Fresh off ACC Tournament title, Duke baseball heads to Oklahoma as No. 2 seed in the Norman Regional

Duke earns the second seed in the Norman Regional after winning the 2024 ACC Tournament Title.

The newly minted 2024 ACC Tournament champions are headed to Norman, Oklahoma.

Following their offensive explosion against Florida State in the ACC title game, many around the Duke program thought there was a chance that the Blue Devils could sneak a late hosting bid away. Sunday night, the NCAA disproved that by now awarding Duke with a top-16 seed. On Monday, the Blue Devils discovered which regional they would participate in.

The Blue Devils will head to Norman, hoping to advance to the Super Regionals for the second consecutive year. This will be no tall task, as the hosting Oklahoma Sooners are a well-rounded ball club with offense, defense, and a deep pitching unit that features quality starters and challenging bullpen options in relief. Oklahoma dominated the Big 12, posting a 23-7 record in the conference. They also came up just short of winning the tournament title.

The Big East regular season champion, the Connecticut Huskies, are also in the region and they are no slouches. Lastly, the Blue Devils will have the Oral Roberts Golden Eagles, this year’s Summit League tournament champions, to contend with.

Regionals will run from May 31 through June 3 at L. Dale Mitchell Park in Norman. Duke (39-18) is slated to open the regional against No. 3 seed UConn (32-23) on Friday at 8 p.m. EST. The game can be seen on ESPN+.

The winner of the double-elimination NCAA Regional will advance to a best-of-three NCAA Super Regional, which will run from June 6-8 or 7-9. The Norman Regional winner will face the winner of the Tallahassee Regional, which features Florida State, Alabama, UCF, and Stetson.

Duke softball outlasts Missouri and books WCWS ticket in ninth-inning surge

Duke softball booked its first ticket to OKC in school history behind a ninth-inning home run from D’Auna Jennings.

For the first time in program history, Duke softball is headed to Oklahoma City for the Women’s College World Series.

The Blue Devils needed nine innings on Sunday, but they defeated Missouri 4-3 in a winner-take-all Game 3 at the Columbia Super Regional.

From the first inning, Sunday’s game settled in as a classic pitcher’s duel.

On Missouri’s side of the circle, the Tigers’ Laurin Krings completely silenced the Blue Devils’ offense. After two singles from senior Claire Davidson and sophomore Aminah Vega in the first three at-bats of the game, Krings immediately forced two put-outs to end the top of the first quickly and quietly.

The Blue Devils only managed one hit, another single from Davidson in the third inning, over the next five frames. Krings complimented those three hits with three strikeouts, but she mostly just forced Duke into simple put-outs. The Blue Devils made contact on 18 of their first 21 at-bats, but 15 of those ended harmlessly as they couldn’t find holes.

The situation may have been dire if not for the heroics of sophomore Cassidy Curd on Duke’s side of the line. Curd, who recorded her 300th career strikeout earlier in the series, perplexed the Tigers over the entire weekend. She tossed nine scoreless innings between the first two games, giving up one hit and one walk while striking out nine Missouri batters.

The pace seemed impossible to keep up, and yet Curd did exactly that on Sunday. Krings gave up three hits in the first six innings, but Curd gave up only two. The sophomore struck out three of the first four batters of the game, and only one Tigers baserunner made it to second base thanks to a sacrifice bunt.

The second, fourth, fifth, and sixth innings all only needed three batters, and Curd had five strikeouts to her name through six innings.

The final inning began with both offenses completely quiet. The Duke offense couldn’t break the spell after three more put-outs, again making contact but unable to find gaps.

Missouri fared only slightly better, a single from catcher Julia Crenshaw the only work for them as Curd struck out two more.

Lightning finally struck in the top of the ninth from the most unlikely of places. Duke centerfielder D’Auna Jennings led the inning off and sent one back over the right-field corner of the wall, the second home run of the sophomore’s career.

After some brief confusion about whether or not Jennings touched home plate (she very nearly missed it in her excitement), the Blue Devils finally had a run on the board.

Krings finally exited the game after the hit, but Missouri reliever Taylor Pannell couldn’t limit the damage to just one. She smacked a pitch off of Duke senior Francesca Frelick’s elbow before a triple from freshman Amiah Burgess scored the game’s second run.

The game got out of hand quickly from there. An Ana Gold double off the wall scored Burgess, and the Tigers dropped a short pop fly from Kelly Torres that could have ended the inning to let Gold come around.

After a brief relief spell by Blue Devils reliever Lillie Walker resulted in a three-run home run to Mizzou first baseman Abby Hay, Curd came back into the game for the final outs. The final Tigers out came on a fly ball to (who else?) Jennings in centerfield.

After back-to-back Super Regional heartbreaks, the Blue Devils will be one of the last eight teams competing for the national title once the Women’s College World Series begins on May 30.

Missouri evens Super Regional series, sets stage for winner-take-all Sunday game

The Blue Devils held Missouri’s offense to three runs on Saturday, but two hits as a team meant they couldn’t clinch the series.

