Pat Hallmark wins his 200th game at UTSA in a 13-0 rout over New Mexico State

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Coach Pat Hallmark reached a milestone with his 200th win at UTSA as the 25th-ranked Roadrunners scored in double figures for the 10th time in 14 games with a 13-0 run-rule victory over the New Mexico State Aggies Saturday night.

In the contest stopped after eight innings at Las Cruces, N.M., the Roadrunners (13-1) stroked 14 hits and homered twice to win their sixth straight, tying the 1994 team for the fastest start in program history.

New Mexico State (6-8) was baffled from the beginning by UTSA starter Conor Myles, who pitched 5 and 1/3 innings scoreless. Myles allowed only two hits and one walk while striking out eight.

As Myles cruised, UTSA bats supplied the thunder with both Andrew Stucky and Drew Detlefsen, returning players from last year’s NCAA Super Regional team, hitting home runs.

Stucky bashed a solo homer in the sixth and Detlefsen unloaded with a two-run shot in the seventh.

For Stucky, it was his fourth round-tripper of the season, temporarily tying him for the team lead until Detlefsen delivered his fifth an inning later.

Newcomer Lane Haworth, a transfer from Wichita State, also had a big night. He went four for six, scored three runs and produced two RBIs.

UTSA produced a big inning for the second straight night in Las Cruces. On Friday night, the Roadrunners scored four runs in the fourth en route to a 10-2 victory.

On Saturday, they jumped all over Aggies reliever Jack Turner for seven runs on seven hits in the fifth.

Christian Hallmark opened the inning with a double and scored on Detlefsen’s single up the middle.

Jordan Ballin capped the uprising with a two-run single, chasing Turner to the showers.

Once the dust settled, UTSA had sent 11 batters to the plate and had built a 9-0 lead on the home team.

Records

UTSA 13-1
New Mexico State 6-8

Coming up

UTSA at New Mexico State, Sunday, noon

Notable

Pat Hallmark improved his record at UTSA to 200-112 in a little more than six seasons. He is 265-160 for his career, which includes two seasons at the University of the Incarnate Word.

For Lane Haworth, it was his second four-hit performance of the season. He also had four in the third game of the season, a 13-1 victory over South Dakota State on Feb. 15.

Starting pitching for the Roadrunners is starting to round into form. On Friday night, Connor Kelley pitched six innings scoreless. On Saturday, it was Conor Myles, who shut out New Mexico State for five and 1/3.

The Aggies were last shut out at home on March 15, 2024, when they fell to Sam Houston 10-0 in eight innings.

No. 25 UTSA wins its fourth straight, 7-5, over Texas A&M-Corpus Christi

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The 25th-ranked UTSA Roadrunners won their fourth straight game and their first of the season on the road Tuesday night, edging the Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Islanders, 7-5.

Afterward, UTSA coach Pat Hallmark acknowledged that his team was not at its best.

“The defense was atrocious, but I did think we remained persistent,” he said. “You’re not going to play great all the time, and this is a tricky ballpark with the wind and the sun.”

UTSA made three errors leading to three unearned runs.

“I’m not making excuses at all,” Hallmark said. “We have to play better defense, but it’s like this here. I don’t care what their record is, and it’s good now, but this is always a hard place to win.

“We played poorly on defense, but we were mentally tough.”

Falling behind 3-0 after the first inning, the Roadrunners rallied with five straight runs to take the lead — scoring three in the fifth and two in the sixth.

For UTSA, Lane Haworth produced a fifth-inning, two-run double. In the sixth, Christian Hallmark added a two-run homer to make it 5-3.

Undeterred, A&M-Corpus Christi rallied in the seventh with two unearned runs to tie. UTSA, in response, came up with two more in the ninth to take the lead for good.

With two outs and two on base via walks, Diego Diaz smashed a ball to the right of second baseman Cade Sanchez, who misplayed it on the back hand, allowing Caden Miller to score from second base.

Jacob Silva followed with an RBI single up the middle that plated Lane Haworth from second.

On a throw to the plate that was far off line, Diaz tried to score from first but was out at the plate to end the inning.

