Month: May 2019

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Two-time defending national champion Virginia Wesleyan University stayed in the top spot in the NFCA Division III Top 25 following another 4-0 week.

The (31-2) Marlins have now won 12 straight, and are back on track after dropping to No. 2 for two weeks before reclaiming the top spot on April 10. Before that, Virginia Wesleyan had held the No. 1 position for 25 straight weeks — a span of 720 days, which included two NCAA Division III titles.

East Texas Baptist (32-2) remained No. 2 for a second consecutive week despite dropping the third game of its American Southwest Conference series at Hardin-Simmons on a two-run walkoff homer. That loss snapped a 12-game win streak and was just the Tigers’ second defeat in 34 games.

Williams (23-4) has now won 12 straight, and gained four more places to take over the third spot this week, while St. Thomas (28-4), which is riding a 13-game win streak, moved all the way from 11th to fourth. Last week’s third through sixth teams — who all lost a game — fall in line after that to round out the top eight.

Elsewhere, Birmingham-Southern (31-5) surged six spots to No. 12 after extending its win streak to 18, Luther (27-4) moved into to a tie for 16th after sweeping a ranked matchup with No. 9 Coe, Southwestern (29-4) gained two spots after winning its 18th straight, and Thomas More (25-9), which has won 20 of its last 22, joined the mix for the first time this season at No. 25.

The NFCA Division III Top 25 Poll is selected by eight NCAA Division III head coaches representing the eight NCAA regions. Current 2019 records are listed, with first-place votes in parentheses.

NFCA Division III Top 25 Poll – April 17, 2019

Rank

Team

2019 Record

Points

Previous

1

Virginia Wesleyan (8)

31-2

200

1

2

East Texas Baptist

32-2

192

2

3

Williams

23-4

184

7

4

St. Thomas (Minn.)

28-4

176

11

5

Christopher Newport

26-4

168

3

6

Illinois Wesleyan

21-6

160

4

7

Claremont-Mudd-Scripps

27-6

152

5

8

Linfield

28-5-1

144

6

9

Coe

28-7

136

8

10

Trine

22-4

128

9

11

Moravian

28-4

120

10

12

Birmingham-Southern

31-5

110

18

13

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

19-6

99

13

14

Ithaca

19-5-1

85

14

15

Texas Lutheran

25-7

81

15

T16

Luther

27-4

79

17

T16

The College of New Jersey

24-6

79

20

18

Manhattanville

29-2

57

16

19

Kean

28-5

52

23

20

Brandeis

20-1-1

41

21

21

Wisconsin-Eau Claire

17-4-1

37

22

22

Lynchburg

29-9

32

19

23

Southwestern

29-4

29

25

24

Rowan

20-10

20

12

25

Thomas More

25-9

12

NR

Others receiving votes: Geneseo 10, Mount Saint Joseph 5, Endicott 3, Millikin 2, New Paltz 2, Whitworth 2, Pomona-Pitzer 1, and Wartburg 1.

Dropped out: Baldwin Wallace, Emory, Muskingum and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

* NOTE: Texas-Tyler is reclassifying to NCAA Division II, and Pfeiffer continues the process of going from Division II to Division III. Neither is eligible for the NCAA Division III Championship.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. –Immaculate Heart Academy’s (Washington Township, N.J.) Ryleigh White, Constitution’s (Philadelphia) Ellie Benedict, Bishop McNamara’s (Forestville, Md.) Makayla Marbury, Marion County’s (Lebanon, Ky.) Haley Mattingly and White Pine’s (Ely, Nev.) Eva Kingston were selected MaxPreps / NFCA National High School Players of the Week for their outstanding play during the week of April 8-14.

East Region
White tossed 17 innings of hitless and shutout ball, striking out 42 and walking just two batters. She also was 7-for-12 at the plate with a home run and six RBI. White twirled no-hitters against Clifton and DePaul Catholic, striking out 20 and 12 respectively. She issued one walk in each of those contests, facing just one batter over the minimum. The junior hurler fanned 10 in a five innings of work versus Livingston, adding a home run and four RBI in the 5-0 victory.

North Region
Benedict slugged an eye-popping 3.375 by homering six times in her eight at bats, leading the Generals to a pair of big wins last week. She recorded eight hits in as many at bats, registered 17 RBI and scored seven times. The sophomore clubbed four of those long balls with a double, ten RBI and five runs scored versus Parkway West. She added two more homers, including a grand slam, seven RBI against Thomas A. Edison.