The Duke Blue Devils softball team lost its first game of the postseason on Saturday afternoon, a 3-1 defeat at the hands of Missouri to even the Super Regional series.

The Duke pitching staff did its job during the game, giving up just four hits for the day. ACC Pitcher of the Year Jala Wright started in the circle and roared out of the gates with 10 consecutive outs, working her way through the order without a single base runner.

Wright finally caught a snag in the fourth, however. She surrendered her first baserunner with a one-out single, then she coughed up another base hit to the next batter.

With two runners on in a still-scoreless game, Missouri first baseman Abby Hay poked through a third consecutive single to open the game’s scoring. Duke right fielder Claire Davidson couldn’t pin her throw from the outfield on catcher Kelly Torres, but a miscommunication in the infield allowed a second. The ball bounced off Torres as she tried to corral it, and both nearby Blue Devils rushed back to the plate instead of either one going after the ball.

Hay made it all the way to third in the commotion, and an infield ground ball let her score the third run of the inning.

Sophomore pitcher Cassidy Curd replaced Wright in the circle after the two-run debacle, and she did exactly what she did on Friday: shut Mizzou down. With the Blue Devils desperately in need of a comeback, she did all she could. Curd got the last two outs of the fourth and allowed just one hit over the final three innings, holding the Tigers scoreless for a second straight outing.

Through nine innings against Missouri this weekend, Curd has allowed one hit and one walk while striking out nine batters.

Unlike in Game 1, however, the Duke offense couldn’t take advantage of Curd’s form. The Blue Devils got on the board with a solo home run from senior Francesca Frelick in the fifth inning, but they couldn’t manage any other runs in a day with just two team hits.

The Blue Devils had the chance in the sixth inning when two walks and an error loaded the bases with just two outs, but a strikeout and an infield fly meant no damage got done.

With the series now even at one win apiece, the Blue Devils and Tigers will play one final game on Sunday, a winner-take-all game with a spot in Oklahoma City on the line. It will undoubtedly be the biggest game in program history, as Duke has never reached the Women’s College World Series.

Coach K speaks to Duke softball team ahead of its Super Regionals series

Mike Krzyzewski, the five-time national champion, gave a short speech to the Duke softball team ahead of its best-of-three Super Regional series against Missouri.

The Duke softball team begins a best-of-three series against Missouri on Friday with a spot in the Women’s College World Series on the line.

Earlier this week, legendary Duke basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski stopped by the team locker room to offer some encouragement ahead of the Super Regional.

“Just be you,” Krzyzewski said. “We’re proud of you.”

The Blue Devils have already set a single-season program record with 50 wins, and they won both the ACC regular-season title and the ACC Tournament. They’ve never won a Super Regional game in program history, and Marissa Young’s team is on the precipice of its first WCWS appearance.

“You’ve had really good teams,” Krzyzewski said. “But this is the best team that Duke has had. And this team is deserving of winning a national championship.”

Coach K also joked that he’d make a bet with his wife, conditions yet to be determined, that the Blue Devils score in the first inning of Friday’s opening game.

“She’s going to say, ‘Well, we never do that,'” he continued, the team laughing around him. “And I said, well, we’ve never gone past this round either. So we’re going to start doing some things that we have never done.”

Duke’s first game of the series begins at 2 p.m. and will be broadcast on ESPN2.

Duke softball set to play Missouri in Columbia Super Regional

After sweeping the Durham Regional, Duke will travel to Columbia to play the Tigers this weekend with a Women’s College World Series berth on the line.

The Duke softball team knows its Super Regional opponent.

The 10th-seeded Blue Devils will travel to Columbia to play No. 7 Missouri in the best-of-three series beginning on Friday. The winner will advance to the Women’s College World Series, a bracket Duke has not reached in program history.

The Tigers defeated Omaha 1-0 in the Columbia Regional Final on Sunday just hours after Duke clinched the Durham Regional with a dominant win over South Carolina.

Despite Duke’s 50 wins this season, three more than Missouri’s 47, the Tigers will host due to their higher seed.

The Blue Devils made a Super Regional in each of the past two seasons, but they have yet to win a game in this round of the NCAA postseason. The Stanford Cardinal swept them out of the proceedings in 2023, winning 3-1 and 7-2. UCLA did the exact same thing the year before, beating Duke by one run in the first game before an 8-2 win to clinch the series.

The first game of the series starts at 2 p.m. on Friday.

Recapping Day 3 of super regionals

After Sunday’s action, only two spots remain in Omaha.

After Sunday’s action at the NCAA super regionals, only two spots remain at the College World Series in Omaha. Four more tickets were punched as Wake Forest, Virginia, LSU and Oral Roberts all earned a shot at a national title.

After a close game with Alabama in Game 1, the Demon Deacons showed why their team has been called “Rake Forest” at times. They raked in 22 runs to drown the Tide and earn the sweep.

