logo
Top 10 College Softball recruiting classes for 2026

Top 10 College Softball recruiting classes for 2026

USA Today2 days ago

Top 10 College Softball recruiting classes for 2026
The 2025 Women's College World Series has been electric so far. The average margin of victory is just 2.36 runs per game. Tennessee's 11-3 win over UCLA is the only game with a margin of victory greater than three. Of the 11 games played pending Oklahoma vs. Texas Tech in the evening, there have been eight games with a margin of victory of two runs or less. Four of those games were one-run games.
The level of competition in this Women's College World Series has been fantastic. And that's in large part due to the level of commitment athletic departments across the country are putting into softball. Programs across the country are investing more resources into facilities, recruiting at both the high school and transfer ranks, and developing that talent, raising the level of play across the sport.
In the SEC, there doesn't seem to be a huge gap between the top teams like Oklahoma and Texas and those at the bottom of the standings. And down the road, the gap may close even further. Taking a look at Softball America and On3's recruiting rankings for the 2026 recruiting class, nine of the top 10 teams in the national rankings are from the SEC and 12 of the top 15. All 15 SEC programs rank inside the top 18 recruiting classes in the country with Alabama coming in at No. 18.
The only non-SEC team to rank inside the top 10 is the Oregon Ducks, led by former Oklahoma assistant and player Melyssa Lombardi.
Here's a look at the top 10 recruiting classes for 2026 according to Softball America and On3.
Just missed the top 10: Arkansas, Cal, NC State, South Carolina, Kentucky.
10. Oregon Ducks
No. of Commitments: 5
Blue Chip Prospects: 3
Top Rated Player: Bailey Goldberg, INF - No. 32 overall
Under Ducks coach Melyssa Lombardi, the Oregon Ducks won the Big Ten in their first year in the league and were the only team in the Women's College World Series to rank in the top 10 in ERA, team batting average, and fielding percentage. The Ducks have three top-50 players committed to the class and are hoping to build off of their success in 2025.
No. of Commitments: 7
Blue Chip Prospects: 5
Top Rated Player: Milan Torres, OF - No. 26 overall
The Texas A&M Aggies had a great season, spending several weeks at No. 1, finishing in second place in the SEC and earning the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. However, the Aggies had a disappointing College Station regional, getting upset by Liberty and earning the distinction as the only No. 1 overall seed to lose in the regional round. The Aggies recruiting class features three top-50 players.
8. Auburn Tigers
No. of Commitments: 6
Blue Chip Prospects: 4
Top Rated Player: Cece Springfield, OF - No. 27 overall
The Auburn Tigers had a disappointing 2025 season but that hasn't stopped them from putting together a strong recruiting class in 2026. The Tigers have four top-100 commitments in the cycle.
7. Ole Miss Rebels
No. of Commitments: 12
Blue Chip Prospects: 5
Top Rated Player: Charli Calas, INF - No. 17 overall
Ole Miss has 12 players committed in the 2026 recruiting class, which is more than any program inside the top 25. Six of those players rank inside the top 100 of Softball America and On3's recruiting rankings. The Rebels are certainly hoping a strength-in-numbers plan of attack pays off after a run to the Women's College World Series.
No. of Commitments: 5
Blue Chip Prospects: 3
Top Rated Player: Kynzee Anderson, P - No. 10 overall
Despite finishing 12th in the SEC during the regular season, the Georgia Bulldogs had a nice run in the NCAA Tournament. The Dawgs knocked of Durham regional host Duke and took Florida to a game three in the super regionals. Their recruiting class features three top-50 prospects, including the No. 10 overall player and No. 1 player in the state of Louisiana, Kynzee Anderson.
5. Tennessee Volunteers
No. of Commitments: 4
Blue Chip Prospects: 3
Top Rated Player: Avary Stockwell, C - No. 13 overall
Tennessee's class is smaller than the rest of the top five, but it has star power to it. Stockwell is the No. 3 catcher in the class and the No. 1 player in the state of Tennessee.
4. Texas Longhorns
No. of Commitments: 6
Blue Chip Prospects: 4
Top Rated Player: Annie Abdullah, INF - No. 2 overall player
The Texas Longhorns have two of the top five players in the class signed in the 2026 class in Abdullah and Grandview pitcher Madi Doty.
3. Florida Gators
No. of Commitments: 6
Blue Chip Prospects: 6
Top Rated Player: Caroline Stanton, P - No. 1 overall
Three of Florida's top four players in the class come from the state of Georgia, including the No. 1 overall player Caroline Stanton. They also pulled infielder Brooklyn Gidley out of College Station, Texas. Surprisingly, the Gators don't have a player from the state of Florida signed in 2026.
2. Oklahoma Sooners
No. of Commitments: 6
Blue Chip Prospects: 6
Top Rated Player: Ki'ele Ho-Ching, INF - No. 2 overall
The Oklahoma Sooners have recruited well across the country, bringing in the No. 1 player in California, Oklahoma, and Hawaii, the No. 2 player in Texas, and the No. 4 player in Arizona. Pitcher E.K. Smith out of Katy, Texas is considered the No. 6 pitcher in the country.
1. LSU Tigers
No. of Commitments: 7
Blue Chip Prospects: 6
Top Rated Player: Samantha Alekman, C - No. 5 overall
The LSU Tigers have five five-star prospects heading to Baton Rouge in the 2026 class, including four players in the top 10 and two of the top five pitchers in the class.
Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow John on X @john9williams.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

