• BSB: Evans, Gators Power Past Seminoles, Again

    GAINESVILLE, Fla. – The #3 Florida Gators secured the season series against the Florida State Seminoles in a 5-3 win that lasted just north of two hours Tuesday evening. The Gators improved to 28-6 on the year and have won 21 of the last 25 against the Seminoles.

    Gators starter Ryan Slater threw five scoreless innings before being tagged for three runs, two of them earned, in the sixth. Slater finished the night with one strikeout and no walks allowed. Seminoles starter Ben Barrett kept the potent Gators’ offense at bay, hurling five shutout innings and allowing only one hit.

    The Gators bullpen was excellent, going nine up nine down in the final three innings. Cade Fisher earned the win in relief, throwing two perfect innings, while striking out one. Closer Brandon Neely earned his SEC leading seventh save by striking out the side in order. Doug Kirkland was tagged with the loss for the Seminoles.

    Colby Halter continued his stellar defensive season with a diving stop at third to end the fourth.

    On the offensive side of the ball, Josh Rivera opened the scoring for the Gators with a single to left that scored Michael Robertson. Halter, Robertson and Wyatt Langford each had a base hit.

    In the eighth, a botched pickoff attempt allowed Rivera to score to pull the Gators within one. Halter proceeded to work a two out walk to bring defensive replacement Ty Evans to the plate. In his first at bat of the game, Evans lined a hanging breaking ball into the left-field berm for a three run go-ahead shot. The ball left Evans’ bat at 100 mph and gave way for Neely to slam the door.

    The Gators will continue rivalry week when the struggling Georgia Bulldogs come to town for a three game set. Friday’s first pitch at Condron Family Ballpark is slated for 7 p.m.

  • BSB: Gators win eighth-straight series, look ahead to rivalry week

    If the Florida Gators are circling dates on their calendar, this past week and the week to come have been covered in red sharpie.

    Florida entered Knoxville, Tennessee, last Thursday to take on the then-11th ranked Volunteers. The Vols served as a test for UF and an opportunity for revenge. Tennessee swept the Gators in last season’s series and ended Florida’s Southeastern Conference tournament run, handing UF seven shutout innings and a 5-8 loss.

    The Gators emerged from the 2023 series victorious, taking the series 2-1. Florida is now 8-0 in weekend series. UF still has a solid SEC slate ahead of itself and will continue the rivalry action this week versus Florida State and Georgia.

    Highs and lows on Rocky Top

    The Gators came out with force on Thursday and Friday to the tune of a 11-point scoring margin across the two wins.

    Junior infielder Josh Rivera and senior catcher BT Riopelle led the offensive with back-to-back homers, but the highlight of Florida’s night was its pitching staff. Gators ace Brandon Sproat and a bullpen duo of Philip Abner and Brandon Neely combined for 18 strikeouts.

    Tennessee picked up its sole run in the second before UF’s pitching staff threw seven scoreless innings to close game one.

    Florida’s bats were hot in game two, putting up eight hits and nine RBIs on the way to a 9-3 victory.

    There were still things to improve upon from the series, however. Florida took a run-rule loss in the series finale, 14-2.

    The Gators were shut out through six innings, and Jac Caglianone struggled on the mound. The two-way phenom gave up six walks and was pulled off the rubber in the first.

    With a win Saturday Florida may have moved up in the national rankings. For now the Gators are firmly in third behind Louisiana State and Wake Forest. The Gators enter the new week 27-6 overall (9-3 SEC) and 5-0 in their opening five conference series.

    Sunshine Showdown

    Next up, Florida takes on in-state rival Florida State tonight at home in what was supposed to be the finale of the Sunshine Showdown, however a delay forced the Jacksonville leg of the series to later on this season.

    Since their last matchup with the Gators, a 5-9 loss, the Seminoles have continued to struggle on the way to a 13-18 (4-11 ACC) record. The ‘Noles have lost nine of their last 10 games since UF visited Tallahassee.

    With Ryan Slater (4-0, 3.80 ERA) on the mound and barring any mishaps in the bullpen, the Gators should be able to hold their own against their traditional rival.

    ‘Dawgs in town

    The Gators will continue the rivalry slate with a matchup against the Georgia Bulldogs.

    The ‘Dawgs are last in the SEC East with a 3-9 conference record and a 18-14 standing overall. However, the Bulldogs have won three of their last four and picked up a series win against Kentucky this weekend. Still, the Gators have an opportunity to pick up their second SEC series sweep of 2023 this weekend.

    First pitch tonight against FSU is set for 6 p.m. The game will stream on SEC Network+.

  • MBB: Gators Sign 7’1 Transfer, Micah Handlogten
    Photo by Austin McAfee | Getty Images

    Former Marshall center Micah Handlogten has announced his commitment to the Florida Gators, head coach Todd Golden announced shortly after signing the 7’1 player from North Carolina.

    Handlogten averaged 7.6 points, 9.8 rebounds, and 2.3 blocks. He also made 71.1% of his attempts from the floor while averaging more than 25 minutes per game.

    The former 3-star prospect was the Sun Belt Conference’s Freshman of the Year and will arrive in Gainesville with three years of eligibility remaining.

