Current:Home > MarketsOklahoma softball completes four-peat national championship at the WCWS and it was the hardest yet -Nova Finance Academy
Oklahoma softball completes four-peat national championship at the WCWS and it was the hardest yet
View
Date:2025-04-17 18:58:39
Not one, not two, not three …
Four.
And for the Sooners, the fourth was the hardest.
Division-I college softball had never seen a four-peat national champion. Not until Thursday night in Oklahoma City, when Oklahoma beat Texas 8-4 to sweep the championship series.
“People say, ‘Let’s go win one,’” Sooners coach Patty Gasso said. “You’re like, ‘OK.’ It’s not like that. It’s very difficult. Everything has to go right. The thing about them is they’re resilient. They have a lot of pride in that.
“With that, it’s hard for me to comprehend.”
It’s been a presidential term of dominance for the Sooners. The Fab Five of Rylie Boone, Kinzie Hansen, Nicole May, Tiare Jennings and Jayda Coleman have 20 rings between them. They won as freshmen, won as seniors, won as sophomore and juniors.
“This one was the hardest one that I’ve ever had to work for in my life,” Jennings said. “This team, the adversity that we went through, we did it and we overcame everything.”
“This team has fought and fought all season long,” Hansen said.
Added Boone: “This was the most grinding one.”
A four-peat.
It’s ridiculous, really. A feat without precedence on the softball diamond. Four seasons ending in dog piles and confetti angels, of the Sooners flipping bats and raising trophies.
“We expect ourselves here, which is crazy to expect yourself winning the national championship every year,” May said.
Four-peats have only happened on other fields of play. Among the notable ones this century: Penn State volleyball (2007-10), Connecticut women’s basketball (2013-16), Oklahoma men’s gymnastics (2015-18).
In Division I, only Stanford men’s gymnastics, with five straight, has a longer active streak of national championships. Twelve teams compete in Division I men’s gymnastics compared to softball’s 291.
“We knew it was historic,” Oklahoma athletic director Joe Castiglione said on the field after the game. “Of course we wanted to finish it off. I don’t know that I can truly verbalize how magnificent this is.”
May also struggled to describe it.
“Being a part of something that hasn’t been done before is pretty special, especially with this group,” May said. “I don’t think it’ll hit me, it never hits me for another couple weeks.”
Oklahoma softball joins Southern California beach volleyball and Virginia women’s swimming and diving in active four-peats.
Needless to stay, college softball is played on a much grander stage.
A championship record crowd of 12,324 packed Devon Park. Those who didn’t have a seat were lined up three and four deep on the concourse. Every pitch landed with a thud of anxious anticipation. Then the Sooners broke the game open with three runs in the bottom of the sixth inning.
The Sooner-heavy crowd was jubilant.
In the seventh inning, Boone told herself not to cry.
“Please don’t do that,” Boone said, “because if they hit a grand slam I’m kinda screwed.”
Gasso even toyed with Texas, at least it seemed, en route to winning her eight national title — tying former Arizona coach Mike Candrea for the most in softball history. Gasso and pitching coach Jennifer Rocha tinkered with their pitching rotation like never before.
The Sooners started Liberty transfer Karlie Keeney in the circle. The only move more surprising than that was who replaced her: Wisconsin transfer Paytn Monticelli. The Sooners used their No. 4 and 5 pitchers to open a national championship closeout game.
May followed, then Kierston Deal. Finally, it was Kelly Maxwell who entered as closer. Maxwell was named the WCWS Most Outstanding Player.
“It worked exactly how it was supposed to,” Gasso said. “To a T.”
It was a difficult year for Maxwell, ostracized for crossing Bedlam lines and transferring in after four years at Oklahoma State.
The rest of the Sooners concocted obstacles if necessary.
“Everybody hates us, no one wants us to win anymore, but that’s fine,” May said. “We just got a fourth, so it’s OK.”
The three-time defending champions convinced themselves that they were underdogs entering the series against No. 1-seeded Texas - a team they had split four games against during the regular season and Big 12 tournament..
“There were so many times that we could’ve been defeated … ‘Are they gonna do it, are they not?’ But we just fought,” Boone said. “There was a lot of failure, more than what at least this class is used to and this team is used to. The adversity, I think it helped us be able to stand here and say that we won a fourth one.”
The Sooners have been crowned champs in six of the last eight Women's College World Series. In what used to be a West Coast-dominated sport, this century has belonged to Gasso’s Sooners.
Eight national championships. Four in four years.
“Just unreal,” said Jennings, still catching her breath. “We just did the impossible.”
veryGood! (7145)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- A fight at a popular California recreational area leaves 1 dead, several injured
- Takeaways from Hunter Biden’s gun trial: His family turns out as his own words are used against him
- Nike drops 'Girl Dad' sneakers inspired by the late Kobe Bryant. See what they look like
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Missing mother found dead inside 16-foot-long python after it swallowed her whole in Indonesia
- 'Disappointing loss': Pakistan faces yet another embarrassing defeat in T20 World Cup
- Some nationalities escape Biden’s sweeping asylum ban because deportation flights are scarce
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- In the doghouse: A member of Santa Fe’s K-9 unit is the focus of an internal affairs investigation
Ranking
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Arizona closes Picacho Peak State Park after small plane crash that killed pilot
- Body of missing British TV presenter Michael Mosley found on Greek island
- 35 children among those killed in latest Sudan civil war carnage, U.N. says
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- A Christian group teaches public school students during the school day. Their footprint is growing
- RFK Jr. files new petition in Nevada amid legal battle over ballot access
- Sacramento mass shooting suspect dies in jail cell, police and attorney say
Recommendation
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Back-to-back shark attacks injure 2 teens, adult near Florida beach; one victim loses arm
Search underway for Michael Mosley, TV presenter and doctor who is missing after going for walk in Greece
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Peak Performance
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Best MLB stadium tours: Go behind the scenes at these ballparks
Dick Van Dyke becomes oldest Daytime Emmys winner in history at 98 for 'Days of Our Lives'
In the pink: Flamingo sightings flying high in odd places as Hurricane Idalia's wrath lingers