• SB: #5 Gators top #6 FSU with sixth inning offensive explosion

    FLORIDA 5, FLORIDA STATE 1

    RUNS HITS ERRORS
    FSU 1 2 0
    GATORS 5 8 1

    Gainesville, FL– The #5 Florida Gators defeated #6 Florida State 5-1 thanks to a strong outing by starting pitcher, Kelly Barnhill and a sixth inning offensive explosion.

    Barnhill led the Gators in picking up her 22nd win of the season, striking out ten and allowing only two walks in the complete game effort.

    In the second inning, Barnhill escaped a self inflicted jam unscathed. After allowing a leadoff single to Jessie Warren, Barnhill fielded a sacrifice bunt and air mailed the throw to first putting runners on second and third with no out. Barnhill retired the next three in order, including two via strikeouts.

    Florida finally saw the offense explode in the sixth inning. FSU starter Meghan King didn’t fair so well in her third trip through the Florida lineup. Amanda Lorenz started the inning singling up the middle for her second hit of the game. Nicole DeWitt followed with a double to center to score Lorenz for the lead. Sophia Reynoso later doubled down the third base line that cleared the loaded bases and extend Florida’s lead to 5-0. Reynoso said after the game, she didn’t know if it was fair, but was hoping it would stay fair, “it was enough to get some runs on the board.”

    Warren connected with Barnhill’s first pitch of the seventh sending it into the camera well in center field. Barnhill bounced back though, striking out the final three Seminoles to complete the contest.

    “Really good pitcher on their side, really good pitcher on our side, both of them really good in different ways, especially early in the game,” Florida head coach Tim Walton stated after the game.

    The Gators improve to 42-7 while Florida State falls to 39-9 overall. Florida will complete the regular season with a home series against LSU beginning Friday.

    W: Barnhill (22-1)

    L: King (14-6)

  • BSB: Freshman Jack Leftwich to join Gators weekend rotation

    The Florida Gators are tweaking their weekend rotation. Head coach Kevin O’Sullivan announced the decision after Florida’s 6-4 home loss to Mercer Tuesday night.

    Sophomore Tyler Dyson has been assigned to the bullpen after struggling in his last several starts. Dyson is 5-3 with a 3.83 ERA through ten starts and pitched a scorless inning of relief on Tuesday.

    Dyson hasn’t worked more than six innings since March 10 due to a high pitch count and numerous walks. In his last three starts Dyson has pitched 9.2 innings allowing 11 hits, 10 runs while walking 12 and striking out 10.

    The Gators will turn to freshman righty Jack Leftwich, at least for the time being, in the weekend rotation.

    Leftwich, an Orlando native, has appeared in 15 games this season, starting four. He has compiled a 3-1 record and a 3.40 ERA in 39.2 innings.

    Leftwich was drafted by the Detroit Tigers in the 39th round of the 2017 MLB Draft and limited #5 Florida State to one hit in a five inning start on March 27.

    Florida is looking to rebound from their second straight midweek loss with a three game home series against Auburn. The series starts Thursday and Leftwich is expected to start on Saturday.

  • Adam Schefter: Antonio Callaway tested positive for marijuana at combine

    Former Florida Gators wide receiver Antonio Callaway just can’t seem to get out of his own way.

    After spending a year away from football due to his involvement in a credit card fraud case, Callaway declared for the NFL Draft. Callaway was actually a star at the combine and preached his maturity after several issues while at Florida.

    According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter:

    Callaway’s new agent Malki Kawa stated that the positive test was for a diluted sample.

    If the failed test proves true, many teams will likely pass on the skilled wideout. Prior to last season, Callaway was projected as a mid-first round pick. Now it seems more likely that Callaway won’t hear his name called at all.

    Callaway has had multiple instances of marijuana use, a sexual assualt case (which he was cleared from), and the credit card fraud case during his three year tenure in Gainesville.

    The NFL Draft begins Thursday and runs through Saturday. Stay with The Gator Chomp Blog for all the latest.

    Update Per Ian Rapoport:

    Rapoport provided an update after speaking with Callaway on Wednesday:

  • LAX: Trombetta, Kavanagh earn Big East weekly honors

    On Tuesday, the Big East Conference announced their weekly honors for play last week. As Florida cruised through a 2-0 week, sophomore Cara Trombetta and freshman Shannon Kavanagh‘s performance merited weekly honors.

