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Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

This week, Chiefs Wire's Ed Easton Jr. spoke with Team USA Weightlifter Aaron Williams.

USA TODAY

In his interview with Easton Jr., Williams discusses his recent offseason workout withKansas City Chiefslinebacker Jack Cochrane at USA Weightlifting's National Team Camp at the Olympic and Paralympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. He also reflected on meeting the Chiefs' head strength and conditioning coach/director of sports science, Ryan Reynolds, and his favorite NFL team.

"Ryan (Reynolds) was awesome. He was there, of course, and he had a blast. He was willing to let us give him some pointers here and there. " He's also very receptive," said Williams. "It shows that whenever you have a successful program, everyone tends to take in information rather than block it out and go with what they know." So it was really cool to see, also at the very high level of the NFL, that even your strength coaches are willing to take in information and then maybe even use it later on down the road for other athletes as well."

Reynolds watched Cochrane during his weightlifting workout, and is entering his 11th NFL season with the Chiefs. Williams opened up about his love for football growing up, including his favorite NFL team.

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"It's going to sound a little cheesy, but I grew up in Germany, and the only reason that I actually wanted to play football is because my dad played football, so he would be the reason that I really wanted to play football, and then he's a Dallas Cowboys fan," said Williams, "I was a Pittsburgh Steelers fan, so I don't know where we went wrong. He thought he was raising a Cowboys fan, but that was my favorite team to watch whenever I was playing football."

The USA Weightlifting Athlete Identification & Recruitment Initiative is not grassroots development and is not intended for mass participation. Its purpose is to support the high-performance pipeline by identifying outlier athletes—often nearing the end of high school or collegiate eligibility—who may be capable of transitioning into weightlifting and becoming difference-makers at the highest level of the sport.

For more information, visit the USA WeightliftingAthlete Identification & Recruitment Initiativeand learn more about Williams on hisWeightlifting profile.

This article originally appeared on Chiefs Wire:Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

Weightlifter Aaron Williams reflects on meeting with Chiefs Coach

This week, Chiefs Wire's Ed Easton Jr. spoke with Team USA Weightlifter Aaron Williams. In his interview with Easton Jr., Wil...
Donald Trump Addresses Possibility Of Barron Trump Entering Politics In The Most Trumpian Way

Donald Trump left the door open to his youngest son, Barron Trump, entering politics.

HuffPost

But the president sidestepped making a direct prediction and instead made a boast.

Politics:The Supreme Court’s Path To Killing The Voting Rights Act Is Paved With ********

In an interview with “Full Measure” host Sharyl Attkisson, shared online Sunday, the president was asked: “Do you see your son Barron going into politics someday?”

“Well, maybe, he’s certainly a popular guy,” replied Trump.

Then he hyped up other family members, and by extension himself, when he added: “But I have a lot of members of my family that are very popular, you know?”

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The president then concluded: “I have good kids, I have very good kids.”

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Barron Trump turned 20 in March. He is currently studying business at New York University’s Washington, D.C., campus.

He has largely stayed out of the political limelight but has reportedly taken a more prominent behind-the-scenes role in recent years, includingadvising his father on which “macho bro” podcaststo appear on in the run-up to the 2024 election in a bid to boost his popularity with young men.

Two of Barron’s older siblings, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr., have previously been floated for political roles.

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Read the original on HuffPost

Donald Trump Addresses Possibility Of Barron Trump Entering Politics In The Most Trumpian Way

Donald Trump left the door open to his youngest son, Barron Trump, entering politics. But the president sidestepped making a direc...
Lafayette-area baseball 2026 season comes to bitter end with no trips to Sulphur

This past weekend, the 2026high school baseballseason in the 337 came to an end.

USA TODAY

Twenty-nine teams hailing fromLafayette Parishand its surrounding areas earned a spot in the LHSAA Baseball State Tournament, and all 29 have been eliminated before the coveted trip to Sulphur. Last year, the area was home to three state championship teams. That trend won’t continue this year.

A handful of teams came close seeing their postseason journey end in the semifinal and finals round of their respective brackets. In Non-Select, Rayne was the last standing area-teams with the Wolves falling to Lutcher 2-1 in the Division II semifinals series. This was the second deepest playoff run for the Wolves in over a decade since securing their state championship back in 1993. Delcambre, Erath, and Iota saw their seasons end in the quarterfinals of the Division IV and II brackets, respectively.

