The 2026 RBC Heritage, the first PGA Tour event after the 2026 Masters, begins this week at Harbour Town, and the runner-up from the Masters is the favorite to win. Here is everything you need to know about the RBC Heritage odds and other betting favorites to start the week.
RBC Heritage betting favorites
Heading into this week’s RBC Heritage, World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is the betting favorite, coming in with +350 odds-to-win.
Scheffler nearly won his third Masters title on Sunday at Augusta National, eventually finishing runner-up behind winner Rory McIlroy. He already has one win on the season, though, and his Masters result was his fourth top-4 finish of the year.
Though McIlroy won’t be in the field, virtually everyone else from Masters will be joining Scheffler on Hilton Head Island this week.
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Xander Schauffele is in second place in the pre-tournament odds at +1600 odds-to-win. Cameron Young, who was tied with McIlroy for the Masters lead heading into Sunday, is tied for third in RBC Heritage odds at +1800. Tommy Fleetwood is right there with him.
Filling out the top 5 are three other players who had solid performances at the Masters: Matt Fitzpatrick, Russell Henley and Patrick Cantlay (+2200).
You can see the top 20 and ties in the 2026 RBC Heritage betting odds as of Monday morning below, or download the Fanatics Sportsbook app to see the full list of odds and bets for this week.
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Scottie Scheffler (+350) Xander Schauffele (+1600) Cameron Young (+1800) Tommy Fleetwood (+1800) Matt Fitzpatrick (+2000) Russell Henley (+2000) Ludvig Aberg (+2200) Patrick Cantlay (+2200) Collin Morikawa (+2500) Sam Burns (+2500) Jake Knapp (+3250) Justin Thomas (+3500) Robert MacIntyre (+3500) Jordan Spieth (+4000) Maverick McNealy (+4000) Si Woo Kim (+4000) Viktor Hovland (+4000) Ben Griffin (+4500) Jason Day (+4500) Shane Lowry (+4500)
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Kevin Cunningham
Golf.com Editor
As senior managing producer for GOLF.com, Cunningham edits, writes and publishes stories on GOLF.com, and manages the brand’s e-newsletters, which reach more than 1.4 million subscribers each month. A former two-time intern, he also helps keep GOLF.com humming outside the news-breaking stories and service content provided by our reporters and writers, and works with the tech team in the development of new products and innovative ways to deliver an engaging site to our audience.
Nigerian stars Rinsola Babajide and Shukurat Oladipo have won the 2025/26 Serie A Femminile title with AS Roma Women.
Roma secured the league crown on Saturday after beating Ternana 2-0. Midfielder Manuela Giugliano scored both goals to help the club seal the title with two matches still left to play.
It is the first trophy won by Babajide and Oladipo since joining Roma in 2025. The success also marks an important moment in the careers of the two Super Falcons players.
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The league triumph is Roma’s third Serie A Femminile title. The club had earlier won the championship in the 2022/23 and 2023/24 seasons, meaning they have now lifted three of the last four league titles in Italy.
Roma still have the chance to complete a domestic double this season. They will face Juventus Women in the Coppa Italia Women final on May 24.
Oladipo has been one of Roma’s key players this season. The 21-year-old defender has featured in 16 league matches and missed only four games.
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She has played 1,243 league minutes in her first full season at the club, with only five Roma players recording more playing time.
Babajide, despite limited opportunities, has also made an impact. The forward has contributed three goals involvement in nine league appearances this season.
Fernando Mendoza sky-rocketed to the top of every NFL pundit’s draft board during the course of the 2025 college football season as the Indiana Hoosiers standout won the Heisman Trophy and led the school to a national championship.
Mendoza’s status stayed clean as the Las Vegas Raiders selected him with the No. 1 overall pick in this year’s draft. He will be tasked with returning the franchise back to glory under head coach Klint Kubiak and veteran quarterback Kirk Cousins, who is set to serve as Mendoza’s mentor.
Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Fernando Mendoza runs through a drill during a rookie minicamp at Intermountain Health Performance Center in Henderson, Nev., on May 2, 2026.(Candice Ward/Imagn Images)
A detractor came out of the woodwork on Monday as an anonymous ACC coach told ESPN that he didn’t believe Mendoza had the “NFL traits.” The coach competed against Mendoza when the quarterback was tossing the pigskin around for the Cal Golden Bears.
“He’s a good decision-maker, but I don’t think he’s got the NFL traits,” the coach told ESPN. “They’re all back-shoulder (throws). That’s not working in the NFL. His receivers made plays to make him look better than he is. In the NFL, those throws are getting picked off.”
Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Fernando Mendoza warms up during a rookie minicamp at Intermountain Health Performance Center in Henderson, Nev., on May 2, 2026.(Candice Ward/Imagn Images)
Mendoza showed grit and determination with some of the throws he made at Indiana. One that comes to mind is the game-winning touchdown pass to Omar Cooper Jr. against Penn State.
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Cooper made the catch and an incredible toe-tap for the touchdown with 36 seconds left in the game, which kept Indiana’s dream season alive.
Raiders general manager John Spytek said last month he nixed any talk of trading the No. 1 pick because he was sure Mendoza would be their guy.
“I think any coach is excited to work with a big, athletic, talented thrower that is extremely smart and a very driven worker, and that’s been our experience with Fernando,” Spytek said. “That’s a great starting spot for any quarterback.”
It’s the heart that Mendoza showed throughout the season, including in the national title game against the Miami Hurricanes, that made him an attractive prospect for NFL teams.
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Quarterback Fernando Mendoza, selected as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NFL draft by the Las Vegas Raiders, attends a news conference at the Raiders Headquarters in Henderson, Nev., on April 24, 2026.(Ethan Miller/Getty Images)
McLaren Golf unveiled the work it had been hinting at for the past couple of weeks: two different iron models, both built with MIM technology that provides performance both for better players (Series-1) and players looking for some help (Series-3). Many observers have been questioning why McLaren started a golf division in the first place, but the more important question to me is how do you build golf clubs from scratch?
The McLaren Golf Team
Let’s make one thing clear: These clubs are not a collaboration or a branded offering with the McLaren badge. They are made from scratch designs by some of the brightest minds in the game, including JP Harrington, founder of JP Wedges and a former Titleist employee, who is McLaren’s senior design manager for irons and wedges, and Ryan Badgero, a 12-year veteran from Cobra Golf, who is McLaren’s director of engineering. They’ve also attached other operational staff to the brand who are all golf industry veterans. McLaren has no interest in building up to success. They want to start there.
McLaren also has some big names in the game putting their own money on the line with the venture. Justin Rose has been working with the team from the start. He’s not only a McLaren Golf athlete but also an investor in the business as well as the primary player tester when developing the shape and performance of the Series-1. Michelle Wie West is also lending her name to the brand as she comes out of retirement this year to play a few tournaments on the LPGA with the new McLaren Golf equipment.
Justin Rose and Michell Wie West have both joined the McLaren Golf team.
McLaren Golf
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Metal Injection Molding
With a stacked team like this, McLaren has a nice head start. They know what works, what doesn’t and what to test before moving forward. And, yes, they did test. Everything. Forgings, castings and printing were all tested and experimented with until the team landed on Metal Injection Molding, a process that allows them to be highly specific about the designs, including making their own proprietary metal blend for the new irons.
In-hand photos of the new McLaren Golf Series-3 irons.
Jack Hirsh / GOLF
When I asked the engineering team why they are so dedicated to MIM technology, something that has been around for a little while, here’s what they said:
“With McLaren looking to get into the golf space, evaluating cutting edge manufacturing techniques in irons was at a top priority. MIM has its foundations in extremely precise aerospace and biomedical uses and hadn’t been explored to its full capabilities in golf, so taking a deeper look into its potential was really exciting. Our exploration process showed us that MIM would allow us to refine and customize proprietary McLaren metal blends to produce the feel and performance of a forging while also allowing us to create complex, near-net parts that limit the amount of post processing and result in an iron more consistent to our design intentions.”
