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Oregon State Softball’s Lici Campbell and Nicole Donahue Earn Preseason All-WCC Nods

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Oregon State Softball’s Lici Campbell and Nicole Donahue Earn Preseason All-WCC Nods


The Oregon State Beavers are just a few short days away from beginning their first softball season as a member of the West Coast Conference. The League’s preseason all-conference team selections were released this week, with two Beavers cracking the roster.

Infielder/catcher/utility player Lici Campbell made the list after being the Beavs’ primary offensive powerhouse in 2024. She led the team in slugging percentage (.447), runs batted in (25), home runs (9) and total bases (67) last season. The senior is a veteran leader, the only remaining player from OSU’s 2022 run to the Women’s College World Series.

Junior catcher Nicole Donahue, a transfer from UT Arlington, was also an All-WCC pick after a strong 2024 campaign at her previous school that included 32 hits and batting average of .308.

OSU open the season on Friday, February 7 at Cal Poly’s Mustang Classic with a matchup against Ball State at 11 AM PT.

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2025 WCC Softball Preseason Team Position Players

Sam Buckley, Saint Mary’s
Lici Campbell, Oregon State
Mika Chong, LMU
Cairah Curran, Santa Clara
Nicole Donahue, Oregon State
Hannah Ferguson, Saint Mary’s
Hazyl Gray, Santa Clara
Izzy Jamgotchian, LMU
Arianna Jaurequi, LMU
Taylor Johnson, San Diego
Taylor Lane, Saint Mary’s
Olivia Silvestre, Pacific

2025 WCC Softball Preseason Team Pitchers

McKenna Braegelmann, San Diego
Hannah Edwards, Santa Clara
Odhi Vasquez, Saint Mary’s

More Reading Material From Oregon State Beavers On SI

Oregon State Softball Picked Third in WCC Preseason Poll

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State of the Beavs: Beaver Baseball Preparations + The New Pac-12 Agenda



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Many questions to answer, including the future, as Oregon State tries to explain its early WCC tournament exit

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Many questions to answer, including the future, as Oregon State tries to explain its early WCC tournament exit


What happened down the stretch, the future of OSU players and coach Wayne Tinkle for next season, and whether there’s interest in secondary postseason tournaments are addressed after the Beavers lose to Pepperdine in the WCC tournament.



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Regis’ Isaiah Koehnke passes current NBA star as Oregon high school basketball all-time leading scorer

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Regis’ Isaiah Koehnke passes current NBA star as Oregon high school basketball all-time leading scorer


Despite losing in Friday’s semifinals, Regis’ Isaiah Koehnke still came away with a piece of history.

The Regis senior guard scored 15 points while playing 28 minutes against Western Christian in the Class 2A state tournament on Friday night in Pendleton.

It put Koehnke at 2,641 career points, with one game still to play. He is now Oregon’s all-time leading scorer in boys basketball.



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Nelson Keljo, Trent Caraway carry No. 8 Oregon State baseball to win over San Diego with career nights

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Nelson Keljo, Trent Caraway carry No. 8 Oregon State baseball to win over San Diego with career nights


CORVALLIS — After he tossed the final pitch of the longest and most dominant outing of his college career, Oregon State Beavers left-hander Nelson Keljo unleashed weeks of pent-up frustration.

He roared into the night sky. He flexed multiple times. He thumped his chest repeatedly.

And he did it all as he strutted to the home dugout at Goss Stadium, a winner for the first time as the Beavers’ ace.

“Sometimes,” Oregon State coach Mitch Canham said, “it’s good to end on a high note.”

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Keljo earned his first win of the season, Trent Caraway had a career night at the plate and the Beavers had their way with the San Diego Toreros, rolling to an 11-3 win before 3,754 in the home opener in Corvallis.

There was a lot to like about the No. 8 team in the nation on Friday night.

The Beavers scored runs in six different innings and finished with 14 hits, including eight that went for extra bases. Four players had multi-hit efforts, seven drove in a run, and all nine starters reached base, as Oregon State (8-3) punished the San Diego (2-11) pitching staff.

But on a night that so many did so much, it was the start by Keljo and the fireworks by Caraway that sparkled most on a picture-perfect early spring night in the Willamette Valley.

And for Keljo, who had labored through three up-and-down starts this season as he transitioned into the Beavers’ Friday night starter, it was — in his mind — about time. The 6-foot-4 left-hander allowed just four runs and six hits, while striking out 12 against Xavier, Virginia and Baylor. But he also didn’t make it past the fourth inning, coughing up an alarming 10 walks. He was solid … but not sensational.