    Trobetta was named the Big East Defensive Player of the Week while Kavanagh takes home the Freshman of the Week award.

    Per the Big East press release regarding Trombetta:

    BIG EAST Defensive Player Of The Week
    Cara Trombetta, Florida, So., D
    Trombetta anchored the Gators’ defense in back-to-back wins last week, totaling four ground balls and five caused turnovers. Four of Trombetta’s caused turnovers came at RV Denver on Saturday as No. 6/9 Florida scored a win which clinched at least a share of its fourth consecutive BIG EAST regular-season title and the No. 1 seed in the BIG EAST Championship. The Gators held Wednesday’s opponent Cincinnati to just four goals, as the sophomore defender scooped up three ground balls and added a CT. The Florida defense limited its opponents to a 29-38 clip in clear attempts compared to UF’s 34-38 mark, while the Gators nearly doubled up their opponents on the week in shots (80-47) and shots on goal (63-33).

    Per the Big East press release regarding Kavanagh:

    BIG EAST Freshman Of The Week
    Shannon Kavanagh, Florida, Fr., M
    Kavanagh snags her second consecutive rookie honor after stuffing the stat sheet in another 2-0 week for the Gators. The freshman midfielder totaled nine points off five goals and four assists to go along with 23 draw controls, six ground balls and a caused turnover. She posted double-digit draws in both games, including 11 in Saturday’s win at -/RV Denver. Against the Pioneers, Kavanagh totaled two goals and three assists in the winning effort as No. 6/9 Florida clinched at least a share of its fourth consecutive BIG EAST regular-season title and the No. 1 seed in the upcoming BIG EAST Championship.

    Florida is 13-3 overall and has clinched the Big East regular season title with an undefeated 8-0 conference record. The Gators have won seven straight and many of the contests haven’t been close.

    Florida will face Butler in the regular season finale. Butler is 1-15 overall and 0-8 in Big East play. Florida will attempt to win their 31st straight Big East game. The game is set for Saturday at noon.

  • SB: Amanda Lorenz named SEC Player of the Week

    Amanda Lorenz was named the Southeastern Conference’s Player of the Week for her performance in Florida’s four wins last week. The big week by Lorenz was just what she needed after struggling for much of the month. This is the second such honor for Lorenz this season.

    Lorenz finished the week with a .636 average (7-11) and hit a pair of home runs against #19 Mississippi State in the weekend series.

    The junior from Moorpark, CA also hit a double, a triple, walked three times and scored seven runs in leading the Gators to a 4-0 record.

    Lorenz is leading the team with a .409 average on the season and 44 RBI buy had been in a slump until busting out Wednesday against Florida A&M.

    The talented outfielder had struggled since the beginning of April to the tune of a .188 average over eight games.

    Lorenz and the Gators will take on rival Florida State on Wednesday in Gainesville where she will also be celebrating her 21st birthday.

  • SB: Aleshia Ocasio and Nicole DeWitt selected in 2018 NPF Draft

    The 2018 National Pro Fastpitch Draft was held Monday night in Nashville.

    A pair of Florida seniors were drafted. Aleshia Ocasio was selected number ten overall by the Chicago Bandits while Nicole DeWitt was taken by the USSSA Pride with the seventeenth overall choice.

    Ocasio entered the 2018 season with a 48-7 record in the circle to go along with a 1.39 ERA in 351.2 innings pitched. Ocasio had recorded 357 strikeouts. In 2017, Ocasio was utilized in the field, and at the plate much more. With 185 plate appearances, Ocasio hit .308 with 3 home runs and 32 RBI.

    This season, the St. Cloud (FL) native is 16-5 in the circle with a 1.15 ERA while hitting .252 in 111 at-bats playing all over the field.

    DeWitt entered this season with a .329 average in 191 games to go along with 15 homers and 110 RBI.

    DeWitt, a native of Garden Grove, CA, has been solid in 2018, hitting .377 while hitting a team high ten homers and knocking in 43 RBI. DeWitt has played phenomenal defense, recording only nine career errors while manning the outfield, second base, and third base in her time at UF.

    Ocasio and DeWitt are the fourteenth and fifteenth Gators selected in the NPF Draft.

