Oregon
Oregon State Beavers fall to Vanderbilt Commodores, setting up rematch Monday: Live updates recap

CORVALLIS — The Oregon State Beavers couldn’t get their offense happening Sunday evening and misplaced 8-1 to the Vanderbilt Commodores within the Corvallis Regional remaining of the NCAA baseball match.
Oregon State’s loss units up a rematch towards the Commodores at 1 p.m. Monday to determine which staff will win the double-elimination regional and advance to the tremendous regionals subsequent weekend, and which staff will go house.
Vanderbilt jumped out to a 3-0 lead within the second inning, thanks partially to Oregon State errors. OSU starter Jacob Kmatz’s throwing error led to the Commodores’ first run, after which he threw a wild pitch that introduced house a second run.
Vanderbilt’s Spencer Jones crushed a solo house run within the third inning, and the Commodores added a run within the fourth to make it 5-0. Javier Vaz’s two-RBI double highlighted a three-run sixth for Vanderbilt.
Oregon State mustered solely a single run within the seventh as Justin Boyd scored on a throwing error.
LIVE UPDATES RECAP
Closing rating: Vanderbilt 8, Oregon State 1
Scoring performs
Prime 7: Wade Meckler stole second; Justin Boyd scored from third on a throwing error. Vanderbilt 8, Oregon State 1
Backside 6: Spencer Jones singled up the center; Javier Vaz scored from second. Vanderbilt 8, Oregon State 0
Backside 6: Vanderbilt’s Javier Vaz doubled up the center; Tate Kolwyck scored from second and Davis Diaz scored from third. Vanderbilt 7, Oregon State 0
Backside 4: Vanderbilt’s Tate Kolwyck singled via the left aspect; Calvin Hewett scored from second. Vanderbilt 5, Oregon State 0
Backside 3: Vanderbilt’s Spencer Jones homered to right-center. Vanderbilt 4, Oregon State 0
Backside 2: Vanderbilt’s Jack Bulger singled to middle area; Calvin Hewett scored from third (unearned). Vanderbilt 3, Oregon State 0
Backside 2: Vanderbilt’s Parker Noland scored from third on a wild pitch (unearned). Vanderbilt 2, Oregon State 0
Backside 2: Vanderbilt’s Calvin Hewett reached on a throwing error; Dominic Keegan scored from second. Vanderbilt 1, Oregon State 0
Oregon State Beavers (46-15) vs. Vanderbilt Commodores (38-22)
When: 6 p.m., PT Sunday, June 5
The place: Goss Stadium, Corvallis
TV channel: ESPN2.
Easy methods to watch stay stream on-line: You’ll be able to watch the sport stay for FREE with fuboTV (free trial) and on Sling (promotional gives). In case you have a cable subscription, go to the OSU baseball schedule web page and click on the “watch” hyperlink, then log-in along with your supplier information. Additionally, watch the sport on-line by visiting WatchESPN or via the ESPN app on smartphones, tablets, streaming gadgets and sensible televisions. You may also hear stay on-line by accessing the stay broadcast tab on the baseball schedule web page or through through the Varsity Community utility on smartphones and tablets.
Radio: All video games air on the Beaver Sports activities Community beginning half-hour earlier than the primary pitch. Associates embrace: KEJO 1240-AM (Corvallis), KKNX 840-AM (Eugene), KCFM 1250-AM & 104.1-FM (Florence), KLAD 960-AM & 93.3-FM (Klamath Falls), KTMT 880-AM & 96.1-FM (Medford, weekend video games), KEX 1190-AM (Portland), 102.3 FM (weekday video games prior to five:30 p.m.), KSKR 1490-AM (Roseburg) and KBZY 1490-AM (Salem, weekend video games).
Possible starters: Oregon State RHP Jacob Kmatz (8-1, 3.89 ERA) vs. LHP Devin Futrell (8-3, 3.77)
— Joe Freeman | jfreeman@oregonian.com | 503-294-5183 | @BlazerFreeman | Subscribe to The Oregonian/OregonLive newsletters and podcasts for the newest information and high tales.

