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So close for four years, the Texas Longhorns finally broke through to win the Women’s College World Series for the first time.

Texas had lost in the championship series in 2022 and 2024, but in 2025 the Longhorns (56-12) set a school record for victories, beat the four-time defending champions and toppled Texas Tech in the best-of-three championship series.

Celebrate the Longhorns’ historic NCAA softball championship with a beautifully designed commemorative page print from USA TODAY. Featuring a bold headline and a striking image of the Horns celebrating on the field at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, this keepsake captures the moment perfectly.

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In 2022 and 2024, the Longhorns lost in the championship series to Oklahoma, winner of the prior four titles. In 2025, after beating Florida 3-0 in the WCWS opener, they upended the Sooners 4-2 in the winner’s bracket. Then Texas reached the championship series for the third time in four years with a 2-0 victory over Tennessee.

Against Texas Tech, the Longhorns rallied in the bottom of the sixth inning to win 2-1 in Game 1. They lost 4-3 in Game 2 with the tying run on third base.

In Game 3 on June 6, the Longhorns left no doubt who would rule college softball. They scored five runs in the bottom of the first inning against NiJaree Canady, the million-dollar transfer from Stanford who had thrown every pitch for the Red Raiders during the WCWS. She didn’t return for the second inning. Mia Scott’s grand slam in the fourth inning made it 10-0 Texas.

The Red Raiders stayed alive with three runs in the top of the fifth and scored again in the seventh. After a final groundout, with a 10-4 victory secured, the Longhorns stormed the field, celebrated madly and hoisted the trophy. Pitcher Teagan Kavan was selected the most outstanding player.

Own a piece of Longhorns history today! Every Texas fan needs this page print on a wall.

Buy our Texas championship page print

Contact Gene Myers at gmyers@gannett.com. Follow him on X@GeneMyers. After nearly a quarter-century as sports editor at the Detroit Free Press, Myers unretired to coordinate book and poster projects across the USA TODAY Network. Explore more books and page prints from the USA TODAY Network, including titles on the Florida Gators’ NCAA basketball championship and the Philadelphia Eagles’ victory in Super Bowl 59.

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The fallout between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump is an evolving situation marked by a public blowup on Thursday, but their relationship ties back to Trump’s first term and even earlier.

A November 2016 CNBC interview with the Tesla CEO, who’s now the richest man in the world, took a critical tone of the now president just days before he was elected president in an upset that signified the strength of the populist movement. 

‘Honestly, I think Hillary’s economic policies and her environmental policies particularly are the right ones, you know, but yeah. Also, I don’t think this is the finest moment in our democracy at all,’ Musk said.

‘Well, I feel a bit stronger that probably he’s not the right guy. He just doesn’t seem to have the sort of character that reflects well on the United States,’ he later added in the interview.  

During Trump’s first term, Musk was part of some of his economic advisory councils, which often includes CEOs, but ultimately left his post because he disagreed with the president’s move to exit the Paris Climate Accords.

‘Am departing presidential councils. Climate change is real. Leaving Paris is not good for America or the world,’ Musk posted at the time.

The two continued to have an on-and-off relationship, but there were some positive signs in May 2020.

‘Elon Musk, congratulations.  Congratulations, Elon. Thanks, Elon. For Elon and 8,000 SpaceX employees, today is the fulfillment of a dream almost two decades in the making,’ Trump said at the Kennedy Space Center in May 2020.

And at the SpaceX Demo-2 launch, Trump said he and Musk communicate regularly.

‘Well, I won’t get into it.  But, yeah — but I speak to him all the time.  Great guy.  He’s one of our great brains.  We like great brains.  And Elon has done a fantastic job,’ he said.

Fast forward to 2022, when Musk purchased Twitter and renamed it X, and brought back Trump’s account that November, after it was suspended after the events of Jan. 6, 2021. In 2022, Musk also announced that he would vote Republican, but indicated he would back Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis if he opted to seek the nomination.

DeSantis launched his campaign on X in a ‘space,’ a virtual public event forum, with Musk, who also reportedly significantly financially backed the Florida governor, according to The Wall Street Journal.

However, a major turning point was in July 2024, after the assassination attempt of Trump at a rally in Butler, Penn.

‘I fully endorse President Trump and hope for his rapid recovery,’ Musk posted.

Musk then campaigned for the president, including a famous moment when he was jumping on stage at his comeback rally in Butler.

‘I want to say what an honor it is to be here and, you know, the true test of someone’s character is how they behave under fire, right?’ Musk said at the rally. ‘And we had one president who couldn’t climb a flight of stairs and another who was fist pumping after getting shot.’

‘This is no ordinary election,’ the tech CEO continued. ‘The other side wants to take away your freedom of speech.’

‘Just be a pest to everyone,’ he added. ‘You know, people on the street everywhere: Vote, vote, vote!’

The tech billionaire spent roughly $300 million through America PAC to boost swing state voter efforts, including Pennsylvania. 

