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No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run
No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run

San Francisco Chronicle​

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The stands at Charles Schwab Field were emptying, and Murray State players wanted to savor their program's first College World Series as long as they could. Never mind the Racers had just been no-hit by Arkansas' Gage Wood in a 3-0 loss that will send them home to southwestern Kentucky on Tuesday. Some of the players filled jars with infield dirt, a keepsake from their improbable journey to the city where every college baseball team wants to be in June. Some milled about with family and friends. 'One of my wife's favorite movies is 'A League of Their Own,' and they said there's no crying in baseball,' an emotional coach Dan Skirka said to open his postgame news conference with 9-year-old son Keegan on his knee. 'Well, throw that out the window. There's no way I'm making it through this right here.' The Racers were the first Missouri Valley Conference team to make the CWS since 2003 and only the fourth No. 4 regional seed to get to Omaha since the NCAA Tournament went to its current format in 1999. They swept conference regular-season and tournament championships, beat No. 10 national seed Mississippi of the SEC twice on its home field and Georgia Tech of the ACC once en route to a regional title. Then the Racers went to Duke of the ACC for super regionals and lost the opener before winning two straight to punch their ticket to Omaha. Murray State overcame early jitters in its CWS opener against UCLA, falling behind 6-0, and lost 6-4. As for their game against Arkansas, the Racers just happened to run into a pitcher who threw one of the greatest games in college baseball history — a no-hitter with 19 strikeouts, a record in a nine-inning CWS game and tied for most by a Division I pitcher this season. 'We never lost faith. Haven't all year. We're not about to start now," third baseman Carson Garner said. 'About halfway through the game, I think we realized that, 'Hey, this guy's, he's dealing, he's throwing a perfect game.' ' Murray State finished 44-17 to set a program record for wins, ending the season with only its second shutout loss. 'The wins are phenomenal. We had a lot of them,' said Jonathan Hogart, who led the Racers with 22 homers. 'You just can't match the culture we have here. I'm going to miss Coach, I'm going to miss these two (Garner and Dustin Mercer). I'm going to miss every one of these guys. Strap on the cleats to go to war with these guys was such a blessing this year, and I'll never take it for granted.' Skirka, who finished his seventh season at the Racers' coach, put together a roster made up of eight Division I transfers, 14 from junior colleges and 14 high school recruits. Skirka said no one on his team was making money from endorsements or other name, image and likeness opportunities. 'You say at the end of the year only one team's happy,' Skirka said. 'That ain't the case this year. There's definitely more than one because these guys, the run they went on, you're not going to be able to wipe the smile off their face for a really long time. That's what I told them. They're going to share this for ages and people are going to ask them about it for ages, and that's really the cool thing.'

No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run
No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run