Sam Simmons yielded a one-out single to Jackson Smith in the bottom of the ninth that brought the tying run to the plate.

In response, the right-handed reliever from Manvel struck out Cade Sanchez and Isaiah Afework to end the game.

Simmons (3-0) finished for the Roadrunners, working two and a third innings to earn the victory.

Islanders reliever Pierre-Luc Jacques (0-1) took the hard-luck loss after pitching the last two innings.

Jacques nearly had the Roadrunners shut down in the ninth.

The ground ball to Sanchez could have been the third out of a scoreless inning, but it seemed to take a bad hop, ticking off the fielder’s glove for a base hit that scored the go-ahead run.

The Islanders started strong, scoring three runs on two hits in the first.

Smith opened the rally with a one-out double to center, later taking third on a wild pitch. He scored when Miller, the UTSA first baseman, bobbled a ground ball.

With Sanchez on first base via the error, Afework delivered a two-run homer to center off UTSA starter Ryan Self, boosting the home team into a 3-0 advantage.

Records

Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 8-5
UTSA 11-1

Coming up

UTSA at New Mexico State, Friday, 7 p.m.
UTSA at New Mexico State, Saturday, 7 p.m.
UTSA at New Mexico State, Sunday, noon

Notable

The Roadrunners entered the game with the Islanders looking to keep the momentum going from last weekend, when they won three straight at the prestigious BRUCE BOLT College Classic.

With wins in Houston against Ohio State, ninth-ranked Coastal Carolina and Baylor, UTSA earned enough recognition to gain a No. 25 national ranking Monday from D1 Baseball.

On Tuesday, the Roadrunners attained another notable milestone, emerging at No. 5 nationally in the first installment of the NCAA’s ratings percentage index.

Given all the notoriety, Roadrunners coach Pat Hallmark wanted to avoid a letdown. In the end, UTSA didn’t play its best game — it made three errors — but it did come away with its first road win of the season.

UTSA’s only loss this season came a week ago on Tuesday, Feb. 24, at Texas State, 7-2.

UTSA, at No. 5 in the RPI, prepares to play the season without Orloski

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

The UTSA Roadrunners are rolling with the good news and the bad leading into Tuesday night’s baseball game on the road against the Texas A&M-Corpus Christi Islanders.

The good news is that the Roadrunners have been listed No. 5 in the nation in the first installment of the NCAA’s Ratings Percentage Index.

They’re also ranked 25th by D1 Baseball, a prominent source of national news in college baseball.

The bad news is that they will have to play the rest of the way without injured pitcher Rob Orloski.

“He’s out for the season,” UTSA coach Pat Hallmark said Monday on a zoom call with reporters. “Surgery.”

Orloski hurt his right (throwing) arm on Feb. 13, on opening night, against South Dakota State.

The team’s top pitcher coming into the season threw 23 pitches in the top of the first inning before exiting in pain.

He hasn’t pitched since.

“Rob’s known this,” Hallmark said. “We’ve known this. I mean, if you saw the injury, you could tell it wasn’t good. So, in terms of today, I think Rob’s OK.

“It was hard. Everybody was empathetic. But Rob is strong. He’s young. He’s resilient. He’s going to be back. So, everybody’s pulling for him.”

Previously, Hallmark has described it as a shoulder injury, but the nature of it was not discussed on the media call.

Even without Orloski, the team has excelled at just about every turn, putting together a 10-1 start.

In games played at Daikin Park last weekend, UTSA defeated Ohio State, Coastal Carolina and Baylor.

UTSA started the season with seven straight wins at home, including three in a row over the Dallas Baptist Patriots.

The Roadrunners’ only loss came last Tuesday when they fell 7-2 at Texas State in San Marcos.

“My thoughts on the week were, I thought we played well, even the game we lost,” Hallmark said. “I don’t think we played poorly. I don’t know that we played well.

“But we didn’t play poorly, so there was something to be learned from the loss, and then we went over to Houston and did well. Really happy for the players.”

The Roadrunners learned of the D1 ranking on Monday following their sweep of three games in the BRUCE BOLT College Classic.