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MIM also allowed the McLaren team to achieve shapes and mass properties that they weren’t able to achieve with standard forging or casting. The biggest surprise to me in talking with the team was that they are using a MIM process for everything — even the tungsten weights that get placed inside, which are all specifically designed and positioned per loft, per model. Using a MIM process allows them to make sure that their tolerances are incredibly tight, meaning there is less finishing work that needs to be done. The heads have a “net-near shape” when they come out of the MIM process. Less finishing work means a greater level of consistency from head to head.
The new McLaren Golf Series-1 irons exploded. Here you can see the CG calibration bar created with MIM technology that gives them more tolerance control.
McLaren Golf
MIM is also a clean process. There aren’t giant forging presses, big factory floors and dirty work spaces. Think if an Apple Store was making golf clubs: airy buildings with nice lighting, and clean machines pumping out irons. In the supercar market and on the Formula 1 circuit, McLaren is known for luxury, precision and best-in-class design. McLaren Golf is expected to be no different. They’ll hold themselves to the same high standards as any other McLaren division.
The McLaren team went through over 100 prototypes before settling on what we now know are the Series-1 player’s blade and the Series-3 player’s distance offerings.
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Where do you actually start?
Once the McLaren Golf team settled on a process, they got to work creating shapes and involving players like Rose and Wie West in their testing. Rose was a huge part of this development. The Series-1 is essentially Rose’s “perfect” iron, and now we all get to share in that. I haven’t been able to hit them just yet, but from photos and some in-hand time that I have spent with the irons, they sure are cool.
To start the process of designing these new irons from scratch, the team dove into the shape first. How the club sits behind the ball is huge, and for players at the highest levels this look can be the difference between testing a product and handing it right back to a rep or designer. Both the Series-1 and Series-3 have a nice presence behind the ball. The Series-1 is obviously a smaller package with a thinner top line and a shorter blade length, but the Series-3 was surprising. The listed specs sheet for the Series-3 may trigger some folks who are anti-offset, but the way the design hides the offset is really nice. You definitely don’t feel as much offset being there as there is.
McLaren Golf Series-3.
McLaren Golf
Once they’ve determined the overall shape and how the club will look behind the ball, they then dive into the sole, which from a performance standpoint can be the next difference in a long list of items that can turn off a player. How the club gets through the ground determines how a player is going to strike the ball. That strike determines performance. Bad turf interaction can halt progress immediately.
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McLaren took an interesting approach here with the Series-3, with a wider more forgiving sole design that has a unique sole cut in the heel section. This little cut helps to get the heel of the club through the turf more efficiently. The Series-1 have a slightly narrower sole, but nothing I would consider knife-like with a decent amount of pre-worn leading edge relief that helps the clubs get through the turf quickly without digging too harshly.
With the shape dialed, it’s all about CG location and mass properties. Making sure that the CG of each iron, per loft, is dialed into the proper launch expectation and performance windows is crucial. This was one of the biggest areas where Rose impacted testing. Both the Series-1 and Series-3 have mass property targets that are tight on tolerance.
Another way that MIM has helped with the creation of these parts is in the CG calibration weights that live inside the cavities of both irons. These calibration weights are not uniform across the set. They’re different weights and slightly different shapes in every single head to help create a perfectly uniform feeling set, while making it easier to launch the lower-lofted clubs and control the higher-lofted options. They’re also used as a way to makes sure that headweights for each iron head is consistent. The weights won’t be user-serviceable, meaning they aren’t meant to be a swingweighting tool but rather a final calibration for headweight and CG location that the McLaren factory will install properly before being sent out to custom builders, or to the homes of new McLaren Golf players.
Tungsten in the toe of the McLaren Golf Series-3 along with it’s housing. All create with MIM technology.