South Region
Marbury, was 8-for-8 with three doubles, a triple, two home runs, seven RBI and eight runs scored. She drew five walks, reaching base safely in all 13 plate appearances, and slugged 2.375. Against Our Lady of Good Counsel, Benedict went 4-for-4 with a pair of doubles, a homer, three RBI and three runs scored. She posted three more RBI with a double and triple in game one against The Academy of the Holy Cross. Marbury added another long ball in game two versus the Tartans and scored three times despite not having an official at bat against Bishop O’Connell. 

South Central Region
Mattingly posted three wins last week, including a perfect game, and striking out 36. Here perfecto came against Danville, fanning 14 and retiring all 21 batters she faced. Mattingly twirled a two-hit shutout with 13 strikeouts in a 6-0 triumph over Adair County. The junior also made an impact offensively, hitting .600 (6-for-10) with a double, home run and six RBI. Mattingly drove in two runs in each of the Knights’ three games, homering against Taylor County.

West
Kingston was a perfect 10-for-10, with three home runs, nine RBI and 11 runs scored in a three-game sweep of Battle Mountain. The sophomore outfielder, who homered in all three games, added four doubles and slugged 2.300. Her game two and three performances mirrored each other as Kingston went 4-for-4 with two doubles, a home run, three RBI and four runs scored. She added three more RBI and crossed the dish three times in game one.

2018-19 Players of the Week

MaxPreps.com, the official high school statistical provider of the NFCA, provides all statistics for the NFCA High School Player of the Week award. To nominate a player for the award, the coach must enter his or her athlete’s game stats into MaxPreps.com by Sunday evening to be eligible for that week’s award.

The MaxPreps/NFCA High School Players of the Week are announced on NFCA.orgevery Monday during the spring campaign with a player from each of five separate high school regions being selected. In the fall season, one representative is chosen from the participating regions.

MaxPreps is a free stat tool that is available to high school coaches across the country and is one of the most recognized and respected high school athletics websites on the internet. Coaches who enter their team’s stats on Max Preps will not only be nominating their players for this award, but they will be getting their team’s information out to thousands of high school sports fans, as well as college coaches across the country.

To obtain a coach’s login, please contact: [email protected] call (800) 329-7324 x1. To enter a team’s stats on the MaxPreps website, please click here.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Neshoba Central was idle this week, but maintained its status as the No. 1 team in the USA TODAY Sports/NFCA High School Super 25 poll.

The (21-0) Rockets, who have won 60 straight games dating back to May 2017, return to action today with a home game against Cleveland Central. They have now been the top team in the nation for 14 consecutive weeks.

Meanwhile, Norco (24-0) remained No. 2 after winning the Michelle Carew Classic on the strength of a pair of one-run wins over Los Alamitos and Orange Lutheran on the final day, and then Tuesday’s 3-0 shutout of King. Third-ranked Cedar Ridge (24-0) kept pace with a 2-0 victory over Hendrickson.

Elsewhere, Kentucky’s unbeaten Louisville Male (15-0) continued its climb up the rankings, moving up two more spots this week to ninth after collecting seven wins over the past week to complete a perfect 8-0 Alabama spring break trip. On that trip, the Bulldogs outscored their opponents 87-16.

The other mover this week is unbeaten Immaculate Heart Academy (4-0), which moved up to No. 20 after capturing its bracket of the inaugural NFCA New Jersey Leadoff Classic over the weekend in Newark, N.J. The win was fitting, since the tournament was honoring the memory of the Blue Eagles’ longtime coach Anthony LaRezza, who died in February 2016.

State rankings submitted by NFCA member coaches are used to compile the USA TODAY Sports/NFCA High School Super 25. Teams are chosen based on performance, roster quality and strength of schedule.

USA TODAY Sports/NFCA High School Super 25 Poll – April 11, 2019

Rank

Team

2019 Record

Previous

1

Neshoba Central (Miss.)

21-0

1

2

Norco (Calif.)

24-0

2

3

Cedar Ridge (Texas)

24-0

3

4

James Madison (Va.)

6-0

4

5

Shawnee Heights (Kan.)

2-0

5

6

Angleton (Texas)

25-1

6

7

Estero (Fla.)

17-0

7

8

New Palestine (Ind.)

4-0

8

9

Louisville Male (Ky.)

15-0

11

10

Barbers Hill (Texas)

27-1

9

11

Foothill (Pleasanton, Calif.)

15-0

10

12

Winter Springs (Fla.)

18-0

11

13

Oakleaf (Fla.)

17-1

13

14

South Granville (N.C.)

8-1

15

15

Apopka (Fla.)

15-1

NR

16

Fairhope (Ala.)

28-3

17

17

Marist (Ill.)

11-2

25

18

Forney (Texas)

15-2

12

19

Keller (Texas)

23-3-1

NR

20

Immaculate Heart Acad. (N.J.)