By the time the presidential election rolled around, Trump and Musk appeared to be close friends as the Tesla CEO was with Trump in Mar-a-Lago on election night. Over the next few days, Musk remained in Florida and was reportedly advising Trump on appointments and policy as the transition to a new administration kicked off. 

A week later, shortly before Musk and the new president appeared at a SpaceX launch together in Texas, Trump announced that Musk and tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy would be heading up the Department of Government Efficiency in an effort to rid the government of waste, fraud, and abuse. 

Trump described the pair as ‘two wonderful Americans’ and although Ramaswamy left that post in January and is now running for governor in Ohio, Musk stayed on and quickly became the face of an agency that made him the main target of attacks from Democrats pushing back on spending cuts that they argued were too drastic.

Protests erupted nationwide against Musk and DOGE including violent outbursts at his Tesla dealerships that tanked the company’s stock and were labeled as acts of ‘domestic terrorism’ by the Justice Department. 

During the first few months of the year, Musk and Trump were spotted together at several viral events including a UFC fight, an Oval Office meeting where Musk’s son ‘Little X’ stole the show, and a cabinet meeting in late February where Musk was the main focus. 

In March, Trump hosted Elon at a Tesla showcase in front of the White House amid a dip in Tesla stock where the president told reporters he was purchasing a Tesla while touting the company.

As Musk’s time at DOGE began to wind down, his employee classification allowed him to serve for 130 days, the newly formed agency had become the poster child of anti-Trump sentiment from Democrats who consistently attacked the $175 billion in spending cuts that DOGE estimated it delivered.

Signs of fracture in the relationship began showing in late May when Musk took a public shot at Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill’ as it made its way through Congress. 

‘I was disappointed to see the massive spending bill, frankly, which increases the budget deficit, not just decreases it, and undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing,’ Musk said.

Two days later, Musk announced his official departure from DOGE.

‘As my scheduled time as a Special Government Employee comes to an end, I would like to thank President @realDonaldTrump for the opportunity to reduce wasteful spending,’ Musk said, adding that the effects of DOGE ‘will only strengthen over time as it becomes a way of life throughout the government.’

DOGE, which fell short of Musk’s initial goal of slashing $1 trillion in spending which Musk said he still remains optimistic will happen in the future, will continue its work without Musk, who said, ‘I look forward to continuing to be a friend and adviser to the president.’

That optimistic tone shifted drastically on June 3 when Musk took to X, the platform he owns, and blasted the budget reconciliation bill calling it ‘a disgusting abomination’ and criticizing the Republicans who voted for it. 

‘KILL THE BILL,’ Musk said the next day.

A day after that, on Thursday, the feud hit a fever pitch.

While speaking with reporters in the Oval Office, Trump said that he was ‘very disappointed’ by Musk’s vocal criticisms of the bill. The president claimed that Musk knew what was in the bill and ‘had no problem’ with it until the EV incentives had to be cut.

On X, Musk called that assessment ‘false.’

Trump turned to social media to criticize Musk, who he appointed to find ways to cut $2 trillion after forming the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

‘Elon was ‘wearing thin,’ I asked him to leave, I took away his EV Mandate that forced everyone to buy Electric Cars that nobody else wanted (that he knew for months I was going to do!), and he just went CRAZY!’ Trump said in one post.

In another post, Trump said, ‘I don’t mind Elon turning against me, but he should have done so months ago. This is one of the Greatest Bills ever presented to Congress. It’s a Record Cut in Expenses, $1.6 Trillion Dollars, and the Biggest Tax Cut ever given.’

‘If this Bill doesn’t pass, there will be a 68% tax increase, and things far worse than that. I didn’t create this mess, I’m just here to FIX IT. This puts our Country on a Path of Greatness. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!’

At one point, Musk referenced late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein in relation to Trump as part of the larger tirade in a comment that several Republicans told Fox News Digital went ‘too far.’

Other posts from Musk included a claim that Trump would not have won the election without his help while accusing Trump of ‘ingratitude.’ In another post, Musk suggested that Trump should be impeached and replaced by Vice President Vance. 

It is unclear if a resolution to the feud is coming in the next few days. Fox News Digital reported on Friday morning that Musk wants to speak to Trump and that White House aides could possibly broker a meeting.

Trump told Fox News on Friday that he isn’t interested in talking to Musk, adding that ‘Elon’s totally lost it.’

Trump also said to Fox News’ Bret Baier that he isn’t worried about Musk’s suggestion to form a new political party, citing favorable polls and strong support from Republicans on Capitol Hill.

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The massive Ukrainian drone strike on Russia has strong implications for the future of all warfare. The sophisticated operation taught us that the use of low-cost, highly scalable, lethal drone technology is here to stay. Our leaders must pay attention, because the Ukraine-Russia war is a blueprint for not only how we will fight future wars but how we will have to defend ourselves from a more sophisticated and capable enemy than ever before.   