For Texas Tech coach, reminders of late daughter are everywhere at WCWS: ‘She's been with us'
For Texas Tech coach, reminders of late daughter are everywhere at WCWS: ‘She's been with us'

Yahoo

time42 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

For Texas Tech coach, reminders of late daughter are everywhere at WCWS: ‘She's been with us'

OKLAHOMA CITY — For the Glasco family, softball is the lingua franca, the language that connects them. It anchors Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco to his daughter Tara Archibald, who is also the program's associate head coach. And it connects both of them — even now — to Geri Ann, Gerry's daughter and Tara's youngest sister, who was killed in a car crash in 2019 at just 24 years old. Advertisement 'For us, it's like you can't go anywhere in the softball community without some sort of tie to Geri Ann.' Tara said. 'Any park I go recruiting at, there's always some kind of memory that involves G. Then the people, even here.' Even here, at Devon Park — where Texas Tech will face Texas in the Women's College World Series finals beginning Wednesday — Tara can still see a teenage Geri Ann running around in the outfield on Gerry's under-18 squad, competing against the top teams in the nation. All three of the Glasco girls played softball, and all three played or coached in the WCWS. Tara played at Southern Illinois and was a head coach at Eastern Illinois before joining her dad at Texas Tech this season. Erin played at Notre Dame and Texas A&M, reaching the championship series in 2008. Advertisement Geri Ann started her career at Georgia, where Gerry was an assistant coach and Tara was the pitching coach. Together, they took home the program's first SEC tournament championship in 2014. When Gerry left for Texas A&M, Geri Ann departed for Oregon, where she played two more years. She began a coaching career of her own as a student assistant at Oregon in 2017 before following Gerry to Louisiana as a volunteer assistant coach in 2018. She died two weeks before opening day in 2019. 'She was so loving, just loved to love on people, which I think is what you see through the softball community when you hear people talk about her. She just made everybody feel so good,' Tara said. 'The ultimate teammate as a player. (She was) just a fun-loving, goofy, always singing — knew every word to every song — just a fun-loving personality. We loved to be around her.' Reminders of Geri Ann have been frequent throughout Texas Tech's WCWS run. In the semifinals, the Red Raiders came up against Oklahoma pitcher Sam Landry, who played for Gerry for three seasons at Louisiana before they each moved to their current schools. In Geri Ann's brief time as a volunteer assistant coach, Landry was still a budding high school ace, but said they met 'a few times.' When Landry arrived on Louisiana's campus in 2022, she grew 'very close' with Gerry, and opted to wear Geri Ann's number — No. 12 — as her own. Advertisement 'Just seeing how he was dealing with it, wearing No. 12 was how I, in my opinion, helped keep him going, so that's why it was so important to me — carrying on her legacy, she was an amazing person,' Landry said. When Landry arrived at OU this season, her No. 12 was taken. She reversed numbers and went with No. 21. Still, Landry wanted to keep the memory of Geri Ann going. So she wore Geri Ann's name on her glove. To reach its first championship series, Texas Tech had to best Landry — the SEC Newcomer of the Year — in a 3-2 game Monday that ended on a walk-off sacrifice fly. 'I hated that we had to play today. I just hated it,' Glasco said of going against Landry. 'I would have rather her finished her career against anybody besides me. And I would have rather played anybody than her to go to the championship. But we don't control that.' Advertisement When Gerry met Landry on the field for a long postgame embrace, it was not only a reminder of what Gerry had won, but also what he had lost. On May 11, the day of the NCAA tournament bracket reveal, Tara told Gerry that if the team drew the No. 12 seed, it would make it to the WCWS. 'Sure enough, it comes up on TV. She said, 'I told you. We're going to the World Series,'' Gerry said Monday. 'We got the 12-seed, which was Geri Ann's number.' There was also a moment while traveling for softball and checking into a hotel this season that Gerry saw it — a sign from Geri Ann, that lingua franca. In a 'huge hotel,' he said, he checked into one of the first rooms: No. 112. Advertisement 'Things like that happen. She's been with us on this journey,' he said. 'And you know, (Monday) I thought to myself, like, if Sam goes and I don't go, it's still good. Geri Ann would have been thrilled with Sam going (to the championship series), and I'm sure she's thrilled with me going.' Though he's not positive about that. Because there's another connection in the final. At Oregon, Geri Ann played for coach Mike White, reaching the WCWS with the Ducks in 2015. White is now the coach of Texas, the team standing in the Red Raiders' way. Gerry can't say for sure who his daughter's front-runner would've been. Advertisement 'I don't know if she'd root for me or Whitey, because she loved Whitey,' Gerry said Tuesday. 'She used to compare us a lot. She'd say, 'Daddy, coach is just like you, he just got more colorful of a vocabulary.' She probably thought he was a little smarter than I am, but anyway, I'm really looking forward to compete.' No. 12 Texas Tech will face No. 6 Texas for the national title — the first finals since 2018 that will not include Oklahoma — beginning with Game 1 on Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET. With the nation's best pitcher, NiJaree Canady, in the circle, Tara will again aim to call the pitches that stifled the Sooners and so many others. She'll also focus on where it all started. Her first coaching gig came in college, as the leader of Geri Ann's youth travel team. One of her very first players was her sister, and though 12 years younger, Geri Ann was also part teacher. 'No matter how intense the game was, or how big the moment was, she played like a 10-year-old who first fell in love with softball,' Tara said. 'I think she always reminded me to let the game be a game and to enjoy the game.' Advertisement That's a language the Glasco family — and Texas Tech — can surely understand. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Texas Tech Red Raiders, Texas Tech Red Raiders, Texas Tech Lady Raiders, College Sports, Women's College Sports 2025 The Athletic Media Company

