Arizona baseball had won five of its last seven games, which included three road wins, entering Friday evening’s matchup with Kansas State.
Arizona
Arizona softball evens the series with run-rule win over Oklahoma State
Oklahoma State dashed Arizona softball’s hopes late in the series opener on Friday night. The Wildcats returned the favor on Saturday evening by scoring in every inning on their way to a 12-4 victory.
No. 11 Arizona came back from an early three-run deficit to defeat the No. 18 Cowgirls in five innings.
The Wildcats’ 12 runs came on 11 hits and six walks off three different pitchers. They also took advantage of two Cowgirl errors and a hit batter.
Arizona used a combination of freshman lefty Ryan Maddox and fifth-year righty Miranda Stoddard to limit OSU to four earned runs on six hits and a walk. All of the offense was generated against Maddox.
Stoddard got the win to improve to 8-0 this season. She threw 2.2 innings without allowing a baserunner.
Maddox started in the circle for Arizona but she ran into early trouble. The Cowgirls manufactured early offense with a hit batter, a stolen base, and a single to get their first run before an out was recorded.
A single, a sacrifice, and a double scored two more for the Cowgirls. OSU had a 3-0 lead before the Wildcats got their first at-bats.
Arizona didn’t wait to cut into the lead. Dakota Kennedy got things going with a leadoff triple. Kaiah Altmeyer drove her in with a double. The Wildcats only got one run in the inning, but it was just the beginning of the momentum they carried throughout the game.
“Dakota from the first at-bat of the game, setting a tone was huge,” said Arizona head coach Caitlin Lowe. “And I thought we were setting the tone throughout the game, which felt really, really good.”
Maddox settled down in the second inning. She went deep into the count on the first two batters, walking one of them, but she didn’t allow OSU to add to the lead.
The bottom of the inning was the start of a hot day at the plate for third baseman Jenna Sniffen. The freshman led off with a single.
“Proud of her today, and mostly because she went in watching two strikeouts in front of her, and she had a different mentality,” Lowe said.
It was the first hit of a 3-for-3 day that included two RBI and a run scored. It was also Sniffen’s first multihit game since Mar. 14 against Utah. She had a seven-game hitless streak following that game, and she is just starting to emerge from it with the help of those around her.
“It’s humbling to be knocked down, but again, just trusting the people around me, trusting that I can learn from 1 through 22,” Sniffen said. “I can ask anybody a question. What I’m feeling and how I’m feeling, and what they see, what I see.”
That run scored when Kennedy came to the plate with two outs. She reached on an error, which allowed Sniffen to score. It was a one-run game after two innings.
That didn’t last for long. Maddox began to falter again.
A one-out solo home run put the Cowgirls back up by two.
Things continued to unravel. Karli Godwin hit a single. Megan Delgadillo had another one. Then, Maddox hit Claire Timm with a pitch. The bases were loaded with one out.
Stoddard entered the circle looking for some redemption. Her ERA had risen from 2.27 to 2.42 in her last four outings. She had one outing where she didn’t record an out, resulting in a recorded game ERA of 99.00. In another, she had a game ERA of 10.50.
It wasn’t going to be easy. She had bases loaded and only one out.
The pairing of Maddox and Stoddard is one that worked well for Arizona early in the season.
“I’m a big fan of the Miranda-Ryan,” pitching coach Christian Conrad said in a February conversation about the Arizona bullpen.
It worked well again. The OSU hitters couldn’t catch up with Stoddard’s dramatically different velo, pitching repertoire, and release point. She struck out the first batter she faced and got a groundout back to her to finish off the inning.
Still, Arizona was behind 4-2 now. There was more work to do.
The Wildcats responded once again, starting with a leadoff walk by Altmeyer. Devyn Netz put two in scoring position with a double. With Stoddard and Sydney Stewart coming up and only one out, it looked like easy scoring opportunities.
Stoddard and Stewart both went down swinging, leaving it to the freshman again.
Sniffen came through with a two-out hit that was originally ruled a triple. It was eventually called a single and an error that allowed the runner to advance, but it didn’t matter on the scoreboard. Two runs scored and the game was tied.
Arizona broke the game open in the fourth. Stoddard sat down the OSU hitters 1-2-3, but there was drama in the inning. Stewart was hit while trying to block a pitch. The game was paused for an extended period while the Arizona staff checked on her, but she stayed in.
“It hurts bad,” Stewart said. “I’m not gonna lie, but I’m gonna go get it checked out. Just blocked the ball and it hit where there was no gear.”
Stewart’s ability to stay in the game made all the difference.
Paige Dimler led off with a pinch-hit walk in the bottom of the fourth. A single, a wild pitch, and another walk loaded the bases with no outs, forcing the Cowgirls to make their second pitching change of the game.
Reliever Kyra Aycock walked in the go-ahead run. She threw a wild pitch to her next batter, allowing Kennedy to come across for an insurance run. Arizona led 6-4 and it wasn’t done yet.
Netz came up with runners on second and third. She hit a grounder to OSU shortstop Megan Bloodworth. She didn’t seem sure what to do with the ball.
Bloodworth hesitated, then decided she needed to look back Shockey at third base. Netz had been motoring down the first baseline the entire time.
By the time Bloodworth thought about going for the out at first, it was too late. Netz had reached on a fielder’s choice without an out being recorded. The bases were loaded again and there were still no outs.