4-0

22

21

Center Grove (Ind.)

6-1

16

22

Donovan Catholic (N.J.)

3-1

21

23

Wachusett Regional (Mass.)

1-0

24

24

Los Alamitos (Calif.)

15-7

23

25

Spain Park (Ala.)

27-5

19

Dropped out: none.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. –Immaculate Heart Academy’s (Washington Township, N.J.) Ryleigh White, Constitution’s (Philadelphia) Ellie Benedict, Bishop McNamara’s (Forestville, Md.) Makayla Marbury, Marion County’s (Lebanon, Ky.) Haley Mattingly and White Pine’s (Ely, Nev.) Eva Kingston were selected MaxPreps / NFCA National High School Players of the Week for their outstanding play during the week of April 8-14.

East Region
White tossed 17 innings of hitless and shutout ball, striking out 42 and walking just two batters. She also was 7-for-12 at the plate with a home run and six RBI. White twirled no-hitters against Clifton and DePaul Catholic, striking out 20 and 12 respectively. She issued one walk in each of those contests, facing just one batter over the minimum. The junior hurler fanned 10 in a five innings of work versus Livingston, adding a home run and four RBI in the 5-0 victory.

North Region
Benedict slugged an eye-popping 3.375 by homering six times in her eight at bats, leading the Generals to a pair of big wins last week. She recorded eight hits in as many at bats, registered 17 RBI and scored seven times. The sophomore clubbed four of those long balls with a double, ten RBI and five runs scored versus Parkway West. She added two more homers, including a grand slam, seven RBI against Thomas A. Edison.

South Region
Marbury, was 8-for-8 with three doubles, a triple, two home runs, seven RBI and eight runs scored. She drew five walks, reaching base safely in all 13 plate appearances, and slugged 2.375. Against Our Lady of Good Counsel, Benedict went 4-for-4 with a pair of doubles, a homer, three RBI and three runs scored. She posted three more RBI with a double and triple in game one against The Academy of the Holy Cross. Marbury added another long ball in game two versus the Tartans and scored three times despite not having an official at bat against Bishop O’Connell. 

South Central Region
Mattingly posted three wins last week, including a perfect game, and striking out 36. Here perfecto came against Danville, fanning 14 and retiring all 21 batters she faced. Mattingly twirled a two-hit shutout with 13 strikeouts in a 6-0 triumph over Adair County. The junior also made an impact offensively, hitting .600 (6-for-10) with a double, home run and six RBI. Mattingly drove in two runs in each of the Knights’ three games, homering against Taylor County.

West
Kingston was a perfect 10-for-10, with three home runs, nine RBI and 11 runs scored in a three-game sweep of Battle Mountain. The sophomore outfielder, who homered in all three games, added four doubles and slugged 2.300. Her game two and three performances mirrored each other as Kingston went 4-for-4 with two doubles, a home run, three RBI and four runs scored. She added three more RBI and crossed the dish three times in game one.

2018-19 Players of the Week

MaxPreps.com, the official high school statistical provider of the NFCA, provides all statistics for the NFCA High School Player of the Week award. To nominate a player for the award, the coach must enter his or her athlete’s game stats into MaxPreps.com by Sunday evening to be eligible for that week’s award.

The MaxPreps/NFCA High School Players of the Week are announced on NFCA.orgevery Monday during the spring campaign with a player from each of five separate high school regions being selected. In the fall season, one representative is chosen from the participating regions.

MaxPreps is a free stat tool that is available to high school coaches across the country and is one of the most recognized and respected high school athletics websites on the internet. Coaches who enter their team’s stats on Max Preps will not only be nominating their players for this award, but they will be getting their team’s information out to thousands of high school sports fans, as well as college coaches across the country.

To obtain a coach’s login, please contact: [email protected] call (800) 329-7324 x1. To enter a team’s stats on the MaxPreps website, please click here.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – USC Upstate’s Alyssa Oakes and UMBC’s Courtney Coppersmith were named Louisville/Slugger NFCA Division I National Player and Pitcher of the Week of the Week, respectively, for games played April 1-7.

Oakes slugged her way her first NFCA national honor. The junior catcher hit .500 with four home runs, 15 RBI and a 1.500 slugging percentage helping the Spartans to a 5-0 week. Oakes added two doubles, a triple, seven runs scored and a .556 on-base percentage. She drove in at least one run in all five contests, including five and six RBI outputs during a Big South sweep of Campbell. The Winter Park, Fla. native cracked two homers, including a grand slam in the series finale.