McLaren Golf
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How did they ‘McLaren’ the irons?
To me, this is where some of the coolest back stories make their way out. Both irons feature a mesh pattern on the exterior of the iron that mimics a design feature on the rear of the McLaren W1 supercar. That mesh design is also structural; it’s not there just for decoration. It was designed to help them save weight that could then be moved lower and toward the perimeter to increase the MOI of both different models without losing and integrity in strength, sound or feel off the face.
The Series-3 also has the carbon fiber bonnet in the back, which is probably the more obvious connection back to McLaren Automotive and McLaren Racing. I love that they found a way to include this little bit of carbon fiber in the Series-3 because it again gives a nod to McLaren auto while also serving another function. That bonnet was designed to help improve sound and feel, and by utilizing carbon fiber they were able to find some unique properties. After hitting the Series-3 on course, I have to say the sound and feel is fantastic for this classification of iron.
The structural mesh design on the McLaren Golf irons was inspired by the rear design of the McLaren W1 Supercar.
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The Series-3 carbon fiber bonnet and structural mesh.
Jack Hirsh / GOLF
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The last little nod of course is the numbering on the sole, going with a digital pattern that connects back to McLaren Racing. I love this, too. It’s an easy way to differentiate the irons from others on the market, it connects back to the main McLaren brand that people are familiar with and, honestly, it’s just a cool idea. It’s new, it’s different, it’s fun. No harm in that.
McLaren’s done a good thing here
I’m personally excited about what McLaren is doing. I think it’s a hell of a thing for a giant legacy brand to take this sort of approach in golf. Yes, they’re expensive. No, not everyone will be able to get them. That’s the last thing that should be on any of our minds, though. McLaren isn’t setting out to take down TaylorMade or Callaway. They’re setting out to make sure that they reach their market, their customer. That customer is on the more affluent side of the market, and that customer cares about looks, precision and details that they may not even see but they’re excited to own. (And to brag to their buddies about!)
.McLaren Golf’s new Series-1 and Series-3 irons.
McLaren Golf
McLaren fans are going to buy the gear either way. McLaren easily could have started its golf division as a badging company by just throwing their logo on something else so they could sell to their fan base, but they have chosen to start from scratch, design their own product and spend time honing in their craft and their offerings so that those who want the bragging symbol in the bag will also have the performance envy to back it up. McLaren isn’t about the logo or the name; it’s about performance. McLaren Golf now follows in those large footsteps. So far, they’re filling them nicely.
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For the moment, the Series-3 are all we’ve been able to get in our hands, but the Series-1 official launch will be following soon. For more information on the new brand and iy equipment as well as the chance to grab some McLaren Golf merch, visit mclarengolf.com.
Louis Varland has emerged as one of the most reliable arms in Major League Baseball, and the Toronto Blue Jays reliever was recognized for his dominant stretch.
Varland was named American League Reliever of the Month for March and April after a dominant stretch that saw him earn the team’s closing role.
Across 16.0 innings, Varland posted a 0.56 ERA, struck out 43.3 per cent of the batters he faced, and converted all four of his save opportunities.
Varland didn’t enter the season as the Blue Jays’ established closer. Initially deployed in a flexible, high-leverage role, he was tasked with bridging the gap in key moments — sometimes as early as the seventh inning.
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However, inconsistency from Jeff Hoffman forced Toronto to re-assess its late-game structure early in the month with the team operating with a closer-by-committee approach, with Varland handling most of the ninth-inning situations.
Varland is in his first full season with the Blue Jays after joining the team in a trade last summer with the Minnesota Twins.
San Diego Padres closer Mason Miller was named the NL award winner after posting 10 saves and a 1.17 ERA with 29 strikeouts in 15.1 innings pitched.
