahoma emerged from the break continuing its offensive spurt and outscored the Gamecocks 13-5 in the first five minutes of the second half and led 56-47.
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Johnson’s 3-pointer with 10:52 left brought the Gamecocks within 61-56 but they would never get closer.
Brown’s 3 with 7:53 to go made it 70-60 and Oklahoma led by double digits for the remainder.
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Find more Oklahoma coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.
NORMAN — Located just 190 miles from Norman, Southlake, TX, sits comfortably within Oklahoma’s recruiting footprint. Many Dallas–Fort Worth prospects grow up viewing OU as either a favorite destination or a local option thanks to its close proximity.
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New Oklahoma tight end Jack Van Dorselaer, however, had a different perspective during his recruitment at Southlake Carroll High School.
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“Honestly, growing up, I wasn’t the biggest OU fan,” Van Dorselaer said Monday during Oklahoma’s Spring Media Day. “When I was getting recruited, I was really into Tennessee and going to Tennessee.”
He wasn’t exaggerating — his recruiting profile backs it up. Oklahoma extended an offer to Van Dorselaer on March 25, 2023, never took a visit. At the time, former tight ends coach Joe Jon Finley’s track record probably didn’t do much to boost confidence in a highly-touted tight end’s development.
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Tennessee Volunteers tight end Jack Van Dorselaer dives for a touchdown against East Tennessee State Buccaneers. | Randy Sartin-Imagn Images
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Van Dorselaer would go on to pledge to the Volunteers, playing in all 13 games — an experience where he “learned some things as the season went on,” — before entering the transfer portal.
If Oklahoma’s previous tight ends coach left doubts lingering, one phone call changed everything. Ironically, it came from a Tennessee alum — now tabbed to coach that same position in Norman. For Van Dorselaer, it was the pitch that finally landed.
“I guess that was kind of a funny coincidence (getting a call from Jason Witten), but once he got the job, it was kind of a no‑brainer for me,” Van Dorselaer said. “To not pass that up and also to come back home and play in the SEC and play for Oklahoma.
“And I just felt like this offense was better for me and a better opportunity for me to succeed at the next level,” he added.
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The irony ran deeper than Van Dorselaer’s plan to leave Tennessee — only to get recruited by a Tennessee legend for Oklahoma.
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It also sprang from his Southlake roots, where he grew up idolizing hometown hero Witten through his Hall of Fame Cowboys career — an opportunity Van Dorselaer sees as being able to make him a more complete tight end.
“I think last year at Tennessee, I was really utilized in the run game,” Van Dorselaer said “I feel like I have the ability to do everything — not just run block, not just pass catch, but to do everything. A lot of tight ends just want to catch and not block. I think coach Witten offers that coaching that really helped me in the pass game.”
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Jason Witten watches from the sidelines | Brianna Paciorka/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
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Van Dorselaer joins fellow transfer tight ends Hayden Hansen and Rocky Beers — all tasked, as general manager Jim Nagy put it, with “flipping the room” from last year under Witten. Each brings a unique skill set that Ben Arbuckle will channel his inner Dr. Frankenstein to stitch together.
If Hansen is the bigger body that can help open lanes for Sooner ball carries and Beers is the field-stretching tight end, Van Dorselaer already seems him as a bridge between then two.
“I think (Arbuckle) sees me more as like a hybrid guy — not just blocking, not just pass catching, but doing everything,” he said. “I think that’s kind of also what drew me to Oklahoma, was that aspect of it.”
For that vision to be fully realized, Van Dorselaer will have to use this spring and summer as the time to build chemistry with his new quarterback, John Mateer, who appealed to the tight end during his transfer portal recruitment.
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“I think his mindset is a big thing for me,” Van Dorselaer said. “But I mean, just being around him more, I think his mindset is something that’s cool for me to be a part of. He holds me to a standard that is going to make me a better football player and a better person.”
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Van Dorselaer enters spring ball with a clean slate, syncing his hybrid skill set alongside Mateer’s winning mindset and under coach Witten’s complete-tight-end blueprint.