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NCAA softball tournament regional recap: How 2 top-10 teams — including No. 1 Texas A&M — went out
NCAA softball tournament regional recap: How 2 top-10 teams — including No. 1 Texas A&M — went out

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

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  • Yahoo

NCAA softball tournament regional recap: How 2 top-10 teams — including No. 1 Texas A&M — went out

The first weekend of the NCAA softball tournament brought the unprecedented this year. Texas A&M became the first No. 1 seed to be eliminated in the regional round, losing to Liberty on Sunday to end a stunningly roller-coaster day. Liberty defeated Texas A&M in the teams' first meeting Saturday, meaning the Aggies had to beat the Flames twice Sunday to stave off elimination. After Texas A&M roared back to defeat Liberty in extra innings in Sunday's first game — a game that included 25 runs and multi-run comebacks from both teams — the Aggies couldn't hold a lead in the nightcap. A five-run sixth inning was the difference in a 6-5 Liberty win. Advertisement Liberty forged ahead to the super regional round for the first time in program history and became the early story of the 2025 tournament. '(It) doesn't surprise me,' Liberty senior and Conference USA Softball Player of the Year Rachel Roupe said Sunday. The Flames, the CUSA champions, will travel to play No. 16 Oregon in the super regional. They were one of four unseeded teams to pull upsets on seeded opponents' home fields over the weekend. Nebraska, led by former Oklahoma star and 2023 Women's College World Series Most Outstanding Player Jordy Bahl, advanced out of the Baton Rouge regional without needing to face No. 10 LSU. Southeastern Louisiana upset LSU twice to knock out the Tigers, but the Cornhuskers breezed to 14-1 and 8-0 wins over SLU to advance. Bahl finished the regional 5-for-5 with four home runs at the plate and allowed just two hits over 12 innings in the circle. Advertisement Ole Miss and No. 13 Arizona squared off twice Sunday, with the Wildcats forcing a Game 7 earlier in the day before Ole Miss' 7-3 thumping in the final game. It was a similar story for No. 14 Duke and Georgia, with the Bulldogs reigning supreme in Game 7 by a 5-2 margin. No. 2 Oklahoma, the SEC tournament co-champion alongside Texas A&M, outscored its opponents 31-3 in three wins and remains in pursuit of its fifth straight national championship. Regional winners Bryan-College Station: Liberty Liberty's 8-5 upset of Texas A&M on Saturday set the stage for the biggest upset in NCAA history on Sunday. The Flames beat the Aggies in two of three outings, with the last two games both needing all seven innings and every second to claim victory. Advertisement 'We were battling all day long,' Roupe said. 'It took us eight hours to do it. But whatever we needed to get it done, and we did it.' Norman: No. 2 Oklahoma The Sooners cruised through the regionals unscathed. Oklahoma shut out Boston University 8-0 before defeating Cal two straight times, 11-2 and 12-1. Oklahoma will make its 15th straight super regional appearance, the longest active streak in Division I, per the SEC Network. Gainesville: No. 3 Florida Florida was so dominant in its regional that it run-ruled its opponents in all three games. It was the first time in program history that the Gators have done so. Advertisement Florida's final scores were 8-0 against Mercer, 14-6 against Florida Atlantic and 8-0 against Mercer again in the final. Fayetteville: No. 4 Arkansas After shutting out Saint Louis 10-0, Arkansas saw its super regional hopes flounder in its matchup versus Oklahoma State. Trailing 5-2 in the bottom of the seventh, Razorbacks senior Courtney Day doubled to bring in two runs, and another double from freshman Ella McDowell knotted the game at five to send it to extra innings. After a scoreless top of the eighth for the Cowboys, Day's at-bat — again — saved the day for the Razorbacks. A single with bases loaded gave Arkansas the 6-5 victory, and it went on to thrash Oklahoma State 12-0 in the finals the next day. Tallahassee: No. 5 Florida State Auburn took Florida State to a Game 7 in its regional round, but the Seminoles