The Record (Troy, NY)

Oklahoma beats Texas, repeats as softball national champs

- By CLIFF BRUNT

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) » Jocelyn Alo and Tiare Jennings put Oklahoma on the brink of a repeat national championsh­ip with their stellar play throughout the Women’s College World Series.

Their teammates brought it home.

Kinzie Hansen and Grace Lyons hit three-run homers, Jayda Coleman made spectacula­r defensive plays and No. 1 seed Oklahoma defeated unseeded Texas 10-5 on Thursday night to win its second straight title.

Alo, the two-time USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year, was named Most Outstandin­g Player. She hit .667 for the World Series, tied Jennings for a series-record five home runs and set a series mark with 12 runs scored.

Alo ends her career with a Division I record 122 home runs. Most important to her, she ended one of the greatest college careers with a win.

“These are the moments that I’ll remember forever,” she said. “I’m just happy to be going out top and to just know that all the hard work we put in paid off.”

The Sooners (59-3) claimed the best-of-three series against their Big 12 rival 2-0 after winning Game 1 on Wednesday 16-1 with a record six home runs. It was Oklahoma’s sixth overall national championsh­ip and fifth in the past nine World Series.

Alo hit a hard single in her final at-bat in the sixth inning and later scored. In the seventh, she stepped in to play left field and caught

two fly balls for outs before leaving the game to a standing ovation.

The future looks bright for the Sooners. Jennings — just a sophomore — set a World Series record with 15 RBIs. Coleman is a sophomore, too.

And then there’s Oklahoma’s Jordy Bahl (22-1). The NFCA Freshman of the Year settled down after a rough start. She allowed two runs and four hits in four innings.

“We’re all competitor­s, and when you are a competitor, if there’s something else out there you can go get, you’re going to want to go get it,” Bahl said. “So I don’t ever worry about us ever losing our hunger to win more national championsh­ips. I’m going to enjoy this one.”

Texas wasn’t even expected to reach the World Series, but the Longhorns expected a better performanc­e than they gave in Game 1. Texas coach Mike White called Wednesday’s loss to Oklahoma embarrassi­ng and thought Thursday’s effort was better.

“My job was to pick them back up, (have them) come back out and fight,” White said. “Do the Texas fight. I thought we did that. I thought we fought well. Just didn’t turn out our way.”

Texas pitcher Estelle Czech (13-2) began Thursday’s game with three shutout innings, but ran into trouble in the fourth and fifth and was replaced.

Mia Scott hit a three-run homer and JJ Smith had two hits for the Longhorns (47-22-1), who had survived

six eliminatio­n games in NCAA tournament play before Thursday.

“I think it was all worth it in the end to say that we left it all out there and emptied our gas tanks to get to where we are,” Texas catcher Mary Iakopo said.

The Longhorns looked ready to compete on Thursday. They loaded the bases with no outs in the first and scored two runs, but Coleman jumped above the fence for a spectacula­r grab that robbed Courtney Day of a two-run homer and ended the inning.

“I have seen Jayda do that over and over and over in practice, but when it’s in a game and she has your back as well as everyone else on our defense, that stuff fires me up more than any strikeout ever will,” Bahl said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/SUE OGROCKI ?? Oklahoma’s Jocelyn Alo holds the trophy after Oklahoma defeated Texas in the NCAA softball Women’s College World Series finals Thursday, June 9, 2022, in Oklahoma City.
AP PHOTO/SUE OGROCKI Oklahoma’s Jocelyn Alo holds the trophy after Oklahoma defeated Texas in the NCAA softball Women’s College World Series finals Thursday, June 9, 2022, in Oklahoma City.

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