That brought Stewart up. Being hit by the pitch in the top of the inning didn’t affect her power. She sent the 2-2 pitch out for a grand slam, her 11th home run of the season. It put the Wildcats up 10-4.
It tied Stoddard for second on the t.eam, but it was the last play Stewart made in the game. Emily Schepp came in to catch in the top of the fifth. She and Stoddard worked together to keep their team within two runs of the mercy rule with a 1-2-3 inning in the top of the fifth.
The Wildcats got those two runs on base via a walk and a single. Schepp drove one run in with a single of her own. Stoddard walked it off with another single.
The teams will play the rubber game on Sunday at noon MST.
Lead photo courtesy of Arizona Athletics
Arizona
NFL mock draft: 4-round projections for Arizona Cardinals
In these four-round projections, the Arizona Cardinals don’t get a tackle until the fourth round.
We are just days away from the 2026 NFL draft, and that means some final mock drafts. What direction will the draft take the Arizona Cardinals?
Draft Wire’s Curt Popejoy put together a four-round mock draft for the Cardinals. They go defense early but rebuild the offense for 2026 and moving forward, including landing their potential franchise quarterback.
Cardinals 4-round mock draft
Here are the players in the first four rounds Popejoy projects for Arizona.
- Round 1: Ohio State EDGE/LB Arvell Reese
- Round 2: Alabama QB Ty Simpson
- Round 3: Clemson WR Antonio Williams
- Round 4: Florida OT Austin Barber
What we think of the picks
The Cardinals want to trade out of the third pick and draft a tackle, so not getting a tackle until Round 4 seems unlikely, although they did meet with Barber. They do have options at right tackle for 2026 already on the roster.
Reese would be a great pick if they don’t trade back, as they badly need pass-rushing help off the edge.
Drafting Simpson seems inevitable at this point, so it has to be in a mock draft, although the feeling is they will need to go up into Round 1 again to get him.
Williams has speed and is almost six feet tall, but he does have short arms.
Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.
Arizona
Detroit Lions NFL Draft Injury Report: Arizona State CB Keith Abney
Due to significant injuries to the CB position last year which includes a shoulder surgery for Terrion Arnold, the Lions CB position scored a 6/10 need on my Lions Defensive Draft Need Rankings. Thus, an early-round selection of a young, healthy prospect like Keith Abney would not come as a surprise. He enters the draft with very low medical concern level.
Here is the excerpt from my medical report on Keith Abney:
(Ages in parentheses are at start of 2026 season and are factored into the concern level. Injury info and ages based on available public information are unverified and subject to update. Games played data courtesy of sports-reference.com.)
Keith Abney, CB (21) – Arizona State
Projected round 2-3. #43 on Jeff Risdon board Feb 19.
Concern level 0/10
There is an isolated report of a hand injury but no corroborating information. Even if the hand injury is true, that’s of minimal to no long-term concern.
His availability in his final two seasons has been perfect. Overall, Abney appears to be medically clean and is at an excellent age.
He finished college with 6 INT and 21 PBU.
For more Lions coverage, follow us on X, @TheLionsWire, and give our Facebook page a like. Follow Jimmy on X, @JimmyLiaoMD
Arizona
Arizona baseball drops low-scoring series opener to Kansas State
In the first game of the series, Arizona (14-23, 5-11 Big 12) battled in a low-scoring affair but fell short in a 2-1 loss to Kansas State (24-12, 8-8 Big 12). The Wildcats from Tucson held the Wildcats from Manhattan at bay for a good majority of the night.
Given that Kansas State leads the Big 12 in conference play in batting, on-base percentage, and slugging, Arizona had a rather good performance, but it was not enough.
Owen Kramkowski pitched seven scoreless innings before allowing the first Kansas State run in the top of the eight. He finished with six strikeouts and kept the high octane Wildcats at bay.
“I thought the defense played well behind him too,” said head coach Chip Hale. “There’s a lot of ground balls, and we made plays where we were positioned in good places, and he was pitching in the eighth inning. That’s unbelievable.”
Garrett Hicks (3-1) came in to try and stop the bleeding for the Wildcats and did so by not allowing Kansas State to take the lead in the eighth. It was in the ninth when the lead was surrendered.
It took until the sixth inning but the first run was scored by Arizona. Andrew Cain singled to left field and after Maddox Mihalakis flew out, it was Beau Sylvester bringing Cain home with a triple through right center field.
Sylvester extended his hitting streak to eight games and it proved to be not enough to get Arizona to the finish line.
Kansas State tied the game at the top of the eight when back to back singles got runners on at first and third. Then a passed ball allowed the third base runner to come home.
Arizona had a chance to retake the lead in the bottom of the ninth after Cain singled to deep right field. With Sylvester back at the plate, it seemed like it was a perfect set up.
A wild pitch nearly got past Kansas State and Cain tried to take advantage of it and steal home. However, Kansas State was able to corral the pitch and get Cain out at home.
AJ Evasco started the ninth inning with a double for Kansas State and back to back fly outs eventually got him home to give Kansas State the lead and the win.
With eight players being left on base, Arizona will need to bring those runners in more often than not if they want to tie the series Saturday afternoon.
As a young team, the Wildcats have had to walk a very tight line between disappointment and dejection and will need to continue handling these losses with grace if it wants to turn a corner.
“It’s the way it goes, it’s baseball,” said Hale. “If we don’t handle it, we will come out tomorrow and won’t be ready to go, so hopefully they handle it.”
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