Hamilton Spectator

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Hamilton Spectator

No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The stands at Charles Schwab Field were emptying, and Murray State players wanted to savor their program's first College World Series as long as they could. Never mind the Racers had just been no-hit by Arkansas' Gage Wood in a 3-0 loss that will send them home to southwestern Kentucky on Tuesday. Some of the players filled jars with infield dirt, a keepsake from their improbable journey to the city where every college baseball team wants to be in June. Some milled about with family and friends. 'One of my wife's favorite movies is 'A League of Their Own,' and they said there's no crying in baseball,' an emotional coach Dan Skirka said to open his postgame news conference with 9-year-old son Keegan on his knee. 'Well, throw that out the window. There's no way I'm making it through this right here.' The Racers were the first Missouri Valley Conference team to make the CWS since 2003 and only the fourth No. 4 regional seed to get to Omaha since the NCAA Tournament went to its current format in 1999. They swept conference regular-season and tournament championships, beat No. 10 national seed Mississippi of the SEC twice on its home field and Georgia Tech of the ACC once en route to a regional title. Then the Racers went to Duke of the ACC for super regionals and lost the opener before winning two straight to punch their ticket to Omaha. Murray State overcame early jitters in its CWS opener against UCLA, falling behind 6-0, and lost 6-4. As for their game against Arkansas, the Racers just happened to run into a pitcher who threw one of the greatest games in college baseball history — a no-hitter with 19 strikeouts, a record in a nine-inning CWS game and tied for most by a Division I pitcher this season. 'We never lost faith. Haven't all year. We're not about to start now,' third baseman Carson Garner said. 'About halfway through the game, I think we realized that, 'Hey, this guy's, he's dealing, he's throwing a perfect game.' ' Murray State finished 44-17 to set a program record for wins, ending the season with only its second shutout loss. 'The wins are phenomenal. We had a lot of them,' said Jonathan Hogart, who led the Racers with 22 homers. 'You just can't match the culture we have here. I'm going to miss Coach, I'm going to miss these two (Garner and Dustin Mercer). I'm going to miss every one of these guys. Strap on the cleats to go to war with these guys was such a blessing this year, and I'll never take it for granted.' Skirka, who finished his seventh season at the Racers' coach, put together a roster made up of eight Division I transfers, 14 from junior colleges and 14 high school recruits. Skirka said no one on his team was making money from endorsements or other name, image and likeness opportunities. 'You say at the end of the year only one team's happy,' Skirka said. 'That ain't the case this year. There's definitely more than one because these guys, the run they went on, you're not going to be able to wipe the smile off their face for a really long time. That's what I told them. They're going to share this for ages and people are going to ask them about it for ages, and that's really the cool thing.' ___ AP college sports:

No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run
No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run

Fox Sports

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Fox Sports

No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run

Associated Press OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The stands at Charles Schwab Field were emptying, and Murray State players wanted to savor their program's first College World Series as long as they could. Never mind the Racers had just been no-hit by Arkansas' Gage Wood in a 3-0 loss that will send them home to southwestern Kentucky on Tuesday. Some of the players filled jars with infield dirt, a keepsake from their improbable journey to the city where every college baseball team wants to be in June. Some milled about with family and friends. 'One of my wife's favorite movies is 'A League of Their Own,' and they said there's no crying in baseball,' an emotional coach Dan Skirka said to open his postgame news conference with 9-year-old son Keegan on his knee. 'Well, throw that out the window. There's no way I'm making it through this right here.' The Racers were the first Missouri Valley Conference team to make the CWS since 2003 and only the fourth No. 4 regional seed to get to Omaha since the NCAA Tournament went to its current format in 1999. They swept conference regular-season and tournament championships, beat No. 10 national seed Mississippi of the SEC twice on its home field and Georgia Tech of the ACC once en route to a regional title. Then the Racers went to Duke of the ACC for super regionals and lost the opener before winning two straight to punch their ticket to Omaha. Murray State overcame early jitters in its CWS opener against UCLA, falling behind 6-0, and lost 6-4. As for their game against Arkansas, the Racers just happened to run into a pitcher who threw one of the greatest games in college baseball history — a no-hitter with 19 strikeouts, a record in a nine-inning CWS game and tied for most by a Division I pitcher this season. 'We never lost faith. Haven't all year. We're not about to start now," third baseman Carson Garner said. 'About halfway through the game, I think we realized that, 'Hey, this guy's, he's dealing, he's throwing a perfect game.' ' Murray State finished 44-17 to set a program record for wins, ending the season with only its second shutout loss. 'The wins are phenomenal. We had a lot of them,' said Jonathan Hogart, who led the Racers with 22 homers. 'You just can't match the culture we have here. I'm going to miss Coach, I'm going to miss these two (Garner and Dustin Mercer). I'm going to miss every one of these guys. Strap on the cleats to go to war with these guys was such a blessing this year, and I'll never take it for granted.' Skirka, who finished his seventh season at the Racers' coach, put together a roster made up of eight Division I transfers, 14 from junior colleges and 14 high school recruits. Skirka said no one on his team was making money from endorsements or other name, image and likeness opportunities. 'You say at the end of the year only one team's happy,' Skirka said. 'That ain't the case this year. There's definitely more than one because these guys, the run they went on, you're not going to be able to wipe the smile off their face for a really long time. That's what I told them. They're going to share this for ages and people are going to ask them about it for ages, and that's really the cool thing.' ___ AP college sports: recommended in this topic

