logo
Everything Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso said after OU beat Oregon in the WCWS

Everything Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso said after OU beat Oregon in the WCWS

USA Today2 days ago

Everything Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso said after OU beat Oregon in the WCWS
Bittersweet. That's how Oklahoma softball coach Patty Gasso described her team's win over Oregon on Sunday in the Women's College World Series.
The Sooners eliminated the Ducks to secure a place in the final four of the WCWS with a 4-1 win. Oregon is coached by former OU player and assistant Melissa Lombardi.
Oklahoma will play Texas Tech on Monday. If the Sooners win the initial game against the Red Raiders, the two will meet again immediately after in a winner-take-all game for a spot in the WCWS championship series.
Gasso had nothing but positive things to say about her protege Sunday, though, and looked forward to facing a former Big 12 opponent for Monday.
Patty Gasso's opening statement
Huge win for the Sooners. Personally, kind of bittersweet, because those are my people on the other side. It's hard to play on such a platform that means so much and it's going to end somebody's season. It was hard, but super proud of that staff and all that they've done, so really proud of Missy (Lombardi) specifically getting back here. She's dreamed of this for a long time. Gone through a lot to get here. Really happy for her. This team I think it all started in the circle. (Kierston Deal) came out and really handled her business pretty well. Gave up a run, but that's expected. We answered back pretty quickly. And then we had Sam (Landry) come in in a good matchup with their three-hole, I believe, and just kind of let her ride it through. We're in elimination time now so you do everything and anything you can. Just super happy for Cyd Sanders. Her senior year, what a wonderful memory to have, these home runs. Really timely hitting for some of them. At the same time, we left a lot of runners on base, but that means we're getting on a lot. Very pleased. I'll tell you, just straight up, we win a game and we walk over and we shake hands and we walk in the dugout like 'Hey, OK' and I'm like 'Do you know what we just did? Does anyone know what we just did? We're in the Final Four.' 'Yeah, we're good. We're swag. Swaggy swag.' I'm just like, 'Somebody celebrate. Can we do something fun.' They're just the most calm, chill. Sometimes I'm like 'I don't know that you know. Do you know?' 'Yeah, we're good.' So I'm like OK. Hopefully we'll have some massive celebrations in the future. But I'm really happy and proud of these guys.
Gasso on the challenge of having to beat Tech twice
(Associated head coach JT Gasso) has got a lot of work to get going on. I do, to someone's point, we talked about the amount of elite pitchers we have faced and have had some success off of. That's what we're going to live off of. We're going to have to make a few adjustments for sure. But we're fighting. We're fighting for our lives now. That's what it's going to look like. It's going to be a fight on our side to say we will not surrender for anyone or anything. That's how we're going to approach it.
Gasso on Oklahoma's pitching plan for Monday
I like where we're at. I have no idea how we're piecing it together quite yet. But everybody is, they're going to empty their tanks, without question.
Gasso on Sanders' clutch-ness
Very needed for this offense. Cyd is exactly what you just saw. Very chill. Very easy-going. Does not get affected by much of anything. Just getting her swing on. Grein is tough. She is tough. Definitely facing her will help us tomorrow. But Cyd is just very unassuming. Doesn't get all caught up in the thought process. She just waits for her moment.
Gasso on wanting to see her team respond after losing to Texas
OK, the warm-up was better, for sure. Seven innings, they get distracted. They just look around a little bit. They talk some. They just kind of become spectators sometimes. I don't need them to be like the little kids in the 10-and-under teams in the dugout, but I do need them paying attention. They are. They just sometimes don't make a lot of noise. Every once in a while they'll create something. They were definitely more focused and ready today. They learned a valuable lesson. That's one thing we're doing this season is learning so many valuable lessons to help this team go into next year so much better than when we started. I'm on an amazing ride. I don't know how they feel. They don't share a lot. They just walk off the field, walk in the locker room like 'what are we having for dinner?' I'm like 'OK.' I want to celebrate with somebody, but it's swaggy but it's bizarre at the same time. Trying to figure it out.
On Tech being a newcomer to the WCWS
It's been cool to see new faces because that brings in more fans and fan bases. I've known coach Glasgow for quite a long time. I've watched his career move around some. He's an amazing coach. He really is. Some of the stuff he pulls out of his hat is pretty epic. He does it the right way. I really enjoy going up against him because you know you're going to have a battle. Ole Miss the same thing. I was also a member of the Big 12 for 30 years. To see a Big 12 team get in here that's a new name. That's really, really cool for the Big 12. Ole Miss just got on that hot run. Sometimes it's fun to follow those underdogs or Ole Miss that way. The experience, when you have a team that comes to the World Series - that's why I'm really excited for Missy because she really worked hard. Her standard and my standard are very similar and so to finally get her team here. I was just watching. I was a fan from afar. I was really rooting for them. It's going to edify and move her program to a new level.
Gasso on whether four WCWS titles or nine straight elimination wins is more impressive
Oh, I don't know. That's impressive. Nine is pretty dang impressive. That's character. That's like, we are not going to quit. So I love, love, love that. But it's also nice raising a trophy and taking an easier route. I do respect the fact that our team fights their tail off to the end.
Gasso on preparing Sam Landry to face former coach and teammates
I'm going to work on that. That's a good question. She's so different. She's quite different. She's quite a different pitcher than she was. And she really, really showcased, she threw really well tonight. Really well. I hope that will carry over for her and just really have tunnel vision and blinders on and not worry so much on that side but more about her girls on her side.
Gasso on the importance of seeing her former assistants get love from current schools
Thank you for asking that question. If you aren't investing in Melissa Lombardi then you're not paying attention. Not only is she a great coach and very organized and a hustling, hustling staff that recruits very well, but she's an extreme professional and does it the right way. Treats her players the right way. Expects hard work on the field but also her players walking through the line were very grateful for the game that we have, wished us luck. She is turning girls into women and that's what we've done at OU. That's what she was when she came to OU was a girl that turned into a woman. She's one of the best out there. There's no question about that.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Thunder have 5 players on the court. The way they see it, 18,000 helpers are in the stands
Thunder have 5 players on the court. The way they see it, 18,000 helpers are in the stands

