Women's College World Series: Liberty softball stuns No. 1 Texas A&M for historic upset
Liberty softball made history on Sunday night in College Station.
The Flames knocked off Texas A&M 6-5 in their regional matchup on Sunday, which sent them into the Super Regionals for the first time in program history. That also left the Aggies, who were the top seed in the region and the betting favorite to win the Women's College World Series, on the wrong side of a historic upset.
They are now the first No. 1 seed in history to ever fail to make it out of the regionals round since the current format started two decades ago.
The Aggies held a 3-1 lead entering the sixth inning of the winner-take-all game on Sunday afternoon, though that's when the Flames erupted. Savannah Jessee hit a two-run homer to left field to tie the game up early in the inning, and then Rachel Roupe followed suit with a three-run shot of her own. That suddenly put LIberty up 6-3.
JESSER SUE TIES IT UP! pic.twitter.com/ruasSYg0S5
— Liberty Softball (@LibertySB) May 19, 2025
ROUPE DOES IT AGAIN 👏 pic.twitter.com/y61SyrFDZV
— Liberty Softball (@LibertySB) May 19, 2025
While the Aggies added two runs at the bottom of the inning, Liberty held on and took the one-run win after closing out the final inning.
YODER GETS IT DONE!!!!!!!! pic.twitter.com/OlaHPJJqLB
— Liberty Softball (@LibertySB) May 19, 2025
Texas A&M had to beat Liberty twice on Sunday to make it out of the regional, as it had already fallen to the Flames on Saturday. That sent the Aggies to the elimination bracket, where they beat Marist to set up Sunday's pair of games. The Aggies then took the first game 14-11 in extra innings.
Liberty will now take on either Stanford or Oregon next in the Super Regionals. If they win there, the Flames will earn a trip to the Women's College World Series — which starts on May 29 in Oklahoma City.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Associated Press
26 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Jake Munroe hits 2 out, drives in 5 and Louisville rips Miami 8-1 in super regional opener
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Jake Munroe hit two home runs and drove in five runs, leading Louisville to an 8-1 victory over Miami on Friday in the opening game of the Louisville Super Regional. Louisville took a 2-0 lead on two swings in the second inning — a first-pitch leadoff home run by Garret Pike followed by a solo home run by Munroe on a 2-0 count. Louisville starter Patrick Forbes (4-2) breezed through 5 1/3 innings, with the exception of the third inning when he faced a bases-loaded jam with one out. He gave up a sacrifice fly by Renzo Gonzalez, then got the third out on a strikeout. Louisville loaded the bases with one out in the third and scored two runs on a throwing error by the pitcher. The next batter, Munroe, followed with a three-run home run to left for a 7-1 lead. He picked up his fifth RBI with a sacrifice fly in the fourth. Max Galvin had three hits for Miami. AJ Ciscar (6-2) allowed seven runs, six earned, in 2 1/3 innings. First pitch was delayed by a weather for about half an hour. There was another weather delay with two out in the bottom of the eighth. When play resumed, Zion Rose flied out to end the eighth then Miami went down 1-2-3 on 11 pitches in the ninth. This is the seventh super regional hosted by Louisville. The Cardinals have appeared in 10 super regionals overall. Miami is playing in the super regional round for the 13th time and the first since 2016. The Hurricanes (34-26) and Cardinals (39-21) finished ninth and 10th in the ACC regular season. ___ AP college sports:


CBS News
27 minutes ago
- CBS News
History behind Oakmont Country Club ahead of U.S. Open
The story of golf could not be told without the Oakmont Country Club. For a record-setting 10th time, the golf course is hosting the U.S. Open. It's challenged the best in the world for more than 100 years and will host this year's U.S. Open from June 12-15. "The best of the best tend to win here, and sometimes the best of the best have their hearts broken here," Oakmont Country Club historian David Moore said. Since 1903, the Oakmont Country Club has rewarded the perfect shot and punished mistakes. Arguably, one of the toughest spots is the iconic church pews. According to Moore, they've changed names and designs. They got their name during the 1960s from a newspaper writer. "When he said if you hit it into these church pew-like bunkers, only divine intervention can help you save par, and the name has stuck ever since," Moore said at the Oakmont Country Club. As for the name of the club, it can be a bit misleading. More than 90% of it is in Plum Borough. "Oakmont was named after the town in which the train station was in, and that's why it's not Plum Country Club," Moore said. However, its place in golf history can't be questioned. It has hosted the U.S. Open more than any other course, with its first one in 1927. The club has hosted one every decade, except the 1940s, since then. "Between Johnny Miller's 63, Jack [Nicklaus] and [Arnold Palmer] in '62 and Ben Hogan's fourth and final victory in 1953," Moore said. From winning birdies to missed putts and clutch drives, hole 18 may have created the most emotional history. "Eighteen has just been instrumental in crowning or breaking hearts over the last 120 years here," Moore said. Next week, a new chapter will be written.

Associated Press
36 minutes ago
- Associated Press
NBA's talks about new league in Europe are continuing, though the process remains in early stages
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The NBA's talks with FIBA and other entities about the process of adding a new league in Europe are continuing, Commissioner Adam Silver said, though he noted that it may take at least a couple more years to turn the ideas into reality. Silver spoke at a league event to unveil a refurbished Boys & Girls Club in Oklahoma City on Friday — an off day for the NBA Finals — and said it's difficult to put a specific timeline on the Europe plans. 'I will say it's measured in years, not months,' Silver said. 'So, we're at least a couple years away from launching. It would be an enormous undertaking. And while we want to move forward at a deliberate pace, we also want to make sure that we're consulting with all the appropriate stakeholders, meaning the existing league, its teams, European players, media companies, marketing partners. There's a lot of work to be done.' Silver and FIBA secretary general Andreas Zagklis announced in March that the league and the game's governing body are finally taking long-awaited steps to form a new league, with an initial target of 16 teams. It had been talked about for years, and decades even on some levels. And since the NBA and FIBA went public with their idea to move forward, talks have gotten more constructive, Silver said. Silver said the NBA has been talking directly with the EuroLeague and with some member clubs about a partnership. It's his preference that the NBA work with the existing league on some level, though it's still too early to say exactly what that means. 'Either way, we continue to feel there are an enormous number of underserved basketball fans in Europe and that there's a strong opportunity to have another league styled after the NBA,' Silver said. About one in every six current NBA players hails from Europe, including Denver's Nikola Jokic (Serbia) and Milwaukee's Giannis Antetokounmpo (Greece) — who have combined for five of the last seven MVP awards — along with the Los Angeles Lakers' Luka Doncic (Slovenia) and San Antonio's Victor Wembanyama (France). The NBA's board of governors will talk more about next steps with the European plans in July at their scheduled meeting in Las Vegas, Silver said. It's possible that the European venture could be unveiled in some way — or possibly start — around the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, just given how much attention will be on international basketball at that time. 'That might be a good launching pad for an announcement around a new competition,' Silver said. Some of the cities that are expected to have interest in being part of the new venture include London, Manchester, Rome and Munich. There will be others, of course. 'We haven't had direct conversations yet,' Silver said. 'But there have been several organizations that have come forward and said they would be interested and potential owners in operating in those major markets in Europe.' ___ AP NBA: