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UT softball's White on coaching late daughter of TTU's Glasco: 'A special person'
UT softball's White on coaching late daughter of TTU's Glasco: 'A special person'

USA Today

time2 days ago

  • General
  • USA Today

UT softball's White on coaching late daughter of TTU's Glasco: 'A special person'

UT softball's White on coaching late daughter of TTU's Glasco: 'A special person' Show Caption Hide Caption Why Texas Tech, Texas will win 2025 WCWS It's a Lone Star State Women's College World Series this year, and reporter Jenni Carlson breaks down one reason Texas Tech will win and one reason Texas will win the WCWS. Texas Tech and Texas softball will begin their best-of-three championship series at the 2025 Women's College World Series Wednesday from Devon Park in Oklahoma City, with the winner of the first matchup getting a crucial leg up in their quest for an NCAA title. The Red Raiders and Longhorns are inextricably linked in a number of ways. They're large public universities in the same state. For nearly 70 years, they were members of the same conference, first in the Southwest Conference and later the Big 12. These two particular teams have already faced off this season, with Texas winning two games in mid-February. Between their coaches, though, there's an even deeper, more meaningful bond. REQUIRED READING: Texas-Texas Tech softball history: Series record ahead of WCWS championship series While at Oregon, Longhorns coach Mike White coached Geri Ann Glasco, the late daughter of Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco. A utility player and pitcher, Geri Ann Glasco helped lead the Ducks to the WCWS in 2015 and was a second-team All-Pac-12 honoree as a senior in 2016. In 2019, while working as a volunteer assistant under her father at Louisiana, Glasco was killed in a car wreck on Interstate 10 involving several vehicles, including an 18-wheeler. She was 24 years old. When asked about her Tuesday, White had fond memories. 'I just had so much fun with her,' White said. 'What a special person she was, not only as a player, but as a person. She was a proponent of softball and promoted it everywhere she went. Kids loved her. She had that great smile and demeanor about her. I always had a fun time with her in the bullpen, as well, joking to her about the trenches she used to leave with the drag foot. Some great times. She was also a special hitter, as well. I just loved coaching her. It was certainly a very sad day when that tragic thing happened.' While at Oregon, Mike White coached Gerry Glasco's late daughter Geri Ann Glasco... During today's press conference, coach White shared some memories from their time together in Eugene "What a special person she was. Not only as a player but as a person. She was a proponent of… — Cory Mose (@Cory_Mose) June 3, 2025 Gerry Glasco, who White described as a 'softball stalwart' Tuesday, is in his first season at Texas Tech following a decorated seven-year run at Louisiana. This season, he has led the Red Raiders to a program-record 53 wins and their first-ever WCWS appearance. Now, they're just two victories from a national championship. Even if they don't win, Glasco believes his daughter would be satisfied with the result, with her former coach leading Texas to its first title. 'If Geri Ann could talk to you, she'd be just as happy if coach White wins the national championship as her dad,' Glasco said Monday. 'She loved Coach White.'

Texas Tech ends OU's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ after walk-off 3-2 win
Texas Tech ends OU's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ after walk-off 3-2 win

CBS News

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • CBS News

Texas Tech ends OU's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ after walk-off 3-2 win

Oklahoma's run of four straight Women's College World Series titles ended when Lauren Allred's walk-off sacrifice fly gave Texas Tech a 3-2 victory in the semifinals on Monday night. Coach Patty Gasso's Sooners (52-9) were down to their last strike in the top of the seventh inning when Abigale Dayton summoned a bit of magic, hitting a tying two-run homer off Red Raiders ace NiJaree Canady. It was just her third longball of the season. But the Red Raiders (53-12) responded quickly in the bottom half. Mihyia Davis singled with one out and Hailey Toney followed with a double. Allred hit a fly ball to right field and Sydney Barker's throw to the plate was wide, allowing Davis to score easily. "Congratulations to Texas Tech," Gasso said. "They earned that. They played well. They hit well. They pitched well. So well deserved." Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco recounted how he told his team to refocus after giving up the lead. "We don't want it to be easy," he said. "It's Oklahoma. You knew it wasn't going to be easy. Let's go to work right here, win this right here in the bottom of the seventh." Texas Tech, in its first trip to the WCWS, will play Texas in the best-of-three championship series starting Wednesday. The Longhorns reached the finals for the third time in the past four years. They lost to Oklahoma in 2022 and 2024. Sam Landry, the No. 1 overall pick in the Athletes Unlimited Softball League draft, took the complete-game loss. Glasco was Landry's coach at Louisiana last season, and Allred and Davis followed Glasco from Louisiana to Texas Tech. Glasco and Landry embraced after the game. "It's bittersweet," Landry said. "I wished him luck going forward. Neither one of us wanted to be where we met in the postseason. Super happy for them. That's a lot of my old teammates. I'm glad they're getting to experience it." Canady lost the shutout but got the win. She is the two-time reigning National Fastpitch Coaches Association Pitcher of the Year and was the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year last season. Formerly with Stanford, she signed a name, image and likeness deal worth more than $1 million to go to Texas Tech. Canady reached her first finals after leading Stanford to the semifinals the previous two years. "I think people doubted us, didn't think we'd get to this point," she said. "I think we just didn't have any pressure on us, just wanted to go play softball." Oklahoma had won nine straight elimination games, but the Sooners had lost the core of the team that won the previous championships. Their roster featured nine freshmen and just three seniors. Gasso said the future looks bright for the Sooners. "We're standing at the World Series as one of the top three teams left, with a team of 14 newcomers," Gasso said, "and I just shared with them in the locker room how much fun I had with them coaching them, watching them grow, watching them be hungry, watching them never quit."