Washington Post

time26 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Thunder have 5 players on the court. The way they see it, 18,000 helpers are in the stands

OKLAHOMA CITY — There is something different about Oklahoma City Thunder fans, and players aren't afraid to say that. The crowd of 18,000 or so always arrives early. They stay late. They show up in the middle of the night at the airport to welcome the Thunder charter flight home and maybe get a wave or a fist bump from a player, even though a chain-link fence separates the team from the fans. It's like a college atmosphere at Thunder games at times.

Oklahoma's toppled softball dynasty, in context of other college sports
Oklahoma's toppled softball dynasty, in context of other college sports

New York Times

time38 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Oklahoma's toppled softball dynasty, in context of other college sports

Until Saturday Newsletter 🏈 | This is The Athletic's college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox. Today in college football news, the Mrs. and I have been rebuilding our CD collections from scratch … inspired by our kid, who's started one of her own. CDs are so unbelievably back. Yesterday, one of the greatest dynasties in major college sports history saw the end of its current title streak, though we'll let future seasons determine whether the dynasty itself has run its course. In the Women's College World Series semifinals, big-money upstart Texas Tech — which had never won even a conference title in this sport until this season — knocked off four-time reigning champion Oklahoma. On a walkoff, no less. Having spoiled what would have been the third rivalry finale in four years between OU and Texas, the Red Raiders will take the shot themselves. Still plenty of juice, though, since few schools hate Texas more than Tech does. (The best-of-three starts tomorrow night.) With history's longest softball title streak now officially dusted, where does it stand in college sports history? Well, since this is college sports, there are about a million ways to answer that. All according to the NCAA's records: Coach Patty Gasso's softball Sooners didn't put together a streak long enough to hurdle some of the biggest records in the books, but they also managed to challenge for a fifth straight title despite playing in The Portal And NIL Era. This season, their previous star Jordy Bahl was the DI Player of the Year for her home-state Huskers, and the Texas Tech team that finally took OU down was led by million-dollar ace NiJaree Canady. (Nobody's heart is breaking for any SEC power in any sport, but still. It's reasonable to wonder whether staying on the very top is even harder now. Salute.) 🥏 Frisbee emoji? No, it's a blue chip, you see. Today, Grace Raynor ranks all 25 No. 1 recruits of the 2000s. I can stop selling this link now, because you've already clicked it. 💰 Three days ago, it would've cost Bill Belichick $10 million to leave his job at North Carolina. As of this week, it'd cost just $1 million. Still hasn't coached a game yet! Advertisement 🐂 Jim Leavitt, USF's founding coach who then led the Bulls to their momentary No. 2 ranking in 2007, left the program on very bad terms in 2010. He's now joining the athletic department's hall of fame, alongside late basketball coach Amir Abdur-Rahim. 🧢 Lots of slow starters in recruiting, like Alabama down at No. 45. Not without precedent at this point in the calendar, but still. 🎬 'It's little (stuff) like this. That's not typical for 3. Watch 8. That's the stuff I watch this game and go, hmmm … Why aren't we playing as hard as we usually play? If this was Ohio State, Adon would knock the crap out of him.' — Marcus Freeman with Pete Sampson, explaining Notre Dame's loss to NIU while demonstrating how coaches watch film. As we talked about last week, the current '50 million automatic College Football Playoff bids for the Big Ten and SEC, plus scraps for the other powers' plan isn't necessarily the SEC's favorite. As SEC commissioner Greg Sankey has noted, four auto-bids for his league in a 16-team field could actually decrease the SEC's number of contestants. But … wouldn't roughly the same be true for the Big Ten? In that case, why would the B1G want this at all? As Scott Dochterman explains, it all goes back to the exact same thing the Big Ten has been yelling at the sky for nine years now: Its teams play one more conference game per year than the SEC's or ACC's do. Scott writes: 'Without uniform scheduling, Big Ten officials are concerned that an open (five automatic bids and 11 at-larges) plan would cause more schools to ease up on their nonconference slates rather than play other power-conference schools; one recently called it a 'race to the bottom.'' Hmm. In general, this version of college football's eternal strength-of-schedule debate has been non-stop since the CFP era began, with everybody saying each offseason that SOS should matter more, but then nobody liking it once the season begins and a three-loss team ranks ahead of a two-loss team. As for the perpetual Big Ten vs. SEC sub-debate, by any schedule-strength metric, Big Ten and SEC teams annually play schedules that are about as comparable overall as any you'll find anywhere in such a sprawling sport. (As always, because it's impossible to discuss any of this without hearing a specific charge: I'm not an SEC alum. I'm a Conference USA alum who was raised to root for an ACC rival of an SEC team. My list of annoyances with the SEC happens to not include this one, and nobody hoodwinked me into thinking that. I still love you.) OK, see you Thursday! Email me at untilsaturday@ The other day, a couple of you wrote in to suggest an Until Saturday online dynasty in College Football 26. Let us ponder this. Last week's most-clicked: I had zero doubt it'd be Antonio Morales ranking all 62 five-star quarterbacks of the internet rankings era. 📫 Love Until Saturday? Check out The Athletic's other newsletters.

