Texas vs. Oregon Prediction (6/7/2026): NCAA Super Regional Game 2 Pick
Our Texas vs. Oregon prediction for Sunday’s Austin Super Regional Game 2 is Oregon +2.5 runs at -130, a Standard Play built on one read: with the Ducks answering Saturday’s blowout by handing the ball to their ace in a win-or-go-home spot, this game should be a lot closer than the 11-3 opener. Texas is the rightful favorite — the Longhorns lead the best-of-three series 1-0, they’re at home, and they’re the deeper team at -230 on the moneyline — but laying that price off a single lopsided game ignores how much the pitching matchup tightens tonight.
The counterargument is real, and we’ll meet it head-on: Texas is the better team and is one win from Omaha. The No. 6 national seed bulldozed its way through the Austin Regional by a combined 35-3, hung 11 runs on Oregon in Game 1, and gets a second crack at clinching on its home dirt with Game 3 in its back pocket if needed. But Game 2 is a different test than Game 1. Oregon held back ace Will Sanford specifically for this elimination game, Texas turns to a different arm than the one that struck out 10 on Saturday, and an offense that stranded 17 baserunners in the opener is far more likely to regress up than to no-show again. At +2.5, we don’t need Oregon to win. We need a ballgame.
UFCU Disch-Falk Field — Austin, TX
Texas leads best-of-three series 1-0 · Oregon faces elimination
Matchup Overview
This is an elimination game with a College World Series berth on the other side of it. Texas took Game 1 of the best-of-three Austin Super Regional 11-3 on Saturday, so the Longhorns can punch their ticket to Omaha tonight, while Oregon must win twice in a row — starting now — to keep its season alive. The winner of the series moves on to the Men’s College World Series, which opens June 12 at Charles Schwab Field. The loser goes home.
The path here tells you who these teams are. Texas earned the No. 6 national seed and overwhelmed the Austin Regional, outscoring its opponents 35-3 across two clinching games behind a deep, hard-throwing pitching staff. Oregon, the No. 11 seed, won the Eugene Regional the same way — on the mound — outscoring Yale, Washington State, and rival Oregon State by a combined 22-3. Both clubs got here with arms and defense, which is part of why Saturday’s 11-3 final was so out of character for a Ducks team that had allowed three total runs all regional. You can see how the rest of the bracket lines up toward Omaha on the official NCAA Division I baseball bracket.
- Records: Texas 44-13 (No. 6 national seed, SEC), Oregon 43-17 (No. 11 national seed, Big Ten)
- Series: Texas leads the best-of-three Austin Super Regional 1-0 after an 11-3 Game 1 win; an if-necessary Game 3 would be Monday, June 8
- Stakes: the winner advances to the College World Series; Oregon is eliminated with a loss, Texas clinches with a win
Odds & Line Analysis
DraftKings has Texas as a -230 home favorite for Game 2, with Oregon at +175, a total of 10 runs, and a run line of Texas -2.5 (+100) / Oregon +2.5 (-130). A -230 price implies Texas wins roughly 70% of the time — fair enough for the better team at home, up a game — so there’s no obvious soft spot to attack on the moneyline. The value, if it’s anywhere, lives on the margin and the total.
That -2.5 run line is the number we keep coming back to. Texas winning is the likeliest outcome, but Texas winning by three or more — with Oregon throwing its best arm in a must-win — is a different proposition than the moneyline. Game 1 was a 14-run track meet, but it got there because Oregon’s bats short-circuited and Texas’s ace was overpowering; neither of those is a safe bet to repeat. Oregon +2.5 only asks the Ducks to lose by two or fewer, or win outright. If you’d rather play the total, Under 10 is a defensible secondary lean with two quality starters on the mound.
Key Factors
Three angles point to the same conclusion — Game 2 should be tighter than Game 1, and tight is all the +2.5 needs.
