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Elite DT Malik Autry gearing up for a busy summer stretch, will visit UCF this weekend

There are no shortage of suitors for elite 2025 defensive lineman Malik Autry.

The face of Auburn's 2025 recruiting class out of Opelika (Ala.) High, the 6-foot-6, 320-pound Autry has been committed in-state to the Tigers for more than 16 months. That hasn't deterred other blue-blood programs from continuing to chip away at the massive DL target.

Around The Kingdom - UCF Baseball heads to the post-season

Join Eric Lopez and Trace Trylko as they debate some of the current topics surrounding UCF Athletics.

In this episode, the guys talk about some of the latest news in college football, including UCF's ranking according to On3 Sports, and at least one of the guys thinks the black Friday game against Utah could be the biggest black Friday game ever.

Plus, UCF Baseball is heading to the post-season in the Tallahassee Region, just barely as it turns out.

Also: Revenue sharing in college sports, FedEx ponies up some dough, baseball or softball stock, and Jennifer Aniston?

Click here for this week's Around the Kingdom.

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Dom Stagliano 'filled with excitement' to reach NCAA Tournament ⚔️⚾

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Dom Stagliano took a major step up during his second season at UCF.

The right-handed pitcher emerged as the Knights' most reliable weekend starter, finishing the regular season with a 3.73 ERA and a spot on the All-Big 12 second team. He's likely to be UCF's Friday night starter when they open NCAA Regional play against Alabama.

Jack Zyska proved pivotal in UCF's march back to a NCAA Regional ⚔️⚾

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Jack Zyska knows what it takes to reach the College World Series.

Playing under then-Notre Dame assistant Rich Wallace in 2022, Zyska and his teammates won a regional and Super Regional - all on the road - to get to Omaha.

"The atmosphere is electric regardless of where you are," Zyska said about regional play. "You've got to get there. Every team that's in a regional deserves to be there and they've a very good team. When you're in a regional, all bets are off.

"Our style of baseball travels. It's going to play well. Rely on your pitching and defense with timely hitting. That's how you win regionals and Super Regionals. Go in there with a great deal of confidence because our style of baseball is going to travel for sure."

Does UCF have what it takes to get to Omaha?

"Absolutely," Zyska said. "It takes a special team aside from talent in the lineup and in the rotation. It takes a special group of guys. I think we have that. That tough style of baseball where you've got to go out and out-execute somebody, I think it's going to be tough to beat us twice for sure."

Zyska was perhaps Wallace's biggest offseason addition. After he was granted a medical redshirt to free up an additional season of eligibility, Zyska transferred to UCF last September. Continuing the reputation he had at Notre Dame, Zyska proved to be UCF's best power hitter slugging a team-best 10 home runs and 44 runs batted in.

He came to Orlando to help Wallace start his head coaching journey on the right foot.

"It means a lot (to get to a regional)," Zyska said. "That's kind of why I cam here. We've been saying it all year. All we've got to do is get to June. Get to a regional and all bets are off. Anything can happen and here we are."

Rich Wallace leads UCF Baseball to NCAA Regional in his first season as head coach ⚔️⚾

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Rich Wallace, who went to three NCAA Regionals as a UCF player, will take the Knights back to the postseason in his first season as head coach. The Knights were selected as a No. 3 seed and will play No. 2 Alabama in the Tallahassee Regional on Friday at 6 p.m. Florida State and Stetson are the other two teams in the bracket.

Shortly after the NCAA Selection Show, Wallace caught up with the media to talk about the achievement. It's UCF's first regional since 2017 and just their fourth overall since 2005.

After finishing strong which included two wins in the Big 12 tournament and a major RPI-boost victory against eventual champion Oklahoma State, most college baseball writers penciled UCF as solidly in the field. While the Knights obviously did get in, it was later revealed by the committee that they were among the last four teams in the field.

"(I was) a little bit on the edge, just because you never know," Wallace said. "They go in that room. I've been through this enough. You never know what's coming out of that room. But I thought our resume, non-conference, conference and conference tournament was that of a worthy NCAA tournament team.

"So I was hoping they would look at that. And we're just glad to be still playing. I'm glad we have practice this afternoon."

Though he was a bit surprised being among the "last four in."

"A little bit, yeah," Wallace said. "I think who we had to play, where we had to play them, the way the schedule was built with the non-conference weekends that we had. We won six out of 10 Big 12 series, 16 Big 12 games and get to the semifinal of the Big 12 tournament.