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Over in the Select brackets, Teurlings Catholic, Catholic-N.I., St. Thomas More, Acadiana Renaissance Charter, St. Edmund and Ascension Episcopal were the last standing area teams. The Rebels and Panthers were on the hunt for back-to-back state titles in Division II and Division III, but both lost their semifinals series 2-1.

The Cougars and Eagles also fell short in Division I and Division II semifinals, respectively, with STM losing to Brother Martin 2-1 and ARCA losing to Vandebilt Catholic 2-1. For the Eagles, their postseason run was one for the history books as they made their first semifinals appearance in progam history.

In the Class C bracket, Northside Christian was the last standing area team. The Warriors ended their season in the quarterfinals round with a 10-2 loss to Maurepas.

Shannon Belt covers high school sports and the Louisiana Ragin’ Cajuns for The Daily Advertiser as part of the USA TODAY Network. Follow her high school and Cajuns coverage on X, formerly known as Twitter: @ShannonBelt3. Got questions regarding HS/UL athletics? Send them to Shannon Belt at sbelt@gannett.com.

This article originally appeared on Lafayette Daily Advertiser:No Lafayette-area baseball teams reached LHSAA state finals

Lafayette-area baseball 2026 season comes to bitter end with no trips to Sulphur

This past weekend, the 2026high school baseballseason in the 337 came to an end. Twenty-nine teams hailing fromLafayette Parishan...
Yahoo Finance

By Stella Qiu and Wayne Cole

Reuters

SYDNEY, May 12 (Reuters) - Australia's centre-left Labor government has rolled out the biggest changes to investment taxes this century to help young people break into the housing market, along with cost-of-living relief to cushion the fallout from the Iran war.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers on Tuesday called his fifth ‌budget the most "important and ambitious" in decades, as a landslide election victory last year allowed the government to address the politically thorny problem of intergenerational inequity.

"I acknowledge ‌this is a controversial change, I acknowledge this is a government coming into a different view to the view we held 12 months ago," said Chalmers in a press conference.

"The main change in our thinking is the view that ​we cannot let the intersection of the housing market and the tax system continue to lock out so many people from getting a toehold in the housing market, particularly the young people."

The centre piece are proposals limiting capital gains tax discounts and negative gearing on assets, policies that have long been criticised for skewing home ownership towards older, wealthier investors and away from first-home buyers.

From 1 July 2027, the government plans to scrap the 50% capital gains tax (CGT) discount on assets held for more than a year, a benefit begun in 1999 that coincided with a sharp and lasting ‌acceleration in house price growth.

Instead, the CGT will return to the ⁠pre-1999 policy of taxing inflation-indexed gains, with a 30% minimum tax on net capital gains. It will apply to all assets including housing.

Negative gearing, which allows investment losses to be offset against taxable income, will be limited to newly built homes to support new housing supply.

There will also be ⁠a new tax cut for working Australians through a A$250 ($180.88) tax offset, as well as a new A$1,000 instant tax deduction. That is on top of already legislated tax cuts set to deliver up to A$536 in annual savings for taxpayers.

Ratings Agency S&P said in a note after the budget announcement that, since the new housing tax rules are not retroactive, there should be minimal effect on house prices ​and ​rents.

Here are the key highlights of the budget:

BUDGET BOTTOM LINE IMPROVES

The government said the investment tax reforms will ​save over A$3.5 billion over the next four years, with most savings ‌coming in later years.

They will be dwarfed by massive savings from an overhaul of its disability welfare programme - worth more than A$35 billion over the next four years - as well as higher commodity prices from the Iran war and elevated inflation.

Overall, the budget deficit is projected to be A$45 billion lower over the next four years, part of an effort to fight inflationary pressure caused by spiking oil prices.

The Reserve Bank of Australia has already lifted interest rates three times this year to head off the war-driven energy shock, fully reversing the policy easing from last year.

The budget deficit for the current 2025/26 financial year is expected to come in at A$28.3 billion, narrower than the $A36.8 billion tipped in December. This is projected to widen again slightly ‌to A$31.5 billion in the 2026/27 year.