Coppersmith produced four 10-plus strikeout contests, which included 17 punchouts in a no-hitter against Maine. The rookie southpaw finished the week 3-0 with a 0.28 ERA and 51 strikeouts in 25.1 innings of work. She surrendered just six hits and holding the opposition to a .074 batting average. Against the Black Bears, Coppersmith matched her own program record with the 17 strikeouts. On the same day, she fanned 11 more batters in 4.1 innings of shutout relief, finish April 6 with 28 strikeouts and one hit allowed in 11.1 innings. 

She capped off her dominant performance against Maine with a one hit-shutout in which she sat down 13 more Black Bears in the America East series clincher. Earlier in the week, Coppersmith fanned 10 Norfolk State batters and hit the game-winning grand slam in game one of a doubleheader. For the week, she also hit .529 with six RBI and a 1.312 OPS.

2019 Players & Pitcher of the Week

Selected Top Performances
Nicole Newman, Drake – 2-0, SV, 0 R, 0 H, 28 K, BB, 9.1 IP, perfect game vs. Valparaiso; Summer Ellyson, Louisiana – 3-0, SV, 0.32 ERA, 28 K, 5 BB, 9 H, .129 opp. BA, 22 IP; Jessie Harper, Arizona– .667, 2 2B, 4 HR, 12 RBI, 11 R, 3 BB, .722 OBP, 1.600 SLG; Samaria Diaz, New Mexico State– 3-0, 0.30 ERA, 38 K, 4 BB, 23 IP; Taylor Pack, UCLA– .750, 6 H, 3 2B, 3 HR, 10 RBI, 5 R; Caleigh Clifton, Oklahoma-.714, 5 H, 2 3B, HR, 5 RBI, 6 R, .700 OBP; Mya Felder, New Mexico State– .571, 8 H, 2 2B, 4 HR, 9 RBI, .625 OBP, 1.571 SLG; Briana Marcelino, UConn– .611, 11 H, 2 2B, HR, 7 R, 9 RBI, .650 OBP; Jazlyn Crowder, Louisiana Tech– .750, 12 H, 3 2B, HR, 8 R, 10 RBI, 3-3 SB, 1.125 SLG; Virginia Irby, Colgate– .471, 8 H, 10 R, 4 RBI, 3 2B, HR; Miranda Elish, Texas – 2-0, 0.00 ERA, 2 SHO, 15 K, 7 H, .152 opp. BA, 14 IP; Danielle Williams, Northwestern– 2-0, 0.00 ERA 2 SHO, 22 K, 4 H.

 

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Central Oklahoma edged out West Florida by one point to grab the No. 1 spot in this week’s 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll. The Bronchos (38-4) and Argonauts (39-7) each received seven first-place votes, but UCO collected 384 points to UWF’s 383 to garner their first No. 1 ranking since the 2014 preseason poll.

Central Oklahoma, the eighth different No. 1 ranked program in 2019, has been a mainstay in the top 10 since March 6 and held down the No. 2 spot the last five weeks. UCO posted a 3-1 mark in Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA) play last week, sweeping Emporia State and splitting a twinbill with Washburn, suffering its first home loss of 2019. With four games left in the regular season, the Bronchos enter the final week with a three-game lead over Missouri Western in the MIAA standings.

West Florida’s run of four straight weeks at No. 1 was snapped after it dropped both games of a Gulf South Conference doubleheader at then-No. 18 UAH, its first GSC series loss of the season. The Argonauts still hold a three-game lead in the loss column over the Chargers heading into the final week of the regular season.

No. 3 through No. 8 remained the same as those programs went through the week unscathed. No. 3 Texas A&M-Kingsville collected the final two first-place votes and 376 points. The Javelinas bounced back from a 2-3 week with a three-game Lone Star Conference sweep of Midwestern State. TAMUK heads into the final week of the regular season in a three-way tie for first place with No. 8 Texas A&M-Commerce and No. 6 West Texas A&M. 

The Javelinas, who close out league play at Texas Permian Basin, currently own the tiebreaker having swept the Lions (36-10), who were idle last week, and won the series versus the Lady Buffs, who are coming off a three-game sweep of Texas Woman’s.

No. 4 North Georgia posted a Peach Belt Conference doubleheader sweep of USC Aiken last week. Seeking their sixth straight PBC regular-season title, the NightHawks (36-10) have a pair of crucial Peach Belt Conference doubleheaders left of the slate, including one against second-place Columbus State.

No. 5 Florida Tech swept Florida Southern on the road and are tied with Tampa atop the Sunshine State Conference standings with one weekend to go. The Panthers (36-10) close out their regular season with Eckerd, while the Spartans battle Saint Leo. UT owns the tiebreaker having taken two-of-three from FIT earlier in the season.

