No. 1 LSU suffered an SEC Tournament loss on Saturday afternoon at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium after being shutout by the Ole Miss Rebels in the semifinals.
Jay Johnson's crew couldn't hit their stride at the plate, but heading into NCAA Tourrnament play next weekend, the program is ready to hit the reset button.
LSU first baseman Jared Jones took the podium on Saturday following the loss to Ole Miss to dissect what went wrong, what's next and his takeaways from the weekend in Hoover (Ala.).
Q. Jared, since the third inning yesterday you guys haven't had any run support. What are you seeing out there, and how concerned are you about the offense?
JARED JONES: Yeah, I think it's baseball. I think there's going to be ups and downs, highs and lows, but we've got to be tougher mentally to handle those, and we weren't that today at all, and we'll be better for it and better moving forward.
Q. Jared, I was wondering what you knew about Cade Townsend coming into this game and what did you see from him? What did he give Ole Miss the first four and two-thirds?
JARED JONES: Yeah, good heater, upper 90s, and then obviously a low 90s slider. Kind of one-speed hitting, and we just didn't do a great job of separating pitches today. Kind of let him off the hook a few times in three-ball counts, and doesn't lead to a lot of success. Myself included, I've got to do better in the box at the top of the order and get things going.
Q. How have you seen the pitching maybe improve across the conference over the course of this year?
JARED JONES: Yeah, it's been a tough year, obviously. I think there's a lot of great arms throughout the league and country. I just think it's the SEC and you're going to get the best players day in and day out. There's no time to make excuses and no time to feel bad for yourself. There's going to be another game for us this season, and it's about getting on to that one.
Q. Jared, when you're facing a team you haven't seen this year and you have short time to prepare for an opposing pitching staff, how difficult does it make it for you guys batting?
JARED JONES: I mean, it's baseball. You're not really facing the pitcher, you're facing the ball. It's the same thing pretty much day in and day out, upper 90s fastball with some sort of slider or changeup.
You've got to be prepared to go out there and see something you've seen before. I've been in the league for three years; I don't feel like I haven't seen anything that I'm going to see throughout the rest of this year. It's just about getting back into character, slowing them down at the plate, and taking tougher at-bats.
Q. What's it like to have guys like Shores and Mayers that can eat innings completely and what they did today against Ole Miss's offense?
JARED JONES: Yeah, that was huge for us. I hope that doesn't get overlooked by how all three of those guys threw today. It's tough to go out there and be as bad on offense as we were, I guess, would be the word, when they threw as well as we did.
We talked before the game about how four to five runs would win the game, and it would have, and we weren't able to come through in that, but those guys gave us a really good opportunity to win this game.
Q. Jared, have you noticed any sort of pattern that pitchers are trying to execute against you guys over the last couple of games?
JARED JONES: You know, I think not necessarily a pattern, I just think guys are executing pitches and we're kind of getting ourselves out at times. I think we could be better battling and getting pitch counts up and then obviously just moving forward, it's about getting on to the next game. This game, as much as it hurts and as much as we want to maybe it dwell on it, we've just more got to learn from it and move on.
Coach Johnson always says, learn the lesson, leave the moment. That's going to be the biggest thing for today.
Q. Jared, I do want to ask you about the quality opponents you face in this conference and how does that prepare you for the NCAA Tournament and also Omaha?
JARED JONES: Yeah, it's a great training ground for Omaha. It's a 30-game playoff in the SEC. You've got to go out there and every game counts the same, and then obviously here in the SEC tournament you're playing for a chance to host a regional and a super regional and then even better, win a tournament.
That's something I didn't get to do while I was here at LSU, and it's on to the next one with regional and whatever else is ahead of us.
Q. About that playing at home, earning that right, how do you use this next couple of days to hit the reset and get ready for what you know is ahead of you?
JARED JONES: Yeah, got to get back to Baton Rouge, get recovered and get rested and get right back to work. I'm sure we'll have practice either Monday or for sure on Tuesday, and it's just about getting right back into our character of play and being ready to show up on Friday or Thursday, whenever the regional starts.
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Archie Wilson came all the way from Australia to play football at Nebraska, and the freshman punter is admittedly feeling a bit homesick. Wilson recently enrolled at Nebraska after growing up in Victoria, Australia, and playing a different brand of football. The 18-year-old spoke with the media for the first time on Tuesday, and he was asked about his family back home. Wilson became overwhelmed with emotion. "I love them a lot. I've got two little brothers and my mom and dad ... yeah, that's the tough part about being here," Wilson said. "I love them a lot, but they know this is what's best for me, and it's good I can still talk to them plenty over the phone, and they're coming here to see the first few games, so I'm looking forward to that." Wilson is a rugby-style punter who trained at Prokick Australia, which is a program that trains Australian athletes to become punters and kickers in American football. Several current NFL players and Division I student-athletes came from Australia and trained with Prokick. Nebraska will have a new starting punter this season after three-year starter Brian Buschini graduated, and Wilson is competing for the job.