America’s defense leaders need to start reflecting on the realities of modern warfare and fully understand that, as a country, we are not ready. Some people still want to try and deny these very small, handheld first-person view (FPV) drones that cost only a few hundred dollars are not the future of warfare.  

They need to wake up. That’s the wrong mentality, and it makes the U.S. less prepared. In the case of the Ukraine operation, they utilized a few good sources, some cheap trucks, and low-cost drones with munitions that managed to destroy over 40 strategic bombers worth billions. Not millions, billions.  

The U.S. government, on the other hand, will spend $10 billion dollars on an aircraft carrier that takes a decade to build and likely now could be destroyed by a modern-day swarm of unmanned surface vehicles, the same ones that have pushed the entire Russian Black Sea Fleet out of the Black Sea.   

Our defense procurement priorities are misguided. The Russians, Ukrainians, Iranians and even the Chinese are starting to treat drones not like we typically do as surveillance. They treat them like they do artillery rounds. This is ammunition and ammunition needs to be produced in massive quantities. They collectively have their manufacturers producing millions per year, yet our government gets excited when a U.S. manufacturer can produce 100 drones a month.   

 

The Ukraine operation should also highlight just how vulnerable we are as a country to similar attacks from our enemy.  Sadly, history has shown that the U.S. government will likely only change its archaic laws after we have a catastrophic attack on U.S. soil. Currently, we don’t allow for the needed widespread use of counter-drone and electronic warfare systems. We should be asking our leaders, why do we have to wait for fellow Americans to get hurt before doing something?

The truth is, we are not prepared defensively for what the state of drone technology currently is globally. People now easily have access to lethal capabilities at low costs that were before only allotted to first-world countries with massive budgets. The technology is proliferating at an alarming rate.   

Thankfully, we have a few companies up to the task. Andy Yakulis, CEO of the defense startup Vector Defense, focused on preparing our soldiers for the next generation of drone warfare, told me recently that: ‘We don’t have a drone technology problem, we have a contracting problem. We have a federal government and defense department procurement problem. Our defense industrial base is broken, and the big prime contractors just don’t get it and aren’t incentivized to adapt to this modern way of warfare because the money keeps rolling out to the same large defense contractors in from our government. We need to streamline the process for defense innovators, companies who understand the threats.’  

He’s right, the technology and expertise in America exists today to stop future attacks and to protect Americans. We will never fight another war without drone technology and AI playing some of the most critical roles. We just aren’t moving federal government budgets quickly enough to fix it, and we need to before it’s too late.  

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Elon Musk’s fiery feud with President Donald Trump spilled onto the top Republicans in Congress, where the tech billionaire questioned if their zeal to cut spending had disappeared. 

Musk launched into a social media assault this week against Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill,’ and accused Republicans of crafting a ‘disgusting abomination’ full of wasteful spending. 

What started as a rant against the bill turned into pointed attacks against Trump, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. 

The tech billionaire and former head of Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) lamented the bill as not cutting deep enough into Washington’s spending addiction. The House GOP’s offering, which is now being modified in the Senate, set a goal of $1.5 trillion in spending cuts. 

Musk set a benchmark of finding $2 trillion in waste, fraud and abuse to slash with his DOGE initiative, but fell far short, hitting only $160 billion in his four-month stint as a special government employee. 

Still, he came with receipts, questioning whether Trump, Thune and Johnson were actually committed to making deep cuts. 

Below are moments from the campaign trail and recent months compiled by Fox News Digital where the trio affirmed their commitment to putting a dent in the nation’s nearly $37 trillion debt. 

Trump on the trail in 2024: ‘We will stop wasteful spending’

A common theme for Trump during his 2024 presidential campaign was to go after the Biden administration, and his opponent, former Vice President Kamala Harris, for ‘throwing billions of dollars out the window.’ 

The then-presidential candidate vowed that should he win a second term, his incoming administration would halt wasteful spending. 

‘We will stop wasteful spending and big government special interest giveaways, and finally stand up for the American taxpayer, which hasn’t happened since I was president,’ he said. ‘We stood up. Our current massive deficits will be reduced to practically nothing. Our country will be powered by growth. Our country, will be powered by growth, will pay off our debt, will have all this income coming in.’

Thune renews promise to cut spending with Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’: ‘It does everything we set out to do’

Thune has agreed with his colleagues in the House GOP that the tax cut package needs to achieve steep savings, and believes that the Senate GOP could take those cuts a step further. After the bill advanced from the House last month, the top Senate Republican re-upped his vow to slash federal funding. 

‘It does everything that we set out to do. It modernizes our military, secures our border, extends tax relief and makes permanent tax relief that will lead to economic growth and better jobs in this country, and makes America energy dominant, coupled with the biggest spending reduction in American history,’ he said. ‘So those are our agenda items, and that’s what we campaigned on. That’s what we’re going to do.’

