Oregon
Oregon Baseball Schedule 2024: What To Know – FloBaseball
Oregon reached the NCAA Tournament in 2010, just its second year after resurrecting the program from a hiatus that began in 1982, and the Ducks made four more postseason appearances under former Cal State Fullerton coach George Horton.
Horton stepped down after the 2019 season, but the beginning of a new era for Oregon baseball did not mean a backslide after the promise of its first decade back.
Heading into 2024, having made the NCAA Tournament in three straight seasons, and featuring a talented roster ahead of the upcoming campaign, the Ducks may be poised to reach heights never before seen in a program’s history that dates back to the early 1900s.
The Ducks will kick off their 2024 season at the Shriners Children’s College Showdown in Arlington, Texas. But, before they do, here’s all you need to know about Oregon baseball:
How Did Oregon Baseball Do In 2023?
The 2023 season elevated the bar for Oregon baseball.
The Ducks won 40 games for the first time since 2014, going 41-22.
Oregon caught fire late in the season, going on a postseason run to the program’s first Super Regional since 2012.
Who Coaches Oregon Baseball?
Mark Wasikowski returned to Eugene in 2020 as head coach, having been on the staff for Oregon’s peak during George Horton’s tenure.
Wasikowski was an assistant for the 46-19, 46-18 and 44-20 teams from 2012 through 2014.
In 2018, Wasikowski coached Purdue to its third NCAA Tournament appearance in program history. He returned from West Lafayette and has since overseen three straight NCAA Tournament teams at Oregon.
Has Oregon Ever Won The College World Series?
Oregon’s lone trip to the College World Series, back in 1954, ended quickly with losses to Arizona and UMass.
The Ducks reached the Super Regional round twice since the program’s restart, including last year, before Oregon bowed out to Oral Roberts.
Notable Returning Players
Drew Smith, DH/INF
Drew Smith’s outstanding freshman season, which concluded with a .365 batting average in 96 at-bats, three home runs and 18 RBIs, included a two-hit performance in Oregon’s dramatic comeback in its Super Regional against Oral Roberts.
That showing sets the stage for Smith as one of the leaders of an Oregon roster that said farewell to a variety of starring seniors.
Turner Spoljaric, RHP
A freshman season in which he showed plenty of promise catapults Turner Spoljaric into his sophomore campaign.
The Canadian import moved into the starting rotation midway through the season and played a part in Oregon’s run through the Pac-12 Tournament, as well as the NCAA Tournament, with six strong innings pitched in the Ducks’ defeat of Vanderbilt.
Spoljaric pitched 55 innings and went 7-0 with a 6.55 ERA. Look for him to trim that number down as a full-time, experienced starter in 2024.
Notable Newcomers
Mason Neville, OF
Among the transfers Oregon adds in 2024 is Mason Neville, who comes to Eugene by way of Fayetteville, Arkansas.
Neville originally signed with Arkansas out of Basic High School in Las Vegas, where he was ranked 21st among all outfield prospects in his signing class.
He should get the chance to show his potential with the Ducks after appearing in a limited capacity last season at Arkansas.
Cole Stokes, RHP
At 6-foot-5, pitcher Cole Stokes brings a hard-throwing presence to the Oregon pitching staff.
According to a profile in Baseball America from this past fall, the incoming prospect also brings improved command with “upside and athleticism.”
Oregon Baseball Schedule 2024
All times Pacific
| Date | Time | Opponent | Location |
| Feb. 16 | 1 p.m. | Oklahoma | Arlington , Texas |
| Feb. 17 | 9 a.m. | Baylor | Arlington , Texas |
| Feb. 18 | 12:30 p.m. | Texas Tech | Arlington , Texas |
| Feb. 23 | 4 p.m. | Lafayette | Eugene, Ore. |
| Feb. 24 | Noon | Lafayette | Eugene, Ore. |
| Feb. 24 | TBD | Lafayette | Eugene, Ore. |
| Feb. 25 | Noon | Lafayette | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 1 | 4 p.m. | UC Santa Barbara | Goleta, Calif. |
| March 2 | 3 p.m. | UC Santa Barbara | Goleta , Calif. |
| March 3 | Noon | UC Santa Barbara | Goleta, Calif. |
| March 5 | 6 p.m. | Grand Canyon | Phoenix |
| March 6 | 2 p.m. | Grand Canyon | Phoenix |
| March 8 | 5:30 p.m. | Arizona State | Phoenix |
| March 9 | 5:30 p.m. | Arizona State | Phoenix |
| March 10 | Noon | Arizona State | Phoenix |
