
Texas A&M baseball is 8-0, and Caden Sorrell just reminded the SEC why he’s one of the most dangerous hitters in college baseball. After missing time with a hand injury and enduring a brief hitless stretch, Sorrell erupted in A&M’s latest win, blasting a solo home run and a grand slam to power the Aggies forward.
For a team trying to dodge the early-season upset wave sweeping through college baseball, the timing couldn’t be better.
Sorrell entered the year scorching hot, racking up nine hits, 10 RBI and three home runs on opening weekend to earn SEC Player of the Week honors.
But baseball has a way of humbling even the hottest bats. Over his next three games, he couldn’t find a hit and left Game 2 of the Penn series after tweaking his hand.
Tuesday night was a different story. In five trips to the plate, Sorrell delivered three hits, and none of them were cheap.
He launched a solo shot in the second inning before unloading the Aggies’ first grand slam of the season two frames later. Just like that, the narrative flipped.
That swing pushed Texas A&M into run-rule range and injected life into a lineup preparing for a serious test.
The Aggies now head to the Amegy Bank College Baseball Series in Arlington, where the competition level rises dramatically.
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Maintaining an undefeated start against a loaded field will require star-level performances, and Sorrell’s resurgence suggests A&M’s offense is ready.
In a sport defined by failure, the ability to reset quickly matters. And Texas A&M baseball may be just getting started.