No. 7 Winona State extended its program-record winning streak to 24 games with an 8-0 week in Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference action. Undefeated in the NSIC and the month of April, the Warriors (39-5) hold a two-game lead over No. 14 Augustana in the league standings. Owning the tiebreaker with the Vikings (42-7), the Warriors have six remaining conference contests this week.

UC San Diego (29-10) went 3-1 at Cal State San Marcos and moved up to No. 9 this week, while Grand Valley State returned at No. 10 following a brief top-10 absence. The Lakers (36-8) put forth a 7-1 week in Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference play. Both squads hold slim leads in their respective league standings as they head into the home stretch.

This week’s poll welcomes No. 24 Lincoln Memorial and t-No. 25 Mississippi College back into the rankings. Then-No. 23 Georgia College dropped out.

The 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the eight NCAA regions. Records reflect games played through April 21, 2019.

 

2019 NFCA Division II
Top 25 Coaches Poll – April 24 (Week 10)

Rank

School

Totals

2019 Record

Previous Week

1

Central Oklahoma (7)

384

38-4

2

2

West Florida (7)

383

39-7

1

3

Texas A&M Kingsville (2)

376

36-8

3

4

North Georgia

357

36-10

4

5

Florida Tech

335

36-10

5

6

West Texas A&M

317

30-10

6

7

Winona State

304

39-5

7

8

Texas A&M-Commerce

285

35-10

8

9

UC San Diego

261

29-10

10

10

Grand Valley State

246

36-8

15

11

Colorado Mesa

218

38-7

12

12

Concordia Irvine

217

40-6

14

13

Indianapolis

199

39-11

9

14

Augustana

191

42-7

17

15

Valdosta State

172

30-12

16

16

UAH

156

35-12

18

17

Southern New Hampshire

147

33-9

13

18

Arkansas Tech

122

37-13

24

19

Tarleton State

102

36-11

22

19

Southern Arkansas

102

41-10

11

21

Georgian Court

83

39-6

19

22

Southern Indiana

70

31-15

21

23

Chico State

49

29-13

25

24

Lincoln Memorial

44

32-12

RV

t25

Shepherd

19

32-10

20

t25

Mississippi College

19

34-11

RV

 

New to Poll: No. 24 Lincoln Memorial, t-No. 25 Mississippi College.

Dropped Out: No. 23 Georgia College.

Receiving Votes: LIU Post (18), Saint Leo (10), Cameron (5), Carson-Newman (4), Missouri Western (2), Saint Anselm (2), San Francisco State (1).

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — It’s becoming tougher to separate the top teams in the NFCA Division III Top 25, but there’s no change at the top, with two-time defending national champion Virginia Wesleyan University at No. 1 for a third-straight week and the 28th time in the last 29 weeks.

The (34-3) Marlins have now won 15 of their last 16. They went 3-1 last week, including a run-rule sweep of Shenandoah and a split with Ferrum. Two-time reigning Schutt Sports/NFCA Division III National Player of the Year Hanna Hull fanned 15 Ferrum batters while tossing a no-hitter in Virginia Wesleyan’s 5-0 victory on Saturday.

St. Thomas (33-5) and Williams (26-4) both went unbeaten last week to rank ahead of East Texas Baptist (33-4), which slipped two spots to fourth after dropping two of three to longtime American Southwest Conference rival Texas-Tyler, who is moving to Division II next season.

Nine teams are tied for four spots in the Top 25. Illinois Wesleyan (27-6) and Trine (26-4) are deadlocked at No. 6; Luther (28-5) and Texas Lutheran (27-7) occupy the No. 13 position; Kean (32-5), Manhattanville (33-2) and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (22-7-1) share 16th; and Brandeis (27-2-1) and Lynchburg (30-10) are 20th.

Meanwhile, a patented late-season surge helped DePauw (22-10) break into the rankings this week at No. 25. The Tigers improved their record to 14-2 in April with their fifth straight victory in Monday’s sweep at Wittenberg.

The NFCA Division III Top 25 Poll is selected by eight NCAA Division III head coaches representing the eight NCAA regions. Current 2019 records are listed, with first-place votes in parentheses.

NFCA Division III Top 25 Poll – April 24, 2019

Rank

Team

2019 Record

Points

Previous

1

Virginia Wesleyan (8)

34-3

200

1

2

St. Thomas (Minn.)