| March 12 | 5 p.m. | Portland | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 15 | 5 p.m. | California | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 16 | 2 p.m. | California | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 17 | Noon | California | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 22 | 5 p.m. | Arizona | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 23 | 2 p.m. | Arizona | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 24 | Noon | Arizona | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 27 | 5 p.m. | Seattle | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 28 | 5 p.m. | Seattle | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 29 | 5 p.m. | Seattle | Eugene, Ore. |
| March 30 | Noon | Seattle | Eugene, Ore. |
| April 2 | 5:30 p.m. | Portland | Portland, Ore. |
| April 5 | 7 p.m. | UCLA | Los Angeles |
| April 6 | 6 p.m. | UCLA | Los Angeles |
| April 7 | Noon | UCLA | Los Angeles |
| April 9 | 5 p.m. | Sacramento State | Eugene, Ore. |
| April 10 | 5 p.m. | Sacramento State | Eugene, Ore. |
| April 12 | 5 p.m. | USC | Eugene, Ore. |
| April 13 | 2 p.m. | USC | Eugene, Ore. |
| April 14 | Noon | USC | Eugene, Ore. |
| April 16 | 6 p.m. | Gonzaga | Eugene, Ore. |
| April 19 | 6:05 p.m. | Stanford | Stanford, Calif. |
| April 20 | 2:05 p.m. | Stanford | Stanford, Calif. |
| April 21 | 1:05 p.m. | Stanford | Stanford, Calif. |
| April 22 | Noon | San Francisco | San Francisco |
| April 26 | 6 p.m. | Oregon State | Corvallis, Ore. |
| April 27 | 5 p.m. | Oregon State | Corvallis, Ore. |
| April 28 | 2 p.m. | Oregon State | Corvallis, Ore. |
| April 30 | 6 p.m. | Oregon State | Eugene, Ore. |
| May 3 | 6 p.m. | Utah | Eugene, Ore. |
| May 4 | 2 p.m. | Utah | Eugene, Ore. |
| May 5 | Noon | Utah | Eugene, Ore. |
| May 10 | 7 p.m. | Washington | Seattle |
| May 11 | 5 p.m. | Washington | Seattle |
| May 12 | Noon | Washington | Seattle |
| May 16 | 6 p.m. | Washington State | Eugene, Ore. |
| May 17 | 6 p.m. | Washington State | Eugene, Ore. |
| May 18 | Noon | Washington State | Eugene, Ore. |
| May 21 | All Day | Pac-12 Tournament | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
| May 22 | All Day | Pac-12 Tournament | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
| May 23 | All Day | Pac-12 Tournament | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
| May 24 | All Day | Pac-12 Tournament | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
| May 25 | TBD | Pac-12 Tournament | Scottsdale, Ariz. |
2024 Oregon Baseball Roster
| No. | Name | Position | Year |
| 1 | Isaac Ayon | RHP | Jr. |
| 2 | Grayson Grinsell | OF/LHP | So. |
| 3 | Carter Garate | INF | So. |
| 5 | Jackson Jaha | INF | So. |
| 6 | Jack Brooks | UTL | R-Fr. |
| 7 | Hunter Hyatt | LHP | R-Fr. |
| 16 | Bennett Thompson | C | Jr. |
| 17 | Drew Smith | INF | So. |
| 20 | Logan Mercado | RHP | Sr. |
| 21 | Matthew Grabmann | RHP | So. |
| 24 | Ian Umlandt | LHP | So. |
| 25 | Jacob Walsh | 1B | Jr. |
| 27 | Chase Meggers | C | So. |
| 28 | Bryce Boettcher | OF | Sr. |
| 30 | Austin Anderson | RHP | Sr. |
| 32 | Turner Spoljaric | RHP | So. |
| 39 | Leo Uelmen | RHP | So. |
| 41 | Jackson Pace | RHP | So. |
| 45 | Dominic Hellman | INF | So. |
| 49 | Dylan McShane | RHP | So. |
| 66 | RJ Gordon | RHP | Jr. |
| 77 | Anson Aroz | C | R-So. |
How To Watch The Shriners Children’s College Showdown
Watch the 2024 Shriners Children’s College Showdown on FloBaseball and the FloSports app.
FloBaseball will be streaming several season-opening college baseball tournaments, including the Sanderson Ford College Classic, Snowbird Baseball and the Kubota College Baseball Series.
2024 Shriners Children’s College Showdown Schedule
All times Eastern
Friday, Feb. 16
- 12 p.m. – Nebraska vs. Baylor
- 4 p.m. – Oregon vs. Oklahoma
- 8 p.m. – Tennessee vs. Texas Tech
Saturday, Feb. 17
- 12 p.m. – Baylor vs. Oregon
- 4 p.m. – Texas Tech vs. Nebraska
- 8 p.m. – Oklahoma vs. Tennessee
Sunday, Feb. 18
- 11:30 a.m. – Nebraska vs. Oklahoma
- 3:30 p.m. – Oregon vs. Texas Tech
- 7:30 p.m. – Tennessee vs. Baylor
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Oregon
Texas ‘generational talent’ Booker scores 40 in March Madness rout of Oregon
AUSTIN, Texas — Oregon was simply helpless against Madison Booker.
Texas’ three-time All-American forward did anything she wanted as she scored a career-high 40 points in a rollicking 100-58 win over Oregon on Sunday that earned the No. 1-seeded Longhorns a trip to the Sweet 16 for the third consecutive year.