After losing Game 1 to Duke, Virginia won Games 2 and 3 by 10 runs each as they advance to Omaha.

LSU makes its return visit to Omaha after a stellar performance against Kentucky this weekend, and Oral Roberts is headed to the College World Series as the third No. 4 seed to ever make it.

Tennessee and Stanford both forced a winner-take-all Game 3 that will be played Monday night.

Oral Roberts denies Oregon its trip to Omaha with Game 3 victory

Oral Roberts took full advantage of Oregon miscues, both forced and unforced, to win 11-6 and punch its ticket to Omaha and the CWS.

Oregon can’t say it didn’t have its chances.

Unfortunately, the Ducks had too many unforced mistakes and Oral Roberts didn’t make hardly any and it’s the Golden Eagles who will be going to Omaha for the College World Series with an 11-6 win in Game 3 of the Eugene Super Regional.

At the end of the day, the Ducks will look at the 11 walks, an error, and baserunning blunders and see those are what cost them a ticket to the CWS. The Ducks used a grand total of nine pitchers, four in the ninth inning alone, trying to piecemeal the entire game and it didn’t work.

They can even go back to the night before when a potential double-play grounder to win the game that wasn’t made. At this level and at this point in the NCAA tournament, teams will take advantage and Oral Roberts took full advantage.

Everything looked to be going Oregon’s way in the first inning with Tanner Smith’s three-run homer to put the Ducks up 3-1 early. But Oral Roberts cut into that lead with one in the third and three more in the fourth, chasing Oregon starter Jackson Pace from the ballgame

Logan Mercado, pitching on one day’s rest, held down the fort as best he could. He went three innings and gave up just one run.

Sabin Ceballos made it a one-run game in the sixth with a homer to center to make it 5-4. But that was when the wheels started to come off.

Oregon went to the bullpen and brought in Grayson Grinsell and after just two batters, he went down with what looked like a serious arm injury and couldn’t continue. Matt Dallas came in and thanks to a walk, a wild pitch, a hit and an error, Oral Roberts extended its lead to 8-5.

Heading into the ninth, with their offense, the Ducks still had a reasonable belief that they could still pull this one out. But the top of the frame turned into a complete disaster. Ian Umlandt began the inning harmlessly enough and he got two outs and there was a runner on second. Just one more out to let the bats get to work.

The decision was made to bring in Dylan McShane, a freshman that struggled mightily on Friday and it was the same story here. With his first pitch, he plunked a batter and proceeded to walk the next hitter. The Baes were loaded and Oregon had to go to two more freshmen who hadn’t pitched in more than a month. By the time Jacob Hughes restored order, it was 11-5 Eagles and those rally hopes were dashed.

So were the hopes of going to Omaha for the first time since 1954. The Ducks will have to wait for another season to make that happen.

How to watch Alabama baseball vs. Wake Forest in NCAA Super Regional on Sunday

How to watch game two of Alabama baseball vs. Wake Forest in the 2023 NCAA Super Regional from Winston Salem, North Carolina on Saturday.

The Alabama baseball team is now in a win-or-go-home state following Saturday’s heartbreaking loss to Wake Forest 5-4.

The Crimson Tide went toe-to-toe with the No. 1 overall seed in the tournament but eventually fell short in its effort to upset the Demon Deacons.

Game two is set for Sunday, and the Crimson Tide will need to win in order to force a decisive game three in Winston Salem, North Carolina.

With the first pitch coming up in a few hours, here is everything you need to know to catch all of the action between No. 16 Alabama and No. 1 Wake Forest in the NCAA Super Regionals.

Recapping Day 2 of super regionals

Day 2 of the super regionals had just about everything possible.

Day 2 of the super regionals had just about everything possible. We had two teams punch their tickets to Omaha. We had multiple rain delays. We had late-inning comebacks, and we had a blowout to end the night.

Florida and TCU both punched their ticket to Omaha with super regional sweeps of South Carolina and Indiana State, respectively.

Stanford imploded in the ninth inning to allow Texas to make a comeback victory and take game one. Oral Roberts escaped elimination with a walk-off win against Oregon.

In the final game of the night, LSU put a beatdown on the Kentucky Wildcats.

Here’s a full rundown of all the action on Saturday.

Recapping Day 1 of super regionals

Four teams are now one game away from Omaha. Who came out on top?

Day 1 of the super regionals was Friday, and four of the eight series began play. Four teams are one game away from Omaha. Who came out on top?

Every home team came out on top except for the Virginia Cavaliers. The Cavaliers lost their regular-season series at home to Duke, and the Blue Devils are one game away from Omaha.

The other four super regional series will begin on Saturday: Alabama takes on Wake Forest, LSU hosts Kentucky, Stanford hosts Texas and Tennessee travels to Southern Miss.

Game 1 of the LSU vs Kentucky series is scheduled for 2 p.m. Saturday from Alex Box Stadium. Here’s a rundown of Day 1’s action.