No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run
No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run

Winnipeg Free Press

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Winnipeg Free Press

No-hit loss won't erase the lifetime memories made by Murray State during its improbable run

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The stands at Charles Schwab Field were emptying, and Murray State players wanted to savor their program's first College World Series as long as they could. Never mind the Racers had just been no-hit by Arkansas' Gage Wood in a 3-0 loss that will send them home to southwestern Kentucky on Tuesday. Some of the players filled jars with infield dirt, a keepsake from their improbable journey to the city where every college baseball team wants to be in June. Some milled about with family and friends. 'One of my wife's favorite movies is 'A League of Their Own,' and they said there's no crying in baseball,' an emotional coach Dan Skirka said to open his postgame news conference with 9-year-old son Keegan on his knee. 'Well, throw that out the window. There's no way I'm making it through this right here.' The Racers were the first Missouri Valley Conference team to make the CWS since 2003 and only the fourth No. 4 regional seed to get to Omaha since the NCAA Tournament went to its current format in 1999. They swept conference regular-season and tournament championships, beat No. 10 national seed Mississippi of the SEC twice on its home field and Georgia Tech of the ACC once en route to a regional title. Then the Racers went to Duke of the ACC for super regionals and lost the opener before winning two straight to punch their ticket to Omaha. Murray State overcame early jitters in its CWS opener against UCLA, falling behind 6-0, and lost 6-4. As for their game against Arkansas, the Racers just happened to run into a pitcher who threw one of the greatest games in college baseball history — a no-hitter with 19 strikeouts, a record in a nine-inning CWS game and tied for most by a Division I pitcher this season. 'We never lost faith. Haven't all year. We're not about to start now,' third baseman Carson Garner said. 'About halfway through the game, I think we realized that, 'Hey, this guy's, he's dealing, he's throwing a perfect game.' ' Murray State finished 44-17 to set a program record for wins, ending the season with only its second shutout loss. 'The wins are phenomenal. We had a lot of them,' said Jonathan Hogart, who led the Racers with 22 homers. 'You just can't match the culture we have here. I'm going to miss Coach, I'm going to miss these two (Garner and Dustin Mercer). I'm going to miss every one of these guys. Strap on the cleats to go to war with these guys was such a blessing this year, and I'll never take it for granted.' Skirka, who finished his seventh season at the Racers' coach, put together a roster made up of eight Division I transfers, 14 from junior colleges and 14 high school recruits. Skirka said no one on his team was making money from endorsements or other name, image and likeness opportunities. 'You say at the end of the year only one team's happy,' Skirka said. 'That ain't the case this year. There's definitely more than one because these guys, the run they went on, you're not going to be able to wipe the smile off their face for a really long time. That's what I told them. They're going to share this for ages and people are going to ask them about it for ages, and that's really the cool thing.' ___ AP college sports:

Jill Scott's net worth, Soccer Aid F-bomb, relationship with team-mate's sister
Jill Scott's net worth, Soccer Aid F-bomb, relationship with team-mate's sister