Johnson after the House’s passage of the budget plan: ‘What you’re going to see is a continuing theme of us identifying waste, fraud and abuse in government’

Johnson had to strike a balancing act in the House to cobble together enough support behind the legislation, and struck deals and satisfied concerned lawmakers across the spectrum of the House GOP while still setting a goal of $1.5 trillion in spending cuts. Rooting out waste, fraud and abuse has been a continued mantra of the speaker and his allies. 

‘I said this is the beginning of a process, and what you’re going to see is a continuing theme of us identifying waste, fraud and abuse in government, which is our pledge of common sense, restoring common sense and fiscal sanity,’ Johnson said.  

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Medicaid reform in President Donald Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ has drawn a partisan line through Congress. 

Democrats have railed against potential Medicaid cuts since Trump was elected, while Republicans have celebrated Medicaid reform through the reconciliation process as an efficient way to eliminate waste, fraud and abuse in the welfare program. 

Fox News Digital asked lawmakers from both ends of the political spectrum to react to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s Medicaid reform. The results were as expectedly divided. 

‘This is all B.S., what the Democrats are doing,’ Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., told Fox News Digital. ‘They’re pushing the agenda that we’re cutting 10 million people off Medicaid. It’s people that actually shouldn’t be on it, illegals that shouldn’t be on it. We’re reforming it.’

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO), a nonpartisan federal agency that has been ridiculed by Republicans, estimated this week that Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ would leave 10.9 million people without health insurance, including 1.4 million who are in the country without legal status in state-funded programs.

But Republicans are holding firm in their defense of Medicaid reform, which Republicans say only cuts benefits to illegal immigrants, those ineligible to receive benefits who are currently receiving benefits, duplicate enrollees in one or more states and those who are able but choosing not to work. 

‘The people who would not continue to get Medicaid benefits under this bill were not qualified to get them in the first place,’ Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., told Fox News Digital. 

Democrats continue to sound off on the healthcare threat of eliminating 10 million people from Medicaid. Not a single House Democrat voted to pass Trump’s championed legislation, which includes fulfilling key campaign promises like cutting taxes, immigration reform and American energy production. 

‘These burdensome regulatory requirements for proving that somebody has obtained or sought work are going to mean millions of people will go without healthcare, and the restrictions on food assistance are equally an obstacle to people meeting their everyday needs,’ Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said. 

Blumenthal added he is ‘very, very concerned about these seemingly cruel and unproductive ways of raising money simply to finance tax cuts’ for ‘wealthy billionaires.’

New Jersey Democratic Sen. Andy Kim said he is happy to have an ‘honest conversation’ about government efficiency and saving taxpayer dollars, but that’s not the reality of this bill. 

‘People are struggling, and I feel like, in the richest, most powerful country in the world, we should be able to make sure that people can have the basic needs they need to be able to survive,’ Kim said of Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. 

Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., told Fox News Digital there is ‘nothing beautiful’ about Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill.’

‘This is horrific, and it adds massive amounts to our debt, compromising our ability to [fund] the fundamentals in the future, foundations for families to thrive — health care, housing, education, good-paying jobs. That’s what we should be doing here, not doing massive tax cuts for billionaires and paying for them by tearing down programs for ordinary families,’ Merkley said. 

The national debt stands at more than $36.2 trillion as of June 5, according to the Fox Business, based on data from the Treasury Department.

The CBO’s report this week also estimated Trump’s bill will cut taxes by $3.7 trillion while raising deficits by $2.4 trillion over a decade. 

Fox News’ Anders Hagstrom and Eric Revell contributed to this report. 

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After two knocks on the door, Texas softball finally broke it down at the Women’s College World Series by winning its first national championship against No. 12 Texas Tech.

Following Texas’ 10-4 rout over Texas Tech at Devon Park in Oklahoma City on June 6, Kavan was named the Most Outstanding Player of the WCWS. The West Des Moines, Iowa, native beat out her third baseman Mia Scott − who broke the game wide open in the bottom of the fourth inning with a grand slam − for the award.

‘It means the world. I’m so happy for this team. We did it, first natty, let’s go,’ Kavan told ESPN’s Holly Rowe after the game. ‘My grandma, the last thing she told my brother, one of the last things was to bring home a victory. We did that for her. It’s really so precious.’

The sophomore right-hander set a new WCWS pitching record on June 7, as she threw 31 2/3 scoreless innings across seven outings. In those seven games pitched, Kavan started four of them and was rewarded with the win in each.

Kavan had a heavy heart for much of the WCWS, as she lost her grandmother − who is the reason she wears No. 17 on her jersey − right before Texas’ 4-2 win over No. 2 Oklahoma on May 31.

