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Baseball 24
former team, TCU. The Aggies moved through the winners bracket of the regional, defeating Oral Roberts 8-2 and Louisiana, led by former A&M assistant Matt Deggs, 9-6. A&M needed a late-game rally, sparked by a home run from transfer outfielder Dylan Rock, to down the Horned Frogs 15-9 and advance to the super regionals.
No. 9 Louisville, with their own potent offense, traveled to Blue Bell Park in what projected to be a firework offensive series. However, the Aggies proved they could win tight ballgames with 5-4 and 4-3 wins.
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A five-game walk through the first two rounds of the NCAA tournament were exactly what A&M needed for a deep postseason run. Though Schlossnagle was able to pull Texas Tech transfer Micah Dallas into the fold to join returner Nathan Dettmer in the starting rotation, the Aggies were short in starting pitching depth.
A&M made a trip to Omaha for the first time since 2017 and were in search of its first College World Series win since 1993. That ever-elusive win was put on the line after A&M dropped a 13-8 opener to Oklahoma, who entered the tournament as one of the nation’s hottest teams.
The loss was soothed by the opportunity to face rival Texas in Omaha for the first time in the two program’s storied histories and, ultimately, gave the Aggies the long-awaited win in a 10-2 victory in Charles Schwab Field. Dallas gave the Aggies five innings of work, allowing one earned run with three strikeouts. Bost provided an RBI with two doubles in the game.
“At the end of the day, It’s really just playing the game and playing a nameless opponent, but there is a little extra behind everything, especially when it’s Texas, because if you just look at the fan bases, there’s a lot of genuine hate between each other,” Dallas said after the game. “We kind of feed off it. It’s a lot of fun.”
The Aggies doubled up their College World Series win total two days later with a 5-1 win over Notre Dame, punching a ticket to the semifinals and a rematch against Oklahoma.
A three-run first for the Sooners in the semifinal matchup proved too much for the Aggies to overcome, in the 5-1 loss, but the Aggie’s ahead-of-schedule trip to the College World Series was the best springboard Schlossnagle could have hoped for in his first season in Aggieland.
“They will forever be remembered as the team that reignited Texas A&M baseball and it’s our job now, mine included, to honor what they’ve started and continue to build on it,” Schlossnagle said. “It’s not going to be easy to repeat. I don’t care how many talented players you recruit. It’s hard to create the kind of synergy and leadership that this team was and we’ve got to start back at Ground Zero, starting right now.”
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Article provided by the Texas A&M Corps of Cadets
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The Corps of Cadets develops well-educated leaders of character who embody the values of honor, courage, integrity, discipline, selfless service and respect. Cadets are academically successful, highly sought-after and are prepared for the global leadership challenges of the future. ● The Corps is the largest and oldest student organization at Texas A&M, and it is also the largest uniformed body of cadets in the nation, outside of the military academies. ● Cadets gain leadership knowledge in a military-style environment that complements their academic education and prepares them for a lifetime of success; however, membership in the Corps carries no military obligation. ● This fall, approximately 2,300 men and women will be members of the Corps — all participating on a voluntary basis. ● Most cadets pursue a career in the public or private sector; however, the Corps consistently commissions more officers than any other institution in the nation other than the service academies. An average of 40 percent of cadets pursue a military commission in the Army, Air Force, Navy or Marine Corps. ● The Corps offers the Hollingsworth Center for Ethical Leadership (HCEL), a unique program through which cadets can earn a Certificate in Applied Ethical Leadership. HCEL directly supports the Corps mission statement and enhances students’ capacities to be value-adding leaders in both the public and private sectors of the workplace. Moreover, HCEL also provides career readiness support to cadets including internship and job assistance. ● The Corps of Cadets Athletics Program offers opportunities for athletes in the Corps to compete at the club sport level in a variety of sports. Corps club sports teams participate in competitive sporting events across Texas and the United States. Corps Club Sports teams include baseball, soccer (men and women), basketball (men and women), marksmanship (men and women), triathlon (co-ed), marathon (co-ed) and lacrosse (men). ● The Corps Global Leadership Initiatives program provides opportunities for cadets to study abroad as part of Cadet Exchanges (currently programs established with Germany and Australia), and participate in international excursions, which are highimpact, short-duration overseas experiences in countries of strategic importance to the United States. These international excursions focus heavily on the four elements of national power: diplomacy, information, military and economics, with a heavy emphasis on religion and culture, as well. Recent excursions have taken cadets to Israel, Japan/Okinawa, Mexico, Singapore/Indonesia, Georgia/ Armenia, Germany/Poland, China/Taiwan, Korea, Qatar, the Philippines, Egypt, Morocco, Turkey, Chile and India. TradiTions
Cadets in the Corps are at the heart of the Aggie Spirit. Because Texas A&M was a military college for most of its first 100 years, many of its most cherished traditions grew out of the Corps experience. The university’s Bonfire, Yell Practice, the Twelfth Man, yell leaders, the Aggie mascot Reveille, Aggie Muster and Silver Taps traditions all originated with the Corps. The Corps of Cadets is thus referred to as the “keepers of the spirit” and