Oklahoma Sooners sweep day one of Mary Nutter Classic with 11-3 win over Long Beach State

The Oklahoma Sooners improved to 12-0 on the season with a win over Long Beach State led by Kinzie Hansen, Grace Lyons, and Alyssa Brito.

The No. 1 ranked Oklahoma Sooners improved to 12-0 on the season with an 11-3 run rule win over Long Beach State on day one of the Mary Nutter Classic in California.

After Jordy Bahl’s perfect game in a 10-0 win against Cal-State Fullerton, the Sooners got a bit more of a challenge from Long Beach State who notched the first earned run of the season off of a Sooners pitcher in the three-run third inning.

Hope Trautwein hadn’t allowed an earned run coming into the game got into some trouble in the bottom third inning allowing three runs (two unearned) cutting the Sooners lead to 6-3. Nicole May entered the game to get the Sooners out of a jam and pitched 2.1 scoreless innings, allowing two hits to close out the game.

Oklahoma responded in the top of the fourth thanks to Alyssa Brito’s base-clearing triple that drove in three runs to make it 9-3. They added another one later in the inning to go into the bottom of the fourth up 10-3. Oklahoma would add another run in the top of the fifth and May finished it off in the bottom of the fifth for the Sooners run-rule win.

At the plate, Kinzie Hansen and Grace Lyons hit home runs as the Sooners continued their offensive tear to start the season.

The Oklahoma Sooners will play two games on Saturday, first against No. 8/10 Arizona at 12 p.m. CT and then No. 17/17 Tennessee at 2:30 p.m. CT. They’ll close out the weekend series at 11 a.m. on against Utah on Sunday.

Here’s how you can watch or listen to the Oklahoma Sooners as they look to stay unbeaten and as Jocelyn Alo attempts to break the NCAA all-time home run record.

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Social Media reacts to Jordy Bahl’s perfect game in Sooners 10-0 win over Cal-State

Oklahoma improved to 11-0 on the heels of Jordy Bahl’s perfect game. Here’s how social media reacted to the fantastic performance.

The Oklahoma Sooners softball team is a beautiful two-act performance every time they step on the diamond. While the offense was the story heading into the 2022 season, the pitching staff has provided a plot twist that has the Sooners dominating from the circle.

True freshman pitcher Jordy Bahl has been dominant early in her Sooners career, not allowing an earned run all season. Against Cal-State Fullerton, she was downright dominant as Bahl threw a perfect game over six innings of work for her second perfect performance of the season.

In the Sooners opener, she threw 2.2 inning of perfect ball and combined with Nicole May and Hope Trautwein for a perfect game. This time, Jordy Bahl was a solo act in the circle, striking out 11 Titans hitters and inducing six ground ball outs, leading the Sooners to their 11th straight win to start the season.

Social media was excited for Jordy Bahl’s perfect performance and we gathered some of the best reactions below.

Jordy Bahl perfect, Tiare Jennings homers twice as Oklahoma beats Cal-State Fullerton 10-0

Jordy Bahl throws six innings of perfect ball and Tiare Jennings homers twice as the Oklahoma Sooners beat Cal-State 10-0.

Jordy Bahl’s stellar start to her first season with the Oklahoma Sooners somehow got even better as she threw a perfect game in the Sooners 10-0 win over Cal State Fullerton on Friday afternoon.

On a day when the world was watching in suspense every time Jocelyn Alo took to the plate, it was the true freshman sensation who stole the show.

After throwing 2.2 perfect innings in her debut, this time she was perfect through six innings as Oklahoma garnered another run-rule win, their ninth on the season. Bahl and the Oklahoma Sooners have still not allowed an earned run through their 11th game of the season. Bahl’s 11 strikeouts mark the second time she’s reached double-digits this season after recording 14 against No. 3 UCLA last weekend.

In her dominant performance, Bahl allowed just one batter to get a ball out of the infield, a fly out to keep her day perfect.

Tiare Jennings led off the game with her sixth home run of the season and the Sooners stayed in control throughout. Jennings was 2 for 3 from the lead off spot with another home run later in the game with two RBIs. Jennings is now tied with Jocelyn Alo for the team lead in home runs in 2022. Alo was 0-2 with two walks on the day as Cal-State was reluctant to pitch to her on the day.

Jayda Coleman had a home run and three RBIs and Lynzie Elam notched a home run and two RBIs.

The Sooners are underway in their second game of the day against Long Beach State and are already up 3-0 after Grace Lyons launched a two-run home run in the top of the first.