Oregon
Oregon State football early opponent preview: California
With 53 days until kickoff, the Oregon State Beavers likely have redemption on the mind.
If the cliché of “one game at a time” is indeed how the Beavers will approach fall camp, then one game from last season will be front of mind: a 44-7 drubbing on the road at California. The Beavers open up their 2025 campaign against the Golden Bears on Aug. 30.
Last time out was the worst loss of the Trent Bray era, a turning point in OSU’s 1-6 finish to 2024. But the Beavers (5-7 last season) retooled their roster and are hosting this time around, and transfer portal churn has the Bears (6-7 last season) looking different at key positions on both sides of the ball in their second season in the ACC.
Game 1: California at Oregon State
Date: Aug. 30
Time: 7:30 p.m. PT
Location: Reser Stadium
TV: ESPN
Early odds: Oregon State -3.5; O/U 51.5
California offense preview:
Like so many middling programs across the country, Cal’s best offensive players were poached in the transfer portal by other programs.
Quarterback Fernando Mendoza is now at Indiana, and running backs Jadyn Ott and Jaivian Thomas are at Oklahoma and UCLA, respectively. Top receiver Nyziah Hunter also left for Nebraska, and tight end Jack Endries is at Texas.
The Bears were busy in the portal, though, nabbing a total of 30 players including Ohio State backup quarterback Devin Brown and former Oregon early enrollee Jaron Keawe-Sagapolutele. Those two will compete for the starting job in Berkeley.
Whoever is under center, this is not the same Bears offense that hung 44 on the Beavers last year, even with other playmaking additions in the portal. Still, Cal has an accomplished new offensive coordinator in Bryan Harsin, the former Boise State coach who originally got his start at Eastern Oregon.
California defense preview:
However mediocre the Justin Wilcox tenure has been at Cal, his teams have had stingy defenses. Last season, the Bears were No. 36 in the country in total defense and No. 20 in third down conversion percentage allowed (.333).
For an Oregon State offense likely to lean on Anthony Hankerson in the backfield, Cal’s ability to maintain its strong rushing defense (No. 14, 109.8 YPG last season) could pose problems. But the difference this time around could be Maalik Murphy at quarterback, adding a dimension through the air that the Beavers simply didn’t have against Cal last year.
The Bears have also lost multiple players from a talented secondary including cornerback Marcus Harris, who left for the NFL. Will the Beavers’ new signal-caller have more room to air it out, as we saw him do plenty of in the 2025 spring game?
He will have to do so against former Oregon State defensive coordinator Keith Heyward, now coaching the defensive backs for the Bears following a short break from coaching.
Either way, OSU will want to get off on the right foot offensively in its opener. The Cal defense has multiple question marks at each level which may allow for that.
With a pair of home games against Cal and Fresno State to begin the season, the Beavers need a solid offensive foundation on which to compete in challenging road games at Texas Tech and Oregon.
— Ryan Clarke covers the Oregon State Beavers for The Oregonian/OregonLive. Reach him at RClarke@Oregonian.com or on Twitter/X: @RyanTClarke. Find him on Bluesky: @ryantclarke.bsky.social.
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Oregon
Why 5-Star Recruit Calvin Russell Committed to Syracuse Over Oregon, Michigan, Florida State

The Oregon Ducks took a bit of a recruiting hit over the weekend, as five-star wide receiver Calvin Russell officially committed to the Syracuse Orange. Russell, if he formally signs with the Orange later this year, is poised to be Syracuse’s highest-ranked recruit in program history.
The five-star two-sport athlete chose Syracuse over Michigan, Oregon, and Florida State. In the days before Russell’s announcement, the only buzz in online circles about where Russell might go was trending towards Michigan securing his commitment.
Russell is intent on playing both football and basketball at the collegiate level, as basketball is a priority for him. Russell has had success in both sports at Miami Northwestern High School.
