After finishing the season with an overall record of 43-13 and ranked 21st in the nation, the Ragin’ Cajuns softball program will head to Baton Rouge for the NCAA Regionals, hosted by LSU.
After finishing the season with an overall record of 43-13 and ranked 21st in the nation, the Ragin’ Cajuns softball program will head to Baton Rouge for the NCAA Regionals, hosted by LSU.
Wonder what colors Yvette will be wearing?
I know this is ultra impractical and almost impossible...HOWEVER; being the perpetual optimistic person that I am. Does this scenario exist:
Of the 16 hosting teams if enough were eliminated does UL have a chance at hosting a Super.
WE MUST PACK THE HOUSE
About to order my tickets. Wife and I will be there.
Btw...just read that Scott Farmer...the guy that couldn't have cared less about our softball program...got a $2,500 bonus because we earned a regional spot. Wow.
After receiving an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, the Ragin’ Cajuns softball program will make the short trip to Baton Rouge for the NCAA Regional, taking on Northwestern State on May 17 at 3:00 P.M.
An excerpt from a Graham Hays article on the ESPN college sports section about regionals.
http://espn.go.com/college-sports/so...pace-regionals
Baton Rouge regional
Friday: LSU vs. Central Connecticut; Louisiana-Lafayette vs. Northwestern State
The favorite: No. 9 LSU
LSU enters the tournament on anything but a roll after it lost all three of its May games and gave up 27 runs in the process. But anyone who remembers last season will recall that the Tigers lost eight of their final 10 games, scored barely any runs in the process, and proceeded to reach the World Series. And there's a lot more reason to think Rachele Fico will regain her pitching touch this season than there was to think last season's team would find a way to score runs. One key for Fico is going to be reining in her own stubbornness -- she's either walked or hit 119 batters in 211 1/3 innings. The good news is she and the staff have much more margin for error with Bianka Bell (1.058 OPS) around.
What could get in the way: Genuine dislike
That last word probably isn't the one most fans of Louisiana's two premier softball programs would choose. It's too mild. There is no love lost between LSU and Louisiana-Lafayette, who won't even play in the regular season, and both programs know where to eat in Oklahoma City as repeat visitors to the World Series. Beating a quality team in the postseason is difficult enough. Beating a rival is that much more difficult, especially a rival that brings a lineup with a .547 slugging percentage and .425 on-base percentage. Sarah Draheim (1.291 OPS), Nerissa Myers (1.299 OPS) and Brianna Cherry (1.201 OPS) are the top three OPS players in the regional. Not even Oklahoma can claim that.
Player to watch: Jordan Wallace, P, Louisiana-LafayetteWallace is one of the more intriguing pitchers in the tournament. On paper, she's a statistical beast, fifth in the nation in strikeouts per seven innings with a 28-7 record and 1.89 ERA. And it's not like she piled up numbers against the dregs of Division I. She threw quality innings against Michigan, Mississippi State and Iowa out of conference and back-to-back brilliant outings against Western Kentucky and South Alabama in the Sun Belt tournament (she also two-hit Arizona State in a super regional a season ago). But she wasn't among even the 25 finalists for player of the year and admittedly took some lumps in high-profile outings against Texas and Texas A&M.
Geaux Cajuns
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