The NCAA’s RPI report, believed to be the highest they’ve had in program history, emerged on Tuesday.

The coach said the players deserve the positive publicity and attention “and just the overall positive nature of things right now.”

“As a coach, trying to temper that and get us ready for Corpus,” Hallmark said. “A little worried about that game because Corpus can really swing it. So, that’s where we’re at right now.”

UTSA will play four games on the road this week, at A&M-Corpus Christi on Tuesday and at New Mexico State in three games starting Friday.

The coach said he’s pleased with the team overall, noting that the pitching walked only eight batters in Houston, including four on Friday and two each on Saturday and Sunday.

“We can hit,” he said. “We’re not always going to hit … I feel like every time we don’t score 10 runs (a reporter for UTSA student newspaper) is disappointed.

“It’s not that easy to score 10 runs. We make it look easy sometimes. But we mostly hit well, too. You’re not always going to put up 10 runs, but we were able to do that some this weekend, and we won the one game that we didn’t as well.”

Hallmark said the team’s success is a reflection of the team’s mindset.

“They’re very determined,” he said. “They’re willing to do whatever’s asked of them. It’s a very unselfish group up to this point. So, I can’t say enough about those guys.”

Records

UTSA 10-1
Texas A&M Corpus-Christi 8-4

Coming up

UTSA at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, 6:30 p.m.

Notable

The Islanders have played well recently, beating Pittsburgh, Prairie View A&M and Texas Southern twice before losing to Texas Southern 16-4 on Sunday.

Baseball: UTSA beats Baylor 11-6 to sweep three games in Houston

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Caden Miller and Jacob Silva produced three RBIs each to back left-handed pitcher Conor Myles’ five innings of shutout baseball, and the UTSA Roadrunners downed the Baylor Bears 11-6 Sunday night in Houston.

Caden Miller. UTSA beat South Dakota State 17-4 in the Roadrunners' 2026 baseball season opener on Friday, Feb. 13, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Sophomore Caden Miller, shown here making a play in the season opener at Roadrunner Field, slammed a three-run home run to highlight a four-run second inning against Baylor in Houston. – File photo by Joe Alexander

With the win, the Roadrunners swept three games at the prestigious BRUCE BOLT College Classic (formerly the Astros Classic) and improved to 10-1 on the season.

After the Roadrunners knocked off the Big Ten’s Ohio State Buckeyes on Friday afternoon, they followed with a victory over the ninth-ranked Coastal Carolina Chanticleers on Saturday.

Coastal Carolina reached the College World Series finals last season.

Against Baylor, a member of the Big 12, UTSA of the American Conference scored four runs in the second, highlighted by a three-run homer from Miller.

The Roadrunners added two runs in the third and fourth innings and another in the fifth for a 9-0 lead.

Silva, a TCU transfer from San Antonio Clark High School, had an RBI double in the third inning and a two-RBI single in a two-run eighth.

Meanwhile, Myles (1-0) pitched effectively in his first start of the season. The lefty from Australia pitched five scoreless innings, allowing only three hits.

Myles struck out four and walked two.

Baylor starting pitcher Cade Hansen (0-2) took the loss. Hansen worked three and 1/3 innings, yielding seven runs on seven hits.

The Roadrunners are off to a fast start on the season, a year after they won a program-record 47 games and reached the NCAA Super Regional round of the playoffs.

Records

Baylor 6-5
UTSA 10-1

Coming up

UTSA at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.

College baseball: UTSA vs. Baylor today in Houston

BRUCE BOLT College Classic
At Houston, Daikin Park

Results

Friday

UTSA beats Ohio State, 6-5
Baylor beats (25) Ole Miss, 6-5, 10 innings
(3) Texas beats (9) Coastal Carolina, 8-1

Saturday

(25) Ole Miss beats Ohio State, 8-0
UTSA beats (9) Coastal Carolina, 16-10
(3) Texas beats Baylor, 5-2

Sunday

(9) Coastal Carolina beat (25) Ole Miss, 9-2
(3) Texas vs. Ohio State, 2:05 p.m.
UTSA vs. Baylor, 6:05 p.m.

