31 May

good news and …

Good day for Mississippi State and Pearl River Community College. While rumors percolate about who’ll be coaching them in 2026, the ’25 MSU team upended Northeastern 11-2 Friday in the opener of the Tallahassee Regional. Joe Powell and Noah Sullivan hit home runs and Ben Davis and Ryan McPherson combined on a five-hitter as the Bulldogs set up a winners bracket meeting today with Florida State, the top seed in the regional. Pearl River got a brilliant two-hitter from K.K. Clark — an MSU transfer — and beat East Central CC 10-0 in five innings to advance to the championship game of the NJCAA Division II World Series. Second-seeded PRCC, which won the title in 2022, faces No. 1 Pasco-Hernando State (Fla.) today in Enid, Okla., for the crown. ECCC ends its season at 46-16. … Bad day for Ole Miss and Southern Miss. Pitching let both of the regional hosts down. The Rebels were shocked by Murray State 9-6 in Oxford, while the Golden Eagles got pummeled 11-4 by Columbia in Hattiesburg. Ole Miss gets 3-seed Western Kentucky today. Former Hinds CC star Thomas Marsala is on the Hilltoppers’ roster. USM plays an elimination game against 2-seed Alabama, upset by Miami on Friday. There are several familiar names on the Crimson Tide roster: Bryce Fowler, who played at USM two years ago before transferring to Pearl River CC; Will Hodo, a former Wayne Academy star; Beau Bryans, a Madison Central and Jones College alum; and Jack Ketchum, a freshman out of Heritage Academy. P.S. Jake Mangum, out since April 24, returned to Tampa Bay’s roster on Friday. The rookie out of MSU, batting .338 when he was hurt, went 0-for-3 in a 2-1 loss to Houston. (Fun fact: Yainer Diaz, who hit the walk-off homer for the Astros, is the older brother of the Mississippi Mud Monsters’ Victor Diaz. Both are catchers.) … Rick Collier, who won more than 700 games in 23 years at Itawamba Community College, has retired. A three-time coach of the year in the state, his teams were a regular in the NJCAA national rankings and made the postseason 18 times. Under Delta State alum Collier, the program had more than 20 players drafted by MLB clubs, among them Tim Dillard and Desmond Jennings. … Happy trails, also, to Bill Blackwell, who has retired as executive director of the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame and Museum, where he had served since 2016. Blackwell, who played baseball at Southern Illinois, was a longtime general manager of the Double-A Jackson Mets and Generals at Smith-Wills Stadium. … Today is opening day for the Cotton States League, the New Albany-based college summer loop that’s been around since 2009. The league will field four teams, stocked mostly with small college and juco players.

30 May

names to know

John Lewis and Andrew Nielsen: Lewis, from Columbus, drove in the tie-breaking run in the 11th inning and Nielsen, from Lucedale, got the last 11 outs without yielding a run as East Central Community College rallied past Pearl River CC 6-5 Thursday in the semifinal round of the NJCAA Division II World Series. The teams play again tonight — their eighth clash of 2025 — for a berth in the finals in Enid, Okla. Lewis’ knock in the top of the 11th scored Pablo Roque, who had led off with a double. Nielsen, 4-0 with a 2.62 ERA in 18 appearances this season, posted saves in the Warriors’ first two games in Enid.
Riley Maddox, Matthew Adams and Ben Davis: In today’s NCAA Tournament openers, Maddox gets the start for Ole Miss, Adams for Southern Miss and Davis for Mississippi State. Maddox, out of Jackson Prep, is 6-5 with a 5.26 ERA for UM, which plays Murray State in the Oxford Regional. Adams is 6-2 with a 3.93 headed into the Hattiesburg Regional game vs. Columbia. Davis, a Booneville product by way of Itawamba Community College, is 3-2 with a 3.96 in 22 games, just three starts, the last in March. He faces Northeastern in the Tallahassee Regional. Each of the state’s Big 3 is holding its ace for the second round.
Austin Riley: The ex-DeSoto Central star delivered in a time of major need for Atlanta, going 2-for-3 with a homer, two walks, three runs and four RBIs in a 9-3 win in Game 2 of a twinbill Thursday at Philadelphia. The Braves had lost the first game — Riley was 2-for-5 — and three in a row overall to fall to 25-29. Riley’s homer — his ninth — was his first in 22 games and his 20th career bomb vs. the rival Phillies. The third baseman is batting .280 with 32 RBIs.

