When top-seeded California Baptist ended Tarleton State’s WAC Tournament run with a 77-60 semifinal win on March 13, 2026 at Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, the only place that told the story with names, numbers, and context was Tarleton State University Athletics. ESPN posted a final score. The AP had a short preview. The rest of the national feed moved on. Mid-major women’s results live on school sites; the distribution gap is the blind spot.
Mid-Major Women’s Results Live Only on School Sites; National Feeds Move On
Tarleton State’s athletics site published a press release on March 13, 2026: “Top seeded CBU ends Tarleton State Women’s Basketball’s WAC Tournament run in semifinals.” It reported that Cal Baptist took control early and never trailed, built a 14-point lead in the first quarter and led by as many as 20 in the fourth, and that Tarleton senior guard Gia Adams led the Texans with 22 points while freshman center Elodie Lutbert added 15 points, 7 rebounds, and 2 blocks, bringing her season block total to 65 and a program record. The No. 5 seed had advanced by upsetting No. 4 Utah Valley 60-57 in the quarterfinals the day before, with a game-winning three from Kyriana Jones. That narrative exists in one place: the school.
ESPN’s box score and final score for the March 13 game are available, and the AP ran a brief preview headlined “Cal Baptist faces Tarleton State in WAC Tournament.” Beyond that, the game did not generate national coverage. No major outlet led with Tarleton’s exit, Lutbert’s record, or the fact that the Texans had reached the WAC semifinals for the second year in a row. CBU’s own athletics site carried a preview of the semifinal showdown; after the fact, the story of the loser’s season lives on the loser’s site. That pattern is normal for mid-major women’s basketball: the result is in the scoreboard, but the story is not in the feed. Readers who follow only national headlines or conference scoreboards see that Tarleton lost; they do not see Lutbert’s record, Adams’s 22 points, or the quarterfinal upset that set up the semifinal. The information exists; it is not distributed.
Mid-Major Madness and other dedicated outlets document that mid-major women’s programs face structural disadvantages in visibility and revenue. Tournament units and media attention flow toward power conferences; school and conference sites become the primary record for games that do not involve household names. When Tarleton’s exit gets one press release and national feeds ignore it, the message is that the game did not matter to a national audience. The distribution gap is not that the game was unplayed or unrecorded; it is that the only sustained narrative lives where the audience is already invested. Tarleton had reached the WAC semifinals for the second consecutive year and had knocked out a higher seed to get there; that arc was fully reported only on tarletonsports.com.
What This Actually Means
The real blind spot is distribution. Tarleton’s exit was newsworthy: a program record, a second straight semifinal, a clear result against the eventual WAC champion. The content existed. It did not reach national readers because national outlets did not carry it. Mid-major women’s results are treated as local or institutional property; the feed is built for power conferences and star-driven headlines. Changing that would require editors and algorithms to treat school-site press releases as source material for national stories, not as the end of the line. Until then, Tarleton’s exit and hundreds of similar results will remain one-press-release stories.
What Is Tarleton State?
Tarleton State University is a public research university in Stephenville, Texas, and a founding member of the Texas A&M University System. Its women’s basketball team, the Texans, competes in the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) under head coach Bill Brock. The 2025-26 team reached the WAC Tournament semifinals as the No. 5 seed, losing to No. 1 Cal Baptist 77-60 on March 13, 2026, after upsetting Utah Valley in the quarterfinals. The program plays home games at the EECU Center in Stephenville and had been picked fifth in the WAC preseason poll.
Who Ended Tarleton’s Run?
California Baptist University (CBU), the No. 1 seed and WAC regular-season champion, defeated Tarleton State 77-60 in the WAC Tournament semifinals on March 13, 2026. The Lancers advanced to the WAC championship game, which they won the next day against Abilene Christian. The semifinal was played at Orleans Arena in Las Vegas. CBU built a 14-point lead in the first quarter and led by as many as 20 in the fourth; Tarleton outscored the Lancers 18-16 in the final period but could not close the gap. The Lancers went on to win the WAC title the following day.
Sources
Tarleton State University Athletics, ESPN, AP News, Tarleton State University Athletics (preview), Mid-Major Madness