Amari Avery recounts scary ordeal, how she ended up competing with Gabi Ruffels’ clubs

Amari Avery didn’t realize she didn’t have her clubs until about two hours before her U.S. Women’s Open tee time.

That’s when Avery sat in her hotel room in disbelief. She had hurriedly moved out of her Airbnb that morning following an attempted break-in around 2 a.m. Friday. When her dad, Andre, and boyfriend, Gavin Aurilia, went back to the rental home to retrieve Avery and Aurilia’s clubs, each packed inside matching USC-issued travel bags, Aurilia grabbed the wrong set before he was dropped off at the airport to fly to PGA Tour Americas Q-School.

“I sat in my hotel at 12:30 like, I guess I am going to pull out from the U.S. Open after a pretty solid round,” said Avery, who had opened in 1-under 71 Thursday at Erin Hills. “I was obviously devastated.”

She was still reeling from what had transpired earlier, too. Avery said her dad, mom and boyfriend all saw the person who was trying to break in outside the front door. It took police about 15 to 20 minutes arrive, and when they did, the person was gone. Initially, Avery was panicked when Andre woke up she and Gavin in their room, thinking he was an intruder.

“It was just a scary time,” Avery said.

After discovering Aurilia’s clubs, and not hers, in her possession, Avery scrambled to make calls – to TaylorMade, to her agent, to friends in the field. Eventually, Avery’s agent got ahold of USC alum Gabi Ruffels, who is also represented by Wasserman and was competing in the morning wave; Ruffels offered her clubs to Avery.

“I was like, ‘Well, how did she play?’ Because I was like, if she’s playing good, no one in their right mind is giving me their clubs,” Avery said. “I probably wouldn’t, either, and I’m a nice person. But unfortunately for her she missed the cut, but it was fortunate for me, and she’s obviously a very class act, great friend of mine, so she lent me the clubs.”

Avery, who tried three different sets on the range Friday afternoon before her round, shot 73 with Ruffels’ sticks – the final two holes of her round had to be competed Saturday morning with the same clubs. USC head coach Justin Silverstein texted Avery on Friday night to inform her that she’d gained nearly two shots on the greens with Ruffels’ putter.

“I felt like Gabi’s clubs were honestly pretty good,” Avery said. “I joked with her last night after I called her, and I said, ‘Obviously, thank you so much for lending me the clubs.’ I was like, ‘I might take your putter.’ Like I love my putter, like everyone knows that. But I don’t know, my college coach said I gained putts yesterday. I was like, maybe I should take her putter and maybe like an iron or two. But no, it was nice to have my clubs back.”

After Aurilia’s mother flew Avery’s clubs back to Milwaukee from Phoenix, Avery backed up her wild round with a 76. She’ll enter Sunday at 4 over, 11 shots back and tied for 41st.

Keegan O’Connor’s record-breaking homer leads K-State past Houston Christian 7-4 in Austin Regional

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Keegan O’Connor had a record-breaking three-run homer, Lincoln Sheffield threw 6 2/3 scoreless innings and Kansas State beat Houston Christian 7-4 on Saturday in the Austin Regional.

Kansas State (32-25) advances to Sunday’s elimination game against the loser of Saturday’s nightcap between Texas and UTSA.

Houston Christian (32-25), in its first season under head coach Clay Vanderlaan, finished with a 14-game improvement from last year for its second trip to the regionals.

O’Connor became Kansas State’s single-season home run leader with his 17th blast for a 5-0 lead in the third inning. The previous record of 16 was set in 1997 by Scott Poepard and Heath Schesser. O’Connor’s homer put him at 59 RBIs.

Kansas State’s shutout bid ended in the eighth on Rhett Hendricks’ two-run single up the middle. The Wildcats answered with two runs on a passed ball and sacrifice fly in the bottom half for a 7-2 lead.

Jeremy Rader blasted a two-run homer in the ninth to get within three runs before KSU closed it out.

Sheffield (7-4) struck out six and allowed only four hits.

Joshua Caravalho (9-4) went 3 2/3 innings and allowed six hits and five runs, four earned, while walking one.

Coach Pete Hughes became the fastest to reach 200 wins in Kansas State history.

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AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports

SEC Powerhouse Emerges As Leader For Nation’s No. 1 DL

SEC Powerhouse Emerges As Leader For Nation’s No. 1 DL originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

A leader has emerged for class of 2026 four-star defensive lineman James Johnson as he takes multiple official visits over the summer. 