Oregon hands the ball to ace Will Sanford (9-2, 3.46 ERA), the sophomore right-hander who was named Eugene Regional MVP and was deliberately held back for this elimination game. Texas is expected to counter with senior Ruger Riojas (5-2, 3.86 ERA) rather than Game 1 starter Dylan Volantis, who struck out 10 over five innings on Saturday. That swap matters: Oregon went from facing a buzzsaw to facing a solid-but-beatable arm, and the gap between the two starters is much smaller tonight. Closer pitching matchups produce closer games.
The 11-3 score hides how much traffic the Ducks actually created. Oregon left 17 men on base and went 0-for-8 with runners in scoring position early before the game got away — wastefulness that tends to regress toward the mean rather than repeat. This is a lineup that scored in bunches all postseason and got a solo homer from Drew Smith even on a rough night. Against Riojas instead of Volantis, a few of those stranded rallies are far likelier to cash, and it doesn’t take many to keep this inside the number.
Here’s the case against us, stated plainly: Texas is deeper, hotter, and home, and a favorite one win from Omaha has every reason to step on the gas. The Longhorns outscored the Austin Regional 35-3, just put up 11 on this same Oregon staff, and got a career-high five RBIs from Adrian Rodriguez in Game 1. If Riojas is sharp and Texas’s bats stay hot, a 9-2 type of night is very much on the table — and that’s a losing ticket. That’s exactly why this is +2.5 and not the Oregon moneyline, and why it’s a Standard Play rather than a max bet.
The Pick
Take Oregon +2.5 runs at -130 as a Standard Play. This isn’t a bet against Texas being the better team — the Longhorns are, they’re home, and they lead the series — it’s a bet on a specific shape of game: Sanford keeps Oregon in it the way an ace should in an elimination spot, the Ducks’ lineup stops stranding runners, and the final margin lands inside two runs. If you’re looking for a place to lay a bet down on this game be sure to use one of these trusted betting sites to ensure the best odds and a fast payout.
The risk is worth stating plainly: Texas can win this comfortably and clinch a College World Series berth, and if the bats do damage early against Riojas, that +2.5 is no help at all. That’s the price of taking the points with a live underdog instead of laying -230 on a heavy favorite. If you want a second angle, Under 10 is a reasonable lean with two starters this good, but keep it measured — both of these lineups can erase a number in a single inning, as Saturday proved. No guarantees here; it’s a one-game sample in the most volatile sport there is to handicap, and the line may move before first pitch.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers to what bettors are asking about Game 2 of the Texas–Oregon Austin Super Regional — the start time, the line, who’s pitching, and what’s at stake.
What time is Texas vs. Oregon on June 7, and what channel is it on?
First pitch for Game 2 is set for 9:00 PM ET (8:00 PM CT) on Sunday, June 7, 2026 at UFCU Disch-Falk Field in Austin, Texas, on ESPN. It’s Game 2 of the best-of-three Austin Super Regional, with Texas leading the series 1-0; if Oregon wins to force a decider, Game 3 would be Monday, June 8.
Who is favored in Texas vs. Oregon Game 2, and what’s the line?
Texas is a -230 home favorite at DraftKings, with Oregon at +175, a total of 10 runs, and a run line of Texas -2.5 (+100) / Oregon +2.5 (-130). Our pick is Oregon +2.5 on the run line at -130, with Under 10 as a secondary lean and Texas’s moneyline acknowledged as the correct straight side at a steep price.
Who are the starting pitchers for Game 2?
Oregon has named ace Will Sanford (9-2, 3.46 ERA), a sophomore right-hander and the Eugene Regional MVP, as its Game 2 starter. Texas had not officially confirmed a starter as of this writing but is expected to go with senior right-hander Ruger Riojas (5-2, 3.86 ERA); the Longhorns used ace Dylan Volantis in their 11-3 Game 1 win.
What happens if Oregon wins Game 2?
Because this is a best-of-three series and Texas leads 1-0, an Oregon win Sunday forces a winner-take-all Game 3 on Monday, June 8 in Austin. A Texas win in Game 2 instead clinches the series and sends the Longhorns to the College World Series; an Oregon loss ends its season.