Drive for layups? Easy. Her go-to mid-range jumper? Breezy. Step out for 3-pointers? Swish.
Booker set a Texas school record for most points in an NCAA Tournament game.
It’s still 10 points shy of the overall tournament record of 50 set by Drake’s Lorri Bauman in 1982. But give her time. She’s got at least one more game coming up in Fort Worth, and if the Longhorns are going to play for their first national championship in 40 years, she could get four more.
Booker carried the Longhorns to the Elite Eight as a freshman and to Final Four last season.
“She’s a generational talent,” Texas coach Vic Schaefer said.
Texas forward Madison Booker (35) drives to the basket against Oregon forward Ehis Etute (35) during the second half in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Sunday, March 22, 2026, in Austin, Texas. Credit: AP/Eric Gay
And an unselfish one. Schaefer often has to tell his star player to go get her shot instead of making the extra pass to a teammate.
“I want her to hunt to go get a bucket,” Schaefer said.
That side of her is emerging now that it’s time to start collecting trophies.
Booker came in to the tournament averaging 18.9 points. She set her previous career high of 31 just a couple of weeks ago against Mississippi in the Southeastern Conference tournament, which Texas won.
The previous Texas tournament scoring record of 32 was set by Clarissa Davis in 1986 and Heather Schreiber in 2003. The 1986 team won the national title. The 2003 team made the Final Four.
“Coach Schaefer has pushed me into taking a big role, being aggressive on the offensive end,” Booker said.
She was dominant from the start against Oregon, scoring 14 points in the first quarter. Bookers’ final stat line included 14-of-21 shooting, eight rebounds, five assists, two steals and no turnovers.
“I’ve never seen that. I’d like to see it again,” Texas senior guard Rori Harmon said. “I saw the look in her eyes when she came in. I saw something special coming today.”
Oregon
Dylan Raiola received blessing of Marcus Mariota to wear No. 8 jersey
When the Oregon Ducks’ spring football roster was officially released earlier this month, a lot of eyebrows raised at the fact that Nebraska Cornhuskers transfer quarterback Dylan Raiola was changing his number from No. 15 to No. 8.
While Raiola had often mimicked the stylings of Patrick Mahomes — who also wears No. 15 — throughout his career at Nebraska, the switch to No. 8 — famously worn by Oregon Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota — was interesting, to say the least.
In a “Meet the Flock” video released by the football program on Saturday, giving a closer look at the QB room, Raiola opened up about the number change and revealed that he received permission from Mariota and Dillon Gabriel to wear the number at Oregon.
“The last two people to wear it, if you look at Dillon Gabriel and Marcus Mariota,” Raiola said. “So before I even thought about wearing it, I called Dillon, and I asked him. And then I actually asked him if I could have Marcus’ number, and I called Marcus. I was blessed with the opportunity to wear it.”
While Raiola’s football journey has taken him all across the country, with stops in Texas, Arizona, Georgia, and Nebraska, it all started in Hawaii, where he was born and spent the early years of his life. During that time, Mariota’s legend grew in Eugene and Hawaii, as he became the first Duck and the first Hawaiian-born player to win the Heisman.
“I’m from Hawaii. I lived there for about nine or 10 years, so I call that home, and I always go back there and visit,” Raiola said.
Whether or not the number change means that Raiola is going to start trying to play in a similar fashion as Mariota did is yet to be seen, but Oregon fans everywhere would be thrilled to see him have similar success down the road.
Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.
Oregon
Texas vs Oregon predictions, picks, odds for NCAA Tournament Second Round
The Second Round of the women’s 2026 NCAA Tournament continues Sunday with a slate featuring No. 1 Texas vs. No. 8 Oregon on the eight-game schedule.
Here is the latest on Sunday’s March Madness matchup, including expert picks from reporters across the USA TODAY Sports Network.
USA TODAY Sports has a team of journalists covering the women’s NCAA Tournament to keep you up to date with every point scored, rebound grabbed and game won in the 68-team tournament.
USA TODAY Studio IX : Check out our women’s sports hub for in-depth analysis, commentary and more
Join the USA TODAY $1 million Bracket Challenge
No. 1 Texas vs No. 8 Oregon prediction
- Heather Burns: Texas
- Mitchell Northam: Texas
- Nancy Armour: Texas
- Cydney Henderson: Texas
- Meghan Hall: Texas
No. 1 Texas vs No. 8 Oregon odds
- Opening Moneyline: Texas (-100000)
- Opening Spread: Texas (-26.5)
- Opening Total: 136.5
How to Watch Texas vs Oregon on Sunday
No. 1 Texas takes on No. 8 Oregon at Moody Center in Austin on March 22 at 6:00 p.m. (ET). The game is airing on ESPN.
Stream March Madness on Fubo
2026 Women’s NCAA Tournament full schedule
- March 18-19: First Four
- March 20-21: First Round
- March 22-23: Second Round
- March 27-28: Sweet 16
- March 29-30: Elite 8
- April 3: Final Four
- April 5: National Championship
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