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Jocelyn Alo, Hope Trautwein snag weekly Big 12 awards

Jocelyn Alo hit five home runs last weekend and Hope Trautwein threw her fourth career no-hitter to pick up a pair of weekly Big 12 awards.

It was a great week for Oklahoma softball punctuated by Jocelyn Alo blasting five home runs in three games to tie Lauren Chamberlain’s NCAA career record of 95 home runs.

After recording back-to-back two homer games against McNeese State and Houston on Saturday, Alo sent the second pitch she saw on Sunday against Texas State out of the park for her record-tying 95th career home run. As a result, Alo was named the Big 12 Player of the Week. Alo also pulled down national player of the week honors as she was named the Louisville Slugger/NFCA Division I Player of the Week.Alo batted .600 on the weekend, registered 11 RBI, seven extra base hits and slugged 1.733 in Oklahoma’s five run-rule wins.

Meanwhile, Hope Trautwein recorded her fourth career no-hitter during OU’s 11-0 victory over McNeese State on Saturday and picked up Big 12 Co-Pitcher of the Week honors. Trautwein struck out eight in five innings and allowed just one walk against the 16 batters she faced. It represented her first individual no-hitter as a Sooner since joining the Sooners as a graduate transfer from North Texas. The 5-foot-11 righty from Plugerville, Texas, was the 2021 Conference USA Pitcher of the Year and she’s yet to allow a run this season with Oklahoma in her 17 innings of work.

For Alo, it was the fifth career Big 12 Player of the Week honor. Trautwein snagged her first career Big 12 weekly award.

Alo is looking to make history this weekend as Oklahoma heads into the Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic in Palm Springs, Calif. OU plays Cal State-Fullerton and Long Beach State at 2:30 p.m. and 5 p.m. on Friday. Then, No. 8/10 Arizona and No. 17/17 Tennessee at 12 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. on Saturday before a final date at 11 a.m. on Sunday against Utah.

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Lauren Chamberlain adapting to challenge of serving as commissioner for Women’s Professional Fastpitch league

Lauren Chamberlain is now the Women’s Professional Fastpitch league’s commissioner. She knows there’s challenges ahead, but it’s exciting.

Lauren Chamberlain spent time with Oklahoma reporters yesterday discussing Sooner slugger Jocelyn Alo’s pursuit of the NCAA career home runs record.

Chamberlain is also busy getting set for the inaugural season of the Women’s Professional Fastpitch league where she’s serving as the fledgling league’s commissioner.

“When I got the call to become commissioner, I was like absolutey. This is probably going to be the harder thing that I’ve done in my life, but yeah I feel like I’m built for it. The challenge I think is having experienced the height of NCAA softball and just the beast that it is and all of the support that it has, and then, how do I carry that into the professional level? That’s been the age-old question that we’ve always wondered. Why is there such a drop off? Why can’t we continue to follow these players? I think branding has to do everything with it. I think visibility has to do everything with it. At least getting somebody in the commissioner’s spot and getting people involved that have a little bit more visibility and can really connect the right people, it’s exciting. I understand the opportunity that I have ahead of me to really build something and make it last and make it viable. It’s exciting,” Chamberlain said.

She said the expectation is to begin play this coming June.

“Year one being more of a bringing everything to market year. Really intentional, smaller scale, building a product that we can really take out there. Look for it in June. Learning from our past is the biggest thing. If you have with NPF having 15 years of experience, I mean, that’s not a failure to me. There’s so many things that we can pull that were good from that, but I think the approach now with just how hot women’s sports are right now in general and more and more people buying in data wise and resources and just giving more attention really to professional women’s sports is important. Using that data, not only is it a feel-good thing anymore. Not only is this something that you should do because it’s your duty and it’s your job, this is something that we’ve seen over and over again thanks to the World Series. That data is incredible and the numbers. It’s a standalone, powerful sport,” Chamberlain said.

Chamberlain said she’s in for the long haul as the commissioner of the Women’s Professional Fastpitch league and that the right people are falling into place.

“So, to be able to take those types of things and bring them to some serious investors and some people with deep pockets that value that and that align with that, it can go really far. I’m here for a long time. I’m not here for a blip. It’s going to move at its pace and it’s going to go when it goes. I’m excited, man. The right people right now are figuring it out and I’m pumped for them because they’re going to really reap the benefits of it,” Chamberlain said.