UTSA hits five home runs and downs ninth-ranked Coastal Carolina, 16-10


UTSA left fielder Drew Detlefsen dives and makes a tumbling catch in the bottom of the eighth. Detlefsen also hit two home runs in a four-for-six performance at the plate. – Video from UTSA athletics.

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Two standouts in UTSA’s run to the NCAA Super Regionals last year made an emphatic statement on Saturday in Houston.

With their play against the ninth-ranked Coastal Carolina Chanticleers, Drew Detlefsen and Andrew Stucky suggested that the Roadrunners might just have the leadership to conjure up another magical season.

Detlefsen and Stucky both stroked four hits and combined for three home runs as the Roadrunners rolled to a 16-10 victory over the Chanticleers in Houston.

On Day 2 of the BRUCE BOLT College Classic, the Roadrunners jumped out to a commanding early lead and then cruised to their ninth win in 10 games.

Coastal Carolina, a 2025 College World Series finalist, fell to 6-4. The Chanticleers are playing without standout pitchers Cameron Flukey, Hayden Johnson and others and just couldn’t match up with the Roadrunners.

UTSA produced 18 hits and belted five home runs, including two by Detlefsen and one by Stucky. Lane Haworth and Josh Arquette also hit homers, with Arquette pounding a grand slam.

Detlefsen had an impact with his glove and his bat. Not only did he make a diving catch in left field in the eighth inning to blunt a Coastal Carolina rally, he also finished with four RBIs to match Arquette’s total.

Arquette, a newcomer who played last year at Panola College, leads UTSA with 17 RBIs for the season, while Detlefsen has 15.

Detlefsen paced the Roadrunners with 70 RBIs last season as the Roadrunners surged to 47 victories and championships in the American Conference regular season and the NCAA Austin Regional.

Roadrunners freshman righthander Jake Qualia (2-0) emerged as the winning pitcher against the Chanticleers despite yielding six runs, five of them earned, and nine hits in 4 and 2/3 innings of relief.

Chanticleers starter Ross Norman (1-2) took the loss after working 2 and 2/3 and giving up seven runs on eight hits. ‘

UTSA entered the second day of the classic with some momentum, coming off a 6-5 victory over the Ohio State on Friday.

Coastal Carolina, meanwhile, couldn’t get much going offensively in an 8-1 loss to Texas on Friday night.

The Roadrunners, batting in the top of the first, jumped out to a 3-0 lead nine pitches into the game, before many of the fans could walk from the concession stand to their seats.

Facing pitcher Ross Norman, UTSA’s Caden Miller led off with an opposite-field double to left field. Detlefsen followed with a bloop RBI single to left.

Haworth, the third batter in the game, launched a two-run homer to right field to make it 3-0.

The Chanticleers responded in the bottom half, scoring a run against UTSA starter Kendall Dove.

Dean Milos pounded a lead-off double down the left field line. The next batter, Trace Mazon, bounced a grounder down the line as the throw from third baseman Arquette went past Miller for an error. Milos scored and Mazon reached second.

From there, Dove got tough, retiring three straight. He fanned Rex Watson, popped up Walker Mitchell and got Blake Barthol on a fly ball to right.

In the top of the third, the Roadrunners responded again, scoring four runs against Norman to break the game open. Detlefsen singled and stole second base and then Haworth walked.

After a Coastal Carolina coach visited the mound, Stucky singled to load the bases. Arquette then unloaded with the grand slam into the left field seats to make it 7-1.

The Roadrunners added six runs in the top of the fifth, an outburst capped by Detlefsen’s two-run homer off Jaxon Appleman. When the homer landed in the seats above the high wall in left, UTSA held a 13-1 lead.

Coastal Carolina, a program with pride and a 2016 national title, retaliated in the bottom half. The Chanticleers knocked Dove out of the game and went on to score five runs. They added another in the sixth for good measure to make it 13-7.

Threatened by the Coastal Carolina rally, UTSA turned to Stucky and Detlefsen to put the game away.

Stucky hit a solo homer in the eighth, a high-arcing ball to left, and Detlefsen added another in a two-run ninth as the Roadrunners took a 16-7 lead.

