Texas
Everything Nate Oats said after No. 3 Alabama's win over Texas
Everything Nate Oats said after No. 3 Alabama’s win over Texas
Alabama coach Nate Oats spoke to reporters after the Crimson Tide’s 103-80 win over Texas on Tuesday. Alabama wrapped up a road trip with wins over Texas and Arkansas and will return to Tuscaloosa for its highly-anticipated clash against No. 1 Auburn on Saturday.
Here’s everything Oats said after the victory over Texas.
Opening statement
“This was a game — wish you could shoot it like this all the time. I mean, we shot almost 60% from 3, shot 62% from the field. So, we spend a lot of time in the gym but sometimes you get some open looks, you knock them down, it helps the game go the way you want.
“We had way too many turnovers again. That’s becoming a major issue with us. You’ve gotta give Texas a lot of credit. They got into us. They were physical with us. They forced some turnovers. I thought they played hard it’s just — we got Dioubate who I’m sure they chose to leave open goes 3 of 3 from 3. Jarin who we know can really shot it, but hasn’t shot it this well in a game yet this year, but he did make five 3s to send us to a Final Four last year when we beat Clemson in the Elite Eight.
“So he’s stepped up in big games before and had great shooting games. He ends up with a career-high. I think he’s been playing real physical, real aggressive, great defense. He was our matchup to start with on Tre Johnson who’s leading the league in scoring. I thought he did a pretty good job for the most part. I think he’s been locked into the right stuff. Really happy to see him have a great shooting game like he did tonight.”
“Really fortunate to get these two wins on the road trip — both Arkansas and here and now we got to lock in. We got a pretty tough stretch here these last seven games coming up.”
On his first impression playing in the Moody Center, Texas being hampered by injuries
“I thought the Moody Center was one of the best arenas, maybe the best in the SEC. It’s my first time in here. I thought it was great. They got the boxes up there. They made it so it’s small enough — what do they have 11,000? And if they want to make it bigger — I think it’s great. I thought it was a really good atmosphere tonight to be honest with you. We’re the No. 2 team in the country coming in here. They sold the place out I’m assuming. So, I thought it was good. I’m a big fan of the Moody Center.
“I’m not totally familiar with all the injuries. I know that [Tremon] Mark was out, but he played 37 minutes tonight. So I’m assuming he’s not injured anymore too much… I knew [Arthur] Kaluma had gone out. He didn’t start the second half, and he’s good. He only played 11 minutes so — obviously when you’re missing a starter and we’re dealing with it too — Wrightsell was one of the best shooters in the country. He’s out for the whole year with his Achilles. Houston Mallette leads the team in offensive leverage when he’s in, shot it well. He’s gonna end up having a redshirt on the year for his knees. Derrion Reid’s a McDonald’s All-American that’s been a contributor. He’s out for us.
“It’s definitely affected Texas I’m sure. I mean, shoot when Kaluma couldn’t come back there in the second half you’re missing a starter that you put your game plan together with and then he’s not in there. That’s tough. He’s a good player, but it’s also part of sports. We had three guys out that we planned on playing this year as well.”
On his strategy against Tre Johnson
“Look, Tre’s really good. Our thing with him was, again, he had a fairly efficient night to be honest with you, 9 of 17. He scored 24 points on 17 shots is pretty efficient. Not quite as efficient as Jarin, but Jarin’s not the focal point of everybody’s defense like Tre is. So our thing with him was like, we know he’s gonna get his shots up, we just need to make sure they’re tough, contested. He’s gonna make some. He’s not gonna make enough tough non-rim 2s to beat us. So, don’t let him get to the rim. Let’s run him off the 3-point line. We didn’t do a very good job of that at times. We gave up the 3 in the corner on the underneath out-of-bounds play. We gave up the 3 in transition where we didn’t get matched to him. There was a couple of 3s he got that we didn’t do a great job.
“But, we tried to make sure that they took as many non-rim 2s. I’m looking, we took six non-rim 2s and were 3 of 6. They took 20 and were 8 of 20. Looking at their percentage of shots — 10% of our shots were non-rim 2s and almost 30% of their shots were non-rim 2s. Our thing was, we knew they’d settle a little bit for that. So with Tre, we had some traps and some blitzes in that we needed. The problem was when we kinda came with the baseline trap and missed we were giving up offensive rebounds. So we decided we be better off just settling with him taking a tough, contested pull-up over one of our defenders and not giving up the O-boards because they almost doubled us in second-chance points which isn’t good. They had 13, we only had 7. If we cut out their second chance and our turnovers — they had 39 points, which was half of their points came off of our turnovers or second-chance points.
“So we were OK with Tre taking all the tough shots he wanted. We just, we said going in we gotta rebound and we gotta not turn the ball over. Well we turned it over too much and we didn’t do a good enough job rebounding. But the good thing for us, our offense was clicking pretty well tonight.
On team’s maturity, focus with a big game coming up and if Alabama is the best team in the country
“I mean, we’ll see Saturday who’s the best team in the country I guess. I do think we’ve got a mature group. They know they’ve prepared. We kinda get into it. The hay is in the barn if you will, going into one of these games. We know what we have to do. We don’t get upset if the other team gets some tough shots that we’re willing to give up. Now, the turnovers that was a little upsetting. We had so many rebounds we gave up, that was a little upsetting.