Chamberlain discussed how the best of the best in the sport of softball need a league that gives players an opportunity to showcase their talents and to profit in their primes once their college careers are over.

“With Jocelyn and her opportunity, to have a place for them to play, to have somewhere for them to strive to that’s bigger than college. Think of college and it’s like your MVPs of college. They’re all going to play pro. That’s who’s been playing professional softball. That’s who I played with was all of our World Series MVPs. We faced them every single weekend. And then, same with Olympics. It should be the best of the best going out. If we can have a place for them to play, to showcase their abilities, and not have the drop off and not have them just completely hop off the cliff and no one hears from them again. Give them a place to be seen and played,” Chamberlain said.

It has mystified Chamberlain why the interest in college softball hasn’t matched the professional ranks. She’s looking to build that with the Women’s Professional Fastpitch league.

“You’re talking about the top of the top, the best of the best and you have no idea where they go. That’s where I get a little bit…it’s hard for me to really comprehend. You tell me to be the best of the best at my sport and I do it for a very long time and then as soon as I get even more to the top, you don’t follow me. That’s a hard one for me to swallow, so I think it’s important that we continue to build a good foundation and a good place for these women to play,” Chamberlain said.

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‘It’s home run U’: Lauren Chamberlain embracing Jocelyn Alo’s record chase

Lauren Chamberlain has been one of Jocelyn Alo’s biggest advocates as Alo looks to break Chamberlain’s NCAA career home runs record.

It’s all Oklahoma at the top of the NCAA softball career home runs list. That will remain the case even after Jocelyn Alo eventually breaks her tie with former Sooner Lauren Chamberlain by hitting career home run No. 96 to become college softball’s new home run queen.

“With this home run chase and how everything’s going, it’s bringing back so many memories of not only how did I feel, but just that time in my life. It was such a special time in my life. Those four years were the best. I miss it. It’s exciting. I think it’s going to be kind of like a cool transfer. Okay, this is your time, the sport’s growing, we’re moving in a new direction. You’re the queen now. I think that’s just cool. It’s home run U baby. That’s it. It’s crazy. Thinking about Tiare coming up right behind Jocelyn and just the potential of it. When you rewrite the record books and it looks like all OU at the top, that’s something to say. Shout out to coach Gasso,” Chamberlain said.

Chamberlain knows the type of pressure Alo has faced along the way, too.

“When you get to that point, you’re slumping if you don’t hit a bomb, right, like that’s your slump. When you start to get that outside pressure and you start to see the media follow it and the attention, I know back when it happened to me and, you know, ESPN crews with their cameras were on the field following me to the plate, ticket prices are going up, you’re starting to see more and more people standing,” Chamberlain said.

That pressure is palpable. Even now for Chamberlain watching Alo’s chase on television.

“Watching even on TV, how quiet everybody gets when she comes up to the plate. It’s a buzz but it’s just quiet. I think it’s because everybody knows the weight of the moment. Everybody knows that something is about to happen when she’s at the plate. It’s a crazy transition when you start to watch it as a fan, but you’re watching almost what you went through exactly but from a different perspective. It’s been a really cool couple weeks,” Chamberlain said.

Interestingly enough, Alo and Chamberlain first met at the Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic when Alo was a freshman. It’s fitting then that the full-circle, passing of the torch moment will likely happen this weekend at the place where the pair first met.

That first meeting was also the moment Chamberlain knew it was a possibility that Alo someday would approach her record and perhaps break it.

“I knew when she was a freshman. I heard that she was coming and I knew that she was just different. Hearing coach Gasso kind of talk about what she could be able to do once she gets on campus. I remember specifically—actually this time when she was a freshman, it was the Palm Springs tournament, Mary Nutter Classic—and watched her play and afterwards we chatted a little bit about how are you feeling, how’s your freshman year going so far, what’s different, you know, all that stuff. She had mentioned all of the comparisons that people were making. Like, ‘Man, you’re the next Lauren Chamberlain. You’re the next Lauren. We finally have that person that’s come along.’ And we had talked about how badly she wanted to be the one and only Jocelyn. Right, like not the next Lauren, the one and only Jocelyn and how important it was for her to write her own story and create her own narrative around this entire thing. So, I knew it from the jump it was going to be her. I’m glad it’s her. I’ll tell you I’m very happy that it’s going to stay in OU’s pocket. It’s been just amazing to see her flourish,” Chamberlain said.