33-5

192

4

3

Williams

26-4

184

3

4

East Texas Baptist

33-4

176

2

5

Linfield

32-5-1

168

8

T6

Illinois Wesleyan

27-6

149

6

T6

Trine

26-4

149

10

8

Birmingham-Southern

31-5

132

12

9

Christopher Newport

28-6

130

5

10

Ithaca

22-6-1

126

14

11

Claremont-Mudd-Scripps

30-7

125

7

12

Moravian

29-5

105

11

T13

Luther

28-5

102

T16

T13

Texas Lutheran

27-7

102

15

15

The College of New Jersey

26-6

74

T16

T16

Kean

32-5

67

19

T16

Manhattanville

33-2

67

18

T16

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

22-7-1

67

13

19

Coe

30-7

65

9

T20

Brandeis

27-2-1

48

20

T20

Lynchburg

30-10

48

22

22

Southwestern

33-4

40

23

23

Rowan

24-10

20

24

24

Thomas More

27-9

18

25

25

DePauw

22-10

12

NR

Others receiving votes: Piedmont 7, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 6, Wisconsin-Eau Claire 6, Mount Saint Joseph 5, Geneseo 4, St. Catherine 3, Wisconsin-Whitewater 2, and Endicott 1.

Dropped out: Millikin, New Paltz, Pomona-Pitzer, Wartburg and Whitworth.

* NOTE: Texas-Tyler is reclassifying to NCAA Division II, and Pfeiffer continues the process of going from Division II to Division III. Neither is eligible for the NCAA Division III Championship.

(NEW YORK) — The WNBA is nearly doubling its national TV exposure with a multiyear deal with CBS Sports.

CBS Sports Network will broadcast 40 WNBA games beginning next month when the season opens. The Minnesota Lynx vs. the Chicago Sky on May 25 will be the first game on the CBS Sports Network.

“Through our partnership with CBS Sports Network, the WNBA is joining an elite lineup of premium sports programming,” said NBA Commissioner Adam Silver. “We thank CBS Sports for making such a meaningful commitment to women’s basketball and for providing another platform to showcase the world-class athletes of the WNBA.”

The league, which will begin its 23rd season on May 24, also has a deal with ESPN to show 16 regular-season telecasts, including three on ABC. Last year, the WNBA had a strong regular season with combined average viewership across ESPN2 and NBA TV up 31% over 2018.

All-Star Sue Bird and the defending WNBA Champion Seattle Storm will make six appearances on CBS Sports Network this season. That includes a WNBA Finals rematch against former league MVP Elena Delle Donne and the Washington Mystics on June 14.

The TV channel will use local broadcast feeds for now, similar to what NBA TV does for WNBA games. NBA TV showed 49 games last year. The upcoming NBA TV schedule of WNBA games has not been finalized yet.

“We are truly excited to partner with the WNBA, bringing the country’s premier women’s sports league to CBS Sports Network. This partnership is one of the biggest and most impactful women’s sports programming arrangements ever at CBS Sports, offering national exposure of 40 games per year,” said CBS Sports chairman Sean McManus. “This agreement provides great live content throughout the summer in prime time and on weekends, and aligns two great brands in the WNBA and CBS Sports. We look forward to working with the WNBA for many years to come.”

CBS executive vice president of programming Dan Weinberg said the WNBA was exactly what CBS was looking for to bolster its schedule.

“We are looking to partner with established brands that are growing with dedicated fan bases,” he said in a phone interview. “The WNBA checks every one of those boxes. (Playing in the) spring-summer lends itself to our programming schedule. We are clearly and obviously talking about the best basketball players in the world at the highest level. Associating ourselves with WNBA, it’s a great powerful established brand with popularity across the country.”

The sides are still discussing expanding the coverage to include features and other WNBA programming.

“It’s going to be beyond highlights,” said David Denenberg, who is the Senior Vice President, Global Media Distribution and Business Affairs for NBA Entertainment. “Whether it’s features we develop or CBS develops, we want to do more.”

It’s unclear how the WNBA will decide which games will air on ESPN or CBS Sports Network going forward after this year. The league didn’t seem too concerned.

“Suffice it to say we have enough games we think we’ll put together a robust schedule for everyone,” Denenberg said. “We’ll announce the CBS schedule, ESPN schedule. I think we’re going to well serve all our partners.”

Along the Gulf shores of Texas and Louisiana there is a complex of deep, underground caverns. Inside each of these enormous caves – each of which is large enough to easily fit Chicago’s Willis Tower inside — the U.S. government keeps hundreds of millions of barrels of petroleum to safeguard the country against natural-disaster-induced and political-conflict-related supply disruptions.

Many countries have similar strategic reserves, but on the other side of the world, China maintains a different kind of stockpile: icy warehouses around the country are filled with frozen pork. The commodity is of such importance in China — which consumes more pork per capita than any other country after Vietnam — that the government set up a national reserve to protect the country from shortages and price volatility.