Teagan Kavan WCWS stats

Here’s a game-by-game breakdown of Kavan’s stats at the WCWS this year:

vs. No. 3 Florida: 7 innings, 1 strikeout, 2 hits, 2 walks
vs. No. 2 Oklahoma: 7 innings, 8 strikeouts, 7 hits, 2 walks, 2 runs (0 earned)
vs. No. 7 Tennessee: 3 innings, 2 strikeouts, 1 walk
vs. No. 12 Texas Tech (WCWS finals): 7 innings, 3 strikeouts, 3 hits, 1 run (0 earned)
vs. No. 12 Texas Tech (WCWS finals): 2/3 innings, 1 hit
vs. No. 12 Texas Tech (WCWS finals): 7 innings, 3 strikeouts, 8 hits, 4 runs (0 earned)

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For the first time in program history, Texas has reached the mountaintop of the college softball world.

In what was an all-around dominating performance, the sixth-seeded Longhorns defeated No. 12 Texas Tech 10-4 in Game 3 of the Women’s College World Series championship series.

With the win at Devon Park on June 6, Texas became the first program since Florida State in 2018 to be crowned as a first-time national champion. It also snaps a two-series losing streak in the WCWS championship for head coach Mike White after losing two of the last three finals to Oklahoma.

Texas didn’t take long to get to Texas Tech ace NiJaree Canady, who was starting her eighth consecutive game dating back to the super regional round of the NCAA softball tournament. The Longhorns plated five runs in the bottom of the first inning with back-to-back RBI singles from Reese Atwood and Katie Stewart and a three-run home run from Leighann Goode.

It wasn’t only Texas’ bats that dominated in Game 3 of the WCWS championship series — and the WCWS as a whole — as sophomore ace Teagan Kavan was once again stellar on the mound. The West Des Moines, Iowa native set a new WCWS record with 31 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings across six games at the WCWS this year; as all four of the runs she gave up on the night were unearned.

Here’s what you need to know on who won Game 3 of the WCWS championship series between Texas-Texas Tech on June 6, including a look at the boxscore, stats, highlights and more:

Who won the WCWS?

Texas came out on top in the 2025 WCWS championship series by taking two games in the best-of-three series against Texas Tech.

Behind an all-out offensive slugfest and outstanding performance in the circle by Kavan, the Longhorns bounced back on June 6 after dropping Game 2 of the WCWS championship series on June 5.

Texas took Game 1 of the WCWS championship series on June 4 with a 2-1 victory over Texas Tech. It was Atwood who came up clutch in Game 1 for the Longhorns, as she slapped a two-RBI single into left field on the fourth pitch of what would have been an intentional walk out of the palm of Canady.

WCWS Game 3 score: Texas beats Texas Tech

Texas vs Texas Tech WCWS Game 3 stats

Here’s a breakdown of each team’s stats from Game 3 of the WCWS championship series:

Runs: Texas 10, Texas Tech 4
Hits: Texas 12, Texas Tech 8
Errors: Texas 3, Texas Tech 2
Extra-base hits: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0
Strikeouts: Texas 6, Texas Tech 3
Runners left on base: Texas Tech 5, Texas 4
Runners in scoring position: Texas 6-for-11, Texas Tech 3-for-4

Texas vs Texas Tech WCWS Game 3 highlights

Here’s a look at all the runs scored by the Longhorns in the their WCWS title clinching win June 6 against Texas Tech:

Texas final out clinches first WCWS championship

Here’s a look at the final out at the Women’s College World Series, as the Longhorns claimed their first championship.

WCWS champions history

Here’s a year-by-year history of past WCWS winners, dating back to 2015:

2025: Texas defeats Texas Tech
2024: Oklahoma defeats Texas
2023: Oklahoma defeats Florida State
2022: Oklahoma defeats Texas
2021: Oklahoma defeats Florida State
2020: Canceled due to COVID-19
2019: UCLA defeats Oklahoma
2018: Florida State defeats Washington
2017: Oklahoma defeats Florida
2016: Oklahoma defeats Auburn
2015: Florida defeats Michigan

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Corbin Burnes, the former Cy Young Award winner who received a $210 million contract to push the Arizona Diamondbacks into the National League’s elite, will have Tommy John surgery and miss the rest of this season and most of 2026.

Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo made the announcement on Friday in Cincinnati, where his team was set to open a three-game series against the Reds.

‘It was a lot of fast-moving information, a lot of people weighed in on this, and Corbin felt like this was the best decision for him to continue pushing forward,’ Lovullo said in Cincinnati. ‘We’re all with Corbin right now. This is a tough day to get this news, but we’ll find a way to rally around him and play hard for him all year long. Timelines? I don’t know. When is he coming back? I have no idea. I just know that it’s a long road, and it takes time for him to heal and recover, and he will.’

Burnes, 30, was 70 pitches into his 11th start of the season when he hopped in pain and mouthed to his dugout that the discomfort was coming from his right elbow. He underwent an MRI on Monday and traveled to Los Angeles later in the week to visit with orthopedic surgeon Neal ElAttrache.