Texas Tech ends Oklahoma's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ — now faces Texas for the title
Texas Tech ends Oklahoma's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ — now faces Texas for the title

Chicago Tribune

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • Chicago Tribune

Texas Tech ends Oklahoma's 4-year run as Women's College World Series champ — now faces Texas for the title

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma's run of four straight Women's College World Series titles ended when Lauren Allred's walk-off sacrifice fly gave Texas Tech a 3-2 victory in the semifinals on Monday night. Coach Patty Gasso's Sooners (52-9) were down to their last strike in the top of the seventh inning when Abigale Dayton summoned a bit of magic, hitting a tying two-run home run off Red Raiders ace NiJaree Canady. It was just her third longball of the season. But the Red Raiders (53-12) responded quickly in the bottom half. Mihyia Davis singled with one out and Hailey Toney followed with a double. Allred hit a fly ball to right field and Sydney Barker's throw to the plate was wide, allowing Davis to score easily. 'Congratulations to Texas Tech,' Gasso said. 'They earned that. They played well. They hit well. They pitched well. So well deserved.' Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco recounted how he told his team to refocus after giving up the lead. 'We don't want it to be easy,' he said. 'It's Oklahoma. You knew it wasn't going to be easy. Let's go to work right here, win this right here in the bottom of the seventh.' Texas Tech, in its first trip to the WCWS, will play Texas in the best-of-three championship series starting Wednesday. The Longhorns reached the finals for the third time in the past four years. They lost to Oklahoma in 2022 and 2024. Sam Landry, the No. 1 overall pick in the Athletes Unlimited Softball League draft, took the complete-game loss. Glasco was Landry's coach at Louisiana last season, and Allred and Davis followed Glasco from Louisiana to Texas Tech. Glasco and Landry embraced after the game. 'It's bittersweet,' Landry said. 'I wished him luck going forward. Neither one of us wanted to be where we met in the postseason. Super happy for them. That's a lot of my old teammates. I'm glad they're getting to experience it.' Canady lost the shutout but got the win. She is the two-time reigning National Fastpitch Coaches Association Pitcher of the Year and was the USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year last season. Formerly with Stanford, she signed a name, image and likeness deal worth more than $1 million to go to Texas Tech. Canady reached her first finals after leading Stanford to the semifinals the previous two years. 'I think people doubted us, didn't think we'd get to this point,' she said. 'I think we just didn't have any pressure on us, just wanted to go play softball.' Oklahoma had won nine straight elimination games, but the Sooners had lost the core of the team that won the previous championships. Their roster featured nine freshmen and just three seniors. Gasso said the future looks bright for the Sooners. 'We're standing at the World Series as one of the top three teams left, with a team of 14 newcomers,' Gasso said, 'and I just shared with them in the locker room how much fun I had with them coaching them, watching them grow, watching them be hungry, watching them never quit.' Katie Stewart hit a home run, Mac Morgan and Teagan Kavan combined on a 3-hitter and Texas defeated Tennessee 2-0 on Monday to reach the Women's College World Series championship series for the third time in four years. Kavan, who threw a complete game with eight strikeouts in Saturday's 4-2 victory over Oklahoma, came on in relief of Morgan in the fifth inning and didn't allow a hit the rest of the way. She struck out the Volunteers' Emma Clarke to end the game. Texas (54-11) will play either Texas Tech in the best-of-three series, which starts Wednesday. Karlyn Pickens, a National Fastpitch Coaches Association first-team All-American, allowed just one earned run on five hits and struck out nine for Tennessee (47-17). 'My heart is full because of the young ladies to my right and the young ladies in that locker room,' Vols coach Karen Weekly said. 'They're sad for all the right reasons. It's not about wins and losses; it's about the joy they've experienced being together every single day. And I think people saw that in the way we played. They saw them bounce back. They saw how resilient, how gritty and tough they were.' Texas loaded the bases against Pickens in the third with one out but couldn't score. Reese Atwood struck out swinging and Joley Mitchell popped out to the catcher to end the inning. Things got heated in the top of the fourth when Tennessee hitting coach Craig Snider, the former Texas Tech head coach, appeared to have words with the Texas dugout and was ejected. 'I don't know what transpired,' Texas coach Mike White said. 'I think he was upset about the call by the umpire at home plate … . The rule says any time an assistant coach hits the field and questions something it's an automatic ejection. So I think that's what he was upset about, so I think he decided to maybe just to take some stuff out on us.' Weekly said Snider was frustrated with the strike zone. 'You would hope that you get a little bit of leeway because of the stage you're on right here; you certainly don't want to lose a coach when you're playing for the biggest game of the season,' she said. Stewart homered off Pickens in the bottom of the fourth, a high drive to left that drifted beyond the outstretched glove of Alannah Leach. Pickens recovered quickly, striking out the next three batters she faced. 'We had just enough wind to help that home run go over,' White said. 'That was fortunate there. Looking down on us, maybe, Teagan's grandma, so she puffed one out there.' Kavan pitched Saturday while mourning the death of her 97-year-old grandmother. Morgan got the win, striking out four and walking one. The Longhorns added an insurance run in the sixth on a throwing error by Vols third baseman Taylor Pannell.