But the country’s pork industry is being devastated by a deadly, highly-contagious virus. Since officials began reporting cases last August, African Swine Fever (commonly known by its abbreviation ASF), has swept across the country. Outbreaks have hit every province and all five autonomous regions (like Tibet and Mongolia), and experts believe there are far more cases than the 129 outbreaks officially reported.

“There are many reports of cover-ups in China,” Brett Stuart, co-founder of analysis firm Global AgriTrends told TIME. He said a farm manager was reportedly jailed after reporting a case in Shandong province, suggesting authorities could be trying to obscure the reach of the problem.

Read More: Denmark Is Building a Border Wall to Keep Boars Away Amid Swine Fever Fears

The latest cases in China’s southern Hainan island — a waterway and more than 2,000 miles from the northeastern province of Liaoning where ASF was first reported — show how quickly the virus can spread. ASF, for which there is no cure or vaccine, can be passed between sick animals, or from objects like a farmer’s clothing and boots.

Consumption of infected meat — the resilient disease can live for months in pork products like sausage — is a major contributor to its spread in China, where many small famers feed their pigs household garbage, although the government has now placed restrictions on swill feeding. ASF is not known to be harmful to humans.

Experts say that the disease has moved more rapidly in Asia than in other regions where outbreaks have been found, like Europe.

“I have been very surprised about how fast ASF has spread in China,” Dr. Linda Dixon, an ASF researcher at the Pirbright Institute, a research institute dedicated to studying infectious disease in farm animals, told TIME.

Widespread culls have been enacted to fight the spread of ASF. Data released by China’s National Bureau of Statistics show that pig numbers decreased to 375.3 million, a drop of 40 million, at the end of March from one year earlier, according to the Wall Street Journal. China’s Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs believes the situation is worse, estimating that pigs have decreased 19% year-on-year, says the Journal.

“The impact on China’s pork industry has been catastrophic. Farms are empty across China. Farmers have been directed to wait up to [six] months before restocking,” says Stuart, of Global AgriTrends.

The decline in China’s pig stocks could seriously impact meat production at a time at a time when trade tensions are high. Chenjun Pan, Senior Analyst at Rabobank, told TIME that production could fall as much as 25-35% in 2019, and some experts believe China will be reliant on U.S. pork to keep its population fed.

China has imposed retaliatory tariffs of 50% on U.S. pork imports, which brings the total tariff level to 62% when factoring in the normal 12% rate applied to U.S. pork brought into the country. The USDA estimates that China will be the biggest source of demand for U.S. pork in 2019, and they expect China’s imports to rise 41% for the year.

“China’s need for pork will make it hard to ignore the U.S. It is logistically and physically impossible to find enough pork to fill China’s impeding pork gap,” says Stuart, of Global AgriTrends.

Read More: It’s Not Just China’s Retaliatory Tariffs That Should Worry U.S. Business

And the disease appears to be spreading. Vietnam reported its first outbreak in February, and Cambodia confirmed the virus’ arrival in March. In the last few weeks, more cases have been reported near Cambodia’s border with Vietnam.

Customs authorities worldwide are on alert. Tourists arriving in Taiwan were fined for bringing pork products into the country, and ASF was discovered in sausage confiscated at a Japanese airport. In March, U.S. customs officials seized a million pounds of Chinese pork on swine fever concerns.

According to Dixon, of the Pirbright Institute, it seems “likely” that ASF will spread further across Southeast Asia due to large pig populations living in small farms. Laos has already put a hold on the import of pigs and pork products from China. In early April, Thailand approved funding to prepare the country for a potential outbreak.

“Thailand is probably next,” warns Stuart.

Republicans passed a sweeping tax cut for two-thirds of Americans in 2017, saying it would pay for itself and the American public would thank them.

Now, as Americans finish filing to the IRS for the first time under the new system, the law has swelled the deficit and surveys show just one-fifth of taxpayers believe their taxes have gone down. That’s made it hard for President Donald Trump to leverage the tax cuts as an issue in 2020, when he’s up for reelection and his party will be seeking to retake the House of Representatives.

“The Democrats really outmaneuvered the Republicans by convincing the American people that the main thrust of the tax reform package was to cut taxes for the wealthy,” said Dan Eberhart, a major Republican donor who runs the drilling services company Canary, LLC. Republicans “failed to fully explain the success to voters.”

Trump is going to try again on Monday when he goes to Minnesota, a potential swing state in the 2020 election, to promote what Republicans consider their signature legislative achievement. It’s part of a week of events designed to promote the tax law’s effects on the economy as he turns to his next campaign.