Inflation is forecast to hit 5% by June as the Middle ​East conflict drives up energy costs, way above the central bank's target band of 2% to 3%. That will ​keep the RBA wary, raising the risk interest rates will stay high for longer.

Markets ​are wagering there is an 18% probability that the RBA will have to raise rates a fourth time in June, while a move by ‌September has been fully priced in.

"New fiscal spending could boost aggregate demand, ​complicating the job of the central bank," S&P said ​in its note.

Higher interest rates are expected to weigh on the economy, with the budget projecting growth slowing to a sub par rate of 1.75% next financial year. The unemployment rate, which has held low at 4.3%, is seen drifting up to 4.5%.

Treasury also studied a more severe scenario where the oil price peaks at $200 and takes ​three years to fall back.

"We would still avoid a recession, but ‌unemployment would spike to pre-pandemic levels and inflation would peak above 7%," said Chalmers. "Australians have been paying a hefty price for this war, at the bowser ​and beyond."

A A$14.8 billion "fuel security and price relief package" was also announced which the government said would to help boost fuel supply and aid households and ​businesses impacted by surging energy costs.

(Reporting by Stella Qiu; Editing by Sam Holmes and Andrew Heavens)

Yahoo Finance

By Stella Qiu and Wayne Cole SYDNEY, May 12 (Reuters) - Australia's centre-left Labor government has rolled out the biggest ch...
Florida football recruiting: What Gators, Hurricanes are watching in spring

(Editor's note: This is the latest edition of "Extra Points," the newsletter providing additional news, analysis and opinions on all things high school recruiting in the state of Florida.You can sign up to receive this newsletter in your email inboxweekly.)

USA TODAY

Spring is time to travel in the recruiting world, and reporters are no different.

USA TODAY's Florida Network has been busy this spring, travelling the state to check in with premier recruits and look for under-the-radar prospects.

In this week's Extra Points, we're dumping the notebook halfway through the spring. There are still plenty of schools on the list to check in with, and more intel will come pouring in as the pressure increases on the state's elite recruits.

Here's where we've been and what we're hearing so far this spring.

Florida commit Anthony Jennings headlines talented Dillard squad

Jennings, who committed to Florida on April 25, is the marquee name at Dillard but far from the only elite recruit suiting up for the Panthers.

Jennings (No. 61)namedthe Gatorsfrom an offer list that includes nearly 40 schools. He confirmed with USA TODAY that he as all but officially shut down his recruitment after using all five available official visits. Ever sinceJon Sumrall and his new staff got to Gainesville, we haven't stopped hearing about how unique this new regime is. Jennings reinforced the point, saying that the staff is what got the Gators over the hump against other finalists like Florida State, Auburn and Maryland.

Florida head coach Jon Sumrall poses with fans after the Orange and Blue game at Steve Spurrier Field at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville, FL on Saturday, April 11, 2026. [Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun]

"Coach Sumrall and (WRs coach Marcus) Davis were two key factors in my commitment," he told us at a spring practice. "As soon as I met (Sumrall), he was off the charts — dapping me up and giving me a hug. Even when I committed over the phone he was just really excited..."

Jennings, a 6-foot speedster, is WR1 within a group that includes two 6-4 rising senior pass catchers. Isaiah Monestime and Josh Sylvain both have seen their respective recruitments gain steam this spring. Colorado and Kentucky are among the programs that have extended offers to both in recent weeks.

After transferring in from Piper with zero Division I offers, Monestime has been offered by five different programs in the last two months. Sylvain, a returning senior, reports 10 offers from the likes of Tulane, USF and Cal. Expect the offer count to rise for both as more college coaches stop by Dillard to do their due diligence.

The secondary is also loaded, headlined by Penn State commit Semajay Robinson (No. 79). Robinson confirmed with us that he has not shut down his recruitment and two other programs are nearing visits. Louisville and Virginia are the teams to watch for the 6-3 cornerback.

Louisvillehas made recruiting Florida a priority under Jeff Brohm, and they've already landed three Top 100 commits this cycle. They hope to add another in Robinson.