Oregon Football QB target Matt Ponatoski joins Randy Moss with rare accomplishment
Oregon Football QB target Matt Ponatoski joins Randy Moss with rare accomplishment

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Oregon Football QB target Matt Ponatoski joins Randy Moss with rare accomplishment

Oregon Football QB target Matt Ponatoski joins Randy Moss with rare accomplishment Dan Lanning has demonstrated a trend of recruiting dual-sport athletes over the past few years and utilizing players who specialize in sports other than football for the Oregon Ducks. We've seen this most notably with linebacker Bryce Boettcher, who was drafted by the Houston Astros last year, and 5-star tight end commit Kendre Harrison is another example, excelling in both football and basketball. It appears that the Ducks are after another elite dual-sport athlete in 4-star QB Matt Ponatoski. On Tuesday, it was announced that Ponatoski accomplished a rare feat, winning the Ohio Gatorade Player of the Year for both football and baseball. According to WCPO's Mike Dyer, Ponatoski is one of only three players to ever accomplish this in the 40 years that Gatorade has been giving out the awards, joining Randy Moss (football and basketball) and Matt Bauer (football and baseball). Last week it was announced that Ponatoski — the No. 293 player and No. 22 QB in the class — will take an official visit to Oregon on June 20. That will be a massive weekend for the Ducks, with 5-star OT Immanuel Iheanacho, 5-star TE Mark Bowman, 5-star TE Kendre Harrison, and 5-star ATH Jalen Lott all in town as well. Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.

For Texas Tech coach, reminders of late daughter are everywhere at WCWS: ‘She's been with us'
For Texas Tech coach, reminders of late daughter are everywhere at WCWS: ‘She's been with us'

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

For Texas Tech coach, reminders of late daughter are everywhere at WCWS: ‘She's been with us'