When Chamberlain was attempting to track down UCLA alum Stacey Nuveman’s then-NCAA record of 90 home runs, the pair traded a few Twitter direct messages. It was short and sweet, but that interaction with someone that understood exactly what she was going through helped.

“I remember specifically the conversations that I had with Stacey Nuveman when I was getting close and it was just a little tweet DM. We didn’t have each other’s numbers, we didn’t call each other up, but just that little vote of support was like, ‘Ah, she’s rooting for me.’ It was just such a relief of, oh, that’s cool and the only person that understands what I’m going through is her. That’s it,” Chamberlain said.

Over the course of her career and during this home run chase, Chamberlain has been that voice for Alo whenever asked.

“To be able to kind of lend out that hand and just be like, girl, friend to friend, I got you. No one else understands. When you’re in that room and you’re in your apartment after a game and you didn’t get it done and you think you’re slumping and you don’t know if it’s going to happen, that’s who you want to talk to. You just want to know if they felt the same way. You just want to know if this is something that’s ever crossed their mind. To be able to be a voice for her and not the voice because I know she’s got a great support system, but at least someone that can share that moment with her and just reassure her a little bit. It’s a lot easier that I like her. It’s a lot easier that I actually care for the girl. She’s awesome,” Chamberlain said.

A lot of times the conversations between Alo and Chamberlain aren’t about softball at all.

“More so that off the field stuff. You know, it’s getting tough. Senior year. How do you keep that fire? There’s certain things that are just life and every athlete has those conversations with other athletes. You specifically pick someone that you trust and that you know has maybe felt that before. We’ve just had some really, really good conversations about life. What her plans are, what her goals and dreams are that far exceed this home run record. It’s been really fun to create that friendship with her,” Chamberlain said.

Chamberlain described Alo as like a sister to her. That friendship isn’t lost on Alo.

“We’re really good friends. I can call her right now and just talk to her about anything and it doesn’t even have to be about softball. We’ve gotten dinner a couple times. It’s really just a Sooner sisterhood thing. Just as far as the record and stuff, I feel like she’s kind of happy about it, because, yes, it’s being broken, but it’s staying in the Sooner program so it’s just a win for all of us Sooners in general. We’re really good friends. She’s been a very big advocate for this. She recognized my potential. My freshman year in Palm Springs was the first time that I met her, so to have her there this weekend will be kind of cool and maybe we can remake that picture,” Alo said.

Alo’s next chance to break the record will come against Cal State Fullerton on Friday at 2:30. At this point, it’s a matter of when and not if for Alo and she’s embracing this final challenge in the record chase.

“I was actually talking to JT [Gasso] about this. He was just saying to embrace it as a challenge and I do like challenges. I like when I’m being pushed and I like overcoming certain things. Just looking at this as another challenge and I know I’m going to beat it,” Alo said.

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Jocelyn Alo joins Lauren Chamberlain atop NCAA Softball’s career home runs list with 95

Jocelyn Alo sent a moonshot out of the park in her first at-bat Sunday, tying Lauren Chamberlain’s NCAA record 95 home runs in the process.

What a weekend for Jocelyn Alo. After registering back-to-back two-homer games versus McNeese State and Houston on Saturday, respectively, Alo went yard in her first plate appearance on Sunday.

Alo delivered a moonshot to centerfield on the second pitch she saw to tie former Sooner Lauren Chamberlain’s NCAA record of 95 career home runs in Oklahoma’s 8-0 run-rule victory over Texas State.

Alo equaled Chamberlain’s mark of 95 home runs in her 215th career game and her 634th at-bat. Chamberlain set the mark back in 2015 on her last career at-bat. Chamberlain played in 220 games over the course of her career and registered 607 at-bats.

Alo reached the record in less games than any player in the top-10 of the all-time NCAA softball list, too.

“It was pretty crazy,” said Alo. “Coach (Gasso) calmed me down through the whole process. This was a hard thing to do, but I’m just trying to enjoy every moment that happens. It’s even sweeter when I get to hug my family after. My family got to be here to experience it, so it was pretty cool. Hopefully next weekend, if it happens my mom will be there as well and my grandparents, and it’ll be even more special.”

Oklahoma head softball coach Patty Gasso was of course thrilled to see her star tie the record, but also to see Alo break loose over the course of the past two days.