A Minnesota Vikings wide receiver's season is already over. The Minnesota Vikings announced on Tuesday that wide receiver Rondale Moore is being placed on season-ending injured reserve due to a leg injury that he suffered in the team's first preseason game against the Houston Texans this past weekend. It is a devastating blow for Moore, who is now being sidelined for an entire season, before it even begins, for the second year in a row. Moore signed a one-year, $2 million contract in free agency with the Vikings this offseason in the hopes he could return from a different injury that cost him the entirety of the 2024 season. Moore was a member of the Atlanta Falcons in 2024 after being acquired in a trade with the Arizona Cardinals for backup quarterback Desmond Ridder. This is now two different teams that Moore has been a part of, but will never play a game for them due to injuries. Moore was injured while returning a punt. He began his career with the Arizona Cardinals, catching 135 passes for 1,201 yards over three seasons before being traded. He was never going to be counted on to be a key contributor for the Vikings offense this season, especially given the superstars they already have at wide receiver in Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison, but he still had a chance to be an interesting depth player. Now it is fair to wonder what the rest of his career might even look like. Missing two full seasons due to two different leg injuries is going to be a brutal thing to try to come back from. Missing two seasons for any reason is difficult, but when you add the leg injuries to the equation, it makes the obstacle even steeper.
Pittsburgh Pirates ace Paul Skenes may continue to be one of the top contenders for the National League Cy Young Award, but there is one place where he has appeared mortal this season. On Tuesday night, the Milwaukee Brewers did to Skenes what they have done to plenty of MLB pitchers in 2025 ... put up big offensive numbers. For the second time this season (Skenes also pitched in Milwaukee on June 25), the Brewers forced him from the game after just 4.0 innings on Tuesday night, logging six hits and four runs during his time on the mound. Both of those performances came at Milwaukee's home stadium (American Family Field) and both are now Skenes' shortest outings of the season. While another NL Central team has put up more runs against Skenes this season (the St. Louis Cardinals nicked him for five runs in 6.0 innings on April 8), no other team has had the same kind of success over multiple starts by Skenes in 2025 as have the Brewers inside their home stadium. In all this season, Skenes has given up 10 hits and eight runs in 8.0 innings in Milwaukee. It was his third career outing on the road against the Brewers, with his lone 2024 start representing arguably the best outing of his rookie season. On July 11, 2024, Skenes struck out 11 and didn't allow a hit over 7.0 innings as the Pirates would eventually post a 1-0 victory. Tuesday's short outing was highlighted by a pair of Milwaukee home runs, including a leadoff solo shot by Sal Frelick that quickly set the tone for the Brewers. While Milwaukee's hit parade helped raise Skenes' ERA on the season to 2.13, it's hardly any reason for concern in a season where the 23-year-old right-hander is still a heavy favorite (-600) to win the NL Cy Young Award, per BetMGM. Skenes struggling in Milwaukee is likely more yet another stamp of approval on the Brewers' potential to be a threat once the postseason arrives. With an 18-4 record since the All-Star break entering Tuesday, Milwaukee has taken over the NL Central race from the Chicago Cubs. So what's the good news for Skenes? This is Pittsburgh's last trip to Milwaukee this season and the next-to-last series for the Pirates against the red-hot Brewers. Milwaukee will visit PNC Park for a three-game series on Sept. 5-7, and if Skenes gets a chance for revenge against Milwaukee, there couldn't be a better place for him to take the mound. This season, in 11 starts covering 68.2 innings, Skenes has a 1.70 ERA in the Steel City.
Detroit Lions head coach Dan Campbell thinks he set his team up for failure last season with the messages he sent. The Lions won the NFC North and the top overall seed in the NFC Playoffs by going 15-2, but lost in their first playoff game to the Washington Commanders. In a new interview with WXYZ in Detroit, Campbell confessed that he thinks his messaging led the Lions to get too complacent after achieving the goal of securing the No. 1 seed. “There was a little part of me last year, I’m like, Man, did I put such an emphasis on the one-seed, playing at home, all these things that it was almost like — the set of circumstances, we had a bunch of injuries — that it was like, [sigh]. We took a deep breath,” Campbell said. “And then it was like, ‘Oh man, we reached one of those goals,’ but the ultimate goal is the Super Bowl.” “So I just, in my own head, did I set us up for failure by the way that I spoke about it? I think about little things like that. Whereas, you know what? We didn’t lose on the road last year. What if we had gone on the road?” Campbell is quick to take responsibility when his team loses, but last year’s playoff exit was particularly shocking. The Minnesota Vikings pushed them all the way to Week 18, giving them no real opportunity to exhale. Their playoff bye may have given them an opportunity to do that when they shouldn’t have. Of course, Campbell was plenty confident in his team heading into the playoffs. Still, the messaging will clearly be different in Detroit this season.