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Taryn Jenkins walks Nevada off against Boise State 3-2

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Taryn Jenkins walks Nevada off against Boise State 3-2


RENO, Nev. (Nevada Athletics) – Taryn Jenkins called game in the eighth inning of a tie ballgame with a solo shot over the left field wall, evening the series with the Broncos.

The Broncos put up the first runs of the game in the top of the second with a two RBI double.

The Pack added the two tying runs in the fifth with an RBI single from Bridgette Gilliano scoring Chelie Senini who reached on a fielder’s choice. Gabby Herrera followed with an RBI single to center field scoring Matlyn Leetch who came in to pinch run for Haley Painter who reached on a single up the middle. This put Herrera as the Nevada single-season RBI leader with 62.

The Broncos and Pack were scoreless for two innings sending the game into extras. Taryn Jenkins came up to the plate in the eighth, sending it over to left field wall walking it off for the Pack, 3-2.

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Blake Craft got the start for the Pack going all eight innings. Craft struck out seven, walked two, allowing two runs on six hits.

Notables:

  • Gabby Herrera breaks the Nevada single-season RBI record with her 62nd RBI of the season.
  • Taryn Jenkins’s walk-off homer is her 13th home run of the season, tying for the fourth most in a Nevada single season. The home run was Jenkins’s first career walk-off and Nevada’s third walk-off homer of the season when tied or trailing
  • Herrera’s 67th hit of the season is the seventh most ever in a Nevada single season.
  • Chelie Senini ties La’Tosha Williams (Delaware State) and Shamalene Wilson (Florida State) with 161 career stolen bases, the 20th most in NCAA DI history.
  • Senini ties Danielle Patrick with 212 career games played, ninth most in Wolf Pack history. Senini’s 210 games started ties her with Britton Murdock for the eighth most in Nevada history.
  • Blake Craft passes McKenna Isenberg for the fourth most games started by a pitcher in Nevada history.
  • Senini passes her run total from last season with her 51st run of the season, the second most in a single Nevada season.
  • Haley Painter ties Megan Sweet’s 2016 total of 119 total bases for the fourth most in Nevada single season.
  • Craft’s 13th win of the season notches her a spot on the top-10 list for most wins in a single Nevada season. Craft’s 13 wins are the most since Julia Jensen’s 13 wins in 2018.
  • Nevada ties the 2004 Wolf Pack squad, hitting 87 doubles this season, the fifth-highest total in Nevada history.
  • Bailie Clark extends her on-base streak to ten games. Senini and Bailie Clark extend their hitting streaks to seven and four games, respectively.

Up Next:

The Pack return for their final home game of the season in the series finale against Boise State, Sunday, April 20 with first pitch set for 12 P.M.



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Nevada

Court OK’s counting late-arriving mail ballots in Nevada, 29 other states

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Court OK’s counting late-arriving mail ballots in Nevada, 29 other states


LAS VEGAS (KTNV) — Nevada’s laws allowing the counting of mail-in ballots that arrive up to four days after Election Day — so long as they are postmarked by that date — is constitutional under a Monday ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court.

In a 5-4 ruling, justices upheld a challenge to a Mississippi law that’s similar to Nevada’s statute. Justice Amy Coney Barrett and Chief Justice John Roberts joined with the court’s three liberal members, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Katanji Brown Jackson, to uphold the law.

Conservatives Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch dissented.

The ruling affects 30 states, all of which allow some ballots received after Election Day to be counted. That includes Nevada, which allows ballots postmarked by Election Day to be received and counted up to four days later, and ballots without a postmark to be received and counted up to three days later.

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Plaintiffs in the case — including the Republican National Committee and the Mississippi Republican Party — had contended that federal laws referring to “elections” mean both the casting and counting of ballots, which they said must occur on Election Day.

“The federal election-day statutes do not preempt Mississippi’s law because the defining element of an ‘election’ has always been the electorate’s choice of candidate,” the case summary reads. “And a related federal statute — the Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act — confirms that while federal law dictates when ballots must be cast, state law governs when they must be received.”

In Nevada, critics have contended that late-arriving ballots erode confidence in elections, because they delay learning final election results for days and, in some close races, can change the outcome.

Gov. Joe Lombardo has called the weeklong wait for final, unofficial results “a national embarrassment.”

Plaintiffs in the case made similar arguments, but were turned away by the court: “Finally, plaintiffs policy arguments about election integrity and voter confidence are properly addressed to legislatures, not courts,” the case summary reads.

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Several attempts to require ballots to be received by Election Day have been introduced in Nevada’s Legislature, but none have been successful in the Democratically controlled body.

Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar has argued that the overwhelming majority of ballots are in and counted by Election Day, and only the closest races may be changed by late-arriving ballots. He’s advocated for more resources for county clerks and voter registrars to be able to count mail ballots more quickly.

Under the ruling, nothing will change for Nevada voters going to the polls in four months to vote in the November election. But officials still encourage voters to send in their mail ballots early, or to put them in drop boxes at voting centers during early voting or on Election Day.

Supreme Court upholds late-arriving mail ballots in Mississippi

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One dead, four hospitalized after head-on crash on I-15 in Clark County

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One dead, four hospitalized after head-on crash on I-15 in Clark County


LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Nevada Highway Patrol responded to a two-vehicle crash on Interstate 15 near mile marker 94 Sunday evening.

The crash was reported at 6:43 p.m. on June 28.

MORE ON FOX5: Driver sustains life-threatening injuries in Las Vegas multi-vehicle crash

A passenger sedan and a pickup truck were involved in the crash. One vehicle was traveling southbound, lost control, crossed through the median, and struck the other vehicle head-on in the northbound travel lane.

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One adult male died at the scene. Two people were transported by ground ambulance, and two others were transported by life flight to a local hospital.

Road closures

All northbound I-15 travel lanes were closed at mile marker 94, but have since opened as of Sunday night.

Nevada Highway Patrol said further information will be provided following the preliminary investigation.

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Officials elevate response efforts to combat eastern Nevada wildfires

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Officials elevate response efforts to combat eastern Nevada wildfires












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Officials elevate response efforts to combat eastern Nevada wildfires | Local Nevada | Local























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