“It’s very meaningful. She had a tremendous weekend. I worried about her a little bit, cause right from the start (of the season) she’d been pressing. To see her let loose this weekend and tie it was tremendous. I love Lauren, she’s got my heart and she knows it, so it’s not bittersweet, it’s just a celebration of Sooners. That’s what this is about. I believe it (No. 96) will happen in Palm Springs and we’ll have a lot of fans out there to be able to witness it. It’s not just about the Sooners, it’s a moment in softball history. Any time you break records, it’s huge. It’s a great celebration for our sport,” Gasso said.

Oklahoma is now 10-0 on the season and has outscored its opposition by a combined score of 95-2. The Sooners have still not allowed an earned run, the team has hit 25 home runs and the pitching staff has struck out 86 batters.

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Jordy Bahl fans 14, Oklahoma softball makes statement in win over No. 3 UCLA

Freshman pitcher Jordy Bahl struck out 14 UCLA hitters and the Sooners topped the No. 3 Bruins, 4-1.

In a battle of two of the sport’s titans, No. 1 Oklahoma delivered a statement to the college softball world that the defending champions are every bit as good as 2021. In fact, the Sooners might be better.

OU topped No. 3 UCLA, 4-1, in the Mark Campbell Invitational in Irvine, Calif., as freshman pitcher Jordy Bahl baffled Bruins’ bats. Bahl struck out 14 UCLA batters, demonstrating that OU has found its new ace.

It was the most strikeouts by a Sooner pitcher since Giselle Juarez sat down 16 against Wisconsin in the Norman Regional in 2019 and the most by a Sooner freshman since Keilani Ricketts struck out 15 versus Texas A&M on April 10, 2010.

Bahl secured her second win of the season and now has 24 strikeouts in 12.2 innings.

Oklahoma head softball coach Patty Gasso shared some thoughts on Bahl’s performance against one of the country’s best teams afterwards. Eyes On Oklahoma newsletter and podcast host Joe Buettner shared Gasso’s postgame sentiments.

“For a freshman, just off the charts. I just think about it, when I look at her, I think about the future. But if you saw the kind of work that she puts in, she came in ready. She came in fit. She came in with all the tools and she’s just a workaholic. She works her tail off. She doesn’t take a day off,” Gasso said.

“She’s been training to compete at a whole other level and never do I think, ‘Okay, she’s struggling, let’s get her out.’ Even after some of those illegal pitches, didn’t really faze her. She just figured [it out]. I mean, just back to her drive. We got something special and I felt that this game—although it’s only our fourth game of the season—it just took her to another place of understanding about how this level and this elite game of what it feels like. So, it was really important for her to feel that.”

With Bahl surrendering just four hits, three walks and one unearned run, Oklahoma’s offense wasn’t pressed to score runs. OU did jump in front first during the second inning when senior Taylon Snow delivered an RBI single to score senior Jana Johns.

Then, after UCLA had tied it following an Oklahoma throwing error in the third, the Sooners answered right back. A hit by pitch to senior Grace Lyons and Johns’ second hit of the game set the stage for a two-run response. Junior Mackenzie Donihoo scorched an RBI single up the middle to score Lyons and senior Lynnsie Elam added an infield single to score Johns.

OU added an insurance run in the sixth after three Bruins errors allowed pinch runner Hannah Coor advance home to deliver the winning margin of 4-1.

To date, Oklahoma has outscored its opposition 32-1 while racing out to a perfect 4-0 start. Oklahoma concludes its play in the Mark Campbell Invitational on Sunday at 1 p.m. when the Sooners battle UC-San Diego.

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Oklahoma Sooners dominate in season opening blowout of UC Santa Barbara

The Oklahoma Sooners used a nine-run first inning and a combined perfect game to open the season with a 14-0 win over UC-Santa Barbara.

The Oklahoma Sooners started the 2022 softball season off with a bang in their season opener against UC Santa Barbara, picking up the 14-0 run-rule win.

On the backs of an offense that exploded for nine runs in the top of the first, the Sooners picked up right where they left off from their historic national championship run in 2021. Last season, the Sooners set an NCAA record for home runs and they wasted little time hitting the long ball in this one.

Second baseman Tiare Jennings got Oklahoma going in the top of the first with a lead off home run to give the Sooners a 1-0 lead. The Sooners erupted in their first at bat of the season with nine runs, including a grand slam from 2021’s national player of the year Jocelyn Alo to cap off the explosive inning.

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Jennings’ lead-off home run would be the game winner as three Sooners pitchers combined for the perfect game victory over UCSB. True freshman Jordy Bahl got her first start of the season for the Sooners and led the way with 2.2 innings pitched and four strikeouts. She retired all eight batters she faced before giving way to sophomore Nicole May, who struck out the only batter she faced. Hope Trautwein took over in the bottom of the fourth and closed out the game for the Sooners, striking out three of the six batters she faced in her two innings of work.