29 May

just stuff

Brandon Woodruff, the ex-Mississippi State star, reportedly is on schedule to rejoin the Milwaukee pitching staff on the Brewers’ next homestand, which starts June 6. Making his eighth rehab appearance as he comes back from shoulder surgery, Woodruff went seven innings for High-Class A Wisconsin on Wednesday and yielded a lone unearned run. “It went pretty good,” Woodruff told reporters. He has a 1.94 ERA over 36 2/3 innings split between High-A and Triple-A. A two-time All-Star, Woodruff missed all of the 2024 season after the surgery. … Jake Mangum is batting .389 in 18 at-bats on his rehab assignment for Tampa Bay; the former MSU standout, on the injured list since April 24, is 6-for-15 at Triple-A Durham. … Former East Central Community College star Tim Anderson and Southern Miss alum Chuckie Robinson have been designated for assignment by the Los Angeles Angels. Former All-Star Anderson, a curious off-season addition, was batting .205 with no homers and one steal in 83 at-bats. Robinson, on the 40-man roster but playing at Triple-A Salt Lake all season, was batting .272 with a homer and 18 RBIs in 28 games. … Biloxi Shuckers alum Orlando Arcia, released by the Atlanta Braves, signed with Colorado and went 2-for-3 as the DH in Wednesday’s game, a loss to the Chicago Cubs. … Let’s do it again: Pablo Roque went 3-for-4 with six RBIs to lead East Central CC to a 13-4 win Wednesday against Southeastern Iowa, setting up another game against Pearl River CC. The MACCC rivals will meet tonight at Enid, Okla., for the seventh time this season and second time in the NJCAA Division II World Series. ECCC will have to beat second-seeded PRCC, unbeaten in Enid, twice to reach the World Series finals. … A couple of Mississippians have helped fuel NAIA No. 1 LSU-Shreveport’s run to a record 57-0. That’s 57-0. Hinds CC alum Vantrel Reed is hitting .397 with five homers and 61 RBIs and Mississippi Gulf Coast CC product D.J. Walker is batting .387 for the Pilots, who beat Southeastern (Fla.) 10-0 Wednesday in the NAIA World Series in Lewiston, Idaho. LSU-S plays Hope International (Calif.) today for a berth in the finals. A third Mississippian, Pearl River CC product Byrion Robinson, is also on the LSU-S roster but has not pitched this season. … There will be three Golden Spikes Award semifinalists on display in the Hattiesburg Regional: Southern Miss’ J.B. Middleton, Alabama’s Justin Lebron and Miami’s Daniel Cuvet. There will be two in the Oxford Regional, both playing for Georgia Tech: Drew Burress and Kyle Lodise. The NCAA Division I Tournament starts Friday at all 16 regionals.

28 May

a significant debut

On this date in 1976, Bobby Myrick made his big league debut for the New York Mets at Shea Stadium. The Hattiesburg native and Blair High grad retired the only batter he faced — St. Louis’ Hector Cruz — for the final out of the fifth inning. Myrick was the 13,755th player to play in MLB, but his debut was an historic one: The left-hander, a member of the original Jackson Mets in 1975, became the first JaxMets player to advance from the Double-A team to the majors. A flood of players would follow that trail, several others off the ’75 team. Drafted in the 20th round out of Mississippi State in 1974, Myrick’s rise was rapid. He played parts of three seasons (’76-78) with the Mets, going 3-6 with two saves and a 3.48 ERA in 82 games. He pitched in the minors until 1981. He died in 2012. … The Mets left Jackson and Smith-Wills Stadium after the 1990 season and were followed by the Generals, a Houston affiliate. Tony Eusebio was the first Gens player to get a call-up in 1991. The first Mississippi Braves player to go up was Brian McCann in 2005, during the Atlanta Double-A affiliate’s first season at Trustmark Park in Pearl.