The Trump administration and congressional Republicans sold the tax law as fuel for economic growth and deficit reduction. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell gave assurances in December 2017 that the measure would not only contain the deficit but be a “revenue-producer.” Trump’s top economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, said last week that the tax cut package had largely already paid for itself, a statement that conflicts with government data.

The U.S. budget shortfall grew by 17 percent to $779 billion in fiscal year 2018, which the Congressional Budget Office has said was partly a consequence of the tax law. Along with additional spending that’s been signed into law, the CBO projects the deficit will surpass $1 trillion by 2020.

When the law passed, McConnell said, “If we can’t sell this to the American people, we ought to go into another line of work.” He added that the GOP merely needed to tell the public “that you have more money in your pocket.”

Perceptions

But an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll this month showed that just 17 percent of Americans believe their taxes have been cut. A Reuters/Ipsos poll in March found that 21 percent thought their taxes were lowered.

That’s despite an analysis by the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center that two out of three taxpayers would see their taxes go down. The biggest benefits, though, go to the top 1 percent, who are projected to receive an average tax break of $62,000 in 2018, while the middle one-fifth of income earners got an average tax cut of $1,090 — about $20 per biweekly paycheck.

The law appears to have met a similar political fate as President Barack Obama’s stimulus package in 2009, in which most Americans received a one-year tax break but the incremental gains in paychecks were so small that most didn’t notice.

Eberhart said the Trump administration wanted “an immediate reaction” so it reduced the amount the IRS withholds from regular paychecks starting in 2018.

‘Too Small’

The move backfired. “It was too small an amount for most to notice,” he said. Adding to voters’ frustration, their tax refunds were smaller than expected, down about 1.1 percent overall, but still noticeable to individual households.

White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett on Friday dismissed poor poll results, saying that they might be explained by general frustration with the tax system broadly. He cited other data, such as the Michigan survey of consumer sentiment, that “suggest that you should have a very optimistic outlook for economic growth this year.”

The tax law, passed by Republicans without any Democratic support, lowered the corporate rate from 35 percent to 21 percent and cut individual taxes across income brackets for eight years. It doubled the standard deduction and enhanced the child tax credit. And it closed or tightened various tax breaks — most notably by capping the amount of state and local taxes that can be deducted — which had its biggest impact on residents of high-tax, largely Democratic-run states.

2018 Campaign

Democrats spent their 2018 midterm campaigns hammering the law as a giveaway to wealthy Americans that would widen the deficit and put popular programs like Social Security and Medicare on shaky ground.

According to exit polls for House races published on Election Day 2018 by CNN, 29 percent said the new tax law helped their finances; that group overwhelmingly supported Republican candidates. But 45 percent said the law had no impact and 22 percent said it hurt their finances, and those categories overwhelmingly backed Democratic candidates.

Ryan Ellis, a conservative tax lobbyist, blamed negative news coverage for the unpopularity of the tax law. “People don’t know about their own taxes,” he said, adding that they “get half baked ideas” from the way the law is portrayed.

Republicans didn’t understand what the broader public wanted from a tax bill, said Morris Pearl, a former managing director at BlackRock Inc., who now chairs Patriotic Millionaires, a group of wealthy individuals who advocate for higher taxes on the rich.

“They forgot that the people who show up at their $1,000-a-plate fundraisers are not representative of all people,” Pearl said. “They overreached with their tax bill and tilted the system in the favor of the very wealthy and large corporations.”

Hard Sell

The tax effort stemmed from the bipartisan desire to move the U.S. corporate tax system in line with those of foreign competitors. Both parties supported lowering the country’s 35 percent corporate rate, though Democrats favored a more modest reduction.

Republicans realized that corporate tax cuts were a hard sell to the general public. So they reduced levies for pass-through businesses — partnerships and limited liability companies — and individuals, eliminated some existing tax breaks to offset the rate reductions and included a more generous child tax credit.

But because of earlier unpopular proposals like one to cut deductions for medical expenses, college tuition and child-adoption costs, public opinion had already soured — for good.

In many Democratic strongholds, such as New Jersey, New York and the District of Columbia, the average refund amount decreased, according to H&R Block, fueling discontent with the law, even though residents in those states got a tax cut on average.

Worse, the state and local tax, or SALT, cap really stung. Residents of high-tax states, encouraged by the elected Democratic officials, came to believe they were targeted to pay for the $1.5 trillion tax cut, even if they weren’t able to personally use the deduction.

“It is clear that they consciously exacted revenge on Democratic states like New York, California, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Illinois by capping the SALT deduction, which is bad news for residents in those states,” said Representative Tom Suozzi, a New York Democrat.