Thunder have 5 players on the court. The way they see it, 18,000 helpers are in the stands
Thunder have 5 players on the court. The way they see it, 18,000 helpers are in the stands

Associated Press

time39 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Thunder have 5 players on the court. The way they see it, 18,000 helpers are in the stands

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — There is something different about Oklahoma City Thunder fans, and players aren't afraid to say that. The crowd of 18,000 or so always arrives early. They stay late. They show up in the middle of the night at the airport to welcome the Thunder charter flight home and maybe get a wave or a fist bump from a player, even though a chain-link fence separates the team from the fans. It's like a college atmosphere at Thunder games at times. It will be a raucous atmosphere on Thursday: Game 1 of the NBA Finals is coming to Oklahoma City, and the top-seeded Thunder — big favorites over the Indiana Pacers in this series — freely say that the fans have factored into the team's success. 'I think the fans put the wind at our players' backs,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'There's not a level of judgment. There's no level of skepticism.' It is ... well, unusual. In a good way. Daigneault tells the story of a game on Oct. 26, 2021, as one of the best illustrations of what the relationship is like between the city and its team. The Thunder were 0-3 to start that season, the three losses by 21, 33 and 12 points. Golden State visited Oklahoma City that night; the Thunder led by 11 at the half, before eventually losing by eight. 'They gave us a standing ovation at the end of the game,' Daigneault said. 'And it was a week into the season. We had not won a game. As great as they are right now, and they are unbelievable right now, that's the one that I always go back to because it really struck me. It certainly was unexpected.' The Thunder have given fans plenty of reasons to cheer since. They're a league-best 43-7 at home this season; the last four teams to win at least 40 home games in a full season — Toronto in 2018-19, Golden State in 2021-22, Denver in 2022-23 and Boston last season — went on to win the NBA title. And this year's club is winning home games by an average of 16.9 points per contest. That's on pace to be the second-biggest such differential in NBA history, behind Milwaukee's 18.1-point average home margin in 1970-71. MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said keeping the home crowd happy is on his mind all the time, and he was thinking of it when the Thunder closed out Minnesota at home in Game 5 of the Western Conference finals last week. 'I didn't want to go back to Minnesota, travel-wise,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'And then I wanted the fans to be able to enjoy the moment with us. I wanted them to be able to see it unfold in front of their eyes. I wanted them to be to celebrating in our building, go home, get drunk, whatever they do. I wanted them to have fun with the moment. ... I just wanted to make sure I could give my energy and my effort to try to give these fans what they deserve.' ___ AP NBA:

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