The Arizona Republic

Sooners expect challenge at WCWS

- Cliff Brunt

OKLAHOMA CITY – Many of the top seeds and familiar teams will be absent when the Women’s College World Series starts Thursday.

Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso believes those are good reasons for her top-seeded, defending national champion Sooners to be concerned heading into their opener against No. 9 seed Northweste­rn.

Florida State, Virginia Tech, Arkansas and Alabama are top six seeds that didn’t make it to Oklahoma City. Gasso said that means there are more teams left that overcame the odds on the road to qualify.

Northweste­rn, for example, rallied from a 5-0 deficit in its deciding super regional game to knock off Pac-12 champion Arizona State on the road and punch its ticket.

“It’s that kind of fresh, free ‘let’s go for it, we got nothing to lose’ mentality,” Gasso said. “That’s what you are seeing around the country right now, which makes for a pretty exciting World Series because any of these teams can win this. It’s not just two or three.”

It’s been a strange year, indeed. Florida is the only representa­tive from the Southeaste­rn Conference – a league that had sent at least two teams in each of the past 13 tournament­s, including five in 2015 and four in 2016.

But parity is a real thing. Even with two-time USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year Jocelyn Alo and a team that leads the nation in batting average, scoring and earned run average, Gasso doesn’t expect an easy run.

Oklahoma’s two biggest rivals – Big 12 opponents Texas and Oklahoma State – qualified. Those two teams are responsibl­e for the Sooners’ only two losses this season.

“Those teams that got here are still on a crazy roll,” Gasso said. “They haven’t been home for weeks, but they don’t care because they’re in this beautiful bubble right now that they don’t want to get burst with.”

Texas will face No. 5 seed UCLA and No. 7 Oklahoma State will play Arizona. No. 14 Florida will play Oregon State in the other Thursday matchup. The World Series starts with a double-eliminatio­n tournament and concludes with a bestof-three championsh­ip series that will begin June 8.

The Pac-12 got three teams in – just not the ones that might have been expected. UCLA had its usual dominant year on its way to getting into the field. But Oregon State went 9-15 in conference play and broke through.

Traditiona­l power Arizona tied for last place in league play at 8-16, yet still found its way into the field in coach Caitlin Lowe’s first year stepping in for the retired Mike Candrea.

“They finished last in their conference, but they’re Arizona,” Gasso said. “They’ll always be Arizona.”

Alo repeats

Alo repeated as USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year, becoming the just the fifth player to win the award in consecutiv­e seasons.

Alo has the career Division I record with 117 home runs. She has 29 homers this season and ranks second nationally with a .497 batting average.

Healing pitcher

Oklahoma pitcher Jordy Bahl, the NFCA Division I Freshman of the Year, will return to the circle after an arm injury slowed her late in the season. The Papillion, Nebraska, native hasn’t pitched since the Sooners’ regularsea­son finale on May 7.

Faraimo returns

UCLA pitcher Megan Faraimo is back after missing the World Series last year with a hand injury. She was a first-team All-American last season and a finalist for USA Sotball Collegiate Player of the Year.

This season, she went 22-4 with a 1.70 ERA and 278 strikeouts in 181 2/3

innings.

Sister matchup

Oklahoma State’s Miranda Elish and Arizona’s Madi Elish will be on opposing teams in the opener Thursday.

 ?? TERRY/OKLAHOMAN
BRYAN ?? Oklahoma’s Jocelyn Alo, right, celebrates with Jana Johns after scoring a run against Texas A&M on May 22 in Norman, Okla.
TERRY/OKLAHOMAN BRYAN Oklahoma’s Jocelyn Alo, right, celebrates with Jana Johns after scoring a run against Texas A&M on May 22 in Norman, Okla.

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