Russell won the Florida 3A state title in football this last season, accumulating 39 catches for 704 yards while adding 13 touchdowns to cap off an incredible season under Miami Northwestern High School coach and former NFL quarterback Teddy Bridgewater.
Russell is a force to be reckoned with on the hardwood as well as the gridiron. Russell, who plays small forward at Miami Northwestern High School, averaged 21 points per game while collecting seven rebounds per game.
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Perhaps the reason Russell committing to Syracuse is such a shock is simply due to the fact that the five-star did not take an official visit to upstate New York in the month of June, with the talented wideout instead taking official visits to other colleges around the country.
In fact, when Russell spoke to On3 a week before his commitment, he didn’t even mention Syracuse as a landing spot. Russell mentioned Michigan, Florida State, and Oregon as potential landing spots in the days leading up to his commitment.
Russell would have been a major get for Ducks basketball coach Dana Altman as well as football coach Dan Lanning.
Syracuse had obviously laid out the best path for Russell, who will now play football for Orange coach Fran Brown, who is coming off a 10-win season with the Orange that saw Syracuse get multiple players drafted in the 2025 NFL Draft. Russell is in line to play on the hardwood at Syracuse for coach Adrian Autry, who took over for legendary Orange coach Jim Boeheim.
While the Ducks missed out on Russell, there is still some time to go before signing day, meaning if Ducks coach Dan Lanning or Dana Altman want to give it another go in the race to flip Russell’s commitment, they would be able to do so.
Oregon currently has just one wide receiver committed to the Ducks in the class of 2026, with four-star wide receiver Messiah Hampton set to join the team next summer.
The Ducks’ 2026 recruiting class ranks No. 8 in the nation and No. 3 in the Big Ten, following the USC Trojans and Ohio State Buckeyes.
Oregon
Oregon’s Haines Stampede: How volunteers revived a century-old rodeo

Rain on the Fourth of July brought a muddy start to the annual rodeo in Haines, Oregon, held July 3-4.
But what’s a little mud to a cowboy?
The Haines Stampede traces its roots back to the mid-1890s. That’s when a rodeo was first held in the Rock Creek area, about five miles northwest of Haines, in Baker County.
The Haines Stampede was a regular part of the eastern Oregon town’s Fourth of July celebrations until the mid-1980s, when the rodeo grounds fell into disrepair and the rodeo was disbanded.
“In 1990, a bunch of us in the community got together and thought, we ought to start the rodeo again,” said Bill Taylor, the historian for the rodeo association and one of its founding members. The idea came up during an evening at the local watering hole. “We were all up at the Circle H one night, and some guys decided, ‘Hey, let’s do the rodeo.’”
They called on community volunteers, who chipped in time and money to build the current rodeo facility. They finished the new arena just in time for the rodeo to return to Haines on July 4, 1991.
“We were literally, on the morning of the Fourth, still putting nails in,” said Ken Bain, one of the directors with the rodeo association.
The Haines Stampede has been going ever since, run entirely by volunteers. The two-day event brings an average of 4,000 people to town each year, Bain estimated — not bad for a former mining town of less than 400 people.
“It’s just kind of a hometown event,” Taylor said. “As you can see, even with the rain we had today, we have a pretty decent crowd. It is, in our opinion, the best little rodeo in the state of Oregon.”
The Pendleton Round-Up is known as the place to “Let ‘er Buck.” But here in Haines, the motto they’ve been using since the 1920s is “Cut ‘er Loose.”
Rodeo events continue this holiday weekend at the Haines Stampede Arena, where the Haines Junior Rodeo will be held July 5-6. Events include pony bronc riding, dummy roping and “mutton busting,” in which kids ages 5 and younger attempt to ride a sheep. The Junior Rodeo is free to attend. Find a full schedule of events at hainesstampede.com.
Next up at the Haines Rodeo Arena? The annual demolition derby will be held there at 6 p.m. Aug. 2.
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