
Texas Softball Wins Back-to-Back National Championships
The Texas Longhorns softball program has done it again.
One year after claiming its first-ever national title, the No. 1 Longhorns swept through the 2026 Women’s College World Series championship series against Texas Tech, defeating the Red Raiders in Game 2, 4-1, to repeat as national champions.

For the second straight year, Burnt Orange reigns supreme in Oklahoma City — and Austin has never been louder.
A Championship Road That Wasn’t Easy
This year’s title run was anything but a smooth march to the top.
Texas stumbled out of the gate at Devon Park, dropping a 6-3 opener to Tennessee. But the Longhorns — as champion teams do — responded with resilience. They battled back through the elimination bracket, beating the Volunteers twice to punch their ticket to the championship series. Ace pitcher Citlaly Gutierrez was steady in the semifinals, holding Tennessee to just one earned run over 6⅔ innings, while Katie Stewart sparked the offense with a solo home run.
An All-Texas Final — Again
For the second consecutive year, the championship series became an all-Texas showdown.

Texas Tech, powered by star pitcher NiJaree Canady — the first college softball player ever to sign a $1 million NIL deal — stood in the Longhorns’ way.
In Game 1, Texas exploded for five runs in the first inning alone, with Stewart delivering a leadoff homer and Ashton Maloney following with a clutch two-run triple. The Longhorns won 7-3 behind a complete game from Teagan Kavan.
Game 2 was tighter. After Canady delivered a 1-2-3 first inning, the score stayed close deep into the game. But Kayden Henry’s opposite-field home run extended a Longhorn lead to 3-1 in the late innings, and Texas held on to close out the championship.
Burnt Orange on Top
Head coach Mike White and this program have built something special in Austin. Back-to-back championships speak for themselves — but so does the way this team fights. They lost a game early, shook it off, and found a way. That’s not luck. That’s a championship culture.
Light it up, tower.


Hook ‘Em Horns. 🤘
Sources:
- NCAA.com — Live Updates: Texas vs. Texas Tech in the 2026 Women’s College World Series Finals (June 5, 2026)
- Bleacher Report — College Softball World Series Bracket 2026: Texas vs. Texas Tech Championship Set (June 3, 2026)
- Bleacher Report — College Softball World Series Bracket 2026: Texas vs. Texas Tech Game 1 Recap (June 4, 2026)
- Houston Public Media — Texas Seeks to Defend Softball Title in Women’s College World Series Rematch with Texas Tech (June 3, 2026)
- Sports Illustrated — Texas Softball’s Back-to-Back Quest Unveiled with Complete 2026 Schedule Announced
MORE ON THE LONGHORNS AND OTHER SPORTS OF THE DAY CAN BE FOUND FURTHER DOWN THIS PAGE IN SPORTS

Austin ISD trustees got their first in‑depth public look Thursday night at Superintendent Matias Segura’s proposed $181 million budget‑cut plan, drawing a standing‑room‑only crowd and more than an hour of testimony from parents, staff, students, and community members.
While district leaders say the reductions are needed to close a major deficit, many speakers zeroed in on student impact, warning of academic and campus‑level consequences if the plan moves forward.
The proposed reductions also drew strong opposition from supporters of Austin ISD’s high school water polo program. Students, parents, and coaches attended the meeting wearing team gear and carrying signs, asking trustees to reconsider a proposal that would eliminate the program. District documents estimate that ending water polo would save approximately $89,000. (CBS Austin)


PODCAST

(Episode from June 4, 2026)

The University of Texas at Austin began dismantling a statue of Cesar Chavez on Thursday. This decision comes amid mounting public outcry against the late union activist, triggered by a New York Times investigation that uncovered allegations of Chavez sexually abusing women and girls. (KUT 90.5)

One of the three teenagers accused in a shooting spree across the Austin area last month now faces nearly 20 charges.
Leander authorities are asking for the public’s help identifying the driver of a truck in connection with a theft earlier this week.
CAPITAL AREA CRIME STOPPERS
Just one day after posting a notice for 28-year-old Jacoby Wayne Neal, he was captured.

A Taylor man has been charged with the murder of his cousin.




The city of Hutto just unveiled two new pickleball courts and an 18-hole disc golf course.
A new indoor slide park is opening in the ATX.

Austin City Councilman Marc Duchen posted on Facebook concerning the recent decision to forge ahead with a more expensive plan for the I-35 Cap and Stitch project, one he felt should have been scaled back.

Georgetown officials say nine new traffic signals are in the works due to a rise in population growth and recent data on area traffic patterns and crashes.

A forensic investigator is examining whether lithium-ion batteries caused the fire that has shut down CapMetro’s Bikeshare system since Memorial Day weekend.
Meanwhile, the city’s mass transit system has a new Park & Ride.
Officials with Hutto ISD will be conducting a large-scale training exercise at Lee Martinez Elementary School today.