    Handlogten will be a major part of Golden’s roster overhaul as the team failed to make the NCAA tournament in 2022-23 with a 16-17 overall record.

    “We are thrilled that Micah has decided to join our program… We believe he is just starting to scratch the surface in terms of his upside,” commented Golden.

    Handlogten committed to Florida over Auburn and NC State, among many other suitors.

  • SB: Gators Top Auburn to Bounce Back to .500 in SEC Play
    Photo by Brian Fox | ChompTalk

    After dropping last weekend’s road series to South Carolina, No. 15 Florida bounced back with two straight home wins against No. 19 Auburn before losing the series finale Saturday.

    The Gators improve to 28-10 overall, 17-3 at home, and 6-6 in conference play — tied with No. 12 LSU and No. 16 Alabama for sixth place in the SEC.

    Game 1 Box Score (F/8)

    No. 19 Auburn: 2 / 5 / 1

    No. 15 Florida: 3 / 4 / 1

    Friday’s series opener went to extra innings before Florida second baseman Reagan Walsh singled home shortstop Skylar Wallace in the bottom of the eighth.

    Wallace also scored Florida’s second run in the third inning after she hit an opposite-field RBI triple. The redshirt junior’s seventh triple this year is tied for the nation’s lead.

    Florida right-hander Elizabeth Hightower pitched the first seven frames before southpaw Rylee Trlicek entered the circle in extras and picked up her ninth win this season.

    Game 2 Box Score

    No. 19 Auburn: 3 / 7 / 0

    No. 15 Florida: 6 / 8 / 0

    Hightower made her 17th start of the year Friday and improved to 12-5. The Gators held a 6-1 advantage entering the top of the fifth until Hightower gave up a two-run homer. With no outs, Trlicek came in for relief and pitched three shutout innings to record her second save this year.

    At the plate, third baseman Charla Echols gave Florida an early lead with an RBI single in the bottom of the first. Two innings later, right fielder Pal Egan hit a go-ahead, two-run shot — her fifth home run this year.

    In the fourth, Echols poked a two-run single up the middle and Walsh hit a sacrifice fly to extend Florida’s lead. Echols leads the SEC with 46 RBIs.

    In the top of the fifth, sophomore center fielder Kendra Falby made a leaping catch on the warning track to record the second out.

    Game 3 Box Score

    No. 19 Auburn: 7 / 3 / 0

    No. 15 Florida: 0 / 4 / 2

    Right-hander Samantha Bender made her first career start for Florida in Saturday’s series finale. The Tennessee graduate transfer’s outing was brief as Bender recorded just one out before allowing a three-run homer.

    Sophomore right-hander Lexie Delbrey entered the circle in relief and pitched the remainder of the game. After hurling 105 pitches, Delbrey struck out eight batters and yielded three unearned runs on no hits and four walks.

    At the dish, the Gators produced just four hits and drew only two walks en route to stranding six baserunners. Sophomore catcher Sam Roe — who started as Florida’s designated player — went 1-2 with a walk and a triple.

    On Deck

    The Gators will return to KSP Stadium Wednesday to face UNF before they welcome No. 14 Georgia for a three-game series next weekend. The Bulldogs lead the SEC with an 11-2 record and will look to sweep No. 8 Arkansas on the road Saturday night.

  • #GatorMade: Pete Alonso Slugs 150th Career Homer
    Photo by Mike Stove | Getty Images

    Former Florida Gators star Pete Alonso entered Friday’s matchup with the Miami Marlins hitting below the Mendoza Line (.192), but left the game with a little history.

    The two-time All-Star crushed a homer to center to put the Mets ahead 9-3 in the eighth inning. The homer was the 150th of Alonso’s career, making him the second fastest player to reach the milestone in MLB history. In his fifth year, Alonso has played in 538 games, while the record is 495 games by the Philadelphia Phillies’ Ryan Howard.

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    Alonso entered the game with just five hits in seven games but hit his fourth homer as the Mets rolled to victory.

    The Mets drafted the UF standout in the second round of the 2016 MLB Draft. He is a two-time home run derby winner and was the NL Rookie of the Year in 2019, when he hit 53 homers and drove in 120 runs.

  • BSB: Gators Dominate Vols on Rocky Top in Series Opener
    Photo by Brian Fox | ChompTalk

    Florida continued it’s fast start in SEC play by defeating Tennessee 6-1 in Thursday’s series opener in Knoxville.

    Despite facing one of the nation’s elite starting pitchers, the Gators’ offense was able to crush three home runs across the fourth and fifth innings to put the game out of reach for the Volunteers.

    Florida got to UT starter Chase Dollander early, scoring a run in the second inning on a Michael Robertson single that plated Cade Kurland to put the Gators ahead 1-0.

    The Volunteers responded in the home half of the second as Blake Burke turned on a 2-0 fastball from Florida’s starter, Brandon Sproat, and crushed it beyond the batter’s eye in center to even the score.

    Kurland added another run to the Florida line in the fourth frame with a solo homer, his ninth of the season, to give the Gators a 2-1 advantage.

    Florida added four runs in the fifth inning to put the game out of reach and knock Dollander out of the game. Josh Rivera hit a three-run homer and was followed by a solo shot from BT Riopelle.