"They just know what they want, there's a lot of Florida guys there," he said. "And I feel like if I wasn't home at Penn State, that'd be another place I could call home."

It won't be an easy flip, as Robinson committed back in March after associate head coach and CBs coach Terry Smith closed the deal for the Nittany Lions. The relationship with his verbal pledge remains strong midway through the spring.

"I love (the staff), coach Terry is the G.O.A.T," he said, "I love him. He's the reason I even committed there. And Penn State culture is very big, and I want to be a part of that. And (head coach Matt) Campbell, I love him to death."

Another senior to watch on the defensive side of the ball is Tedrick Oatman, a versatile athlete that roams from the nickel to linebacker that reports offers from the likes of Boston College, UConn, Cal and Georgia State.

Cardinal Mooney looking to repeat with Top 100 recruits leading way

Cardinal Mooney QB Davin Davidson at a spring practice on April 31, 2026

The Cougars have Davin Davidson running the show again this year and are primed for a title defense season with theNo. 1 signal caller in the stateat the helm.

The 6-7 Davidson (No. 17) has had a breakout offseason unlike any other, and committed to Florida after a host of offers came rushing in. Now an Elite 11 finalist with a verbal commitment made, Davidson committed quickly after the offers came in order to avoid distractions and visits during the summer and fall. Expect his pledge to the Gators to hold firm until signing day.

Kaleb Exume (No. 56)transfers in from Parrish, and has one of the more impressive tapes in the state. The 6-2, 310-pound defensive tackle played both ways at Parrish, and is expected to do the same for the Cougars.He committed to Louisville on April 19over Indiana, Virginia Tech and Kansas.

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Connail Jackson (No. 69) committed to UCF on May 2 over North Carolina and Virginia Tech. The Knights were early on Jackson, and started their recruitment his sophomore year — a head start that Jackson says helped seal the deal. They land a commitment from him after a junior campaign that saw him rush for 2,452 yards and 39 touchdowns on 217 touches.

American Heritage still priority stop for college coaches

QB Neimann Lawrence at the second day of the OT7 Playoffs at St. Thomas Aquinas, June 28, 2025.

Miami, Florida State, Auburn and more were in attendance for a spring practice on April 5 at American Heritage, which sees a revolving door of coaches come by to evaluate talent regularly.

The south Florida powerhouse and defending back-to-back state champs have a new marquee recruit in at quarterback after Dia Bell's (Texas signee) graduation. Rising junior phenom Neimann Lawrence arrived from Miami Northwestern, and is among the most touted signal callers in the 2028 class.

Texas, Texas A&M, Notre Dame, Michigan and Miami are leaders in his recruitment at this stage, and he visited all five this spring. Lawrence has long been on the 'Canes board, and they've been recruiting him since he was in eighth grade.One of Miami's most successful recruiters, offensive line coach Alex Mirabal, was at practice and made sure to check in with Lawrence (as well as the trenches).

Lawrence will have big targets this year. 6-5 Kentucky commit Trae Proctor (No. 35) will start practicing with the team as soon as his transfer from Southridge becomes official, and 6-6 rising junior Robert Outler has been gaining serious steam on the trail — reeling in offers from Missouri and UCF this offseason. Rising senior Michael Stringer (6-0, 190 pounds) is unranked by major recruiting services, but has picked up five offers in the last week from the likes of East Carolina, Cornell and Western Kentucky.

The other side of the ball has elite prospects as well.CB Amare Nugent (No. 12) is a Florida commitand the No. 3 corner in the state, and defensive lineman Micah price reports 14 offers, including Missouri, Purdue and Kentucky this offseason.

Chaminade-Madonna still stacked with high-end talent

Chaminade-Madonna QB Brady Quinn and St. John Nuemann RB Nino Joseph, former teammates at Lely, at the Under Armour Next camp in Orlando, Feb. 22, 2026

Rising junior quarterback Brady Quinn is another quarterback that is being pursued heavily, and has had a busy spring taking visits. Indiana, Notre Dame, Alabama, Clemson, Miami, Kentucky and Purdue were the programs that hosted the 6-1 composite 3-star.

