Your daily briefing on what's going on with Mississippi State Athletics, including full TV listings.
earned yet another ranked win on the season, taking down No. 23 Alabama, 8-1. Men's Tennis also picked up a victory, defeating Middle Tennessee State 4-0 and advancing to the Sweet Sixteen for the fifth time in the last six seasons.
Bulldogs softball fell to Georgia on Saturday, giving State its 17th loss on the season, and twelfth conference loss.Baseball: No. 23 Alabama at Mississippi State, 12 p.m. on SEC Network+Mississippi State men's tennis advanced to the Sweet sixteen for the fifth time in six years, and will now face off against first seeded Ohio State.
Mississippi State transfer defensive lineman Caleb Bryant committed to Southern Mississippi. Bryant is a former 3-star who redshirted last season with the Bulldogs.On upsets in college football:"Everybody's all surprised every time this stuff happens. It surprises me everybody gets surprised, because it happens every year like this that there are surprises. The most surprising thing would be if there weren't any surprises.
Mississippi State Bulldogs SEC Baseball
United Kingdom Latest News, United Kingdom Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Driver found shot in crashed vehicle prompts homicide investigation in BellAn early morning car crash in Bell turned into a homicide investigation Wednesday.
Read more »
Deadly shooting investigation underway after driver pulled from burning car in BellAuthorities were investigating a deadly shooting and fiery car crash in Bell early Wednesday morning.
Read more »
Your morning coffee may be hundreds of thousands of years oldThe coffee that picked you up this morning is 600,000 old.
Read more »
Your morning coffee may be hundreds of thousands of years oldThe coffee that picked you up this morning is 600,000 old. Researchers have found that the world's most popular type of coffee, known as arabica, emerged hundreds of thousands of years ago through natural crossbreeding of two other coffee species.
Read more »
Your morning coffee may be hundreds of thousands of years oldThe coffee that picked you up this morning is 600,000 old.
Read more »
Your morning coffee may be more than a half million years oldUsing genes from coffee plants around the world, researchers built a family tree for the world's most popular type of coffee, known to coffee lovers simply as…
Read more »