Daily Mirror

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

Jill Scott's net worth, Soccer Aid F-bomb, relationship with team-mate's sister

Jill Scott returns for Soccer Aid 2025 in the latest endeavour of her hectic media career, which is boosting her net worth nicely but getting in the way of her wedding plans Jill Scott is lacing up her boots once again as England face the World XI in Soccer Aid 2025. Elevated to nationwide fame after Sarina Wiegman's squad clinched Euro 2022 at Wembley, the Lionesses icon continued to capture hearts by winning I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! later the same year. Despite her skyrocketing popularity, Jill, 38, keeps her feet firmly on the ground. Speaking with OK!, she confessed: "To be honest, I'm faking my life half of the time." ‌ She'll be back in the limelight on Sunday for her third successive Soccer Aid appearance. But away from the public eye, she enjoys a serene and simple existence in Manchester with her partner Shelly. ‌ Who is Jill Scott in a relationship with? Scott's romance with Shelly appears to have come about via Jill's former England and Everton team-mate Rachel Unitt, who is Shelly's elder sister. The couple's relationship has flourished over nearly 10 years and in 2020, they got engaged. Yet the altar remains a step away for them. Jill told OK! that several obstructions have hindered their wedding organisation, bemoaning that they "haven't had the time" to get plans in place. "It's been so busy that we're like passing ships at times," she said in October 2023. "We're definitely starting to think about what we want to do. We've been engaged for nearly four years now, but with Covid and lockdown happening, we sort of lost momentum for a while." It seems they still haven't tied the knot, although Jill remained optimistic as she added: "But Shelly and I have finally been making some wedding plans and we're definitely in the swing of things now." What does Jill Scott do now? They've certainly had their hands full with their bustling schedules. Shelly juggles her role as a community health officer with managing the Boxx2Boxx coffee shop that they co-own. ‌ When she isn't appearing on our television screens, Jill lends a hand with the graft at the coffee shop. Post-football, she's carved out a career as a pundit, offering insights into both the men's and women's game. She's also a team captain on Sky's A League of Their Own and a fixture on the Stick to Football podcast, bantering weekly with Gary Neville, Jamie Carragher, Roy Keane and Ian Wright. Come Sunday, she's set for her third star-studded stint in Soccer Aid. ‌ Why did Jill Scott swear? In what turned into one of Euro 2022's unforgettable moments, Jill let out a fiery "f*** off you f*****g p****" after a clash with Germany's Sydney Lohmann, caught in full colour by the cameras. Despite the slip going viral and earning her acclaim, she's not proud of the outburst, as she confided to FourFourTwo she's usually the first to tell off kids for any foul language, including Shelly's daughters Evie and Hattie. She said: "I must say I don't like swearing, if I ever hear kids swear I pull them up on it. But I didn't have a leg to stand on in that moment, but we won and hopefully people remember the football rather than what I might have accidentally said." ‌ Despite this, Jill hasn't quite taken her own advice, as she once again let slip an F-bomb during last year's Soccer Aid match, prompting a live on-air apology from ITV. Commentator Sam Matterface said: "I don't know if you noticed it, I certainly didn't, but there may have been, just may have been, some rather industrial language that emanated from Jill Scott's mouth when she missed the chance. If that was the case, we do apologise!". His co-commentator Iain Stirling couldn't resist quipping: "We'll apologise on Jill Scott's behalf, just in case. I'm actually getting fed up apologising on Jill Scott's behalf. She needs to wash her mouth out with soap quite frankly!" ‌ What is Jill Scott's net worth? Before diving into the jungle for I'm A Celeb, Jill's footballing career had already netted her a tidy sum, with estimates of her wealth ranging between £1.3million to £3.4million. However, after appearing on the show, which granted her a sizeable fee – albeit one she claimed on Good Morning Britain to be "a lot lower" than Matt Hancock's hefty £320k – her finances soared. According to The Sun, she raked in an impressive £720k in 2023 as the equity in her company, Jill Scott 8 Ltd, climbed to £1.2m. Moreover, she rewarded herself with two significant payouts of £50k and £300k. With her media career showing no signs of slowing down, her net worth is predicted to keep climbing in the seven figures for the foreseeable future. However, Sunday's event at Old Trafford is all about raising funds for UNICEF's projects aimed at assisting vulnerable children worldwide. Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.

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