    Sproat had a solid outing, going 5.2 innings and allowing just one earned run. Lefty Philip Abner entered with two down in the sixth and shut down an opportunity for a rally before throwing two more innings and coming out unscathed.

    Florida closer Brandon Neely closed it out in the ninth and despite loading the bases, didn’t allow a run.

    For the Gators, Kurland finished 2-4 on the day while Jac Caglianone extended his hitting streak to nine games with a 2-5 night at the plate. Wyatt Langford, batting leadoff for the first time all year, reached base twice via walk.

    Florida and Tennessee will continue their series Friday night with first pitch scheduled for 7:00 PM. The Gators will throw Hurston Waldrep on the mound looking for the series victory.

  • SB: Gators strike out 15 times in rubber match against South Carolina to drop second straight SEC series

    After run-ruling Stetson at home last Wednesday, No. 13 Florida struck out 15 times in Sunday’s away rubber match against South Carolina to drop back-to-back SEC series.

    The Gators lost Friday’s series opener in a 13-10 shootout before they bounced back with an 8-1 victory Saturday. On Sunday, South Carolina right-hander Donnie Gobourne hurled a one-hitter en route to a series-clinching 3-0 win over the Orange and Blue.

    Florida gave up a four-run lead in the sixth inning Friday after senior southpaw Rylee Trick allowed six unearned runs following a dropped third strike that would’ve stranded the bases loaded. At the plate, Gator shortstop Skylar Wallace, center fielder Kendra Falby and catcher Sam Roe all produced multi-hit performances. Wallace and Falby each hit three singles, while Roe went 2-3 with a walk and a bases-clearing triple.

    On Saturday, Florida right-hander Elizabeth Hightower started in the circle and threw her fifth complete game this season en route to earning her 11th win this year. Wallace produced another three-hit effort at the dish — including her team-leading sixth triple — while second baseman Reagan Walsh and right fielder Pal Egan put the Gators on the scoreboard courtesy of back-to-back home runs in the top of the first.

    In Sunday’s rubber match, Hightower drew another start but conceded two earned runs across four frames before Trlicek entered the circle in relief and delivered two shutout innings. Offensively, Florida produced just six baserunners via four walks, a hit-by-pitch, and outfielder Katie Kistler’s seventh-inning double. The Gators stranded three baserunners in the top of the first before Gobourne settled into cruise control and struck out a season-high 15 batters.

    Following the weekend, Florida falls to 26-9 overall, 4-5 in conference play and 7-4 on the road.

    Game 1 Box Score

    No. 13 Florida: 10 / 9 / 2

    South Carolina: 13 / 8 / 1

    Game 2 Box Score

    No. 13 Florida: 8 / 12 / 0

    South Carolina: 1 / 4 / 2

    Game 3 Box Score

    No. 13 Florida: 0 / 1 / 1

    South Carolina: 3 / 5 / 0

    On Deck

    The Gators will return to the Sunshine State to welcome No. 19 Auburn for a three-game home series set to begin on Thursday. Florida (4-5) enters the series two games behind Auburn (6-3) in the conference standings, but the Gators are 8-2 versus the Tigers dating back to 2019.

  • BSB: Gators Rally to Win Game, Series vs Auburn
    Photo by Brian Fox | ChompTalk

    Florida Gators sophomore two-way player Jac Caglianone stepped to the plate in the bottom of the seventh. After struggling on the mound and at the plate Sunday versus Auburn, he had a chance to take the lead. The game was tied 8-8 with the series on the line as both teams traded wins and runs all weekend.

    He turned on a 1-1 pitch and ignited the offensive onslaught needed for a Gators win.

    Florida (24-5, 7-2 SEC) defeated Auburn (18-9-1, 3-6 SEC) 17-8 to take the weekend series 2-1. UF notched double-digit hits once again in the back-and-forth victory.

    Caglianone started his Sunday on the mound with a jam. A throwing error by freshman infielder Cade Kurland allowed Auburn’s Bobby Peirce to reach second base. Then, Caglianone threw a wild pitch and hit a batter to put runners on the corners. The runner at first stole second to put two Tigers runners in scoring position.

    Despite the dangerous position in the opening frame, Caglianone escaped with the help of two strikeouts and handed it over to the Gators’ bats.

    Auburn’s Tommy Vail found trouble of his own on the mound. He walked Wyatt Langford and gave up a single to Josh Rivera. Vail then walked senior catcher BT Riopelle to load the bases with two outs.

    Freshman catcher Luke Heyman stepped to the plate and delivered.

    Heyman singled to left field, plating two runners. An error by Peirce allowed Heyman to reach second and scored another runner. After one inning, the Gators led 3-0.

    The Tigers immediately began digging away at Florida’s lead. Cooper McMurray led off the second inning for Auburn with a deep solo shot into the Dizney Grove. Caglianone walked two batters with two down but was able to turn three outs to close the frame, including a gem from redshirt freshman Michael Robertson in center field.

    Florida went scoreless in the bottom frame to keep a 2-run cushion after two innings.

    Caglianone’s slow starts and strong finishes continued in the top of the third. He let up a single and a walk to put two runners on with two outs. He was able to close the frame with his third strikeout in as many innings.

    The Gators endured their second consecutive scoreless frame to maintain a 3-1 lead through the opening third.