Records

UTSA 9-1
Coastal Carolina 6-4

Coming up

UTSA vs. Baylor, Sunday, 6:05 p.m., in Houston (at Daikin Park)

Saturday’s scores

(25) Ole Miss beat Ohio State, 8-0
UTSA beat (9) Coastal Carolina, 16-10
(3) Texas beat Baylor, 5-2

Sunday’s schedule

(9) Coastal Carolina vs. (25) Ole Miss, 10:05 a.m.
(3) Texas vs. Ohio State, 2:05 p.m.
UTSA vs. Baylor, 6:05 p.m.

Notable

UTSA is playing without two of its best players, both of them out possibly for the season. Infielder Nathan Hodge hasn’t played at all and ace pitcher Rob Orloski threw only 23 pitches in the opener. Both are out with injuries to their throwing arms.


UTSA catcher Andrew Stucky smashes a solo home run in the eighth inning on a ball that glances off the bricks in left field. Stucky went four for five and scored three runs against Coastal Carolina. – Video from UTSA athletics

College baseball: UTSA vs. ninth-ranked Coastal Carolina in Houston

BRUCE BOLT College Classic
At Houston, Daikin Park

Results

Friday’s scores

UTSA beats Ohio State, 6-5
Baylor beats (25) Ole Miss, 6-5, 10 innings
(3) Texas beats (9) Coastal Carolina, 8-1

Saturday’s games

(25) Ole Miss beats Ohio State, 8-0
UTSA vs. (9) Coastal Carolina, 3:05 p.m.
Baylor vs. (3) Texas, 7:05 p.m.

Sunday’s games

Coastal Carolina vs. (25) Ole Miss, 10:05 a.m.
Texas vs. Ohio State, 2:05 p.m.
UTSA vs. Baylor, 6:05 p.m.

College baseball: UTSA holds off Ohio State, 6-5, in Houston

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Pitcher Sam Simmons entered in relief in the top of the ninth inning and retired three straight batters on ground balls, as the UTSA Roadrunners quelled a rally and held off the Ohio State Buckeyes, 6-5, on Friday afternoon in Houston.

As a result, the Roadrunners will take an 8-1 record into their second game of the BRUCE BOLT College Classic on Saturday afternoon at Daikin Park against ninth-ranked Coastal Carolina.

UTSA coach Pat Hallmark. UTSA beat Texas 7-4 on Sunday, June 1, 2025, to win the NCAA baseball tournament Austin Regional. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Coach Pat Hallmark’s UTSA Roadrunners improved to 8-1 after beating Ohio State 6-5 on Friday in Houston. – Photo by Joe Alexander

Daikin Park, the home of Major League Baseball’s Houston Astros, is hosting the multi-team event over three days through Sunday. UTSA is playing in the invitational for the first time following its run last season to the NCAA Super Regionals.

Coming from behind against the Buckeyes from the Big Ten Conference, the Roadrunners produced two-out hits in both the sixth and seventh innings, scoring two runs on each, to take a 5-3 lead.

Designated hitter Garrett Gruell stroked a two-RBI single in the sixth and then Lane Haworth blasted a two-run homer in the seventh. In the eighth, the Roadrunners manufactured a run, thanks to the speed of Christian Hallmark.

First, Hallmark was hit by a pitch. Next, he stole second. With one out, Diego Diaz came to bat for UTSA and chopped a ground ball to the right side.

When Ohio State first baseman Steven Cavaco touched first base for the second out of the inning, the coach’s son didn’t slow down on a mad dash for home plate.

Diving head first, he was tagged by catcher Mason Eckelman, but the ball popped out as the hard-charging base runner made impact with the glove. He touched home to make it 6-3.

In the ninth, the Buckeyes put their first two batters aboard against UTSA’s Mike DeBattista on an infield single by Miles Vandenheuvel and a double to left by Lee Ellis.

With runners at second and third and nobody out, Simmons, who played in high school at Houston-area Manvel, entered the game to pitch.

Ground balls by Eckelman and Noah Furcht pushed across one run apiece, but Simmons finished the game when Henry Kaczmar bounced out to second.