“But we try to be intense, like you said very intense. Play hard, give max effort. But we’re not trying to flip out over stuff. We come prepared. We know what we got to do. We get it done. We execute the game plan and we get out of here with a win.
“And do we think we’re the best team in the country? I think we got a chance to be, but Auburn’s the best team in the country right now and we gotta knock them out on Saturday if we want to claim to be the best team in the country.”
On how winning two road games gives him more confidence ahead of Auburn matchup
“I think it’s huge. We had our bye-game right in the middle. We had kind of a first nine games, last nine after the bye. Last nine we had five of them on the road, but started with a two-game road stand. So now we got seven that four of the seven are home. Only three of the seven are on the road. But I thought it was imperative that we get both these wins to stay in the hunt to win the league. We dropped the home one against Ole Miss which we just didn’t play very well and Ole Miss played very well.
Auburn dropped the home one fo Florida. So we’ve each dropped the home one. We each get each other still. We get a home and away with them, but road wins aren’t easy in this league, I mean at all. So, you saw it – Arkansas’ record isn’t great but shoot, that was a 3-point game with three minutes to go in the game up at Arkansas on Saturday.
“So, I think you’re gonna see some teams get upset. I didn’t see any of the final scores tonight from the first games. I saw Auburn was up 12 pretty late in the game last I saw. I’m assuming they won. Kentucky beat Tennessee? That was at Kentucky? Yeah, so there you go. Tennessee’s a really good team. I think the metrics, the metrics have Tennessee ahead of us and they go into Kentucky and that was a tough win for us to get at Kentucky and Tennessee loses at Kentucky. So, there’s no guarantee in road wins. I mean every — shoot South Carolina, I’m guessing they still don’t have a win but they played Auburn down to like two points I think. So, you go to a place like South Carolina that hasn’t been able to get a win, they’re still playing the best teams in the league really tough at their place.
“To get two road wins on this road trip is big for us. It gives us some confidence. We’ve played well on the road though. This is I think our eighth game in a row we’ve scored 85 on the road. So we tend to — we’ve got a veteran group. They tend to like the road for whatever reason. They like seeing the stands empty early when it can and they seem to embrace that villain role if you will going in and knocking some teams off on the road.
“So, I love this group, they play hard. It’s great to see some of these guys — you know Dioubate and Jarin shoot it really well tonight and contribute to a great offensive game for us.”
Texas
Josh Bell hits 3-run homer as Minnesota Twins beat Texas Rangers 4-2
Josh Bell hit a three-run homer in the first inning, Byron Buxton went deep for the 23rd time this season, leading off the sixth, and the Minnesota Twins beat the Texas Rangers 4-2 on Monday night.
All six runs in the game came off homers, with Texas’ Joc Pederson delivering a two-run shot in the third off rookie Mike Paredes.
Minnesota’s 25-year-old left-hander fell an out short of his first major league win in his second start among four career appearances since May 31. Paredes allowed four hits and two runs in 4 2/3 innings.
Buxton has homered in six of his past nine games to get within one of major league leaders Yordan Alvarez of Houston and Philadelphia’s Kyle Schwarber.
Four Twins relievers held Texas to one hit over the final 4 1/3 innings, starting with Taylor Rogers (3-3) striking out Pederson, the only batter he faced, to end the fifth.
Andrew Morris pitched a perfect sixth, Eric Orze allowed a single over 1 2/3 innings and Yoendrys Gómez retired the final four Texas batters for his second save in two days and seventh of the season, six coming with Minnesota.
Josh Smith came off the bench for the Rangers in his first appearance since May 3, fouling out to catcher Alex Jackson on the only pitch he saw from Orze. Smith’s six-week absence started with a glute strain and wrist inflammation before he was hospitalized with viral meningitis.
Kyler Fedko made his major league debut for the Twins as the left fielder. The 26-year-old went 0 for 4, striking out his first two times up against Texas left-hander Mackenzie Gore, who struck out a season-high 10 in seven innings. Gore (4-6) allowed four hits and four runs with two walks in seven innings.
Up next
Twins RHP Zebby Matthews (2-4, 5,20 ERA) faces Texas RHP Kumar Rocker (2-5, 3.56) on Tuesday.
Texas
Rodriguez joins elite company with cycle in oddest of ways in Men's College World Series
Sophomore shortstop Adrian Rodriguez hit for the cycle in a 14-2 Texas victory. He became the third player
Texas
Big 12 pursuing legal action against Texas Tech, Texas attorney general over Brendan Sorsby
The Big 12 has started down the legal path to potentially sanction Texas Tech over its intention to play quarterback Brendan Sorsby.
On Monday, the conference filed a 47-page complaint against Texas Tech, the Texas attorney general, the system’s chancellor, the school president and athletic director in seeking declaratory judgement and a preliminary injunction to enable it to enforce its bylaws.
