Gators travel to Arkansas for final series of regular season
Time to hit the road once again.
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Time to hit the road once again.
The seniors of Florida Gators baseball stood side-by-side with smiles from ear-to-ear as they were honored before Sunday’s first pitch.
With Jack Leftwich on the mound and Georgia second baseman Josh McAllister staring at a full count, the opening series between Florida and the Bulldogs came down to the final pitch.
After the Florida bullpen imploded on Tuesday night against the Stetson Hatters, the Gators baseball team returns home to Gainesville to take on a familiar face — the Georgia Bulldogs.
Reliever Trey Van Der Weide took a long, calm gaze around the diamond with the bases fully loaded in the seventh inning. But when pinch hitter Ryne Guida put down a routine bunt, chaos took the wheel.
After a steady series victory over Kentucky, the Florida Gators return to the Sunshine State for a battle with the Stetson Hatters.
A four-seam fastball raced out of the fiery hand of southpaw Hunter Barco and flashed across home plate. At 97 mph, the pitch whizzed by the delayed swing of Kentucky’s Oraj Anu, who became just another victim of a strikeout massacre.
Three up. Three down. Try again tomorrow.
When the bus doors opened, Florida climbed aboard to hit the road on the way to the Bluegrass state.
Five days before the first serve is offered, the NCAA made their selections for both the men’s and women’s tennis national championship tournaments.
Almost a week after the Florida men’s tennis team fell in the SEC Championship against the Tennessee Volunteers, the All-Conference awards gave the Gators another reason to celebrate.
Water bottles and their contaminants fell from above like rain as the athletes piled in a frenzy on the floor. The celebration raged on Friday afternoon after the conclusion of the SEC championship tournament.
With an undefeated streak and a trip to the conference final on the line, sophomore Blaise Bicknell stayed cool, calm and collected.
The warmth of spring didn’t stop Tuscaloosa, Alabama temperature to drop into the mid-30s. The athletes’ breath exhumed from their mouths with every strike and return.
The doors cracked open Monday morning on the Florida Gators’ team bus. Player by player, the men’s squad stepped off the vehicle in their color-coordinated, orange t-shirts.
Before the athletes geared up to take the floor on Tuesday afternoon, South Carolina took the chance to celebrate their seniors who prepare to begin a new chapter. After the roses and framed photographs were distributed, the party rolled on into doubles play.
Gray clouds and thunderbolts struck the afternoon skies over the campus of South Carolina Saturday afternoon. When the raindrops soaked the courts, the umpires delayed the match.
Last weekend at the Alfred A. Ring Tennis Complex, the Florida Gators defended their home turf successfully and for the cherry on top: earned the right to claim the SEC regular-season crown.
The Florida Gators and their perfect SEC record came down to a 3-3 stalemate with South Carolina. Only one man who stood between sophomore Blaise Bicknell and his own perfect solo record: his name was Raphael Lambling.
With an SEC regular-season crown in their back pocket, the Gators can now ride on cruise control through the remainder of the season.