NEW DELHI: Lucknow Super Giants batter Nicholas Pooran continues to redefine power-hitting in the IPL, and this time he has moved past Vaibhav Sooryavanshi in one of the league’s most explosive batting records.With his breathtaking 16-ball fifty against Mumbai Indians at the Wankhede Stadium on Monday, Pooran now has five IPL half-centuries scored in fewer than 20 balls — the second-most in tournament history. Only Abhishek Sharma, with six, stands ahead of him on the elite list.
Most 50s in less than 20 balls in IPL:
6 — Abhishek Sharma
5 — Nicholas Pooran
4 — Vaibhav Sooryavanshi
Pooran’s latest blitz was more than just another quickfire innings. It felt like a statement. Batting at No. 3 for the first time this season for Lucknow Super Giants, the left-hander looked completely unleashed from the moment he walked in.
Fastest fifties for LSG (by balls)
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15 – Nicholas Pooran vs RCB, Bengaluru, 2023
16 – Nicholas Pooran vs MI, Wankhede, 2026
18 – Nicholas Pooran vs SRH, Hyderabad, 2025
19 – Nicholas Pooran vs MI,Wankhede, 2024
20 – Kyle Mayers vs PBKS, Mohali, 2023
20 – Nicholas Pooran vs DC, Delhi, 2024
He raced to 63 off just 21 deliveries, smashing one four and eight sixes at a staggering strike rate of 300. The landmark moment came in the 8th over when he pulled a short ball from Deepak Chahar over fine leg for six to bring up his fifty in only 16 balls. The shot itself summed up the innings — fearless, inventive, and brutally clean.The celebration also hinted at the significance of the knock. Pooran blew a kiss before raising his bat to acknowledge the crowd, almost as if sending a message to the team management that this role suits him perfectly.On a night where even bowlers like Jasprit Bumrah struggled for control, Pooran turned the Wankhede into his personal launchpad. If this innings is any indication, Pooran at No. 3 could become one of the most dangerous tactical shifts of IPL 2026.
Group 1 winner Sepals remains on course for a Queensland foray under trainer Cliff Brown.
Last spring’s conqueror of the Group 1 Sir Rupert Clarke Stakes (1400m) at Caulfield, the gelding delivered Brown’s breakthrough Group 1 triumph post his 2021 homecoming from Singapore.
The trainer targets the Group 1 Stradbroke Handicap (1400m) at Eagle Farm June 13, emphasising a swift withdrawal if the four-year-old shows any concern.
Von Hauke’s Listed Golden Mile (1600m) victory at Bendigo on Saturday positions the stable with possible dual Stradbroke challengers.
The performance disappointed, with Brown citing a stern weight and a track at Rosehill debilitated by Sydney Carnival exertions, leaving the gelding subdued back in Melbourne.
A proposed Sydney revisit for the Group 1 All-Aged Stakes (1400m) at Randwick on April 18 was shelved in favour of a concise paddock respite for Sepals.
“He had 10 days off and he’s come back in tremendous order,” Brown said.
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“He just wasn’t himself, but he seems right now.
“I don’t think he appreciated the track up in Sydney, but just afterwards when we got him home, he just wasn’t himself.
“We know him intimately and he wasn’t right.
“I gave him a jump-out, which was OK, without being great, but then he had the 10 days off and I thought, if he’s OK, we’ll be able to continue on and if he’s not, we’ll go to the paddock.
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“At this point he seems good and if he’s right, we’ll head up to Queensland, and he can have a run at the end of the month with the aim of hopefully getting him to the Stradbroke.”
Mourinho and Benfica will surely view this season as a missed opportunity – although an invincible campaign would be some solace.
They could even finish third given they are only three points ahead of Sporting, who have a game in hand and a supeerior goal difference.
Portuguese sports publication A Bola, external said Benfica had “gifted” rivals Porto 12 points, after letting a lead slip in six of their 10 draws.
However, after seeing their title hopes disappear following a 2-2 draw at Famalicao on Saturday, Benfica president Rui Costa instead took aim at the officials.
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“No-one has the right to decide who wins championships or who goes to the Champions League other than the players and coaches on the field, and what happened here today was not that,” Costa said.