    In the fourth inning, Caglianone’s early shortcomings began to catch up. He let up a lead off single, followed by a 2-run shot to tie the ballgame up 3-3. After letting up another single and a double, Florida head coach Kevin O’Sullivan opted to pull his starter early in favor of reliever Blake Purnell.

    The sophomore right-hander hit a batter to load the bases, then let a wild pitch loose to score Auburn’s tie-breaking run. BT Riopelle made a spectacular play at home to prevent another run, and freshman closer Cade Fisher took the mound in search of the final out.

    After walking the bases loaded, Fisher was able to force the final out at first to close the frame with the Gators down 4-3. The Gators picked up their third-straight scoreless frame offensively in the bottom of the fourth.

    Things continued to unravel for Florida in the fifth. Fisher gave up a walk and a pair of singles to plate another run, expanding the Auburn lead to 5-3. Then, Auburn’s Bryson Ware sent a moonshot to right field to score three more.

    Florida began a comeback effort of its own in the bottom fifth. Junior infielder Colby Halter stepped to the plate with loaded bases and notched a 2-RBI single to bring the Gators’ deficit to 8-5. Matt Prevesk entered to pinch hit and was walked to load the bases again.

    Auburn reliever Chase Allsup threw four-straight balls to walk a run in with loaded bases. He was pulled for fellow reliever Chase Isbell.

    After five innings, the Gators trailed 8-6.

    Sophomore right-handed reliever Ryan Slater took the mound for Florida in the sixth. He produced a 1-2-3 inning with a strikeout to notch a scoreless frame.

    In the bottom of the sixth, Langford opened things up with a leadoff double. A pair of walks loaded the bases for Heyman. He was walked to score a run, and Halter clutched up again to plate another runner on a deep sacrifice fly. At the end of the sixth, the ballgame was tied at eight runs a piece.

    Slater posted another 1-2-3 inning through the seventh to give the Gators another shot on offense with an even score.

    Robertson walked to lead off the bottom seventh. Langford followed him with a double off the wall, putting two runners in scoring position as Caglianone stepped to the plate with two outs.

    He plated two runners to take a 10-8 lead. Rivera and Heyman singled to plate another and make it a 11-8 Gators.

    Halter topped it off with an RBI double to make it 12-8 Florida after seven innings.

    Slater added two more Ks in the eighth as he retired three-straight Auburn batters to close the frame.

    In the bottom of the eighth, Florida added to its lead, now 13-8, with a solo-shot homer from Langford. His five runs scored Sunday set a new career high.

    A Heyman grand slam put the cherry on top and left the Gators with a 17-8 victory.

    Next up, Florida hosts Bethune-Cookman for a one-off matchup Tuesday. The Wildcats are 16-12 and 7-2 in the MEAC. They defeated the Florida A&M rattlers 2-1 in this weekend’s series, including a 6-3 win today. The game is set to begin at 6 p.m. and will stream on SEC Network+.

  • WGYM: Regional Final ft. No. 2 Florida, No. 7 California, No. 10 Michigan State, and No. 15 Arizona State

    Four teams have already punched their tickets to the national championship – now, it’s the Gators’ turn. They’ll have to face down three top 15 teams to do so, though, and only two of the four can qualify.

    Despite all four seeded teams qualifying as expected, Friday’s semifinals had their fair share of drama – session I saw some missteps from both Cal and MSU, which you can read about in this livetweet thread, though both were able to qualify fairly comfortably over Western Michigan and West Virginia.

    Session II saw Florida super-senior Trinity Thomas injured on floor with an undisclosed lower leg injury; Florida has listed her status as day-to-day, so we don’t know if we will see her tonight. As warmups begin around 3pm, check @mycluttereddesk on Twitter for live updates on her condition and the Gators overall.

    Even without Thomas’s scores on three events, the Gators posted a solid 197.875, led by freshman Kayla DiCello’s massive 39.8 all-around performance. She was next on floor after Thomas walked off, unable to continue, and used some sage advice from head coach Jenny Rowland to put the nerve-wracking sight she’d just seen behind her: “be a goldfish.”

    Goldfish have almost no short-term memories, so when DiCello was starting to have trouble at SEC Championships a few weeks ago, Rowland encouraged her to channel the adorable animal to great success. It worked so well that DiCello wrote it on her arm on Friday in preparation for the meet – clearly, it’s working for her.

    Florida has rested big names against top opponents and still come out with solid scores – see floor vs. Oklahoma late in the regular season – but qualifying to Nationals without Thomas is not an ideal situation. Cal, MSU, and ASU will not go down easily, and after some of the chaos that occurred at the regional finals elsewhere in the country yesterday, it’s evident more than ever than anything can happen in this sport. A quick tweet story to catch you up…

    Ultimately, Oklahoma, Kentucky, Utah, and UCLA punched their tickets to nationals, but clearly, it wasn’t smooth sailing.

    The Gators will start on bars tonight, perhaps their best event this season, and finish on vault, their weakest. They will want to build a comfortable lead going into the final rotation, as Cal will get Olympic order and Michigan State will get to finish on bars, one of its best events.

