Zink, Taylor, on season expectations
Wednesday, January 18, 2023
PROJECTED STARTING LINEUPS: OSU vs. No. 18 Iowa State
Baylor Bryant Staff Reporter
Tyler Zink’s second year with the Cowboys program. With incoming freshmen The Cowboys and transfers makkicked off their ing an immediate double-header seaimpact, here are son opener with two Taylor and Zink’s clean sweeps. expectations for the The OSU season. men’s tennis team “I think we hosted the UTRGV can accomplish big Vaqueros for a things this year, double-header especially with the on Saturday with lineup that we have,” matches played at Zink said. “Nothing 1 p.m. then shortly comes easy though after at 5 p.m. The and we’re gonna take Cowboys won both one match at a time of their matches, and yeah, have high 7-0. goals and hopefully The season we can achieve them marks coach Dustin day by day. Taylor and senior See Zink on page 2
OSU: Guard Naomie Alnatas
ISU: Guard Ashley Joens
Guard Terryn Milton
Guard - Lexi Donarski
Guard Lexy Keys
Guard Emily Ryan
Forward - Claire Chastain
Guard - Denai Fritz
Forward - Taylen Collins
Forward - Nyamer Diew
Prove it week
Davis Cordova
The Cowgirls have won its last three games, but face a tough two-game road stretch when they play at No. 18 Iowa State and No. 15 Oklahoma this week.
Cowgirls face tough two-game road stretch
Davis Cordova Staff Reporter
Courtesy of OSU Athletics OSU senior Tyler Zink said the Cowboys have high expectations for the season after a doubleheader sweep of UTRGV on Saturday afternoon.
The hype train for Cowgirl basketball is picking up speed, but there are two steep mountains to climb this week – one in Ames and one in Norman. On Wednesday, the Cowgirls start a two-game road trip with a game at No. 18 Iowa State and a date with No. 15 Oklahoma in Lloyd Noble Center on Saturday. It’s the toughest two-game stretch of the season for the Cowgirls, but a win in either game would help OSU garner more respect in a tough conference. Currently, Iowa State and Oklahoma are the highest ranked Big 12 teams. OSU however didn’t receive a vote in this week’s poll
despite defeating now-ranked Texas and then-ranked Baylor on the road. Things have changed recently in Stillwater and Ames. In Stillwater, the Cowgirls lost their first two conference games, but now they are on a three-game winning streak, playing with no fear and now have Big 12 experience to learn from. “All the fifth-year players we have understand what this level is like playing through a conference season,” Hoyt said. “What we didn’t have was Big 12 experience and I think we needed to get punched in the mouth early in order to figure out and adapt what it looks like. Experience is one thing, Big 12 experience is another.” For Iowa State lately, things have not gone well. The Cyclones have lost two of their last three games, given they’ve been to Oklahoma and Texas, but that’s not what’s wrong. In the loss to Oklahoma on Jan. 8, star center Stephanie Soares suffered a torn ACL and is out for
What: Cowgirls (13-4, 3-2 Big 12) at No. 18 Iowa State (11-4, 3-2 Big 12) When: 6:30 p.m. TV/Stream: ESPN+ Radio: KGFY — 105.5 FM
the season. Soares averaged a near double-double with 14.4 points and 9.9 rebounds per game. Soares threatened the paint offensively and secured offensive rebounds, something the OSU defense has struggled with containing all season. Iowa State averaged 12.2 offensive rebounds per game with Soares, but the Cyclones have grabbed just 15 total offensive boards in the two games without her. Injuries suck, injuries happen, but this helps the Cowgirls when they play Iowa State on Wednesday. A win in Ames or Norman would go a long way in boosting OSU’s resume for the Big Dance. sports.ed@ocolly.com
OSU to host course in grape-growing area Luisa Clausen News & Lifestyle Editor
and novice growers. Classes will take place from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Cimarron Valley Research Station, 10820 S. Jardot in Perkins Cotton and corn fields are Registration is $250 and due not all people can find in Okla- before Feb. 17. The course will homa. The state also dedicates accept 50 people. some of its lands to growing “Traditional agriculture grapes. typically takes many acres of Oklahoma State Univer- land, but viticulture can be sity’s Department of Horticul- successful on a few acres of ture and Landscape Architec- land,” said Aaron Essary, OSU ture will host the 2023 Grape Extension assistant specialist Management course, Due to with grapes and wine. “This more Oklahomans developing course will familiarize partician interest in the grape-growpants with grape management ing area. requirements throughout the The course starts on growing season.” March 2 and will meet one The classes will focus on Thursday per month through what is going on at that time of September. The course is the year in grape production. geared toward both seasoned Topics include site selection,
sprayer calibration, Mesonet tools, soil and water quality, insect management, irrigation, marketing, harvesting and more. The course will feature both classroom and hands-on learning opportunities in the vineyard. Specialists from OSU Extension will lead discussions and share researchbased information with participants. Continuing Education Units from the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food and Forestry, are requested for categories 1A and 10, as well as private applicators. Participants must attend at least four classes to receive a certificate. news.ed@ocolly.com
Courtesy of OSU The 2023 Grape Management Course will give current and potential grape growers a close-up view of the grape growing industry and offer information vital to successful production.