Quinn will have plenty of elite targets in his first year with the Lions, including LSU WR commit Ah'Mari Stevens (No. 41). Stevens held a longtime commitment to Miami before he and the 'Canes mutually agreed to part ways shortly after an official visit to LSU. He named the Tigers one day after his visit to Baton Rouge.

Another big name in the receiver's group is is tight end Peter Pierre, who enters his junior campaign at 6-4, 220 pounds. Pierre reports over 30 offers, and added Alabama, West Virginia, and Mississippi State to the list last week. Rising junior Armani Strong has gained momentum this spring, and added USC and Virginia Tech to an offer list that already includes Ole Miss, Notre Dame, and Florida State.

The Lions also have Amos Bradford at running back, a 6-0, 170-pound 3-star that decommitted from Toledo in February before committing to Purdue this spring.

The Lions have some big names in the secondary, including Notre Dame safety commit John Ford III and Ohio State safety commit Angelo Smith — the younger brother of phenomBuckeye receiver Jeremiah Smith, who was at Chaminade's practice.

Venice flexes elite offensive talent

Venice Indians running back Dorien Irving-jones (2) returns a kick during the second quarter of a spring football game against the Naples Golden Eagles at Staver Field in Naples, Fla., on Tuesday, May 20, 2025.

Tyree Mannings Jr. is one of the best receivers in the nation, and coaches from all over the country have stopped by The Island to check in. The rising junior has added offers from USC, Alabama, North Carolina and Virginia Tech this spring, and is already offered by Florida's Big 3 along with Georgia, LSU, Nebraska, and others.

Transferring in from IMG is rising junior Noah Patton, who has had limited meaningful snaps at the varsity level but has all the tools to take Venice's offense to the next level. He reports offers from Arkansas, Syracuse, Kentucky and others. Florida QB coach Joe Craddock stopped by a Venice practice to do his due diligence on the 6-3, 190 pound signal caller.

Running back Dorien Jones (No. 85) has added North Carolina, Georgia Tech and FIU to his offer sheet this spring. Jones took a visit to Chapel Hill already, and says the tar Heels are among his leaders. Georgia Tech, which extended an offer in late April, has already locked in a summertime visit. USF is working hard on the 5-11, 190-pound back and the Bulls are also among his leaders. Expect a summer commitment from Jones.

While the big names are on the offensive side of the ball, the defense has long been a strong point for Venice and players on that side of the ball are seeing their recruitment speed up. Defensive back Ira Dale has earned offers from Florida Atlantic and Western Kentucky this offseason. Brothers Felly and Desi Kmit are two well-built linebackers in the class of 2028 that transferred in from Michigan, and will almost certainly reel in some big-time offers before next year's signing day.

Eau Gaille has promising crop of talent

It will be interesting so how colleges approach Eau Gallie rising senior quarterback Joseph Allen. Allen was being recruited by Power 4 programs before suffering a season-ending knee injury in the 2025 season opener. Coastal Carolina is a program to keep a close eye on with Allen moving forward.

Eau Gallie 6-5, 215-pound rising junior tight end Troy Silberzahn is seeing his recruitment take off this spring. He's a big body with soft hands and enough speed to separate from linebackers and safeties. Wisconsin, Maryland, Indiana, UCF, Florida State and North Carolina are among the schools to offer early this spring.

Defensive prospects shining at Cardinal Gibbons

Cardinal Gibbons rising junior edge rusher/tight end Ty Kirkpatrick has been taking plenty of reps at linebacker this spring. The 6-2 ½, 235-pounder led the Crusaders with six sacks in 2025. West Virginia, USF, SMU and North Carolina all offered in the past week.

Rutgers has been hot on the trail of Cardinal Gibbons rising senior edge rusher Michael Loudort. The 6-4, 240-pounder's offers also include Florida State, Georgia Tech, Nebraska and Pitt.

This article originally appeared on Treasure Coast Newspapers:Florida H.S. football recruiting: What to know for spring practices

Florida football recruiting: What Gators, Hurricanes are watching in spring

(Editor's note: This is the latest edition of "Extra Points," the newsletter providing additional news, analysis and opin...
Fisherman has largemouth bass catch confirmed as a record in Tennessee

Nearly 2½ months after catching a monster largemouth bass, Darren Nunley received confirmation from the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency that his fish is a state record.