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So, after the Beavers returned to Corvallis from their season-opening 10-day trip, the former reliever sat down with pitching coach Rich Dorman and evaluated everything. They watched film of every inning of Keljo’s first three starts. They chatted about his pregame routine. And, perhaps more than anything, they went deep on the inconsistent results of his changeup and slider.

In his first three starts, Keljo said, he only threw his off-speed pitches for strikes 10% of the time, which led him to throw his fastball more than 70% of the time.

“The past few starts,” Keljo said, “it was pretty easy for hitters to just lay off the slider and changeup, because I couldn’t really land them in the zone. … Whenever I would throw (an off-speed pitch), it was pretty much an auto ball, so I would already get behind in the count. And I work best working ahead in the counts, getting to two strikes on guys.”

He looked like a different pitcher against San Diego. Keljo worked ahead in the count, throwing first-pitch strikes to nine of the first 12 batters he faced. He controlled the zone, facing three-ball counts on just two batters. And he located his off-speed pitches with remarkable precision.

The result: dominance. Keljo recorded eight strikeouts and allowed just one hit — an infield single — and two walks during five scoreless innings, breezing to his first win of the season. He finished with career highs in strikeouts and innings pitched.

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Keljo fanned five of the first 10 batters he faced, then struck out the side in his final inning, mixing 95 mph fastballs with mid-80s sliders and changeups. After his last out in the fifth — a three-pitch strikeout against Aden Howard, he erupted with that burst of emotion, flexing and screaming his way off the field.

“My few starts this year, I’ve been pretty mellow,” he said. “I didn’t really have everything working for me, so it was kind of hard to get hyped up like that. But especially in front of the Goss crowd, it was super easy. It just happens. I just kind of get excited and pumped up, so yeah, that was super awesome. And I know the team likes to see that, too, so it’s good to get a Friday night win under our belt.”

It didn’t hurt that Keljo had Caraway hitting at the top of the order.

The sophomore third baseman finished 4 for 5 with a homer, three doubles, three RBIs and three runs scored, unleashing the loudest and most productive performance on a night so many OSU players excelled.

Caraway opened the third with a leadoff double, drove in a run with another double in the fourth and demolished a two-run homer in the sixth, sending a 1-0 fastball 421 feet into the parking lot beyond the bullpen in left field.

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“The first pitch, he flipped a slider in, and I was like, ‘OK, this guy is not going to beat me, I’m going to just sit middle-middle with a heater,’” Caraway said, breaking down the at-bat of his homer. “He threw it there and I was just perfectly on time and ready to go.”

After Caraway hit the blast, he stood a couple feet away from home plate and watched the ball sail away, holding his bat, soaking in his first home run of the season.

“I knew it was absolutely gone,” he said. “I thought, ‘I might have to strut this one out a little bit, look at it.’”

But Caraway’s big night — which featured the most hits of his career, pushed his hitting streak to 11 games and equaled the school-record for doubles — wasn’t the only thing worth looking at Friday night.

Shortstop Aiva Arquette (2 for 5, double, two runs scored), designated hitter Tyce Peterson (2 for 4, triple, two runs scored) and right-fielder Easton Talt (2 for 4, double, 2 RBIs) had multi-hit efforts and center fielder Canon Reeder (1 for 3, two walks, two runs scored) had another strong showing.

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All the while, the Beavers’ defense, which has been leaky of late, turned in multiple memorable plays. Reeder made a diving catch in the third, AJ Singer made a pretty ranging play at second base the same inning, chasing a grounder up the middle and throwing across his body to get the out, and catcher Wilson Weber completed a strike-em-out, throw-em-out double play in the sixth.

It added up to more than enough on a night Keljo finally pitched beyond the fourth inning and earned his first win of the season.

“He had a huge smile on his face,” Canham said of his Friday night starter. “And that was what he wanted. He goes, ‘I’m sick of three-, four-inning (outings). I want to go out there and go deeper into it.‘

“Very encouraging. He just had a lot of confidence.”

Next up: The Beavers and Toreros continue their three-game series Saturday at 1:35 p.m. at Goss Stadium.

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— Joe Freeman | jfreeman@oregonian.com | 503-294-5183 | @BlazerFreeman | @freemanjoe.bsky.social | Subscribe to The Oregonian/OregonLive newsletters and podcasts for the latest news and top stories.





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