Johnson (6-foot-2.5, 285 pounds) plays for Northwestern High School in Cape Coral, Florida. The highly-coveted recruit ranks as the No. 1 defensive lineman, the No. 3 player in the state and the No. 15 recruit overall in his class (On3). 

Despite missing time with a knee injury, Johnson posted 60 tackles (29 for loss) with five sacks as a junior in 2024. 

Johnson is one of the many high-profile recruits visiting Georgia over the weekend, and it’s the Bulldogs that are the current favorite to land his commitment, according to On3’s Steve Wiltfong. 

Georgia coach Kirby Smart leads his team onto the field before the start of the SEC Championship game at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.Joshua L. Jones / USA TODAY NETWORK

Illinois and Penn State hosted Johnson on official visits in May. He also plans to visit Syracuse, Miami, Florida and Florida State before finishing out the summer back at Georgia on June 20. 

“I feel like Georgia has led for much of this year in his process,” Wiltfong said. “Miami, Florida and Syracuse are some of the other heavy hitters … But coach Trey Scott, Georgia’s defense, style of play, culture are all things that have resonated with him. Georgia has been the leader in this recruitment.”

Head coach Kirby Smart and position coach Trey Scott have recruited among the best along the defensive line. UGA’s 2025 class featured No. 1 defensive lineman Elijah Griffin, and NFL stars like Jalen Carter, Travon Walker and Jordan Davis are a testament to the development in Athens. 

The Bulldogs do have some stiff competition for Johnson, though, and nothing is certain at this point in his recruitment. 

Related: Georgia, Kirby Smart Land Four-Star Legacy Recruit On Saturday

Related: Nation’s No. 1 QB Reacts To 5-Star Wide Receiver’s Visit To Georgia

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on May 31, 2025, where it first appeared.

Orioles rookie Coby Mayo sparks bench clearing with shove after first MLB RBI

Baltimore Orioles rookie Coby Mayo’s first MLB RBI turned into an adventure of his own making Saturday.

In his 22nd career game, the top-100 prospect finally plated a run with an RBI single to score Ryan O’Hearn from second base in the fourth inning. However, the play went sour when Chicago White Sox third baseman Josh Rojas cut off a throw from left fielder Joshua Palacios and caught Mayo trying to sneak into second base.

The play turned into a rundown between first and second. Mayo was caught quickly, and responded by giving Lenyn Sosa a hard shove before first baseman Miguel Vargas tagged him out. Both Sosa and Vargas took exception to the shove, confronting Mayo as he laid on the ground. Mayo didn’t appreciate the treatment, pushing Sosa as he walked away.

Cue the benches clearing.

Viewed charitably, the 23-year-old Mayo’s shove could be seen as him attempting to draw an interference call on Sosa while running out of the baseline to avoid the tag. However, that tactic doesn’t work so well when you instigate the contact with your outstretched arms, with a fielder who has run out of the basepath.

Mayo confirmed that’s what he was doing after the game, via MASN’s Roch Kubatko:

“Yeah, obviously, just trying to get to second base and trying to get into scoring position for Heston [Kjerstad],” Mayo said. “Cuts it off and got into a rundown. Obviously, just being told in the minor leagues to try to stay in a rundown, and I thought he was in the base line and trying to get some contact. Didn’t mean for it to escalate. I wasn’t trying to do that. It just did.

“The guys always have your back. I think everyone in here will fight for one another — not literally, but, you know, everyone has each other’s back. I think that’s just what happened. Looking out for teammates, and we’ll do the same thing for them.”

Orioles interim manager Tony Mansolino provided a little more detail behind the play, but ultimately agreed with the umps for not buying Mayo’s attempt:

“Now he’s an infielder, right? So when we’re in spring training talking about rundowns, one of the things that we constantly talk about with our infielders is not crossing the line because if there’s contact with the infielder then it’s … I think they call it a Type 2 obstruction, and then you automatically get second base. 

“So, I think instinctually Coby kind of sought out the contact right there with the infielder, which, visually, it probably didn’t look the best but I think most coaches will probably go, ‘Not a bad baseball play.’ Just didn’t work [in] our favor. Umpire made a good call.”

This … is not how you draw an interference call in the big leagues. Coby Mayo gave it a try. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)
Mitchell Layton via Getty Images

Ultimately, it was a rookie moment for a player whose career hasn’t started off on the best foot. Mayo is one of the shinier prospects in the Orioles’ youth movement — MLB Pipeline ranked him as the No. 14 prospect in baseball entering the season — but he entered Saturday hitting .094/.186/.094 in 59 plate appearances between 2024 and 2025.