28 May

wrap it up

Putting a bow on the state’s high school season — which ended with the MHSAA championships in Pearl last week — MaxPreps ranks Magnolia Heights, the MAIS Class 5A champion, as Mississippi’s No. 1 team. The Senatobia-based Chiefs, who had some big wins over out-of-state schools, are No. 22 in MaxPreps’ latest national poll. Madison Central, which beat Brandon in three games for the MHSAA Class 7A championship, is ranked No. 2 in the state, followed by Purvis, West Lauderdale, East Union, Saltillo, Lafayette, Oak Grove, Brandon and Hartfield Academy. West Lauderdale beat Purvis in the MHSAA 4A title series, but Purvis has what many consider the state’s best player: shortstop JoJo Parker. East Union, featuring highly touted pitcher Landon Harmon, was the MHSAA 2A champ. Saltillo won in 6A, Lafayette in 5A. (Seminary won the 3A title and West Union 1A.) Oak Grove lost in the 7A South finals to Brandon, while Hartfield Academy was MAIS 6A runner-up to Presbyterian Christian. … Many of the state’s best players are gathering in Hattiesburg this week for the Crossroads Diamond Club D.M. Howie All-Star Games. The 6A/7A game was slated for Tuesday, the 4A/5A game for tonight and the 1A/2A/3A game for Thursday, all at William Carey University’s Wheeler Field. This is the 50th edition of the event. … The state’s Gatorade player of the year will be announced (by Gatorade’s select committee) next month, and it’ll be quite interesting to see who follows Konnor Griffin as the winner of this prestigious award. If pro prospect status holds any sway, Purvis’ Parker (ranked 14th in MLB Pipeline’s latest draft chart), East Union’s Harmon (No. 47) and Lewisburg’s Talon Haley (No. 84) would be considered top candidates. JoJo Parker’s brother Jacob — they shared the state’s 4A Mr. Baseball title — Oak Grove’s Maddox Miller, Sumrall’s Leo Odom, Petal’s Tanner Beliveau, Hartfield’s J.P. Abt and Magnolia Heights’ Cole Prosek are others worthy of mention. The Gatorade committee considers both on-field and off-field accomplishments. The last seven winners were Jackson Prep’s Griffin (also the national player of the year), Cooper Pratt, Dakota Jordan, Braden Montgomery, Blaze Jordan, Colt Keith and J.T. Ginn. All are currently in pro ball, with Keith and Ginn on MLB rosters. P.S. Update from Enid: Pearl River Community College rallied from an early deficit to beat East Central CC 7-6 on a walk-off double in the ninth inning by Topher Jones. Second-seeded Pearl River, 2-0 in the NJCAA Division II College World Series, advances to the bracket final. Six-seed East Central, 2-1 in Enid, plays Southeastern Iowa tonight in an elimination game, with the winner taking on PRCC Thursday for a berth in the World Series finals. No. 1 seed Pasco-Hernando State (Fla.) is 2-0 in the other bracket.

27 May

eye on enid

After a day of rest, Pearl River Community College and East Central CC will get back on the field for the sixth installment of their compelling 2025 rivalry. They meet tonight in a winners bracket game at Enid, Okla., in the NJCAA Division II World Series. Both have been ranked No. 1 at one point this year. When last they tangled, PRCC won 10-0 in the deciding Game 3 of the Region 23 title series, played at Poplarville earlier this month. The Wildcats outscored the Warriors 36-7 in that series, something that no doubt gnaws at the ECCC players. The teams split their MACCC regular season doubleheader, played in March in Decatur. Pearl River, seeded second in the World Series, is 51-8, coming off an 11-3 win against Kellogg (Mich.) on Sunday. Jackson Hood keyed a pivotal five-run fifth inning with a home run, and K.K. Clark posted his 11th win. Jacob Johnson, 12-game winner who beat ECCC in the Region 23 clincher, should be available tonight. East Central, 45-14 and the 6-seed, has won two games in Enid, including a wonky 10-9 victory vs. South Mountain (Ariz.) on Sunday. The Warriors squandered a 6-0 lead but got a big bomb from Brady McAbee, a clutch go-ahead knock in the ninth from Eli Smith and a 1-2-3 final inning from closer Andrew Nielsen to emerge a winner. It was their second one-run win in Enid. ECCC has used seven pitchers, with Nielsen closing in both contests. The winner of tonight’s game will be in the driver’s seat to make the WS finals.

