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Texas A&M sweeps LSU with brutal efficiency as Aggie baseball keeps skyrocketing

Texas A&M baseball is headed in one direction, without a doubt— and they just keep gaining momentum.
Texas A&M's Gavin Grahovac (9) celebrates an RBI-single during game three of the NCAA College World Series finals between Tennessee and Texas A&M at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha, Neb., on Monday, June 24, 2024.
Texas A&M's Gavin Grahovac (9) celebrates an RBI-single during game three of the NCAA College World Series finals between Tennessee and Texas A&M at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha, Neb., on Monday, June 24, 2024. | Brianna Paciorka/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK

Texas A&M baseball has now swept their biggest rivals in two straight weekends, demolishing the Texas Longhorns last Friday and Saturday and trouncing the LSU Tigers over the past three days. This is a huge boost to Texas A&M, as, though the Tigers have very much faded from what they were projected to be in the preseason, they still possess enough talent to threaten top teams.

Texas A&M made sure that was not an issue in this series, as they never let the Tigers score more than four runs en route to their weekend sweep. LSU only notched a total of 8 runs across the entire weekend, with four of those coming in the first game.

Texas A&M baseball's emphatic sweep of LSU shows that their arrow is pointed straight up

The cautious optimism that fans have showed towards Michael Earley this season is beginning to lose some of the caution as the year goes on. Texas A&M has already surpassed their win total from last year— both overall and in conference— and is firmly in the middle of the super regional hosting conversation.

That's a complete turnaround from the roller coaster we saw last season— at times, the Aggies looked like world beaters in 2025, but then all of a sudden they get swept by a Missouri team that's at the bottom of the conference standings. This season has seen a complete change— apart from the loss to UCLA (where just about everything that could go wrong did go wrong), the Aggies have been competitive in every game they've played, and have looked flat far less often.

Next up, they'll host UTSA for a midweek game before a showdown with the Florida Gators in Gainesville— another measuring stick series, as the Gators are one of the best teams in the conference. We'll have another chance to see just how good the Aggies really are in that one— but for now, their arrow looks like it's pointed directly upwards.

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