Mayor Kirk Watson took to social media to announce Austin and Greater Manchester, UK are officially “sister cities”.
The Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center is reopening on Saturday. The center will welcome the public back for the first time in nearly three years with a day full of performances, workshops, exhibits, and tours.
WEATHER

THURSDAY’S HIGH / LOW TEMPERATURES
AUSTIN-BERGSTROM INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT

CAMP MABRY

2:00 P.M. UPDATE:







Things have been quiet lately across the state in terms of wildfires, thanks to favorable weather conditions. The current risk in the Panhandle is relatively low.


Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller responded to the first suspected case of New World screwworm (NWS) in Texas, criticizing the United States Department of Agriculture for what he called a slow, bureaucratic, and incomplete response that allowed the pest to advance unchecked through Mexico and reach American soil.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has opened an investigation into Celsius Holdings, the company behind the wildly popular Alani Nu energy drink, accusing it of targeting children and teens with a product health experts say is dangerously caffeinated.

After hours of mostly negative comments from residents Wednesday, the Grimes County Commissioners Court approved a 35-year tax abatement agreement with SpaceX, which plans to build a chip manufacturing plant in the county northwest of Houston. (Houston Public Media)
Elon Musk’s rocket maker and artificial intelligence company set a price for its initial public offering on Wednesday of $135 a share, which would value it at $1.77 trillion and crown it the largest I.P.O. ever. (New York Times)

From The New York Times:
Mr. Musk, 54, has said his rocket company, SpaceX, will build a colony of humans on Mars. He has said that Tesla, his electric carmaker, will incorporate fully autonomous driving abilities into all of its cars. And he has promised to show that humanoid robots made by Tesla are dexterous enough to thread a needle.
None of these have happened.


Full article from The New York Times.

The rapid rise of artificial intelligence has officially scrambled the political landscape on Capitol Hill. Leading the charge for the progressive bloc, Texas Representative Greg Casar has proposed an aggressive new AI tax framework explicitly designed to prevent Great Depression-level unemployment.

A proposed agreement to provide water service to a planned data center drew hours of discussion and a packed crowd to a Crystal Clear Special Utility District board meeting in San Marcos on Wednesday.
Google has announced a $10 million investment into a Water Preservation fund for Texas. As data centers continue to pop up all over the state, concerns regarding the use of the precious resource for cooling purposes leave local residents troubled. (Texas Scorecard)
Texans who bought newer iPhones may learn within days whether a federal court gives final approval to a $250 million class-action settlement tied to Apple’s delayed AI-powered Siri features—potentially clearing the way for cash payouts to eligible consumers. (Houston Chronicle)
Texas is once again facing record summertime demand, according to the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which released its summer forecast this week.




After a week in which Texas Republicans circled the wagons for legislative elections and national Democrats announced #txlege targets, James Henson and Joshua Blank look at the landscape for legislative races, and compare differences and similarities in public opinion in 2018 and 2026. This episode was engineered by Els Brady, and mixed by Uriel Murillo.
(Episode from June 4, 2026)


KARMELO ANTHONY TRIAL: WEEK 1 RECAP
Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson is sounding the alarm as the Stars, Mavericks and major businesses announce moves out of downtown Dallas.
SPORTS

COLLEGE SOFTBALL: No. 3 Texas Softball capitalized on a five-run first inning to take down No. 6 Texas Tech, 7-3, in the first game of the Women’s College World Series Championship Series on Wednesday night at Devon Park.
Texas finishes 52-12 overall and secured its 25th win against a ranked opponent. Texas was 10-2 in the NCAA Tournament and 5-1 at the WCWS.
Junior RHP Teagan Kavan (29-6) threw her fourth complete game of this year’s WCWS and her 21st of the season. (Texas Longhorns)


COLLEGE BASEBALL: The road to Omaha runs through Austin this weekend.

Tomorrow night at UFCU Disch-Falk Field, the sixth-ranked Texas Longhorns kick off the NCAA Super Regionals, hosting the eleventh-ranked Oregon Ducks in a high-stakes, best-of-three series. Texas enters the matchup firing on all cylinders after a dominant regional sweep where they outscored opponents 41 to 7, while a battle-tested Oregon squad arrives hunting for their first College World Series berth in over 70 years. (Texas Longhorns)

MLB: The Houston Astros lost Thursday while the Texas Rangers had the night off.

ON THE SCHEDULE




NBA FINALS: To secure a victory tonight, the silver and black must find their rhythm.
The San Antonio Spurs choked away Game 1of the NBA Finals against the New York Knicks by shooting an ice-cold 36% from the floor and hitting just 26% from beyond the arc. If San Antonio hopes to even the score tonight in Game 2, they will need a much cleaner, more aggressive performance in the paint and a dominant response from Victor Wembanyama to counter a surging Jalen Brunson and the physical Knicks defense.


Charles Goodnight is remembered as one of the greatest Texas cowboys who ever lived a trailblazer, cattle king, and symbol of the American frontier.
But the real story is far more complicated.