He’d posted a 2.66 ERA in 64 ⅓ innings, propping up an Arizona rotation and ballclub that otherwise has been a significant disappointment this season. Burnes has been one of the game’s most reliable starters since 2021, making between 28 and 33 starts and pitching 167 to 202 innings the past four seasons.

Now, Arizona must venture on without Burnes, saddled with a 31-31 record, 6 1/2 games behind the Los Angeles Dodgers and in fourth place in the NL West.

Burnes signed a six-year, $210 million contract with Arizona after one season in Baltimore, and won the 2021 NL Cy Young Award with the Milwaukee Brewers, when he led the major leagues with a 2.43 ERA.

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Texas softball is a national champion for the first time.

The Longhorns defeated Texas Tech 10-4 in Game 3 of the Women’s College World Series championship series on Friday at Devon Park in Oklahoma City. Texas scored five runs off NiJaree Canady in the first inning and never looked back.

Leighann Goode capped the explosive first inning for the Longhorns with a three-run blast, which turned out to be the only inning for Canady. Texas added four more runs in the bottom of the fourth inning on a grand slam by catcher Reese Atwood, but could not finish the game with a run-rule victory in the fifth inning.

Texas ace Teagan Kavan limited Texas Tech to four runs and eight hits, but none of the runs she allowed were earned. This was the Longhorns’ eighth WCWS appearance, but their first-ever championship. The Longhorns lost to rival Oklahoma in the championship series last season.

USA TODAY Sports has you covered with scores and highlights from Game 3 of the WCWS finals. Catch up with the WCWS Game 3 here:

Watch WCWS finals with ESPN+

Texas vs Texas Tech softball score

This section will be updated

Texas vs Texas Tech softball updates

Final: Texas 10, Texas Tech 4

Texas beats Texas Tech 10-4 for first national championship

Texas defeats Texas Tech 10-4 first-ever national championship in softball. Mia Scott hit a grand slam in the fourth inning, while Leighann Goode had a three-run home run in the first inning. The Longhorns scored five runs in the first inning off Canady. 

Teagan Kavan struck out three in a complete game effort, limiting the Red Raiders to four runs, but none of them were earned due to errors by the Texas defense.

Hailey Toney drives in another run

Hailey Toney singles to left field to score Makayla Garcia to make it 10-4. Mihyia Davis is thrown out at third, but obstruction is called. The play is under review.

The call is overturned and Davis is out at third. Texas has two outs.

End of sixth inning: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3

Texas Tech forces seventh inning

Samantha Lincoln strikes out Reese Atwood and Katie Stewart with the game-clinching run in scoring position. Texas Tech forces a seventh inning. The Longhorns are still three outs away from a national championship.

Teagan Kavan keeps Texas Tech off the board in sixth inning

Texas Tech cannot put up a run in the top of the sixth inning. Texas will have another chance to walk it off via run rule in the bottom of the inning. Kavan picked up her second and third strikeouts in the sixth.

End of fifth inning: Texas 10, Texas Tech 3

Texas Tech forces sixth inning

A combination of a three-run fifth for the Red Raiders and a scoreless frame for the Longhorns keeps Texas Tech out of run rule territory. The Red Raiders will get to bat at least once more in the sixth inning.

Hailey Toney keeps Texas Tech alive with 2-RBI single

Texas Tech is not done yet. Hailey Toney with a two-RBI single and it’s 10-3 Texas with the lead in the fifth. The run-rule is off the table, for now.

Mihyia Davis plates first Texas Tech run

Mihyia Davis plates a run on an infield single, followed by a throwing error, putting runners on second and third with two outs for Texas Tech.

End of fourth inning: Texas 10, Texas Tech 0

College softball run-rule, explained

Texas has a 10-0 lead in the bottom of the fourth inning vs. Texas Tech. The Longhorns are three outs away in the top of the fifth inning from picking up a run-rule victory. Here’s an explanation of how the run-rule works in college softball.

Samantha Lincoln enters to pitch for Texas

Samantha Lincoln is taking over in the circle for Chloe Riassetto. Lincoln will be the third pitcher of the game for the Longhorns.

Mia Scott hits grand slam for Texas

Mia Scott deposits a ball over the center field wall for a grand slam. That’s a 10-0 lead for Texas. The Longhorns are now three outs away from a run-rule victory.

Teagan Kavan with most consecutive scoreless innings in WCWS

Teagan Kavan has now gone 28 2/3 innings without allowing an earned run at the WCWS. That’s the longest streak by any pitcher at the WCWS.

Teagan Kavan allows first hit, scoreless through four innings

Hailey Toney gets the first Texas Tech hit of the game off Teagan Kavan. However, Kavan retires the next three hitters in order and is through four innings without allowing a run. Toney was the first baserunner for the Red Raiders since Lauren Allred was hit by a pitch in the first inning.

End of third inning: Texas 6, Texas Tech 0

Katie Stewart double scores Reese Atwood to extend Texas lead

Reese Atwood leads off the bottom of the third inning with a double and is followed by a double by Katie Stewart, which scores Atwood. The Longhorns are now up 6-0. They are closing in on eight run-rule territory.