    Key routines to watch from Cal include the entire bars rotation – the Bears on Bars are clutch, Mya Lauzon in the all-around, and eMjae Frazier on floor. Both Lauzon and Frazier have perfect 10s this season to their names, Lauzon on beam and Frazier on floor.

    From Michigan State, Nikki Smith has previously been a powerhouse freshman for the Spartans but faltered on Friday afternoon on several events. They’ll hope to have her head back in the game if they’re going to qualify over top seeds Florida and Cal. Also keep an eye on powerhouse sophomore duo Gabi Stephen and Skyla Schulte, as both are capable of near-perfection on all four events.

    Arizona State is led by all-arounders Hannah Scharf and Emily White, who filled out the AA podium on Friday behind DiCello. The team’s standout event is bars, where the Sun Devils will go in rotation 3, so if they’re going to make a push for an upset, that’s the likeliest moment for it.

    The meet starts at 5pm on ESPN+, but we’ll have live tweets from warmups starting at 3, so follow @mycluttereddesk on Twitter for live updates! I’ll be sure to post the highlights from that thread here shortly before the meet starts as well.

    2:37pm: Gators have arrived here at Petersen Events Center and are starting to filter onto the floor. ASU and MSU were already here when we arrived, and Cal has since arrived as well. Just under 20 minutes til warmups!

    3:02pm: Thomas is not running or jumping during open stretch but is stretching and warming up some. We’ll see what happens when it’s actually time to warm up events.

    4:39pm: Warmups have finished and I am back at my seat! Check out some highlights from my tweet thread:

    Thomas will not be competing tonight, as she did not warm up at all. Richards will go in for her on UB and BB, Blakely is her likeliest replacement on FX, but vault is where it gets interesting.

    On vault on Friday, both Edwards and Clark competed, instead of just one of them, as it has been most of the season. However, Victoria Nguyen also warmed up her Yurchenko 1.5 tonight and looked nearly ready to make another attempt, just a month after her scary crash at the TWU quad meet.

    We’ll have to wait and see exactly what head coach Jenny Rowland is prepared to do, but vault will be the last event for the Gators, so it may be a question of what give them the best chance to qualify. In the meantime, get ready for bars!

    5:00pm: Rotation one, let’s go Gators!

    Blakely, UB: Solid opening handstand. Maloney to pak, both clean leg form. Last handstand maybe a little shy. Blind change is good. Sticks her double front! That’s how you start!

    Li, Cal VT: Yfull, little hop in place.

    Kalefe just stuck her dismount for MSU on BB, and ASU hit their leadoff routine on FX as well.

    Nguyen, UB: Solid handstands. Pak looked a little better today. Stuck her DLO!!

    5:05pm: Harkness, MSU BB: I’m joining partway through here. Sidie aerial is good, maybe a little lean but covers well. Switch leap switch leap, both 180s are good. Cat leap side aerial back tuck 1.5, looked stuck from here! Wow!

    DiCello, UB: Big Ray, lovely toe point. Pak is sooo clean, straight to handstand, straight to the van Leeuwen, legs glued together. Full out dismount, same usual lower leg sep with her knees crooked, but she sticks it!!

    Brown, Cal VT: Yfull, little hop back.

    Clark, ASU FX: Nailed her double back to close!

    All these teams are on fire right now y’all.

    DeSouza, Cal VT: Y1.5, some knee bend in the air, little hop forward.

    Nikki Smith for MSU just nailed her series on BB.

    Wong, UB: Great opening handstand! Maloney is clean, so is the pak. low bar handstand maybe a little shy? van Leeuwen good. Last handstand is excellent. DLO is stuck! Yes!

    Theodorou, ASU FX: Has nailed both of her passes so far. Turning cat leap is fun as she finishes up, should be another hit for them.

    9.975 for Wong!! Two judges went 10.0, two 9.95.

    5:11pm: McCusker, UB: Maloney to pak, solid. Maybe a little shy on her low bar handstand? van Leeuwen is GORGEOUS. Stalder is good. Double tuck, little bounce in place it looked like.

    Cal celebrating Frazier’s vault, must’ve been a good one.

    Jaslow, ASU FX: Really floaty double pike to open. Front lay to front full, lots of power but well controlled. Looked like maybe she missed something in a dance series there? It wasn’t really an element at all. Double tuck is excellent.

    Richards, UB: Maloney, some leg sep there. Bail is solid. Last handstand is good. Double layout, little hop forward – we’ll take it.

    5:13pm: Stephen, MSU BB: Nails her acro series! Beat to straddle 1/2, solid 180 position there. Roundoff double full is stuck!

    White, ASU FX: Front double full, really strong on that landing. 1.5 to front lay, very clean in her twisting form. Switch ring to switch half, could use a clearer ring position but amplitude is fine. Front full to front lay for her last pass – also well controlled, just a little lowkey for my personal taste.

    Garcia, MSU BB: Acro series nailed right off the bat, excellent. Front aerial to split jump, lovely extension on that. Switch to split jump, clean 180 positions. Team is going nuts for her on EVERY element, love that for them. Bhs gainer full, a little forward with her chest but she sticks it!

    5:17pm: Scharf, ASU FX: Front through to double tuck, little bouncy on that landing. Front full to front tuck, very clean and floaty on that. Double pike to close it out, very strong finish.

    Every team is in the hunt on this. This is incredible!