Mayo, whose power is graded as plus-plus by Pipeline, is still waiting for his first extra-base hit in the big leagues. He has every opportunity to become an everyday player in the Orioles’ infield, as soon as he starts hitting like he has in the minors.

Unfortunately, even his first RBI showed he still has some learning to do.

Orioles rookie Coby Mayo sparks bench clearing with shove after first MLB RBI

Baltimore Orioles rookie Coby Mayo’s first MLB RBI turned into an adventure of his own making Saturday.

In his 22nd career game, the top-100 prospect finally plated a run with an RBI single to score Ryan O’Hearn from second base in the fourth inning. However, the play went sour when Chicago White Sox third baseman Josh Rojas cut off a throw from left fielder Joshua Palacios and caught Mayo trying to sneak into second base.

The play turned into a rundown between first and second. Mayo was caught quickly, and responded by giving Lenyn Sosa a hard shove before first baseman Miguel Vargas tagged him out. Both Sosa and Vargas took exception to the shove, confronting Mayo as he laid on the ground. Mayo didn’t appreciate the treatment, pushing Sosa as he walked away.

Cue the benches clearing.

Viewed charitably, the 23-year-old Mayo’s shove could be seen as him attempting to draw an interference call on Sosa while running out of the baseline to avoid the tag. However, that tactic doesn’t work so well when you instigate the contact with your outstretched arms, with a fielder who has run out of the basepath.

Mayo confirmed that’s what he was doing after the game, via MASN’s Roch Kubatko:

“Yeah, obviously, just trying to get to second base and trying to get into scoring position for Heston [Kjerstad],” Mayo said. “Cuts it off and got into a rundown. Obviously, just being told in the minor leagues to try to stay in a rundown, and I thought he was in the base line and trying to get some contact. Didn’t mean for it to escalate. I wasn’t trying to do that. It just did.

“The guys always have your back. I think everyone in here will fight for one another — not literally, but, you know, everyone has each other’s back. I think that’s just what happened. Looking out for teammates, and we’ll do the same thing for them.”

Orioles interim manager Tony Mansolino provided a little more detail behind the play, but ultimately agreed with the umps for not buying Mayo’s attempt:

“Now he’s an infielder, right? So when we’re in spring training talking about rundowns, one of the things that we constantly talk about with our infielders is not crossing the line because if there’s contact with the infielder then it’s … I think they call it a Type 2 obstruction, and then you automatically get second base. 

“So, I think instinctually Coby kind of sought out the contact right there with the infielder, which, visually, it probably didn’t look the best but I think most coaches will probably go, ‘Not a bad baseball play.’ Just didn’t work [in] our favor. Umpire made a good call.”

This … is not how you draw an interference call in the big leagues. Coby Mayo gave it a try. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)
Mitchell Layton via Getty Images

Ultimately, it was a rookie moment for a player whose career hasn’t started off on the best foot. Mayo is one of the shinier prospects in the Orioles’ youth movement — MLB Pipeline ranked him as the No. 14 prospect in baseball entering the season — but he entered Saturday hitting .094/.186/.094 in 59 plate appearances between 2024 and 2025.

Mayo, whose power is graded as plus-plus by Pipeline, is still waiting for his first extra-base hit in the big leagues. He has every opportunity to become an everyday player in the Orioles’ infield, as soon as he starts hitting like he has in the minors.

Unfortunately, even his first RBI showed he still has some learning to do.

Shohei Ohtani throws 2nd batting practice session in a week — ‘We still got a ways to go’

LOS ANGELES — Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani threw a two-inning, 30-pitch live batting practice against minor league hitters before Saturday’s game against the Yankees. It was Ohtani’s second time throwing live BP as the three-time MVP slowly goes through his progression and pitching rehab from elbow surgery in order to return to the Dodgers’ rotation.

“[He] used his entire mix, take some hitters up, down and came out of it well, which is most important,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I think he wishes his command would have been a little bit better. But a really positive day for Shohei.

“You still got to get to five or six innings, so we still got a ways to go. … I didn’t ask what the velocity was, I would think a safe guess is somewhere in the mid 90s.”