Advertisement
In this landmark case — a league filing legally against one of its members — the Big 12 is asking a federal court to bar Texas Tech and the state’s attorney general, Ken Paxton, from preventing the conference from “exercising its right under its bylaws to sanction Texas Tech,” according to the complaint obtained by Yahoo Sports, which was filed in the Northern District of Texas in Dallas.
The league is not seeking damages in the filing and is not challenging a state court ruling deeming Sorsby eligible, but is instead asking a federal judge to permit it to take action against the Red Raiders in light of legal threats made from the Texas attorney general, whose letter to the league last week seems to have triggered the Big 12’s filing. The letter from Paxton’s office demanded that the league refrain from exercising its governance authority, characterizing any sanction as an antitrust violation and threatening joint liability against the conference.
Perhaps most notably, the complaint lays out the conference’s intention to sanction Texas Tech if it were to play Sorsby, who has acknowledged to betting on his own team while a freshman at Indiana, violating one of sports’ most sacred policies.
According to the filing, Big 12 conference officials, university presidents and athletic directors have requested that Tech not play Sorsby, but “TTU has not agreed,” resulting in the conference considering a variety of sanctions. Big 12 presidents and chancellors are scheduled to meet later Monday afternoon, though a decision on sanctions is not necessarily expected then.
Advertisement
“If a vote were to occur however,” the complaint says, “some of the potential sanctions the Board could consider under the bylaws include monetary sanctions and/or a ban on competing in the Big 12 Championship Game.”
There is “considerable concern” within the Big 12 that the league will incur “reputational harm and irreparable damage to public and member trust in the integrity of league compensations” if Sorsby were to play and is concerned that the Red Raiders would “take a spot” from another school in the league championship game “with a player that has acted contrary” to conference values.
“In an industry that rarely agrees on anything, there is finally an issue that everyone seems to agree on (other than TTU and the Attorney General): universities should not field players who have bet on their own team’s games in college athletics,” the Big 12 writes in the filing.
The league is asking a federal judge to grant an injunction to allow it to exercise its “First Amendment” rights to invoke its authority under its bylaws, dismiss Paxton’s claims that any sanction is an antitrust violation and grant it the right to penalize a member school for violating the dormant Commerce Clause, which prevents state governments from enacting laws that impact competition or commence across a variety of states.
Advertisement
“The threat that gambling poses to the integrity of athletic competition has been understood — and has been borne out by scandal — for over a century,” the complaint reads. “That history informs the Conference’s values and governance practices and explains why these values are non-negotiable.”
The complaint lists as defendants Paxton, Texas Tech University, Texas Tech University System, chancellor Brandon Creighton, president Lawrence Schovanec and athletic director Kirby Hocutt.
When reached on Monday, Big 12 officials declined to comment on the filing.
The Sorsby case has gripped college athletics.
Advertisement
A Texas court judge’s decision last Monday to prohibit the NCAA from enforcing its rule to permanently ban Sorsby from playing college football sent shockwaves through the college community, with one Big 12 athletic director even calling it “total f***ing bulls***” and at least two schools boycotting playing Tech in future competitions.
The NCAA denied Sorsby’s request to have his eligibility reinstated after he acknowledged wagering on his own team. In all, Sorsby acknowledged to making at least $90,000 from thousands of impermissible wagers during his college career, which spanned from Indiana to Cincinnati to, now, Texas Tech, which signed him to a one-year contract believed to be worth at least $4 million annually.
Advertisement
Even after enrolling at Tech, Sorsby admitted to sending about $5,000 to another person to place bets on his behalf. Upon the NCAA starting an investigation into the quarterback this spring, Sorsby enrolled in treatment for sports gambling addiction and anxiety.
After news emerged that the Big 12 was considering sanctioning Tech, Paxton’s office sent a letter to the league Thursday.
“The Big 12 is concerned with TTU’s stated plans — communicated by TTU to the Conference and now backed by independent threats from the Attorney General — to field a student-athlete in Conference competitions despite admitted wagering conduct that is both illegal and in direct conflict with the ethical standards and public trust on which Big 12 competition depends,” the complaint says.
“The Big 12 and its Member Institutions (apparently save TTU) have no interest in being required to endorse or even appearing to endorse unethical and indeed unlawful conduct that strikes at the heart of athletic integrity,” the suit reads.
-
Washington, D.C6 minutes agoTFB’s AgVentures Challenge finalists visit Washington, D.C.
-
Cleveland, OH8 minutes agoHemp-derived THC drinks return to Ohio businesses after judge blocks new law
-
Austin, TX14 minutes agoOregon Baseball Loses Key Talent in Surprising Transfer Portal Move
-
Alaska23 minutes agoSmall ships go where big ships can’t in Alaska’s wilderness
-
Arizona28 minutes ago20 famous ASU alumni, including Jimmy Kimmel and other favorites
-
Arkansas36 minutes agoCongressman Steve Womack visits Northwest Arkansas
-
California38 minutes agoCalMatters journalism honored as ‘impeccable,’ ‘beautifully-written’ and ‘the definition of public service’ in Golden State Journalism Awards
-
Colorado44 minutes agoColorado man claims $4 million jackpot in Massachusetts lottery