    AFTER ONE: UF 49.575, MSU 49.425, ASU 49.3, CAL 49.275

    This explains the big cheer for Frazier – she threw a double twisting Yurchenko! It is essentially the hardest vault being competed in the NCAA currently, once competed by Gator great Alex McMurtry for you longtime Gator fans.

    5:26pm: Rotation 2! Here we go!

    Blakely, BB: Front aerial to bhs, solid. Switch leap to switch half to beat jump, like I said on Twitter, those leaps are fire tonight. Gainer full dismount is stuck! She has turned into such an incredible leadoff performer for this team. So clutch.

    DeSouza, Cal UB: Good opening handstand. Big piked Jaeger to immediate overshoot. Sticks her dismount!

    Nyah Smith for MSU just opened their floor rotation with a solid routine.

    Mangahas, ASU VT: Yfull, looked like a stick from here!

    Frazier, Cal UB: Maloney to pak, a little whippy in the pak but keeps moving okay. Sticks her DLO!

    5:30pm: Lazzari, BB: Triple series, absolutely gorgeous. Switch leap to split jump, perfect. Front aerial, so clean. Dismount looked stuck from here!

    Kalefe, MSU FX: Front double full, excellent. Cat leap to switch leap to wolf jump full to Shushunova – that’s a dance pass! Punch Rudi to loso, she’s got some power, wow. Good for her.

    Big cheers from the ASU crowd for Theodorou, but I missed it. 9.925 for her!

    Smith, ASU VT: Y1.5, maybe the tiniest slide back? Maybe a stick? She’s celebrating like it was a stick!

    DiCello, BB: Candle mount is clean. Double wolf, good. Switch leap to split jump, good 180s on those. Nails her acro series. Front aerial, flicks those hands like she knows she’s got it. Bhs gainer full, stuck! Best one she’s done all day.

    Harkness, MSU FX: Opens with a full in, great amplitude but a little bouncy. Hits her last pass, although I missed what it was.

    Williams, Cal UB: Floaty pak salto. Sticks her dismount! Every single team is fighting for this – it is ELECTRIC in here.

    5:36pm: Wong, BB: Switch leap to split leap, just textbook. Bhs loso, so steady. Front aerial to beat, excellent. Roundoff double full is stuck!! Yes!

    Stephen, MSU FX: Front through to double tuck to open, very well controlled. Giving big Trinity Thomas vibes with her opening music and choreo, but now it’s a flavor all her own. Controls the landing on her last pass as well – MSU fighting for every tenth.

    Big amplitude on the Jaeger to overshoot from Cesario to close things out on bars for Cal. Should be another good score.

    McCusker, BB: Gave me a small heart attack on the wolf turn but she makes it around just before there’s a problem. Front aerial is lovely. Bhs loso, nails it! Switch leap to split leap, gorgeous. Sticks that gainer full dismount, let’s go!

    Nikki Smith, MSU FX: Full in to open! Just a step into the lunge. Love this choreo here, lots of drama and showing off her flexibility and musicality all at the same time. 1.5 to front lay, well done. Double tuck to close it out, bringing the difficulty too – that should be an EXCELLENT score for the Spartans.

    5:41pm: Richards, BB: Bhs loso, super steady, she’s locked in. Switch half to beat, maybe a little shy of 180? Certainly some knees. Switch leap to straddle, much better positions there. Bhs 1.5, stuck! That’s an entire lineup of stuck dismounts for the Gators, y’all!!

    Schulte, MSU FX: Full in to open, great control there. Gorgeous split positions in her dance series. Really fun choreo sequence, playing to the whole crowd. Front through to double tuck, a little bouncy on the landing, but ends it powerfully in her final pose.

    AFTER TWO: UF 99.175, MSU 98.9, CAL 98.8, ASU 98.75

    Sam is 100% right here – Richards has been absolutely CLUTCH for this team in so many situations this season. She’s built up her mental fortitude and confidence so much and played such a key role for the Gators.

    5:53pm: Rotation 3 time!

    Nguyen, FX: Front double full, overcooks it a little and jumps waaay forward into her sissone. A little bouncy coming out of her leap series, but the leaps themselves are just so incredible. Y turn is excellent. 1.5 to front lay, some knees in the layout, that’s uncharacteristic for her. I wonder if the closeness of this meet is getting to them at all?

    Garcia just nailed her vault for MSU, and DeSouza looked like she stuck for Cal on beam.

    Samiley, ASU UB: Jaeger to overshoot, good amplitude there. Last handstand was a little quick, sticks her DLO though!

    Baumann, FX: Double wolf to start is good. 1.5 to front full is so clean, looks like she’s dialed in to me. Switch side to straddle, such amplitude, incredible oversplit. I’m never getting over it. Double pike to finish, overcooks it and stumbles OOB. Gators can only eat one of those right now, maybe.

    Schulte, MSU VT: Yfull, little slide back. Pretty clean body position.

    Scharf, ASU UB: Great opening handstand. Maloney to pak, very clean. Last handstand maybe a little shy? Full in, looks like she shifted a little backward in her salute but not sure if judges will take that.

    Li, Cal BB: Front aerial to loso, that’s a fun series. Switch to split, maybe a little shy of 180. Gainer tuck full off the end, little hop.