Defending American Conference champion UTSA (8-1) is scheduled to play Coastal Carolina on Saturday afternoon and Baylor on Sunday night.

Coastal Carolina, from the Sun Belt Conference, won the 2016 national title and last season reached the championship round before falling to LSU at the Men’s College World Series.

The Chanticleers ran into trouble Friday night in their first game, as the third-ranked Texas Longhorns hit four home runs and beat them 8-1. Coastal Carolina will take a 6-3 record into the UTSA game.

Records

Ohio State 5-3
UTSA 8-1

Coming up

UTSA vs. Coastal Carolina, Saturday, 3:05 p.m.
UTSA vs. Baylor, Sunday, 6:05 p.m.

The road to Houston

The Roadrunners opened the season with seven straight victories at home.

Included in the record start were three consecutive victories over Dallas Baptist, a perennial NCAA tournament team. Playing on the road Tuesday in San Marcos, they lost 7-2 to the Texas State Bobcats.

Lane Haworth. UTSA beat South Dakota State 17-4 in the Roadrunners' 2026 baseball season opener on Friday, Feb. 13, at Roadrunner Field. - Photo by Joe Alexander

Lane Haworth hit a two-out, two-run homer in the seventh inning to give UTSA a 5-3 lead. He blasted his first homer in a UTSA uniform into the right field seats at Daikin Park. – File photo by Joe Alexander

Ohio State started its season with three straight wins in Pensacola, Fla., against Saint Louis.

The Buckeyes next played four straight in Memphis. They lost the first and third games in the event to the Louisiana Tech Bulldogs and won the second and fourth games against the Memphis Tigers.

Notable

Starting pitchers for UTSA and Ohio State put on a good show. UTSA’s Connor Kelley battled with control problems early, but he made it through four and a third innings, allowing three runs on six hits.

Though Kelley walked four, he showcased a high-velocity fastball, striking out seven in a 105-pitch performance.

For Ohio State, Gavin Kuzniewski pitched six innings, allowing three runs on six hits. He walked three and struck out five.

Roadrunners relief pitchers held their own.

After Noah Furcht blasted a one-out, solo homer off Kelley in the top of the fifth to give the Buckeyes a 3-1 lead, UTSA lefthander Christopher Gutierrez entered and struck out both batters he faced to close the inning.

Winning pitcher Mike DeBattista (2-0) worked three innings, yielding two runs on five hits and no walks, while striking out two. DeBattista was lifted in the ninth after giving up an infield single to Miles Vandenheuvel and a double to Lee Ellis.

Replacing DeBattista, Simmons secured his first save of the season after he retired Mason Eckelman and Furcht on ground balls, with both of them pushing runs across, before getting Henry Kaczmar on a bouncer to second.

Ohio State reliever Zak Sigman (1-1) took the loss after giving up the go-ahead, two-run homer to Lane Haworth, a Wichita State transfer who entered the game as UTSA’s leading hitter.

Both Haworth and Garrett Gruell finished with two hits and two RBIs apiece.

Ohio State out-hit UTSA, 11-7. The Buckeyes showed good pop on offense with five hits going for extra bases. Ellis had two hits, both of them doubles. Furcht homered into the Crawford boxes and drove in two in a two-for-five performance.

Also getting two hits apiece were Kaczmar and Maddix Simpson. Kaczmar singled up the middle in the top of the first inning to give Ohio State a 2-0 lead.

I-35 baseball rivalry: Texas State snaps UTSA’s seven-game winning streak

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Freshman Clayton Namken from New Braunfels High School belted a two-run homer and had four hits Tuesday night as the Texas State Bobcats recorded a 7-2 victory, snapping a season-opening, seven-game winning streak by the UTSA Roadrunners.

In the game attended by 2,315 fans at Bobcat Ballpark in San Marcos, Texas State pitching also flustered UTSA, striking out 14, as the home team broke a three-game losing streak to its Interstate 35 rival.

With the victory, Texas State improved to 64-42 against UTSA in the all-time series.