"I don't know exactly how many non-conference games we won, but we only lost three. So that to me felt like it, but you never know. I've been on this on both sides of this thing. We won an ACC championship by five and a half games in 2022 and you think you're gonna be a national seed and you're not. You try to do all you can and you just hope the committee gives you a shot."

Wallace reflected on how his inaugural team came together. A staff that had never worked together. Returning players who chose to stay. Transfers who decided to make the move. Freshmen they had to re-recruit.

"To get all that with the 26 new players and five new coaches, to get them all going in the same direction and to watch that kind of evolve over the year and see them win the games on the stage that they had to win them," Wallace said. "And the way they went about it and represented our program, our school and our city the way they did. For them to get a chance to keep playing has been unbelievable."

The NCAA Regional is a big accomplishment for the entire team, but extremely special to the players in their final season of eligibility. That includes several players who have been at UCF for the last four or five years.

"(Kyle) Kramer, (Andrew) Brait, (Ben) Vespi, some other guys in that room that have given everything they could to this program for so long," Wallace said. "Our team wanted them to have the opportunity to experience not only postseason baseball but NCAA Tournament baseball at the highest level. It means a lot to me and the program they don't leave this place without playing in an NCAA Tournament."

UCF opens regional play against Alabama, but there's the potential for a matchup against Florida State. Wallace is probably UCF's head coach today because of FSU coach Link Jarrett, who hired him at Notre Dame in 2020. Wallace spent three seasons with Jarrett in South Bend, which included a trip to the College World Series in 2022, then joined him at FSU last season.

"I had a feeling when we were in that's where we were going, Wallace said. "If you asked me in February that you're going and where it would be I would have guessed Tallahassee. That's what always happens here. You've got Florida State, Alabama, Stetson and us all in the same regional, that's an unbelievably deep regional that's got championship teams all around in it. It's going to be fun to watch."

Given UCF's recent lack of success combined with elevating conferences to the Big 12, few outsiders would have predicted a NCAA Regional in Wallace's first season. But he felt fairly early it would be a distinct possibility.

"I think as the fall started to roll around a little bit and we started to see some pieces fall together," Wallace said. "And then knowing when Jack Zyska showed up, obviously solidified some pieces in our offense. And you just started to see the team kind of gel and the pieces defensively start to work out from the guys we brought in and the guys returning.

"And then I would say near the end of the fall and early spring when you started to see some of those arms that at this point in their career had not had great careers start to look like they were really developing. The guys that we all thought they would be from the beginning like Dom Castellano, Dom Stagliano, Ben Vespi, Chase Centala. Kramer has always been Kramer, but those guys really started to emerge and you started to see that.

"We talked in our first meeting. I know a lot of people outside the building didn't think it, but the standard of UCF baseball is to play in June. So if you're going to sign up for this program, you're going to do everything right on and off the field and your goal and the expectation is that you're going to play in June. We're not going to throw a massive party when we get in in June, but that's the expectation, that's what you deserve. Put in the work, that's where we'll be. And it's nice to see them get rewarded for that."

Florida State will play Stetson at 12 noon on Friday, leaving the evening timeslot for UCF-Alabama at 6 p.m. That's perfectly fine with Wallace, assuming no weather issues.

Wallace anticipates Dom Stagliano will start Friday's game. He had typically pitched the Saturday games on the weekends, but pitched the first game of the Big 12 tournament against Cincinnati.

This will be Wallace's fifth NCAA Tournament at UCF: Three as a player, one as an assistant coach and now his first as head coach.

"I came back here because I love the program so much," Wallace said. "I was grateful for the opportunity. I know what it's like to play in these tournaments with the UCF on their chest. I'm happy that group of guys gets a chance to do that and represent our school on the highest stage."

What I'm hearing on four-star WR Jayvan Boggs..

The four-star receiver from Cocoa, Fla., decommitted from Ohio State on Tuesday night and is now focused on Missouri, Georgia, Notre Dame and UCF.

The very productive Boggs will visit Georgia this weekend but the issue with Ohio State might have been his intent on taking visits so more could be coming as well.

OT: Always look both ways when first to enter an intersection (terrible accident in Winter Springs)

I guess I missed this last week when it happened, but saw some news reports today.

In Winter Springs last Tuesday around 10 a.m., there was a terrible t-bone crash at the intersection of 434 and Vistawilla (Tuscawilla neighborhood) by the Seminole Co. tax collector office.