The Sooners would get another home run from Jennings and Kinzie Hanson hit her first of the season to help Oklahoma erupt for their first win of the season.

On the afternoon, nine players recorded a hit and nine players drove in a runner for Oklahoma. Jennings, Alo, Hansen, and shortstop Grace Lyons combined to go 7 for 13 with four home runs, seven RBIs, and 10 runs scored.

The Sooners quest to defend their 2021 national title got off to a great start with the offensive explosion and the pitching dominance. If the Oklahoma Sooners continue to get performances like this from their pitching staff, they’ll be incredibly difficult to beat all year.

The Sooners will next compete in the Mark Campbell Invitational where they’ll face Loyola Marymount and Mississippi State on Friday, before a pivotal early-season matchup with UCLA on Saturday. They’ll close out the weekend against UC-San Diego on Sunday.

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WATCH: Tiare Jennings, Jocelyn Alo belt first-inning HRs to begin Oklahoma’s title defense

Sophomore Tiare Jennings and redshirt senior Jocelyn Alo each blasted first-inning home runs as OU started off its title defense.

That didn’t take long. Top-ranked Oklahoma started off its title defense in style. Sophomore at second base Tiare Jennings and designated player Jocelyn Alo each belted first-inning homers.

In the process, the Sooners jumped all over the Gauchos with a nine-run first inning in Santa Barbara, Calif.

Jennings connected on an 0-2 pitch for a leadoff bop to start Oklahoma’s season.

It’s already the 28th home run of Jennings’ abbreviated career with OU. Jennings set an NCAA single-season freshman record with her 92 RBIs last season and the program record with 52 extra-base hits in 2021.

Then, to cap the opening fireworks, Alo stepped to the plate with the bases juiced and ripped a 2-2 pitch well past the right field wall to collect her 89th career home run.

Alo is just six homers shy of tying the career NCAA home run record. Of course, former Sooner slugger Lauren Chamberlain holds that record with her 95 career blasts.

“I’m not really thinking about it. Honestly, I know it’ll come so I’m just kind of, like I said, enjoying every moment that I have and if it comes it comes, if it doesn’t it doesn’t, but I know it’ll come so I’m not like pressed about it, but like I said I just want to win another (national title),” Alo said of her record pursuit ahead of the season.

Again, her main focus is leaving Norman with another national championship ring.

“Obviously, I want to win again. It’d be nice to be the last team standing once more. I think you guys kind of know about the other record going on. But honestly, I’m just here to enjoy my last year and I was kind of talking with my dad about it. I was just saying how I want to enjoy every moment and just be present in every moment. And Coach Gasso said like you won’t ever get this again. And I really won’t ever get this again. Like I won’t get to grind the same way that they pushed me to, I won’t get to play for these coaches again, I won’t get to play with this team again, I won’t get to wear ‘Sooners’ across my chest again. So I’m just kind of here to enjoy every moment,” Alo said.

Freshman standout pitcher Jordy Bahl got the opening-day start in the circle for the Sooners and promptly struck out a pair of Gauchos in a scoreless first.

Oklahoma head softball coach Patty Gasso recently commented on the team’s motivation to start the 2022 season.

“It’s interesting because I think different teams approach the next season differently. Once you win it, you have two choices of thought, ‘I want it, I got it, it’ll never go away, I’ll have it forever and I’m good’ or ‘That tasted so well, that was such a wow factor in my world that I want more’. The taste of winning it, being called the best, is something that is almost like a drug. You want more. Some players feel one way, and some players feel the other. That is a bit concerning. The whole goal here from my side, is what would I feel like if a coach is telling me this and I’m an athlete. If my coach told me ‘you could be the greatest softball team of all time’, that would make me want to play hard. That would get me fired up. Every player is different. I’m anxious to see what this (the team) is going to look like when we put it out there because then I can really decipher where we’re at. Right now, we’re grinding and working really hard to get prepared for the start,” Gasso said.

The Sooners will also play in the Mark Campbell Invitational over the weekend from Irvine, Calif. On Friday, OU takes on Loyola Marymount at 5:45 p.m. and Mississippi State at 8:30 p.m. Then, on Saturday, Oklahoma will play No. 3 UCLA at 6 p.m. The final game of the weekend is against UC San Diego on Sunday at 1 p.m.

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