Drew Detlefsen launched a solo home run in the sixth and Caden Miller scored on a wild pitch in the eighth for the Roadrunners, who were held to seven hits. UTSA had scored 81 runs on 91 hits in its first seven games, all at home.

Texas State scored two runs in the first inning. In the second, they added two more on Namken’s blast over the right field wall, ending the night for UTSA starter Christian Okerholm.

UTSA had a chance to get back into the game in the top of the fourth, but a Texas State defensive gem stopped the uprising.

With two runners aboard via base hit, Roadrunners slugger Josh Arquette hit a sinking liner into right center. The Bobcats, somewhat miraculously, turned it into a double play.

Texas State center fielder Jackson Cotton made a running catch and fired to shortstop Dawson Park, who whirled and thew a strike to third baseman Chase Mora. Mora tagged out a sliding Lane Haworth for the second out of the inning.

As it turned out, UTSA did not score in the inning. At the same time, Bobcats pitching was in high gear. Starter Sam Hall struck out four over the first two innings. Freshman lefty Titan Targac followed Hall and fanned six more.

Targac (1-1) pitched three innings, gave up one run on four hits and fanned six, including three straight in the fifth. Okerholm (0-1) took the loss.

Freshmen played a major role in the victory for the Bobcats. Namkin homered and roped three singles. Cotton made the defensive play in the fourth and reached base three times, with a single, a double and a walk.

Others included outfielder Tanner Carson from Southlake who roped a two-run double to left field in the fifth. In the pitching department, freshman Wade Cooper from Del Rio yielded one run while fanning four in the last two innings.

Records

UTSA 7-1
Texas State 6-2

Coming up

UTSA vs. Ohio State, Friday, 11:05 a.m., at Daikin Park, in Houston, at the Bruce Bolt College Classic
UTSA vs. Coastal Carolina, Saturday, 3:05 p.m., at Daikin Park in Houston
UTSA vs. Baylor, Sunday, 6:05 p.m., at Daikin Park in Houston
(Daikin Park is the home of Major League Baseball’s Houston Astros)

Notable

Cade Smith, a Texas State sophomore from San Antonio Churchill, pitched two scoreless innings in the sixth and seventh.

Entering in relief with a runner at second base in the sixth, he retired three straight to end the threat. He retired another three straight in the seventh.

It was the first win for the Bobcats in the I-35 rivalry since March of 2024 when they won 14-13 in San Marcos. In the wake of that game, the Roadrunners won three straight in the series.

UTSA won 11-9 in San Antonio in April of 2024 and then swept both meetings last season.

In 2025, the Roadrunners beat the Bobcats 12-9 in San Antonio and then 18-13 in San Marcos en route to a 47-15 record and their first-ever berth in the NCAA Super Regionals.

Both coaches Pat Hallmark at UTSA and Steve Trout at Texas State started with their respective programs in the 2020 season. Since then, the Roadrunners and the Bobcats are 5-5 in head-to-head matchups.

The two teams will play again in San Antonio on Tuesday, May 12, at Roadrunner Field.

For Texas State and UTSA, the games are non conference. UTSA plays in the American and Texas State plays in the Sun Belt. Texas State is moving to the Pac 12 next season.

The teams once shared membership in the Southland and in the Western Athletic Conference.

Correction: Clayton Namken’s name was misspelled in an earlier version of this story.

Undefeated UTSA improves to 7-0 after three-game series sweep of Dallas Baptist

Kendall Dove allowed one run in five innings to earn the victory Sunday as UTSA swept three games from Dallas Baptist. – Courtesy photo from UTSA athletics

By Jerry Briggs
Special for The JB Replay

Josh Arquette stroked two hits and produced three RBIs Sunday as undefeated and record-setting UTSA downed the Dallas Baptist Patriots 6-3 to sweep a three-game series between mid-major powers in college baseball.

A crowd of 1,049 at Roadrunner Field watched as UTSA improved to 7-0, the best record after seven games in program history. Another record was set with 3,048 in attendance for the three games.

Roadrunners starter Kendall Dove started and worked five innings, giving up only one run on five hits, to earn the victory.

Reliever Gunnar Brown, making his second appearance in two days, was almost as effective in pitching the last four innings for the save.