Texas Tech tops UCLA 3-1 behind Canady's pitching to reach Women's College World Series semifinals

time5 days ago

  • Sport

Texas Tech tops UCLA 3-1 behind Canady's pitching to reach Women's College World Series semifinals

OKLAHOMA CITY -- NiJaree Canady gave up just four hits and struck out seven, and Texas Tech defeated UCLA 3-1 on Saturday to reach the Women's College World Series semifinals for the first time. The Red Raiders (52-12) need one win against Oregon or Oklahoma on Monday to reach the best-of-three championship series. UCLA (55-12) is still alive in the double-elimination format. The Bruins will play Tennessee in an elimination game on Sunday. Saturday's contest matched programs with very different histories. UCLA has a record 12 World Series championships while Texas Tech just won its first World Series game on Thursday in its first ever trip. 'It feels amazing, just this being our first time here as a team and just being able to get to the semifinals," Canady said. "I feel like, it's a huge accomplishment by itself, but obviously we're not finished. We're going for the whole thing like every other team here. But it's definitely something to be proud of.' Canady has plenty of World Series experience. She led Stanford to the semifinals the past two years and eliminated UCLA from the World Series last year before transferring to Tech. Canady ran into trouble against UCLA a few times on Saturday before coming through, like she did so many times before in a Cardinal uniform. 'I guess you've got to start everything with NiJa in the circle," Tech coach Gerry Glasco said. "She's just so fantastic, and I thought she pitched a gem of a game.' UCLA loaded the bases with one out in the second, yet Canady, the National Fastpitch Coaches Association's Pitcher of the Year, escaped without allowing a run. Texas Tech's Makayla Garcia stole home in the fifth to open the scoring. She slid between UCLA catcher Alexis Ramirez's legs to score the run. 'Coach Glasco told me, 'Hey, we're gonna go and we're going to take a chance,'' Garcia said. "And I had to trust him in that moment, and I trust him -- he's a great coach. And so I was like, 'You know what? We're gonna do it.' And it had to work in our favor. And luckily it did.' UCLA's Kaniya Bragg answered with a solo homer in the bottom of the inning. Hailey Toney's solo blast in the sixth put Tech ahead 2-1 and Raegan Jennings' RBI single in the seventh made it 3-1. UCLA got two on with no outs in the seventh, and Canady again avoided damage. 'We just found a way to win," Glasco said. "And that's kind of what we've become. We pride ourselves on being a mentally tough team, a resilient team that can go out under pressure and play defense when we have to play defense in tight moments.' Taylor Tinsley took the loss. She went the distance and gave up three runs on four hits. Tinsley said the Bruins are ready to move on. 'I feel like the big thing with this team is we have a really short-term memory,' she said. 'Each play is kind of like in the past. This game is already as old as dirt for us, so we're just ready to get back out there.'

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