    The Bandits and Pride met in the 2017 NPF semifinals with the Pride advancing 2-0. Chicago is now coached by former Gators assistant coach Sharonda McDonald.

    The seniors will look to clinch another berth to the WCWS in Oklahoma City. In 2015 both Ocasio and DeWitt contributed as freshman to a team that won the second of back-to-back national titles. It would make a perfect ending to finish with championships at the bookends of their collegiate careers.

    *Information for this article was provided by the official UF softball press release.

    (Photos by: Tim Curry / UAA)

  • BSB: Wil Dalton named SEC Player of the Week

    Florida outfielder Wil Dalton was named the SEC Player of the week, the conference announced on Monday.

    Dalton played in all four games this week and earned the weekly honor despite only hitting .263 (5-19) for the week. What Dalton did do was make those hits count.

    The sophomore junior college transfer collected three home runs and ten RBIs on the week.

    Dalton, a Spring Hill, TN native is leading the SEC with 15 home runs and 45 RBI and maintains a .287 overall average and a .647 slugging percentage.

    Florida currently sits atop most of the national polls with a 34-8 record and a 14-4 conference record has them in the driver’s seat in the SEC East race.

    The Gators will begin a four game homestand with Mercer in midweek play on Tuesday before taking on Auburn in conference play with a three game set that will begin on Thursday.

    *Information for this article was provided by the official UF baseball press release.

  • SB: #5 Gators sweep #19 Mississippi State, will face FSU Wednesday

    The #5 Florida softball team traveled to Starkville to face #19 Mississippi State and swiftly swept the series from the Bulldogs. Florida earned an 8-3 victory on Friday, but were forced to play a double-header on Saturday due to a poor forecast for Saturday. Florida is now two games ahead of Georgia with three conference games to play.

    FRIDAY:

    FLORIDA 8, MISSISSIPPI ST 3

    RUNS HITS ERRORS
    GATORS 8 10 1
    MISS ST 3 2 2

    Starkville, MS– Florida defeated the Bulldogs 8-3 in the series opener on Friday behind a 4-4 effort from Amanda Lorenz at plate and a complete game, two hitter from Kelly Barnhill in the circle.

    Barnhill earned her 20th win in the game while striking out 10 despite allowing three earned runs.

    Lorenz set the tone from the beginning crushing a solo homer in the top of the first to put Florida ahead. Just three hitters later, Aleshia Ocasio belter her third homer of the season, a two-run shot, that put the Gators ahead 3-0.

    After a second inning homer by MSU’s Kat Moore in the second inning, Florida rebounded by putting a pair of runs on the scoreboard in the top of the third. Jordan Matthews hit an RBI single to right field that scored Nicole DeWitt.

    The Gators added a run in the fourth on a DeWitt sacrifice fly to center that scored Alex Voss and a pair in the sixth. Lorenz hit an RBI triple and then scored on another DeWit sac fly.

    Voss, Florida’s nine-hole hitter, did a good job with a pair of hits in her three at-bats to turn the lineup over to the top of the order.

    W: Barnhill (20-1)

    L: Candace Denis (4-3)

    SATURDAY (GAME ONE):

    FLORIDA 6, MISSISSIPPI ST 2

    RUNS HITS ERRORS
    GATORS 6 8 2
    MISS ST 2 8 1

    Starkville, MS– Florida clinched a series victory with a 6-2 win behind a fourth inning grand slam from Amanda Lorenz.

    Florida grabbed a lead in the second inning when Janell Wheaton hit her third homer of the year to left center.

    Mississippi State bounced back in the third with an RBI groundout by Sarai Niu to tie the score.

    Then came Lorenz’s blast. Jordan Matthews led off the fourth by reaching on an error, Alex Voss then singled, which was followed by a single by Hannah Adams that loaded the bases for Lorenz. For Lorenz, it was her seventh homer of the year and second in the series.

    Florida tacked on another run in the sixth when Lorenz scored on Nicole DeWitt’s double.

    The win put Florida up to forty,becoming just the second team in the NCAA to reach the mark.

    W: Ocasio (16-5)

    L: Cassady Knudsen (13-5)

    SATURDAY (GAME TWO):

    FLORIDA 3, MISSISSIPPI ST 0

    RUNS HITS ERRORS
    GATORS 3 2 1
    MISS ST 0 3 3

    Starkville, FL– The series finale was a classic pitchers duel. Kelly Barnhill and Holly Ward were nearly equally dominant in the circle for their team.