He yielded two runs on five hits, a day after UTSA’s 10-8 victory, in which he earned the win in 2/3 of an inning.

A bit of drama unfolded in the last inning Sunday when Brown issued one-out walks to Jake Bennett and Ben Tryon, who both later advanced on a wild pitch.

With runners at second and third, Brown responded by striking out Chayton Krauss on a check swing. Finally, he retired slugger Ryan Martin on a long fly ball to right field to end it.

UTSA coach Pat Hallmark praised his players for evolving into “a complete team” in winning the finale against the Patriots, who fell to 4-3.

“We looked like a very good baseball team today” he said. “We pitched it. We put together grown-up bats versus good pitching in conditions that were not conducive to hitting.

“We played good defense. We ran the bases (well). It was a just a very complete game. It’s one that’ll make a coach pleased.”

Hallmark raised an eyebrow when he was asked what it means to start the season 7-0.

“It means we’re OK,” he said. “It means we got a decent team. But, again, we want to improve. We’re always looking forward …. We’re looking to improve, but 7-0 is better than anything else.”

After winning seven straight at home by a combined score of 81-32, the Roadrunners play their first road game Tuesday night in San Marcos against the I-35 rival Texas State Bobcats.

“(They are) a good team and they’re good fans,” Hallmark said. “They love their team, and they mostly hate UTSA, and that’s OK. That’s what fans are supposed to do.”

On a cool afternoon with fans wearing jackets and sweatshirts and a stiff wind blowing into the hitters’ faces, the Roadrunners jumped on the Patriots in the bottom of the first.

They scored three runs on three hits, two walks and a wild pitch by Patriots starter Ryan Borberg.

With the bases loaded and only one out, Arquette bounced a single up the middle to score the first two runs.

Christian Hallmark followed with a bouncer through the right side to make it 3-0.

In essence, the inning served as a microcosm of how the Roadrunners won the series against a perennial NCAA tournament team.

They laid off pitches out of the strike zone. They took the walks when they could and then capitalized with timely hitting.

“Really it’s just trusting your approach, trusting your eyes and just not trying to do too much,” Arquette said. “Get a pitch that you can handle, and if they don’t give it to you, take the free pass.

“Because,” he added, “we can hit. So we’re going to capitalize on pitchers’ mistakes.”

The Patriots out-hit the Roadrunners 10-9, the second time on the weekend that they had more hits than the home team and still lost.

Their problem stemmed from the disparity in walks and how the Roadrunners took advantage of it.

They Patriots issued eight free passes, compared to only three combined by Dove and Brown.

Four of the eight UTSA players who walked ended up scoring. DBU, by contrast, didn’t score with any of its three who reached via the base on ball.

Dove said he felt good and tried to just throw as many strikes as possible, and then let the defense do the work.

“And they played great (behind me) today,” said Dove, who struck out six batters and walked one.

In the fifth inning, the Patriots scored their first run of the game when Jake Bennett delivered an RBI double down the left field to make it 4-1.

Afterward, Hallmark came out to the mound to tell his starting pitcher that the next batter, Tryon, would be the last one he’d face.

But after Dove struck out Tryon, he signaled to the dugout that he’d like to pitch to the next batter, Krauss, the preseason Player of the Year in Conference USA.

Dove was granted his wish, and then he retired Krauss on a long fly ball to left.

“I thought I had him,” Dove said. “I wanted to compete against him. Thanks to coach Hallmark for letting me get the opportunity right there.”

Looking into looming challenges for the Roadrunners, the Bobcats in San Marcos and then the Astros Classic in Houston next weekend, Dove said there’s “definitely” more work to be done.

“We’re starting to figure out our identity a little bit,” he said. “But it’s going to be tested again on Tuesday and this weekend, and we’ll see how we handle it from there.”

Records

Dallas Baptist 4-3
UTSA 7-0

Coming up

UTSA at Texas State, Tuesday, 6 p.m.

Notable

The Patriots haven’t been swept in a three-game series since March 3-5 in 2023 when they lost three straight to the Southern Miss Golden Eagles in Hattiesburg.