OKLAHOMA CITY — For the Glasco family, softball is the lingua franca, the language that connects them. It anchors Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco to his daughter Tara Archibald, who is also the program's associate head coach. And it connects both of them — even now — to Geri Ann, Gerry's daughter and Tara's youngest sister, who was killed in a car crash in 2019 at just 24 years old. Advertisement 'For us, it's like you can't go anywhere in the softball community without some sort of tie to Geri Ann.' Tara said. 'Any park I go recruiting at, there's always some kind of memory that involves G. Then the people, even here.' Even here, at Devon Park — where Texas Tech will face Texas in the Women's College World Series finals beginning Wednesday — Tara can still see a teenage Geri Ann running around in the outfield on Gerry's under-18 squad, competing against the top teams in the nation. All three of the Glasco girls played softball, and all three played or coached in the WCWS. Tara played at Southern Illinois and was a head coach at Eastern Illinois before joining her dad at Texas Tech this season. Erin played at Notre Dame and Texas A&M, reaching the championship series in 2008. Geri Ann started her career at Georgia, where Gerry was an assistant coach and Tara was the pitching coach. Together, they took home the program's first SEC tournament championship in 2014. When Gerry left for Texas A&M, Geri Ann departed for Oregon, where she played two more years. She began a coaching career of her own as a student assistant at Oregon in 2017 before following Gerry to Louisiana as a volunteer assistant coach in 2018. She died two weeks before opening day in 2019. 'She was so loving, just loved to love on people, which I think is what you see through the softball community when you hear people talk about her. She just made everybody feel so good,' Tara said. 'The ultimate teammate as a player. (She was) just a fun-loving, goofy, always singing — knew every word to every song — just a fun-loving personality. We loved to be around her.' Reminders of Geri Ann have been frequent throughout Texas Tech's WCWS run. In the semifinals, the Red Raiders came up against Oklahoma pitcher Sam Landry, who played for Gerry for three seasons at Louisiana before they each moved to their current schools. In Geri Ann's brief time as a volunteer assistant coach, Landry was still a budding high school ace, but said they met 'a few times.' When Landry arrived on Louisiana's campus in 2022, she grew 'very close' with Gerry, and opted to wear Geri Ann's number — No. 12 — as her own. Advertisement 'Just seeing how he was dealing with it, wearing No. 12 was how I, in my opinion, helped keep him going, so that's why it was so important to me — carrying on her legacy, she was an amazing person,' Landry said. When Landry arrived at OU this season, her No. 12 was taken. She reversed numbers and went with No. 21. Still, Landry wanted to keep the memory of Geri Ann going. So she wore Geri Ann's name on her glove. To reach its first championship series, Texas Tech had to best Landry — the SEC Newcomer of the Year — in a 3-2 game Monday that ended on a walk-off sacrifice fly. 'I hated that we had to play today. I just hated it,' Glasco said of going against Landry. 'I would have rather her finished her career against anybody besides me. And I would have rather played anybody than her to go to the championship. But we don't control that.' When Gerry met Landry on the field for a long postgame embrace, it was not only a reminder of what Gerry had won, but also what he had lost. On May 11, the day of the NCAA tournament bracket reveal, Tara told Gerry that if the team drew the No. 12 seed, it would make it to the WCWS. 'Sure enough, it comes up on TV. She said, 'I told you. We're going to the World Series,'' Gerry said Monday. 'We got the 12-seed, which was Geri Ann's number.' There was also a moment while traveling for softball and checking into a hotel this season that Gerry saw it — a sign from Geri Ann, that lingua franca. In a 'huge hotel,' he said, he checked into one of the first rooms: No. 112. 'Things like that happen. She's been with us on this journey,' he said. 'And you know, (Monday) I thought to myself, like, if Sam goes and I don't go, it's still good. Geri Ann would have been thrilled with Sam going (to the championship series), and I'm sure she's thrilled with me going.' Though he's not positive about that. Because there's another connection in the final. At Oregon, Geri Ann played for coach Mike White, reaching the WCWS with the Ducks in 2015. White is now the coach of Texas, the team standing in the Red Raiders' way. Gerry can't say for sure who his daughter's front-runner would've been. 'I don't know if she'd root for me or Whitey, because she loved Whitey,' Gerry said Tuesday. 'She used to compare us a lot. She'd say, 'Daddy, coach is just like you, he just got more colorful of a vocabulary.' She probably thought he was a little smarter than I am, but anyway, I'm really looking forward to compete.' Advertisement No. 12 Texas Tech will face No. 6 Texas for the national title — the first finals since 2018 that will not include Oklahoma — beginning with Game 1 on Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET. With the nation's best pitcher, NiJaree Canady, in the circle, Tara will again aim to call the pitches that stifled the Sooners and so many others. She'll also focus on where it all started. Her first coaching gig came in college, as the leader of Geri Ann's youth travel team. One of her very first players was her sister, and though 12 years younger, Geri Ann was also part teacher. 'No matter how intense the game was, or how big the moment was, she played like a 10-year-old who first fell in love with softball,' Tara said. 'I think she always reminded me to let the game be a game and to enjoy the game.' That's a language the Glasco family — and Texas Tech — can surely understand. (Top photo of Gerry Glasco: Brett Rojo / Imagn Images)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store