A mom of three was t-boned by a woman who ran a red light. She registered a BAC of 0.386, five times the legal limit.

The mom died instantly, the two kids in the back seat had minor injuries but will be OK (physically).

They later released video and it appears like the woman must have been doing 70+, hard to tell. Definitely faster than the posted 50.

It's a good reminder to always be diligent when crossing an intersection. It may not have made a difference here, not trying to cast blame because obviously the poor mom did nothing wrong.

A similar thing happened to me a few years ago in Altamonte near the mall. I was going across 436 and a car didn't slow down at all, probably distracted by the I-4 signs (I really don't know). I slammed on the brakes hard, narrowly missing getting t-boned.

Around The Kingdom - UCF Baseball heads to the post-season

Join Eric Lopez and Trace Trylko as they debate some of the current topics surrounding UCF Athletics.

In this episode, the guys talk about some of the latest news in college football, including UCF's ranking according to On3 Sports, and at least one of the guys thinks the black Friday game against Utah could be the biggest black Friday game ever.

Plus, UCF Baseball is heading to the post-season in the Tallahassee Region, just barely as it turns out.

Also: Revenue sharing in college sports, FedEx ponies up some dough, baseball or softball stock, and Jennifer Aniston?

Click here for this week's Around the Kingdom.

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Gus High School Recruits and Results

As of right now, it seems like the best players on the roster are transfers. Some have been here for a while (RJ, Kobe, Barber, Hunter), others made immediate impact last year (Kight, Marshall). Others were just brought on like Jefferson, Barr, Tennison, Pace, and Boone; it’s possible one I’m not even mentioning ends up being a huge impact guy.

The best high school kids Gus and Co have recruited in terms of production have been Xavier Townsend, Demari Henderson, and Colton Boomer. Am I missing anyone there? John Walker did great as a freshman, but he has not been the primary starter yet. Chasen Johnson made waves in spring ball.

The high school classes under Gus have brought a lot of excitement to the fanbase on signing day. Who do y’all think we will be talking about a lot this Fall from those classes? Anyone not listed above?

Objectively, did UCF fare the best out of the Fresh Four this inaugural Big 12 sports calendar year?

This post got me thinking.

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Only one to go bowling.
Basketball surprised and we beat a top 5 Kansas plus other ranked wins.
Both baseball and softball going to regionals.

Is football now the “worst” men’s sport on campus? 🤔 We did pretty solid this first year.

Kyle Kramer grateful to be a Knight, amped to end career with postseason push ⚾

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Kyle Kramer began his college career at Rollins and after three years made the decision to head across town to transfer to UCF.

The St. Petersburg native immediately became one of UCF's clutch relievers, leading the team in saves in both 2022 and 2023. He continued his role as one of the team's most reliable bullpen arms, delivering one of his best performances in last week's Big 12 tournament against Cincinnati.

After UCF took a 6-5 lead in the 11th inning thanks to Danny Neri's solo home run, Kramer was tasked with getting the final three outs. After giving up a leadoff single, Kramer quickly retired the next three batters to close out the win.

"I just really wanted to get the team the win," Kramer said this week. "That was my mindset. What do I have to do right here to get the win... It was a relief of emotions. After they tied it up in the bottom of the ninth, it was like oof. We've got to win this. When we did, it was let's go."

Then two days later in the win against Oklahoma State, Kramer was asked to get UCF out of a jam. With a man on second and just one out, Kramer struck out his first batter faced and then forced a fly out to end the inning.

The win against Cincinnati and subsequent triumph over the Cowboys likely was the clincher to secure an at-large bid to the NCAA Regionals.

For Kramer, it will be his first NCAA postseason at any level.

"It's super awesome, especially being the last year," Kramer said. "This is the last ride. I get to go out there and play more baseball with my friends. Let's see how long we can do it. It's exciting."

Kramer admitted he wasn't immediately sure about his future after last year's coaching change that brought Rich Wallace to Orlando.

"(Wallace) played for UCF so he knows how important it is for us," Kramer said. "He has this passion and history of being here. He just wants to win. Danny (Neri) said that he's a winner. It's true because our first meeting here I was hesitant on coming back in the summer. He was like, 'I've been to Omaha. I've been to regionals and Super Regionals. It's an awesome feeling to get there.' Once he said that, that kind of gave me a future of what he wanted to do. I was like alright, we're gonna win here. He wants to win."