    The Florida offense managed just two hits, but were able to manufacture a trio of runs.

    The Gators took a 1-0 lead in the third when Sophia Reynoso walked, but managed to get to third base due to a pair of groundouts and finally scored when MSU catcher Montana Davidson threw the ball into left field on a pick off attempt.

    Florida finally picked up their first hit of the game in the seventh. Jaimie Hoover doubled to right which scored Aleshia Ocasio who reached on an error immediately prior to Hoover’s at-bat. Janell Wheaton hit a sac fly to score Hoover and make it a 3-0 advantage and provide some run support for Barnhill.

    Barnhill finished with a complete game, striking out five and walking one while only allowing three hits in earning her 21st victory of the season.

    W: Barnhill (21-1)

    L: Holly Ward (12-6)

    _______________

    Florida is now 41-7 overall and 15-3 in conference play with just one series left in the regular season. The Gators stand two games ahead of Georgia entering the final weekend. Florida will face rival Florida State on Wednesday in Gainesville with he first pitch set for 6:00 PM.

  • LAX: Gators earn Big East title with 18-13 win at Denver

    FINAL: FLORIDA 18, DENVER 13

    1st 2nd OT FINAL
    GATORS 7 11 X 18
    DENVER 7 6 X 13

    Denver, CO – On Saturday, the Gators earned their eighth straight conference title by defeating the Denver Pioneers 18-13 in the Rocky Mountain altitude. For Florida, this is the fourth consecutive Big East Championship, having also won four straight American Lacrosse Conference titles before realigning into the Big East.

    The Gators began the game with six unanswered goals by five different players. Sydney Pirreca opened the scoring with a goal within the first minute of play.

    The Pioneers wouldn’t go away quietly, however. Denver would score the next seven goals before Allie Pavinelli scored her sixteenth goal of the season to notch the game at 7 before halftime.

    Florida opened the second half with a three score run to take a 10-7 advantage less than three minutes into the period. Florida’s defense tightened up in the second half and the Gators would finish the game on an 8-3 run.

    Lindsey Ronbeck scored a team high five goals while Pirreca added four more (and an assist). Caroline Benitez, Shayna Pirreca, Grace Haus, Shannon Kavanagh each added two goals with Pavinelli added a tally as well. Shayna Pirreca and Kavanagh each assisted on three goals.

    The Gators earned an incredible 21 draw controls with Kavanagh leading the way with 11. Sabrina Cristodero added eight draw controls in the circle.

    GK Haley Hicklen played the entire contest for the first time in a while as the Gators have routed their last several opponents. She made seven saves and allowed 13 goals in the game.

    Florida has now won thirty straight Big East games with one more regular season matchup with Butler on Saturday.

    Team Stats:

    GATORS DENVER
    SHOTS 32 28
    SOG 28 20
    SAVES 7 10
    DRAW CONTROLS 21 11
    TURNOVERS 22 15

    What’s Next:

    Florida finishes the regular season on Saturday with a noon contest against Butler. Butler is currently 1-15 on the season and 0-8 in conference play. This will be Florida’s final regular season conference game as a member of the Big East. The Gators will play in the American Athletic Conference beginning next season.

    BIG EAST STANDINGS (Through April 21)

    SCHOOL Big East W L Overall W L
    Florida 8 0 13 3
    Georgetown 7 1 11 4
    Denver 5 3 10 5
    Marquette 5 3 9 7
    Temple 4 4 9 7
    Vanderbilt 3 4 8 7
    UConn 3 4 7 8
    Villanova 3 5 8 7
    Cincinnati 1 7 7 8
    Butler 0 8 1 15
  • GYM: Previewing Florida’s chances at a fourth National Title

    This article was written by Caroline Medley from NCAAGymNews.com, you can follow Caroline on Twitter here.

    __________

    When the 2018 gymnastics season began, many expected Florida to be one of the top contenders for the national title come April. Expectations often fluctuated throughout the season as the Gators had quite a rollercoaster of a year, from breaking 198 and beating reigning champion Oklahoma, to Kennedy Baker’s devastating injury and losing to Missouri for the first time in program history. Finishing the regular season ranked No. 5 may not exactly be what Gator fans had envisioned for this season, but that doesn’t mean the title is out of reach. This weekend, Florida enters Chaifetz Arena with a clean slate, the same as the rest of the competitors, and has an opportunity to return to glory with a fourth national title – but it won’t be easy.