started the final strong with two runs in the first inning and ended it strong with two runs over the fifth and sixth innings for the 4-0 win. Advertisement Austin: No. 6 Texas The Longhorns frolicked their way to the super regionals, ousting all opponents by a 35-6 margin. Texas beat every opponent in its regional bracket — Eastern Illinois, Michigan and UCF, respectively. Knoxville: No. 7 Tennessee Tennessee's smooth journey through regionals started by blasting Miami (Ohio) 17-0 in its opening game. A double defeat of Ohio State followed for the regional crown. Columbia: No. 8 South Carolina After cruising past North Florida 8-0 in the regional final, South Carolina is heading to its first super regionals since 2018 and first under first-year head coach Ashley Chastain Woodard. Advertisement Chastain Woodard, a former Gamecocks pitcher and graduate assistant coach, was hired in June 2024. Los Angeles: No. 9 UCLA UCLA went on a 31-2 tear en route to a seamless run through the regional, ending each game by the run rule. Baton Rouge: Nebraska Bahl became the fourth player in NCAA history to have 20 home runs and 20 wins in the same season following her regional-round dominance. Clemson: No. 11 Clemson Clemson and Northwestern were scoreless through eight innings before freshman Marian Collins bunted the team to victory. Her hit brought in the runner on third, and the Tigers' defense in the bottom of the ninth got the Wildcats out in four batters. The Tigers then toppled Kentucky 5-1 for a trip to their third super regionals in four years. Advertisement Lubbock: No. 12 Texas Tech Texas Tech made its first super regionals in school history after squeaking by Mississippi State 9-6. The Bulldogs posted a three-run fifth inning to narrow the gap 7-6, but the Red Raiders never relinquished their wire-to-wire lead. Tucson: Ole Miss Ole Miss bested No. 13 Arizona twice in the last three games of the regional round to advance. It marked the first time in program history that Ole Miss took down a national seed in the NCAA softball tournament. The Rebels also snapped the Wildcats' 23-game regional win streak. Durham: Georgia Georgia junior Jaydyn Goodwin nailed a home run over right field in extra innings to earn Georgia's winning run in a 5-2 victory against Duke in the winner-take-all Game 7. It was Goodwin's team-best 12th homer of the year. With the win, the Bulldogs advance to their third straight super regionals and fourth in the last five seasons. Advertisement Tuscaloosa: No. 15 Alabama Three wins in a row, and Alabama secured its third straight and record-setting 19th super regionals. Eugene: No. 16 Oregon Oregon and Stanford were tied 7-all in the bottom of the seventh. With a runner on first and third, Oregon senior Dezianna Patmon hammered a homer to left field for the walk-off win. Oregon was the last team to secure a spot in the super regionals — and it's a home game at that, after Liberty's defeat of No. 1 Texas A&M set up a Ducks-Flames second-round matchup. Super regional schedule All times in ET. Each series is best of three. Eugene: Liberty vs. No. 16 Oregon Game 1: Friday, 10 p.m. Advertisement Game 2: Saturday, 7 p.m. Game 3 (if needed): Sunday Norman: No. 2 Oklahoma vs. No. 15 Alabama Game 1: Friday, 5 p.m. Game 2: Saturday, 3 p.m. Game 3 (if needed): Sunday Gainesville: No. 3 Florida vs. Georgia Game 1: Friday, 11 a.m. Game 2: Saturday, 11 a.m. Game 3 (if needed): Sunday Fayetteville: No. 4 Arkansas vs. Ole Miss Game 1: Friday, 8 p.m. Game 2: Saturday, 9 p.m. Game 3 (if needed): Sunday Tallahassee: No. 5 Florida State vs. No. 12 Texas Tech Game 1: Thursday, 7 p.m. Game 2: Friday, 3 p.m. Game 3 (if needed): Saturday Austin: No. 6 Texas vs. No. 11 Clemson Game 1: Thursday, 9 p.m. Game 2: Friday, 9 p.m. Advertisement Game 3 (if needed): Saturday Knoxville: No. 7 Tennessee vs. Nebraska Game 1: Friday, 7 p.m. Game 2: Saturday, 5 p.m. Game 3 (if needed): Sunday Columbia: No. 8 South Carolina vs. No. 9 UCLA Game 1: Friday, 1 p.m. Game 2: Saturday, 1 p.m. Game 3 (if needed): Sunday This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Women's College Basketball, College Sports, Women's College Sports 2025 The Athletic Media Company

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