    Richards, FX: DLO to open, pops it out into a lunge. Maybe not quite as fully rotated as Friday but I wouldn’t call it under. Leaps are solid. 1.5 to front full to finish up, it’s a good one! Good reset – like I said, talk about clutch.

    Stephen, MSU VT: Another Yfull, another little slide back.

    6:00pm: White, ASU UB: Gorgeous Handstand work. Jaeger is excellent. Transition was good. Great last handstand, sticks her dismount!

    Frazier, Cal BB: Front aerial to loso, excellent. Dance series was solid, lovely straddle positions. Roundoff 1.5 is stuck!

    Wong, FX: Dos Santos, a little deep, but doesn’t cheat back with the stag like Friday. Leap series is gorgeous, so precise. Whip half front full, single step forward, well controlled. That should be a fantastic score! Don’t think it’s a 10 but it’ll be great.

    Lauzon, Cal BB: Single wolf turn, fine. Bhs bhs loso, absolutely nails it! Switch leap to split, good 180 positions. Roundoff double full, a little squatty but holds the stick!

    6:05pm: DiCello, FX: Front double full, back foot scoots maybe a little bit. Switch ring to switch half, super clean. Double wolf is a little wobbly. 1.5 to front lay is suuuper clean. Another good one for the Gators! One more from Blakely and they’ll drop the OOB from Baumann.

    Perea, Cal BB: Double wolf is good to start. Acro series clean, good 180 in her leap series. Side somi to back tuck 1.5 off the side?? That’s a cool dismount! And it looked stuck!

    Blakely, FX: Double arabian, and her foot goes out. Welp. We’d rather that than she sit it, I suppose. Leap series is excellent. Much better on her combo pass to finish. They needed a bigger lead than this going into the last rotation…

    AFTER THREE: UF 148.5, CAL 148.45, ASU 148.25, MSU 148.125

    Florida needed a bigger lead than that going into arguably their worst event, though floor has been their most inconsistent.

    VICTORIA NGUYEN IS ANNOUNCED AS PART OF THE LINEUP, THIS IS NOT A DRILL!!!!

    6:17pm: Wong, VT: Yhalf on, front pike half off – a good one, just a little hop back.

    DeSouza, Cal FX: Rudi to loso, looked a little funky twisting but couldn’t put my finger on it. 1.5 to front full to finish out, much cleaner.

    Lee, ASU BB: Hit acro series, split to sheep is clean. Sticks her dismount. Hoo boy.

    Zsarmani, MSU UB: Gienger didn’t get much amplitude but clean legs. Sticks her dismount!

    6:20pm: Richards, VT: Y1.5, looks like a stick from here. Oh my god.

    Reeves, ASU BB: Nails her triple series. Switch to split, short on the second 180. Front aerial to two feet. Rest was a hit I think, had to watch vault.

    Blakely, VT: Y1.5, sits it. Oh my god.

    Cal just hit a clean floor routine. My nerves are HIGH.

    Stephen, MSU UB: Good opening handstand. Gorgeous Jaeger. Bail is solid. Little slide back on her double tuck dismount.

    DiCello, VT: Y1.5, little scoot back. Needed that.

    Harper sticks a dismount for ASU on beam. Team is screaming for her.

    6:25pm: Clark, VT: Yfull, bounces back. They just need hits right now.

    Jackard, MSU UB: It’s a hit. I saw no details, focused on Clark.

    Williams, Cal FX: Hits first pass! Clean dance series. 1.5 to front lay, clean. Cal is hitting when it counts.

    Clark, ASU BB: Bhs loso, solid. Split to ring, good positions in the air. Sticks her 1.5 dismount!

    Looks like Florida is switching to Edwards instead of Nguyen to make sure it’s another hit.

    Edwards, VT: Yfull, little hop forward. We’ll see if it’s enough.

    Li, Cal FX: Front double full, gorgeous. Cartwheel to loso, to fulfill the back tumbling requirement. Front full front lay, clean. Dance series is lovely. Another great score for Cal.

    White, ASU BB: Little bobble on her acro series. Front aerial to beat jump. Split to ring, short of 180 it looked like. Step on her dismount.

    6:30pm: Lauzon, Cal FX: Front double full to front tuck, very floaty. Leap series is gorgeous, big amplitude. Sticks her final combo pass! Cal having the floor rotation of their life!

    Scharf, ASU BB: Wolf turn is clean. Bhs loso, steady. Lean forward on her side somi. Roundoff 1.5 is stuck.

    Florida finishes with a 197.8… I don’t think ASU can catch them, and they’ve already passed Michigan State, but I’m not 100% on that.

    Frazier, Cal FX: Last routine of the night. DLO to open, great control. Gorgeous split ring jump in the corner. Good split positions in her leap series, although I could use a clearer ring position in the first element. Using a dance remix of Circle of Life, that’s fun. Front through to double tuck to close it out, and they’re screaming for 10s.

    Regardless, of Frazier’s score, Cal will win, but Florida will also advance!!

    FINAL: CAL 198.075, UF 197.8, MSU 197.65, ASU 197.475

    Gators live to dance another day!