27 May

short hops

Worth noting from pro ball: Desperate for healthy arms, the Los Angeles Dodgers signed ex-Mississippi State standout — and Kansas City Royals cast-off — Chris Stratton and had him in their bullpen for Monday’s game against Cleveland; he didn’t pitch in a 7-2 L.A. win. MLB vet Stratton had a 7.94 ERA for the Royals before his release. (One wonders if ex-Bulldogs star Hunter Renfroe, also cut loose by K.C., might also land a new team. The veteran outfielder was hitting .182 with no homers.) … Drew Pomeranz, former Ole Miss star, made his 13th straight scoreless appearance Monday for the Chicago Cubs in their win against Colorado. Back in The Show for the first time since 2021, the big lefty is 2-0 with a 0.00 ERA over 12 2/3 innings for the first-place club. … MSU product Adam Frazier has started to click at the plate for Pittsburgh, batting .348 over his last 15 games. He is at .260 with 14 RBIs and 13 runs for a disappointing team. … Blaine Crim, the former Mississippi College slugger, is getting another shot with Texas. He was 0-for-11 during his first call-up. … The normally slick-fielding Austin Riley, the DeSoto Central High alum, has been charged with five errors in his last 15 games for Atlanta. Braves manager Brian Snitker said third baseman Riley had gotten bad hops on some of those “errors.” … Down in Mexico, ex-Ole Miss ace and erstwhile big leaguer Chris Ellis, 32, has nine saves and a 3.07 ERA in 15 games for Monterrey. … Former Rebels star Houston Roth, a 2019 draftee by Baltimore, has reached Triple-A and worked 2 2/3 scoreless innings in his Norfolk debut. The right-hander from Oxford has a 1.32 ERA in nine games overall this season. … MSU product Colton Ledbetter, now in the Tampa Bay chain, ranks fifth in the Double-A Southern League in hitting (.284) and third in stolen bases (17). He also has three homers and 19 RBIs for Montgomery. … Ex-DeSoto Central standout Blaze Jordan is having a red-hot May at Double-A Portland in the Boston system. Jordan, only 22 in his fifth pro season, is batting .379 (.481 OBP) with five homers and 17 RBIs this month. He’s up to .306 for the year with 30 RBIs. … Ole Miss product Brandon Johnson leads the Texas League with seven saves and as a 0.79 ERA at Northwest Arkansas, the Royals’ Double-A affiliate. … Jurrangelo Cijntje, first-rounder out of MSU last summer, has won four straight starts with a 2.05 ERA at High-A Everett in the Seattle system. The switch-pitcher, who is throwing mostly righty, has a 4.12 ERA in 11 appearances overall. … Khal Stephen, drafted in Round 2 out of MSU last year by Toronto, went 3-0 with a 2.06 ERA at Low-A Dunedin and yielded one run in three innings in his High-A debut for Vancouver in Toronto’s organization. … And still out there raking in A-ball are former state prep stars and 2024 first-round picks Braden Montgomery (Madison Central) and Konnor Griffin (Jackson Prep). Montgomery, now in High-A in the White Sox’s system, is batting .299 with seven homers and 37 RBIs. Griffin, in Low-A with Pittsburgh, is at .307 with eight homers, 27 RBIs and 18 steals.

26 May

set a course for omaha

The College World Series is the ultimate destination, and the path has been laid out for Ole Miss, Southern Miss and Mississippi State, each of which made the NCAA Tournament field of 64. Each must clear considerable hurdles in the bracket to get to Omaha. Ole Miss, hosting a regional as the No. 10 national seed, will welcome Georgia Tech, Western Kentucky and Murray State to Oxford next weekend. Tech — seeded second in the regional — is 40-17, won the ACC regular season title and was ranked 19th in the final Baseball America poll. Shortstop Kyle Lodise is an MLB draft prospect. Western Kentucky, the 3-seed, is 46-12 and comes in hot, having won the C-USA Tournament title. Should the Rebels win their regional, they’d meet the champion of the Athens Regional, where Georgia — ranked No. 3 by Baseball America — is the favorite to advance. USM, hosting a regional as the 16th national seed, welcomes Alabama, Miami and Columbia to Hattiesburg. Columbia, USM’s first-round foe, won both the regular season and tournament titles in the Ivy League. Alabama, out of the vaunted SEC, is the 2-seed in Hattiesburg and is ranked No. 18 by Baseball America; the Crimson Tide beat USM in early April. Bama’s Riley Quick, a 6-foot-6, 255-pound right-hander, is a prime pro prospect. Worth noting: Miami, the regional 3-seed, claims four national titles — the last in 2001 — and 25 — yes, 25 — CWS appearances. The Hattiesburg Regional is paired with the Nashville Regional, where Vanderbilt, the overall No. 1 seed and the SEC Tournament champ, is lurking as the heavy favorite to make the Super Regional round. Mississippi State, 34-21 in a tumultuous year, heads to the Tallahassee Regional as a 3-seed. First up for the Bulldogs is Northeastern (48-9), the CAA regular season and tournament champion and Baseball America’s No. 24. Reports say the Huskies can really pitch. Regional host Florida State, the No. 9 overall seed, is 38-14 and boasts a host of MLB draft prospects, most notably shortstop Alex Lodise. These are heady times for Magnolia State schools. MSU won the national title in 2021 and Ole Miss in 2022. USM has been in a regional nine of the past 10 seasons (there was no postseason in 2020) but only once has reached Omaha (2009). The path there in 2025 certainly ain’t easy for any of the three — but, as we know, unexpected stuff often happens in baseball.