At the conclusion of his college career, Kramer wants to see how far they can take it. Being a UCF Knight has meant the world to him.

"I talk about this with my dad all the time," Kramer said. "What would have happened if we hadn't made that move? I'm very happy to be here. It's been a pleasure to be here the last three years and get to know everybody. Just the whole family of UCF. A tight-knit community. You've got a huge alumni base. It's crazy because we were in Arlington and you have people you've never seen before coming to the games and rooting on the Knights. That's pretty cool stuff."

OT: Vero Beach/Melbourne boat day

Taking the family for a beach getaway in June. Our plan is to just stay on the beach at the house we rented most of the time secluded from everything. However, I was interested in renting a boat with a captain for a day to cruise around for a few hours, maybe let the kids do some tubing, or just relax at a sandbar and grab lunch at a restaurant. I haven't found very many options online in the area. Can anyone here recommend somebody I can get in touch with to make this happen? We are staying close to Sebastian Inlet so would prefer to get picked up and dropped off somewhere in that area.

Stewert Mandel Would Like To Address The Dungeon

People will not stop complaining about the state of things​

College football is the rare phenomenon that is somehow both extremely popular yet extremely frustrating to its consumers on all variety of matters.

The House settlement may bring some much-needed stability to the NIL/portal world, but it will not solve any of the following widespread complaints:

  • Exorbitant ticket prices (which if anything will go up even farther to help offset the lost revenue)
  • Traffic in and out of the stadium
  • Inconvenient kickoff times
  • Conference realignment
  • Targeting
  • Officiating in general
  • Long replay reviews/too many commercials
  • End zone fades
  • Clock management
  • The overtime format
  • Coaches leaving before the bowl game
  • Too many bowl games
  • Your team’s recruiting ranking
  • Your quarterback’s decision-making
  • Losing to your rival
Considering we endure all those things, and still keep watching, a running back getting a paycheck is not likely to be the final straw.




OT: Eli Manning is having a big estate sale

I thought this was interesting. Eli's primary home is in the NYC area, but he had a second home in Oxford, Miss. I guess he doesn't want/need that residence anymore, so he sold the house and now he's having a big estate sale to sell the contents including his sports memorabilia and game balls, his clothing, etc.

OT...Sod Companies, experiences and recommendations

Hey Yall,
I need to replace maybe 400 square feet of sod in Oviedo . I have initially looked at Sod Depot, Lukas , A1 Sod . Do any of you folks have any experience or recommendations for sod? I anticipate laying it myself. It's not a very large space. Looking at St. Aug, Floratam or that other one. Lol.. Thanks

A few thoughts on the eve of the NCAA Baseball Selection Show ⚾

Looking back at the history of UCF Baseball, I consider joining Conference USA in 2005-06 as a delineation signifying the beginning of the "modern" era.

The Knights dominated the TAAC and Atlantic Sun during the 1990s and early 2000s when their key rivals were Stetson, Jacksonville, FAU, Troy, etc. Between 1993 and 2004, UCF made the NCAA Regionals eight times, the longest drought being two years.

When UCF joined C-USA, most of us thought UCF Baseball would continue to be the most successful men's sport at UCF. The program had a fantastic reputation at the time based on their A-Sun success and they would now be aligned in a top-five baseball league that also included quality programs like Rice, Southern Miss, Tulane and Southern Miss.

I won't completely rehash the (end of) Bergman, Terry Rooney and Greg Lovelady eras, but it's staggering to me that in the 18 seasons between 2006 and 2023, UCF made just three NCAA Regionals: 2011, 2012 and 2017.

Rooney almost reached a third regional. In 2014, UCF was acknowledged as the "first team out" of the bracket. Things fell off after that, a subpar season followed in 2015 and then a dreadful one in 2016 which prompted Rooney to cut bait and take an assistant job elsewhere knowing he was heading into the final year of a contract.

Then lo and behold in 2017, Greg Lovelady in his first year led UCF to a 40 wins, a regular season AAC championship and NCAA Regional berth.

After that, Lovelady's teams were good but not good enough. To his credit, he never had a losing season. We could talk about pitching depth/injuries and late-season slides that seemed to be a culprit in some of those seasons, but the biggest issue IMO was the decline of the American. It went from being a multiple-bid league to essentially a one-bid league* the last few years.