USA TODAY

Nunley, 54, was fishing with professional fishing guide Hensley Powell on Nickajack Lake on Feb. 28 when he landed a largemouth bass weighing 15 pounds, 7½ ounces, breaking the previous record set more than 11 years ago, according to theTWRA.

Darren Nunley holds his state-record largemouth bass at the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency office.

The old record of 15 pounds, 3 ounces was set by Gabe Keen on Feb. 13, 2015, which had broken a record that stood for more than 60 years.

Nunley was using a Z-Man Jack Hammer Chatterbait lure on 17-pound test when he hooked the behemoth bass.

“It felt like it ran straight toward me at first,” Nunley toldNews Channel 9. “I thought I missed it and then I finally caught up with it.

“It was a pretty good fight, but it wasn’t jumping or anything. I guess it was too big to jump. I didn’t think it was as big as it was in the water, but then when we got it out of the water, I thought, ‘My God, what have I done?’”

Certifying the catch

The bass was weighed on a certified scale at a Save A Lot grocery store in Whitwell, where Nunley lives. Sequatchie County Wildlife Officer Shawn Edgmon witnessed the weigh-in.

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Fishing guide Hensley Powell (left) and Tennessee Wildlife Officer Shawn Edgmon stand beside fisherman Darren Nunley, who hold his state-record largemouth bass.

When Keen made his record catch in 2015, he didn’t expect it to last long, saying, “There’s another one in there,” referring to Chickamauga Lake, the location of his catch.

“I think there’s some more 15 or 16-pound fish in that lake.”

The stocking of Florida bass helped

The reason for the big bass in Nickajack and Chickamauga lakes is the fact the TWRA began stocking Florida-strain largemouth bass fingerlings into these waters in 2015 and 2000, respectively. This strain of largemouth bass is known to grow large.

Once Nunley’s bass was in the boat, Hensley obtained an unofficial weight on his scale, and then didn’t waste time heading in to get an official weight, knowing the fish could be a state record, as reported byUSA Today/For The Win Outdoors.

After a lot of waiting, the catch was finally confirmed as a state record.

David Strege is an award-winning journalist who spent most his career as a sportswriter at the Los Angeles Times and Orange County Register before evolving into an outdoors writer. He joined Yahoo! Sports as a copy editor prior to providing outdoor-related blogs for a company associated with Yahoo! He is currently doing the same for USA Today.

This article originally appeared on For The Win:Fisherman has largemouth bass catch confirmed as a record in Tennessee

Fisherman has largemouth bass catch confirmed as a record in Tennessee

Nearly 2½ months after catching a monster largemouth bass, Darren Nunley received confirmation from the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Ag...
Tennessee baseball's updated RPI after Game 2 Texas win

A series finale will take place Sunday between Tennessee (34-17, 13-13 SEC) and No. 4Texas(36-12, 15-10 SEC). The Vols are playing for a series sweep after winning the first two games.

USA TODAY

First pitch on Sunday between the Vols and Longhorns is slated for noon EDT atLindsey Nelson Stadium. ESPN2 willtelevise the series finalewith Karl Ravech (play-by-play) and Chris Burke (analyst) on the call.

Ahead of first pitch, Tennessee enters Game 3 with a No. 32 RPI following May 9 college baseball games. Texas is ranked No. 4 nationally for RPI.

UCLA(1), Georgia Tech (2),Auburn(3),North Carolina(5),Alabama(6),Florida State(7),USC(8), Southern Miss (9) and Mississippi State (10) are also ranked in the top 10 for RPI after May 9 games.

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Tennessee’s final regular-season home game at Lindsey Nelson Stadium is slated for Tuesday versus Belmont. First pitch for the in-state matchup is scheduled for 5 p.m. EDT (SEC Network+).

More:How 2026 SEC Tournament strike zone challenge system will work

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This article originally appeared on Vols Wire:Tennessee baseball RPI after Texas win in Game 2

Tennessee baseball's updated RPI after Game 2 Texas win

A series finale will take place Sunday between Tennessee (34-17, 13-13 SEC) and No. 4Texas(36-12, 15-10 SEC). The Vols are playing for ...

 

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