Moderators Jeff Howe Posted 17 hours ago Moderators Posted 17 hours ago AUSTIN, Texas — Jonah Williams punctuated his first series of the 2026 baseball season by taking a chance that had Jim Schlossnagle, Steve Sarkisian and anyone else with a stake in the two-sport standout’s future on the Forty Acres holding their breath. With two outs in the bottom of the seventh inning of Sunday’s 4-0 win over Michigan State at UFCU Disch-Falk Field, Williams popped the first pitch he saw from reliever Brady Chambers into left field. When center fielder Trent Rice lost track of the ball, allowing it to fall to the turf for a base hit, Williams bolted for second base. A late-season shoulder injury while suiting up as a safety for the football team delayed the start of Williams’ second season with the third-ranked Texas baseball team. His head-first slide into second base wasn’t quite the decision Schlossnagle wanted to see late in a game the Longhorns had under control, which is why Dariyan Pendergrass entered the game as a pinch runner after the 6-foot-3-inch, 210-pound Williams was called safe. “When he starts slow out and then tries to bust the double – I felt like it was time,” Schlossnagle said. “And three straight days of playing. He didn't play the field, but I think he's getting really close. Our training staff is doing a good job with him. “No other reason other than just to protect him moving forward.” Manning the designated hitter spot for each of the team’s three wins over the Spartans, Williams went 3-for-10 after making his season debut in Friday’s 8-1 victory. Williams scored two runs, tallied two RBI, walked twice and struck out twice over the weekend, a solid start as he looks to build on a freshman season in which he hit .327 with three doubles, 10 RBI and three stolen bases in 20 games. When Williams will be ready to resume his duties as a position player remains to be seen. Presumably, when the time comes, Williams will replace Ashton Larson in left field, with Anthony Pack Jr. off to a hot start in right field and Aiden Robbins patrolling center field. Until then, Schlossnagle will continue monitoring Williams’ progress, looking for positive signs as he saw on Friday. While going 1-for-3 at the plate and scoring two runs, Schlossnagle thought Williams had “great” at-bats and made smart decisions, like when he tried to turn an infield chopper into a base hit in the third inning. “He wanted to go to a full gear, but we've told him — his 85-90 percent is still faster than most of the guys on our team,” Schlossnagle said. “I'm really proud of Jonah for pulling up just a little bit — not at the end, but in the middle — running down the line. Then, he got his base hit and made his turn around first base. You saw some maturity there from Jonah.” View full news story 7 1 Quote
Moderators Jeff Howe Posted 17 hours ago Author Moderators Posted 17 hours ago Jonah recorded his first RBI of the season with a bases-loaded walk in Sunday's win: 4 Quote
Moderators Jeff Howe Posted 17 hours ago Author Moderators Posted 17 hours ago In the third inning of Sunday's win, Jonah followed a double by Carson Tinney with an RBI single to right: 7 1 Quote
Thailand T Sip Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) Thank Jeff! It's hard to rein in a thoroughbred. Edited 15 hours ago by Thailand T Sip 4 Quote
TexasFight12 Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago I’d like to see a race between Jonah Williams and Ryan Wingo. Both guys are around 210 and are 🔥🔥🔥 fast! 1 Quote
nicray0920 Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago What an athlete! I think baseball will eventually win out as he grows/develops over football 2 Quote
TheRoJoShow Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 3 hours ago, nicray0920 said: What an athlete! I think baseball will eventually win out as he grows/develops over football For the sake of our safety room, I hope that's not for a couple years. 1 Quote
McCoy2Shipley Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 17 minutes ago, TexShoe said: why is he still playing baseball? Because he's damn good at it Quote
TexShoe Posted 48 minutes ago Posted 48 minutes ago 14 minutes ago, McCoy2Shipley said: Because he's damn good at it That's nice, but I'm a selfish fan, so I would rather see him be a great football player instead of a good football player and damn good baseball player. Don't tell me he can spend time on baseball and still be a great football player. Quote
McCoy2Shipley Posted 40 minutes ago Posted 40 minutes ago 6 minutes ago, TexShoe said: That's nice, but I'm a selfish fan, so I would rather see him be a great football player instead of a good football player and damn good baseball player. Don't tell me he can spend time on baseball and still be a great football player. Seems what he's gonna try to do so I will support him either way. I love both sports and hope he excels at both 1 Quote
TexShoe Posted 18 minutes ago Posted 18 minutes ago 4 minutes ago, Califashorn75 said: He should just commit to baseball. You seriously would prefer a 5-star, #1 safety prospect, and overall top 10 talent to abandon football for baseball? Quote
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