(Once UConn left, for whatever reason, the league RPI plummeted which usually meant ECU was the only team slated to earn a bid regardless of winning the conference tournament or not. From 2021 onward, the only times the AAC got two bids is when ECU lost the conference tournament).

I wasn't sure what to expect in Rich Wallace's first season besides having complete confidence that he would get UCF Baseball on track to becoming a regular regional contender again. I also know that when you're in a power conference like the Big 12, a rising tide lifts all boats. UCF was no longer competing in what's essentially a one-bid league like the AAC.

As long as they did reasonably well in OOC and found a way to finish Big 12 play around .500, their RPI should be in the range to have a chance. Still, that was easier said than done.

Highlights for me were the home series wins vs. Oklahoma State and Kansas State. Gutting out the Saturday win against Texas. Then delivering two clutch wins in the Big 12 tournament to seal the at-large bid and get off the bubble.

Kudos to Wallace and his staff, the UCF seniors that bought in and stuck it out and the influx of transfers that seamlessly meshed in. Happy for a guy like Ben Vespi who will end his career with a regional as well as Andrew Brait who is the lone remaining player that played on UCF's 2020 team.

And as far as those transfers, how huge were Wallace's connections? He was the sole reason for the late pickups of Jack Zyska (enrolled last September) and Danny Neri (enrolled in January), both of whom played for him at Notre Dame. Without those two, is UCF in a regional this year?

Fantastic season and hopefully a sign of what becomes an annual occurrence for the program.

***

NCAA Selection Show airs Monday from 12-1 p.m. on ESPN2.

I would not bet against Tallahassee, though we'll find out for sure tomorrow. FSU has not hosted a regional since 2018.

If Kendall Rogers and the D1Baseball crew is accurate, both UCF and Florida should be No. 3 seeds. I've seen some projections that put UF in Tally, though I'd be surprised if they did that. If one of us had to go out of state, I'd put my money on UF.

Danny Neri honored to help UCF Baseball earn NCAA Regional bid

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UCF Baseball's march to the NCAA postseason was a season-long team effort, but they may not have gotten there if not for the recent heroics of catcher Danny Neri.

During UCF's Big 12 tournament opener against Cincinnati, Neri hit three home runs inside Globe Life Park including the game winner in the 11th inning. He was named to the Big 12 All-Tournament team for his efforts.

Neri, who had four home runs the entire season leading up to that game, said it hadn't really sunk in what he was able to do.

"I just wanted to go out there and do anything I could to help the team," Neri said. "That's what I was excited to do, to help put us in this position. All the personal accolades, that's all great, but at the end of the day we made it back to a regional and that's the best part."

On Monday, UCF found out they would play in the Tallahassee Regional with a opening round matchup against Alabama. Host Florida State and Stetson are also in the bracket.

Neri transferred to UCF to reunite with Rich Wallace, who was his former assistant coach at Notre Dame. Neri's former Notre Dame head coach, Link Jarrett, now holds the same position at FSU where a potential regional matchup looms.

"Having played so many postseason games for Coach Jarrett and with Coach Wallace in the dugout and the potential to be playing for Coach Wallace and Coach Jarrett in the other dugout, I'm sure it'll be weird to look across the field and see him over there. I'm excited. I know he'll have those guys ready. They've got a great team, but so do we. I would love to get a chance at them."

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Neri said it's an honor knowing he helped Wallace take UCF to a regional in his first season as head coach.

"It's a massive accomplishment," Neri said. "Not an easy thing to do, show up with a new group of guys in a new conference and navigate your way through all those challenges. It wasn't smooth sailing by any means. We got swept in our first conference series and had to fight all year. He did a great job helping us through it. Can't say enough what he's done and the rest of the staff has done to get us ready."

From Wallace on down, Neri said 2024 UCF Baseball is a special group.

"There's such a cohesiveness between the staff and the players," Neri said. "It's unlike any team I've ever been on. I feel like all of us have such a great relationship with all our coaches whether that be the hitting coach or pitching coach. They've helped us in so many different ways it makes it easy on gameday to get the job done when you're all on the same page."

Neri was essentially the last man added to the roster. He remained at Notre Dame through December in order to graduate, then made the decision to transfer in January.

"I couldn't have asked for a better group of guys to play my last year with," Neri said. "Coming here in January, I was a little nervous about how I would fit in with these guys who have known each other for so long. They welcomed me with open arms. I could not have asked for a better situation. To get to go into battle one last time with these guys and make a postseason push, I'm really excited and grateful for the opportunity."
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