Teagan Kavan has set down seven in a row

Teagan Kavan has retired seven in a row, as she records her second straight 1-2-3 inning. Kavan only has one strikeout so far, but has generated five groundouts.

End of second inning: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0

Texas goes quietly in second inning vs Chloe Riassetto

After hanging five runs in the first inning against NiJaree Canady, Texas is unable to add more despite a two-out single from Kayden Henry. Chloe Riassetto, who came in in relief of Canady, holds the Longhorns scoreless to begin her night.

Chloe Riassetto enters for NiJaree Canady

Chloe Riassetto replaces NiJaree Canady in the circle in the second inning. Riassetto will be the first non-Canady pitcher to throw in the WCWS and since the start of the Tallahassee Super Regional.

Teagan Kavan retires Texas Tech 1-2-3 in second inning

Teagan Kavan delivers a shutdown inning by retiring Texas Tech 1-2-3 in the second inning. A quick inning from the Texas pitcher gets the Longhorns back at the plate with a chance to build on the lead.

End of first inning: Texas 5, Texas Tech 0

Leighann Goode hits a 3-run home run off NiJaree Canady

Leighann Goode hits a three-run home run off NiJaree Canady with two outs. Texas now leads 5-0 in the first inning. It’s Goode’s fourth home run of the postseason and the 10th of the season.

The Longhorns had five runs total in the first two games.

Katie Stewart extends Texas lead on NiJaree Canady

Texas has seemed to figure out NiJaree Canady, as Katie Stewart drives in another run on a single. The Longhorns have four straight hits, including back-to-back RBI singles to make it 2-0 Texas in the bottom of the first.

Reese Atwood gives Texas lead in first inning

With runners on first and second and one out, Texas catcher Reese Atwood singles through the right side for an RBI single to score Kayden Henry. The Longhorns have runners on second and third with one out following an E7.

Teagan Kavan fires scoreless first inning

Teagan Kavan throws a scoreless first inning, working around a two-out hit batter. Kavan needed just four pitches to retire the first two hitters, but Lauren Allred forced a 13-pitch at bat before being hit by a pitch. Kavan induces a groundball by Alana Johnson to get out of the inning.

Texas home team for WCWS Game 3

Texas is the home team for WCWS Game 3. That means the Longhorns field and pitch first and would bat last in the seventh inning, if necessary.

Game 3 of WCWS finals underway

Texas pitcher Teagan Kavan fires a first pitch strike and Game 3 of the 2025 WCWS is officially underway.

Pregame

How many innings is a college softball game?

Teagan Kavan starts for Texas in WCWS final Game 3

Teagan Kavan is starting for Texas in Game 3 of the WCWS final. Kavan started and won Game 1, but did not come out of the bullpen until the bottom of the sixth inning in Game 2. Kavan allowed two inherited runners to score, which were key insurance runs for the Red Raiders.

Texas starting lineup for WCWS final Game 3

Here’s the Longhorns’ starting lineup for the third game of the WCWS final:

Ashton Maloney, RF
Kayden Henry, CF
Mia Scott, 3B
Reese Atwood, C
Katie Stewart, LF
Joley Mitchell, 1B
Leighann Goode, SS
Katie Cimusz, DP
Kaydee Bennett, 2B

NiJaree Canady starting for Texas Tech

For the third straight night, NiJaree Canady is the starter for the Red Raiders. Canady has thrown 495 pitches in five games in the WCWS.

Texas Tech starting lineup for WCWS Game 3 final

Here’s the lineup for the Red Raiders in Game 3 of the WCWS final. Texas Tech is the designated road team.

Mihyia Davis, CF
Hailey Toney, SS
Lauren Allred, 1B
Alana Johnson, RF
Alexa Langeliers, 2B
NiJaree Canady, SP
Demi Elder, LF
Victoria Valdez, C
Bailey Lindemuth, 3B

Texas-Texas Tech most watched WCWS final Game 2 in history

Game 2 of the WCWS final between Texas and Texas Tech was the most-watched Game 2 ever with 2.1 million viewers. The game peaked at 2.6 million viewers and was up 5% from 2024’s Game 2 between Texas and Oklahoma.

The game is the fifth-most watched college softball game across ESPN platforms.

NiJaree Canady signs new NIL deal during WCWS

Texas-Texas Tech to play winner-take-all Game 3 WCWS final

Texas and Texas Tech are set to square off in a winner-take-all Game 3 in the Women’s College World Series championship series. Since the format was adopted in 2005, this marks the seventh Game 3. Here’s a look at the history of Game 3s.

What time does Texas vs Texas Tech softball start?

Time: 8 p.m. ET
Date: Friday, June 6
Location: Devon Park (Oklahoma City)

First pitch for Game 3 of the WCWS finals is scheduled for 8 p.m. ET from Devon Park in Oklahoma City.

