EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Softball made its 2023 home debut on Sunday by beating the cold and sweeping both games of an Ohio Valley Conference doubleheader against Lindenwood University.
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The Screaming Eagles claimed an 8-0 victory in six innings in game 1 before taking game 2 by a final score of 7-4. The doubleheader sweep improved USI’s record to 10-11 overall and 4-1 in the OVC, keeping USI in the top part of the conference standings. On the flip side, Lindenwood dropped to 6-15 this season and 0-4 in OVC play.
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The series against Lindenwood ended up being a two-game set following a cancellation on Saturday due to cold temperatures.
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In the first game of the doubleheader, the Screaming Eagles jumped out in front in the bottom of the second inning when senior infielder Rachel Martinez (Chicago, Illinois) sent a ball over the left-field fence for a two-run home run, her first of the season. Junior first baseman Lexi Fair (Greenwood, Indiana) came around to score off the Martinez home run, as Southern Indiana led 2-0.
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USI continued to pile on runs in the bottom of the third when Fair sent a ball of her own out of the ballpark, bringing around senior designated player Allie Goodin (Evansville, Indiana) and junior catcher Sammie Kihega (Greenfield, Indiana) to give USI a 5-0 advantage.
Southern Indiana would explode in the sixth inning to bring in three more runs. Following a sac fly by freshman infielder Julianna Hibbs (Henderson, Kentucky), senior Jordan Rager (Fishers, Indiana) doubled down the left field line to drive in freshman outfielder Caroline Stapleton (Shirley, Indiana). With USI up 7-0, Goodin singled up the middle to score junior outfielder Mackenzie Bedrick (Brownsburg, Indiana) to end the game on a run rule in the sixth inning.
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Goodin led all hitters in the first game with three hits while also tallying a run and an RBI. Fair went 2-for-2 in game 1 with two runs and three RBIs on a home run.
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Meanwhile, the Screaming Eagles received another brilliant performance in the pitching circle by sophomore Josie Newman (Indianapolis, Indiana), who held the Lions at bay. Newman held Lindenwood to only three hits in six innings worked. The right-hander finished the day with seven strikeouts in her fourth shutout of the season. Newman improved her record to 8-4 on the season.
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For Lindenwood, senior pitcher Amanda Weyh had her record drop to 3-4 after the loss. Weyh went five innings, allowing five runs and striking out four.
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The second game of Sunday’s twin bill was less lopsided. Lindenwood scored the game’s first run in the top of the second inning on a fielder’s choice off USI sophomore starting pitcher Hailey Gotshall (Lucerne, Indiana).
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USI answered with a crooked number in the bottom of the third, posting five runs. The Screaming Eagles first grabbed a 2-1 lead when Goodin resumed her solid day at the plate with a double to left-center field that scored Rager and Bedrick. Two batters later, Fair picked up her second three-run blast of the doubleheader to push USI ahead 5-1.
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After Lindenwood scored one run back in the fourth, the Lions pulled within one run, 5-4, in the top of the fifth inning, as the first four hitters reached base. USI responded with two runs in the home half of the fifth. Martinez and freshman infielder Carlee Effinger (Evansville, Indiana) each came through with RBI singles, increasing USI’s lead to 7-4.
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Offensively, Goodin paced USI in the hit column in game 2 with a pair of hits while accounting for two RBIs. Fair had three RBIs on the home run with two runs scored.
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Following the start of Gotshall, freshman pitcher Raegan Gibson (Louisville, Kentucky) pitched 2.1 innings of relief into the top of the seventh inning. In the seventh, Lindenwood threatened with the bases loaded and one out, so USI went to its third pitcher of the game in Newman. Newman recorded the last two outs to earn her first save of the season.
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Gotshall earned her second win of the season, moving to 2-2 on the year. The sophomore allowed four runs – three earned – with two strikeouts in four innings.
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Gotshall’s Lindenwood counterpart, freshman pitcher Avery Wapp, was charged with her fourth loss this season. Wapp surrendered seven runs – six earned – with four strikeouts in 4.1 innings of work.
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On Sunday, Fair entered the top-10 in USI history for career home runs after her two-home-run day. She has 19 career home runs. Kihega’s career-best on-base streak reached 19 games on Sunday, as the catcher also moved into the top-five and in a tie for fourth in USI history with 72 career walks. Goodin extended her hitting streak to a career-best 10 games.
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The Screaming Eagles will return to action at USI Softball Field on Wednesday for a midweek, nonconference matchup against Austin Peay State University. First pitch Wednesday is at 3 p.m. Admission to all 2023 USI Softball home spring games is free, courtesy of The Women’s Hospital Deaconess.
On Saturday afternoon, Trump supporters gathered at his Mar-a-Lago home and country club in Florida to show their support. Trump later boarded a private jet to fly from Palm Beach to Tulsa, Oklahoma, to attend a college wrestling tournament.
Trump made no mention of a criminal indictment and arrest at the Tulsa event. He appeared alongside Senator Markwayne Mullin, congratulated the wrestlers and posed for pictures with supporters, according to pictures published by Tulsa World.
Trump and Mullin sat in a boxed-off area and stayed for all 10 matches, while Mullin, a former wrestler, explained the finer points of the sport. Trump talked with fans between matches, but reporters were kept away.
Speaking before Trump’s arrival, Mullin appeared to compare the likely charges against Trump with unproven and largely discredited claims that former secretary of state Hilary Clinton, Trump’s 2016 opponent, committed criminal security breaches while she served in the Obama administration.
“They’ve been after the president (Trump) since Day 1,†Mullin was reported to have remarked. “Everybody sees this for what it is. It’s not what this country is about. We had an opportunity to get after Hilary, … and we didn’t.â€
“The [Manhattan] district attorney needs to concentrate on putting bad guys in jail,†he added.
It was Trump’s first public appearance since he said in a social media post that he would be arrested over the payments made to Daniels, a month before the 2016 presidential election. If any indictment is handed down, it is likely to claim the payments were an illegal use of campaign finances.
Trump received a standing ovation in Tulsa and held up a defiant fist as he arrived at the wrestling event while fans cheered. Earlier on Saturday, Trump had urged his supporters to “protest, protest, protest†in comments made on his Truth Social platform.
Insider has reported that the grand jury looking at the case may still listen to one further witness on Monday, raising the prospect of any indictment coming later in the week.
Michael Cohen, the former Trump attorney and “fixer†who was sentenced to three years in federal prison after pleading guilty to tax evasion and campaign-finance violations, said that Trump’s comments signaled a desire for “another violent clashâ€.
“It’s eerily similar to the battle cry that he put out just prior to the Jan 6 insurrection, you know, especially including the call, you know, for protest,†Cohen told MSNBC. Cohen added that “it would have been smart for Donald to write ‘peaceful protest’, but he doesn’t want a peaceful protestâ€.Cohen also theorized that Trump would see his arrest as a potential boost to his 2024 presidential campaign as he frequently has sought to portray himself as at the center of a political “witch huntâ€.