25 May

games of throne

It’s championship Sunday, and look who’s here. Though nothing can be taken for granted in tournament play, it’s no surprise, really, that Southern Miss has reached the Sun Belt Conference title game. The Golden Eagles, two-time defending champs, came in as the No. 2 seed with a 15-game win streak. They’ll meet Coastal Carolina, the top seed, today (1 p.m.) in Montgomery, Ala. In Hoover, Ala., Ole Miss is something of an interloper in the SEC championship match. The Rebels came in as the seventh seed (16-14 in the league) and were a little wobbly down the stretch of the regular season, going 14-11 after a hot start that had lifted them into the national top 10. They’ll play 4-seed Vanderbilt today (noon). Ole Miss (40-18), the 2022 national champ, last won the SEC tourney in 2018, its third crown. To get to this final, the Rebels beat Florida, Arkansas and No. 1-ranked LSU, 2-0 on Saturday. The Rebels won two of three from Vanderbilt in Oxford this season. Vandy (41-16) won the SEC Tournament in 2023, its fourth league title. The Commodores, typically loaded with MLB-caliber arms, have won two national titles. A pick to click for UM: Will Furniss. He hit a big homer against LSU, his 10th of the year, and is batting .288 with 40 RBIs. For Vandy, it’s freshman Brodie Johnston, who has 12 homers, 51 RBIs, 14 doubles and a .502 slugging average. In the Sun Belt finale, USM (44-13, 18 straight wins) gets a Coastal Carolina club that is also sizzling hot. The Chanticleers are 47-11 with 17 straight wins. The teams did not meet in the SBC regular season; USM leads the all-time series 5-2. A key player for USM figures to be Jake Cook, former Madison Central High star who is hitting .357 with 54 runs and 30 RBIs. For Coastal, which won the national title in 2016, the pick to click is Sebastian Alexander, a .302 hitter with nine homers and 25 steals. P.S. Belhaven ran into a buzzsaw in its NCAA Division III super regional. The Blazers, finishing 34-15, were blasted two straight, 17-3 Friday and 14-1 Saturday, at No. 2-ranked Denison (Ohio). … East Central Community College, behind the pitching of Chris Bilingsley and the power of Jayden Adcox, won its NJCAA Division II World Series opener 6-5 Saturday against Catawba Valley. Pearl River CC, which had a first-round bye in Enid, Okla., plays its opener today against Kellogg (Mich.).

21 May

collecting hardware

Awards season was very rewarding for the Magnolia State’s NCAA Division I programs. Southern Miss’ Nick Monistere won the Sun Belt Conference Player of the Year Award; Golden Eagles teammate Carson Paetow won the league’s leadership award; Jackson State’s Eric Elliott is the SWAC’s pitcher of the year; and Mississippi State’s Ace Reese was named the SEC’s newcomer of the year. USM’s J.B. Middleton – who won the Ferriss Trophy as the state’s top player – and Colby Allen were first-team All-SBC picks along with Monistere. Reese, a transfer from Houston, was also first-team All-SEC. Ole Miss had two players – Luke Hill and Mason Morris – named to the All-SEC second team, and JSU had two – Jordan McCladdie and Wilbert Perez – make second-team All-SWAC. Worth noting: In the jucos, Pearl River Community College, which won the MACCC and Region 23 titles, had six players make first-team all-conference, including player of the year Caston Thompson and pitcher of the year K.K. Clark. In the small college ranks, as previously announced, Bobby Halford at William Carey, Rodney Batts at Delta State and Jim Page at Millsaps won conference coach of the year honors. Carey’s Josh Alexander was the SSAC player of the year; DSU’s Drake Fontenot won GSC pitcher of the year honors; and Millsaps’ Bradley Pelle (player) and Nick Tarantino (pitcher) swept the SAA’s top awards.