What TV channel is Texas vs Texas Tech softball on today?

TV channel: ESPN
Streaming: ESPN app | ESPN+

Game 3 of the national championship series between Texas and Texas Tech will air live on ESPN, with streaming options on the ESPN app (with a cable login) and ESPN+, the latter of which serves as the network’s streaming service.

WCWS finals schedule

Wednesday, June 4: No. 6 Texas 2, No. 12 Texas Tech 1
Thursday, June 5: No. 12 Texas Tech 4, No. 6 Texas 3
Friday, June 6: Texas vs. Texas Tech | 8 p.m. | ESPN (ESPN+)

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Like PitchCom did with baseball, the company is targeting the top of the professional ranks to introduce their new products. The new, anti-sign-stealing technology – called PitchCom Impact, the football version of the product that changed pitcher-catcher communication in baseball, leading to a more streamlined product while preventing sign-stealing – made its professional football debut this weekend in the Canadian Football League. 

“Sort of the proof of concept,” PitchCom co-founder John Hankins told USA TODAY Sports. 

The tech tryout began June 5 as the Saskatchewan Roughriders played the Ottawa Redblacks and continued through the league’s opening weekend as seven of the nine teams tried it out.

PitchCom debuted in Major League Baseball at the start of the 2022 season and, combined with the pitch clock, has helped dramatically decrease the length of games. But the company had its sights set beyond the diamond.  

“At the end of the day, though, we wanted to be involved in football,” Hankins said, “because people always said, you know, ‘This makes perfect sense.’” 

PitchCom attended the American Football Coaches Association Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina this past January. They walked to the CFL booth and vice president of customer relations Jon Updike demonstrated how PitchCom worked. The league was impressed by the size of the device and that it could fit safely into a helmet. 

Co-founder Craig Filicetti said slight software modifications were required. In baseball, the pitcher or catcher presses the buttons and a pre-recorded voice calls out the corresponding pitch and location through an earpiece located in a player’s cap or helmet. But in football, there are exponentially more types of plays (and personnel groupings) compared to pitches and locations. 

By March, Filicetti created a usable product for the league to use at its annual combine. The defensive coach who ran the drill had the controller and the players had helmets fitted with earpieces. The remaining defensive coordinators for the other teams that were present all received audio headpieces, which allowed every coach to hear what play was being called as well. The test went well and the CFL wanted devices fast tracked for games, Hankins said. 

“It’s groundbreaking and I think it shows their adaptability and their willingness to change and wanting to make improvements and kind of being on that leading edge of technology and stuff, which is great,” Filicetti said. 

The CFL introduction is strictly for the defense. To make it game-ready, Filicetti changed the keypad interface into a numbering system that allows for coaches to type in two-digit or three-digit combinations. The player will hear that and determine his assignment from that instruction, rather than having to look to the sideline for a signal or having the play call communicated through one player’s helmet, followed by that player relaying it to 11 of his teammates or having to signal the play to his side.

Instead, a coach – usually in the press box – looks at his play sheet that now includes numbers. He presses the numbers, and it’s sent to the players who have the device in their helmets. The prototype is similar to the baseball catcher’s helmet device. 

A coach can press a button for a longer period that will signal different types of personnel into the earpiece. Multiple coaches can use the device and split the duties – one setting the personnel, the other dialing up the actual play – up until the ball is snapped. The CFL’s 20-second play clock, which differs from the 40 seconds in the NFL, makes PitchCom Impact a natural tool. While watching the Redblacks-Roughriders game Thursday, a 31-26 Saskatchewan victory, Hankins noted that the defense often looked set before the offense. 

Another use of PitchCom Impact is on the practice field, since the device allows coaches to simultaneously dole out different assignments to different positions with the press of a button. “(Coaches) don’t have to even be looking,” Filicetti said. “They could just hit that play and those players who (have the device) know what it is. And they’re saying that their practices are more efficient. They’re getting more reps in because they’re not having to get (players’) attention and get them all looking and then put the sign in.” 

“It speeds up the game,” Hankins added. “Just like in baseball.” 

Filicetti said the CFL is going to benefit from the three years of “significant advancements” PitchCom made in product reliability, durability and design. He’s designing a new transmitter (controller held by coach) that will be easier to use on a sideline, since the original prototypes were made for catchers who’d be concealing it behind home plate. They also want to integrate with teams’ current communications on headsets, since coaches are already all talking on there during games. 

NFL teams are allowed to use PitchCom in practices if they wanted to, but current rules about in-game communication means that it won’t be used in the NFL unless the league edits the rule book. 

PitchCom’s partners now, as of June 6, include USA Softball. Thirteen of the 16 teams playing in the men’s College World Series Super Regionals are PitchCom users, as are 180 total Division I baseball and softball programs. They’re also suppliers for the Korean Baseball Organization (KBO) and in the professional leagues in Mexico and the Dominican Republic. 

This post appeared first on USA TODAY