    Breaking it down chronologically, the Gators will start their road to the title in the second semifinal on bars, historically one of their stronger events. Ranked No. 3 on bars after the regular season, Florida has six bar workers that have all gone 9.9 or higher this season. The problem has been getting them to do it all at the same time. The keys to remember for the Gators here are patience and normalcy. Many of them often rush through their handstands and lose valuable tenths rather than taking their time to get the easier elements right. One mantra we’ve heard often this season from head coach Jenny Rowland is that “we don’t need to be perfect, we just need to be normal,” and this is especially true on bars. Some of the team’s top performers, including sophomore Rachel Gowey and senior Alex McMurtry, can sometimes try too hard or go too big on their releases and end up falling, when the way they perform normally is worth an excellent score with less risk. If the bars team can put all the pieces together, they’ll be off to the races.

    Beam has given Florida some trouble this season, particularly competing anywhere other than Gainesville. What they’ll want to remember in St. Louis is to take their routines one skill at a time – not think ahead or get stuck on previous mistakes, but keep moving forward and stay in the moment. The momentum starts with the lead-off performer, likely to be sophomore Amelia Hundley now that Kennedy Baker is out for the season. Staying calm and present will be the key to staying on for her, and she’ll set her teammates up for success if she hits her routine. Beam is very much a mental game, and the easiest way to stay positive and confident on beam is for everyone to stay on. That being said, if someone should fall, the team will need the next performer to hit the reset button if they want to still put up a good total. Coach Jenny Rowland has smartly structured this beam lineup with a built-in reset button in junior Alicia Boren, whose dependability this season has saved the Gators more than once. She typically performs third, in the middle of the lineup, so that the three girls after her can feel more secure about their own performances. Those final three are typically Gowey, freshman Alyssa Baumann and McMurtry, all of whom have scored perfect or near-perfect scores this season. Keep an eye out for their spectacular execution and unique skills, like Baumann’s Onodi and McMurtry’s switch side leap to Shushunova to back hip circle combination.

    Following beam, the Gators will go to a bye and see how their scores hold up through the halfway point. After bars and beam, if they’re in the top three (which they should be, provided things go according to plan), they should feel confident about their chances of advancing to Super Six. During the bye, coach Rowland has said before that they like to “stay in their bubble,” and there’s some kind of dance ritual that the team does to keep the pressure low and their spirits high. Their standings at this halfway point will be a good indicator for the outcome of the session, but most of the gymnasts will be doing their best to ignore the numbers and just do what they came to do.

    After the bye, it’s time for floor. Usually a strong suit for the Gators, floor has revealed some weakness in recent weeks, with lots of landing trouble across the board. The Gators were dealt a devastating blow at their Link to Pink meet at the end of February, when senior floor star Kennedy Baker tore her Achilles, ending her season and career just a few weeks too soon. The floor squad has done its best to cope, bringing Gowey into the lineup and working with Baumann and senior Rachel Slocum to upgrade to their more difficult E tumbling passes. But the underlying concerns are still there. Freshman Megan Skaggs had trouble at SEC Championships just a few weeks ago, crashing her last pass in the very arena they’ll be in this weekend, and McMurtry has gone between running out of juice and overcooking her closing double tuck. Granted, she doesn’t get nearly the practice in that most competitors do, due to a back injury that she and her coaches have managed for years, but that hasn’t stopped her in the past. She is the proud owner of a perfect 10.0 on the event, so she’ll want to get that landing just right to get as close to that number as possible. And Boren is basically guaranteed a huge score as long as she hits. Again, she’s been their rock steady performer all season – it’s time to show that off on the national stage.