    They will hope to have Thomas healthy again for nationals, but they will also hope to have Blakely out of her head and Baumann not going OOB on floor anymore. They have two weeks to figure it out before they head to Fort Worth – so we’ll see you back here then!

    Thanks for joining us, and make sure you head to my Twitter for live tweets from the press conference in just a few minutes!

  • BSB: Florida bats explode, tie series versus Auburn
    Photo by Brian Fox | ChompTalk

    The Florida Gators entered Saturday’s matchup against the Auburn Tigers in unfamiliar territory. Instead of needing a win s=to secure the series, the Gators found themselves trailing 1-0 and in search of a win to even up the weekend.

    After taking a 10-1 beating against the Tigers Friday night, Florida needed a big performance on both sides of the plate to stay in the series.

    The Gators got just that.

    No. 3 Florida (23-5, 6-2 SEC) defeated Auburn (18-8-1, 3-5 SEC) 12-5 Saturday in a convincing performance offensively and defensively. The Gators put up 19 hits as Saturday ace Hurston Waldrep notched 10 strikeouts on the way to a series-tying victory.

    “It was important that we responded that way after last night,” Florida head coach Kevin O’Sullivan said.

    Junior right-hander Hurston Waldrep started on the mound for the Gators, hoping to provide some defensive support after Florida’s loss Friday. His opening started off shakily, with a single and a walk putting the first two batters on base. Then, a wild pitch advanced both runners.

    Auburn third baseman Bryson Ware was able to score a runner on a groundout to first base, putting the Tigers on the board first. Waldrep was able to secure two strikeouts to close the top of the first. The Gators started out of the gate trailing 1-0.

    Florida responded in no time.

    Junior outfielder Wyatt Langford knocked in the first hit of the night for the Gators after beating out a tag at first base. Sophomore two-way player Jac Caglianone stepped to the plate behind him. The NCAA home run leader added to his total, now at 18, with a 2-run shot to right field to put the Gators up 2-1.

    In the top of the second, Waldrep let up a leadoff double to put a runner in scoring position with no outs. The following at-bat, Auburn hit a line drive towards Junior shortstop Josh Rivera. Rivera gloved the ball for the first out and then made the throw in time at second base to clear the bases and secure a double play.

    Waldrep let up another double in the second, but the Gators made the final out to close the frame without a score.

    The Southern Mississippi transfer’s woes continued in the third inning as he walked the leadoff batter. After throwing his sixth consecutive ball, Waldrep and senior catcher BT Riopelle had a word on the mound. Immediately following the break, Waldrep’s pitch was hit into the right berm for a 2-run homer. Auburn now led 3-2.

    After walking another batter, O’Sullivan trotted to the mound for another chat with Waldrep. He chose to keep his weekend starter on the rubber.

    “We don’t normally do that early,” O’Sullivan said. “But it seemed to help.”

    Florida’s infield closed the inning with the help of a double play to prevent any more damage.

    In the bottom of the third, the Gators had a chance to come back with force. Langford reached first on an error, and was advanced to second on a Rivera single. Riopelle was hit by a pitch to load the bases.

    Junior and Santa Fe College transfer Tyler Shelnut stepped to the plate. He turned on a single to plate two runners and regain a 4-3 lead for the Gators.

    Junior infielder Colby Halter followed suit with an RBI double to expand the lead to 5-3 and force Auburn to call upon right-handed reliever Christian Herberholz. A sacrifice groundout from sophomore outfielder Matt Prevesk made it 6-3.

    The Gators topped it off with an RBI single from redshirt freshman outfielder Michael Robertson before he was caught stealing to close the inning. After the opening third, Florida led 7-3.

    Despite letting up his fourth walk in the same amount of innings, Waldrep evened that total with his fourth strikeout to close the frame and secure a 1-2-3 inning.

    Florida put two runners on base in the bottom of the fourth thanks to a Caglianone single and Rivera walk but closed the frame without a score.

    Waldrep struck out the side in the top of the fifth, moving his total to seven at that point in the night.

    The Gators went scoreless in the bottom of the fifth despite notching a trio of singles.

    In the sixth inning, Waldrep recorded three more strikeouts to make it six consecutive outs on Ks. He stranded two runners and picked up his 10th strikeout as he closed the frame.

    “There’s a lot to learn from this one,” Waldrep said.

    Sophomore reliever Nick Ficarrotta entered for Waldrep in the seventh. He loaded the bases and gave up a 2-RBI single to make it just a 8-5 Gators lead with runners on the corners and one out.

    Ficarrotta was pulled for closer Brandon Neely. The sophomore righty was able to close the frame without another score to make it 8-5 Gators.

    Florida’s bats retook the field and rehabilitated the Gators’ run cushion. A single plus a fielder’s choice, a passed ball and a walk put runners on corners with two outs. Caglianone stepped to the plate and sent a ball off the wall for a 2-RBI triple. Rivera singled behind him to plate another, making it an 11-5 Florida lead after seven.

    Neely delivered again, putting up a 1-2-3 inning to move along the top of the eighth.

    Florida added another run on an RBI single from pinch-hitter Ty Evans. Neely worked through the ninth to close a convincing win for the Gators.

    Florida will chase the series victory tomorrow versus Auburn. First pitch is set for 1 p.m. and the game will stream on SEC Network+.