Costa complained that Famalicao were unfairly awarded a penalty, while their second goal “came from a corner which wasn’t a corner”.
“It unequivocally explains what this referee came here to do today. Trying to make sure Benfica got beaten here.”
Portuguese sports newspaper Record, external has reported that the Portuguese Association of Football Referees will file a complaint against Costa after his comments.
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Mourinho, who was also unhappy with the officiating in Saturday’s match, said: “This game is a good reflection of what has happened in this championship.”
The Portuguese manager has been one of the names linked to the Real Madrid job in the summer if the Spanish club decide to part ways with Alvaro Arbeloa.
However, O Jogo report, external that Benfica are set to offer Mourinho a new contract this week.
Roxanne Perez received her WWE main roster call-up nearly a year ago when she qualified for the women’s Money in the Bank ladder match with a win over Becky Lynch and Natalya.
A few weeks later, Perez joined the Judgment Day faction as she replaced an injured Liv Morgan as one-half of the women’s tag team champions. Perez and Raquel Rodriguez held the title for more than a month before losing the titles on Night 1 of SummerSlam to Alexa Bliss and Charlotte Flair.
Roxanne Perez and Liv Morgan enter the ring during “WWE’s Saturday Night’s Main Event” at Bell Centre in Montreal on Jan. 24, 2026.(Craig Melvin/WWE)
Morgan has had high praise for Perez since she joined “Monday Night Raw.”
“I think Roxanne is so incredibly talented,” Morgan said. “She’s so young and is so aware in the ring. She really knows what she’s doing. For us, the Judgment Day, to take our little Roxy under our wing and set her up as the next great for the next generation.
Roxanne Perez celebrates her win with Liv Morgan during “Monday Night Raw” at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Mo., on Dec. 8, 2025.(Bradlee Rutledge/WWE/Getty Images)
“She’s definitely under my tutelage. I’m teaching her a lot. I’m teaching her everything that I know. I’m teaching her a lot. The future of WWE is more than safe in my little Roxy’s hands.”
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Morgan warmed up to Perez when she returned on screen.
Perez recently rejoined the Judgment Day after being out for a few weeks recovering from back surgery. She and Rodriguez were in Morgan’s corner as she won the Women’s World Championship against Stephanie Vaquer at WrestleMania 42.
Liv Morgan enters the arena with Raquel Rodriguez, Roxanne Perez and Dominik Mysterio during “Monday Night Raw” at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nev., on April 20, 2026.(Rich Wade/WWE)
Clemsonbaseball didn’t just win a series over the weekend… it gave its postseason chances a real jolt where it matters most.
The Tigers jumped to No. 41 in the RPI after taking two of three from a ranked Boston College team, and that number is now the biggest thing keeping their season alive. At 28-20 overall with an 8-16 mark in ACC play, Clemson isn’t getting any help from its conference record. But RPI doesn’t ignore who you beat, and that series win added something meaningful to a résumé that badly needed it.
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Right now, everything revolves around that number. Sitting in the low 40s keeps Clemson within striking distance of the NCAA Tournament conversation, but it’s still a fragile spot. Projections have the Tigers finishing in that same range by the end of the regular season, which means there’s very little margin for error over these final games.
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The reality is Clemson can’t count on a deep ACC Tournament run to bail them out. With their current standing, they’d likely need to win five straight games just to secure the automatic bid, which is a long shot. That puts even more pressure on improving their RPI before Selection Monday rolls around.
There are still chances to do that. A midweek matchup against a top-10 Coastal Carolina team and a home series with a ranked Florida State squad both present opportunities to stack quality wins. Those are the kinds of results that could push Clemson out of the danger zone and into a more comfortable position.
The Tigers have been solid enough statistically to stay competitive, especially on the mound, but none of it carries weight if the RPI doesn’t move. At this point, Clemson’s path is clear — keep winning, keep stacking strong opponents, and hope that No. 41 turns into something the selection committee can’t ignore.
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