    The Gators will close their evening on vault, their strongest event this season. Ranked No. 2 in the country, the Florida vault squad boasts three 10.0 start values, including a Yurchenko 1.5 from Boren, a handspring pike half from Slocum and a Yurchenko double full from McMurtry. The scoring potential from these three is enormous, but they’ll need to keep their landings under control in order to maximize on their dynamic vaults. The first three in the lineup have varied throughout the season, but expect to see three Yurchenko fulls from some subset of Hundley, Gowey, freshman Jazmyn Foberg, Skaggs or Baumann. The full only starts from a 9.95 and nearly everyone competes it, so the judges get lots of practice scrutinizing every minute detail of it. Most of those five have gotten good scores at home, but Nationals is a different story entirely.

    Florida will spend its final rotation again on a bye, anxiously awaiting the final results. If they can just be normal, in the words of Coach Rowland, the Gators should go through to Super Six without any issue. Once they get to Super Six, they have to do it all over again. The order of their competition at finals will be determined by how they place within their session, so it’s hard to predict exactly how their day will go. But the principles on each event are the same – the stakes just rise that much higher.

    To clinch a fourth national championship, the Gators will have to duke it out against the best of the best. But lucky for them, they’ve already competed against over half of their likely competitors in Super Six. The Gators faced off against LSU, Oklahoma and Alabama earlier in the regular season, coming up with the W against the latter two but falling just short of a victory against LSU. That was, of course, back when Baker was at full strength. Since then, Florida lost to both LSU and Alabama at SEC Championships, coming in third after counting a fall on floor. These aren’t Florida’s only competition though – UCLA and Utah both expect to challenge for the title as well. All of these teams presumed to advance to Super Six have won national championships in the past except LSU, who’s been runner-up the last two years, so it’s clear every team has what it takes to make a run for it.

    Starting in 2016, the NCAA discontinued the Sunday event finals session in favor of more live TV coverage, so instead of having a separate competition, event titles are awarded after semifinals, including the all-around. The Gators have some strong contenders for each of these crowns, starting with the all-around. Boren is Florida’s top-ranked competitor at No. 9, and without a true “weak” event (her RQS -regional qualifying score- is 9.870 or higher on every event), she could be a definite contender as long as she keeps her vault landing clean and is patient with her handstands on bars. McMurtry isn’t ranked in RQS this year, but as the reigning national all-around champion, she can’t exactly be left out of the conversation. Her inconsistencies on beam and floor will be her biggest weakness, but if she has good days, she is absolutely in the mix for the title.

    Both Boren and McMurtry could contend for vault, but let’s not forget about Slocum. Tied for No. 10 in the nation, her handspring pike half can come close to perfection on her best day. On bars, the strongest competitors for the title will be McMurtry and Gowey, whose elegant lines and dynamic Ray release often earn her high scores. McMurtry and Boren will also be beam contenders, but a better bet would be Baumann. Her vast vocabulary of difficult skills and near-perfect execution have already earned her a 9.975 as just a freshman, so she’s got the chops. And Baumann should have no trouble dealing with the high-pressure atmosphere of a competition like this: she comes from an elite background that included a trip to Worlds with Team USA and an invitation to Olympic Trials. She’s always been considered a beam queen, so don’t be surprised to see her begin her reign in college this year. And on floor, Boren and McMurtry again will come as Florida’s best foot forward, provided McMurtry can get her landings together. Boren’s routine is a real showstopper and she’s ranked No. 11, so expect to see big numbers out of her.

    All in all, Florida’s chances are good. It isn’t coming in as the heavy favorite, as Oklahoma is, or even a favorite spoiler choice, as LSU and UCLA seem to be. But if there’s one thing that’s become evident over the years, it’s that you can never count the Gators out. They’re good at peaking at the right time, they’re good at making adjustments in the moment, and they have a core of excellent, well-rounded competitors that can step up and make it happen when they’re needed. It may take a little luck, and maybe even some help from other teams’ slipups, but this Florida team can absolutely be a championship team.

    That being said, here’s the most realistic prediction of how Super Six will finish, provided the presumed teams qualify:

    1. Oklahoma
    2. UCLA
    3. LSU
    4. Florida
    5. Utah
    6. Alabama

    *Caroline Medley is an English Lit grad from Elon University, living and breathing gymnastics in Orlando, Fla. When she isn’t coaching her after-school gymnastics program or writing, she’s binging on superhero TV with her fiance Stephen and their two tortie cats, Ailith and Dara. She is the Managing Editor for the SEC and MRGC at NCAA Gym News and will be providing live coverage from St. Louis this weekend at ncaagymnews.com.