
Texas A&M baseball looked like a lineup that had finally had enough of waiting around Friday night. The Aggies blasted Oakland 10-2 at Blue Bell Park, clinching the weekend series behind a relentless offensive attack, timely power, and another steady performance on the mound.
For a team still trying to find its full rhythm, this felt like a statement.
Texas A&M piled up hits all night, finishing with a .355 team batting average, and the damage started almost immediately.
After Weston Moss opened the game by attacking Oakland with a clean first inning, the Aggies wasted no time turning pressure into runs.
Grant Grahovac got the offense moving with an RBI knock, and that was only the beginning. With Chris Hacopian sidelined by a lingering back issue, Boston Kellner stepped into a bigger role and delivered in a huge way.
Kellner ripped a two-run single early, then later added a two-run home run, giving the Aggies a jolt from a spot that suddenly mattered a lot more.
That’s the kind of depth good teams need, and Texas A&M got it in a big spot.
By the end of the second inning, the Aggies had already built an 8-0 lead, and Oakland was basically chasing shadows.
Grahovac added even more thunder with a solo homer to center, his second home run of the season, continuing a strong early return after the torn labrum that interrupted much of his first two years in College Station.
When Grahovac is healthy and driving the baseball, the middle of the Aggies lineup looks a whole lot more dangerous.
The production wasn’t limited to just a couple of bats, either.
Zane Becker chipped in with a sacrifice fly, and Texas A&M kept manufacturing runs without letting the inning die. That balance made the performance even more impressive. It wasn’t just power. It was pressure from top to bottom.
On the mound, Moss gave the Aggies exactly what they needed. The right-hander worked efficiently, allowed three hits and one run, and struck out three while keeping Oakland from ever building real momentum.
Out of the bullpen, Gavin Lyons and Hunter Vincent kept things under control, combining for four strikeouts and limiting further damage.
A day after Shane Sdao punched out a career-high eight hitters in Game 1, the Aggies backed up that opening win with a more complete effort in Game 2.
Now Texas A&M heads into the finale with a chance to finish the job and complete the sweep ... and if the bats stay this loud, Oakland may be in for another long morning.