Shohei Ohtani throws to a live batter prior to Saturday’s game vs. the Yankees. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ohtani, who hasn’t pitched in a regular-season game since Aug. 23, 2023, won’t pitch for the Dodgers until the second half at the earliest. Los Angeles’ rotation has dealt with several injuries this season. Starters Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are currently on the 60-day IL while rookie Roki Sasaki is on the 15-day IL.

The world’s best player has shown no signs of slowing down while he’s been rehabbing from elbow surgery, entering Saturday hitting .294 with an MLB-leading 22 homers this season, including two against the Yankees on Friday night.

He started Saturday’s game with a leadoff single and later scored on a Will Smith RBI-single. The Dodgers blitzed Yankees starter Will Warren for seven runs in 1 1/3 innings before New York yanked him. The lead ballooned to 10-0 by the time Ohtani got his third at-bat of the game. 

The Dodgers have not been lucky with their health for quite some time and were hit with another injury as shortstop Mookie Betts is dealing with a fractured left toe, Roberts confirmed Saturday. Betts, who was not in the Dodgers’ lineup in their 8-5 win over the Yankees, injured the toe in the dark at his home and reported the pain and swelling to L.A.’s medical staff and Roberts before Friday’s series opener.

“It’s a fracture at the tip of his toe, so basically it’s kind of what he can tolerate,” Roberts said. “And the last couple days, it’s been hard for him to even put on his shoe. So that’s obviously why he’s not in the lineup. But I still don’t believe it’s going to be an IL stint.”

While the injury isn’t expected to keep Betts out long-term, the Dodgers may have to reevaluate that plan should Betts’ pain and swelling in the toe not improve. 

He wasn’t in the starting lineup Saturday against the Yankees for the second straight game. 

The Dodgers are currently playing with just 12 position players, but have several players with plenty of experience at shortstop including Tommy Edman, Miguel Rojas and Hyeseong Kim, who got the nod at short on Saturday.

Shohei Ohtani throws 2nd batting practice session in a week — ‘We still got a ways to go’

LOS ANGELES — Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani threw a two-inning, 30-pitch live batting practice against minor league hitters before Saturday’s game against the Yankees. It was Ohtani’s second time throwing live BP as the three-time MVP slowly goes through his progression and pitching rehab from elbow surgery in order to return to the Dodgers’ rotation.

“[He] used his entire mix, take some hitters up, down and came out of it well, which is most important,” manager Dave Roberts said. “I think he wishes his command would have been a little bit better. But a really positive day for Shohei.

“You still got to get to five or six innings, so we still got a ways to go. … I didn’t ask what the velocity was, I would think a safe guess is somewhere in the mid 90s.”

Shohei Ohtani throws to a live batter prior to Saturday’s game vs. the Yankees. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ohtani, who hasn’t pitched in a regular-season game since Aug. 23, 2023, won’t pitch for the Dodgers until the second half at the earliest. Los Angeles’ rotation has dealt with several injuries this season. Starters Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow are currently on the 60-day IL while rookie Roki Sasaki is on the 15-day IL.

The world’s best player has shown no signs of slowing down while he’s been rehabbing from elbow surgery, entering Saturday hitting .294 with an MLB-leading 22 homers this season, including two against the Yankees on Friday night.

He started Saturday’s game with a leadoff single and later scored on a Will Smith RBI-single. The Dodgers blitzed Yankees starter Will Warren for seven runs in 1 1/3 innings before New York yanked him. The lead ballooned to 10-0 by the time Ohtani got his third at-bat of the game. 

The Dodgers have not been lucky with their health for quite some time and were hit with another injury as shortstop Mookie Betts is dealing with a fractured left toe, Roberts confirmed Saturday. Betts, who was not in the Dodgers’ lineup in their 8-5 win over the Yankees, injured the toe in the dark at his home and reported the pain and swelling to L.A.’s medical staff and Roberts before Friday’s series opener.

“It’s a fracture at the tip of his toe, so basically it’s kind of what he can tolerate,” Roberts said. “And the last couple days, it’s been hard for him to even put on his shoe. So that’s obviously why he’s not in the lineup. But I still don’t believe it’s going to be an IL stint.”

While the injury isn’t expected to keep Betts out long-term, the Dodgers may have to reevaluate that plan should Betts’ pain and swelling in the toe not improve. 

He wasn’t in the starting lineup Saturday against the Yankees for the second straight game. 

The Dodgers are currently playing with just 12 position players, but have several players with plenty of experience at shortstop including Tommy Edman, Miguel Rojas and Hyeseong Kim, who got the nod at short on Saturday.