Tue May 27, 2008
WCWS has just about all you could ask for
By Scott Wright
Softball Insider
This Women's College World Series has all a softball fan could ask for.
The mid-major Cinderella.
The sentimental favorite.
The dominant upstart.
The hometown hero.
The two-time defending champ looking for a three-peat.
The long-time power pushing for a return to prominence.
And enough sno-cones to turn 10,000 tongues blue.
The WCWS festivities get going tonight with an opening ceremony of sorts at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium. The Party at the Park begins at 7:30 p.m. and includes a concert by country singer Luke Bryan. The softball show kicks off Thursday at noon, with every game being televised by the ESPN networks.
But dull moments look to be rare between now and the best-of-three championship series that begins Monday night. Here's a look at some of the excitement that could be generated by this WCWS:
•The mid-major Cinderella: Louisiana is no stranger to the WCWS, but the Ragin' Cajuns had some work to do to get to OKC. They first had to beat No. 9 national seed LSU twice on the Tigers' home field to escape regional play. Then they knocked off eighth-seeded Houston on its home field in the best-of-three super-regional.
The husband-wife coaching tandem of Michael and Stefni Lotief have the Cajuns in their fifth WCWS, but they're the big underdog, especially in their opening-round matchup against No. 1 seed Florida.
•The sentimental favorite: A little more a year after an on-campus shooting that took the lives of 33, the Hokie softball team is proudly carrying the banner for a university still healing from the devastating event.
And Virginia Tech knows a little about success in OKC. Pitcher Angela Tincher and the Hokies no-hit Team USA in an exhibition game at Hall of Fame Stadium in March. Now they're back looking for similar success.
•The dominant up-start/hometown hero: Former Oklahoma Sooner baseball player and softball assistant coach Tim Walton has the Florida Gators in their first WCWS, capping a brilliant rebuilding project at the Southeastern Conference school.
The 67-3 Gators are the No. 1 seed and Walton knows a little about winning championships. He was on OU's 1994 national championship baseball squad and helped coach the Sooners to the 2000 WCWS title.
•Chasing the three-peat: Arizona might be without head coach Mike Candrea this season while he tours the country in preparation for the Olympic Games with USA Softball, but the Wildcats still have Taryne Mowatt in the circle. She's not the biggest pitcher around, but she carried Arizona to the title last year.
•Long-time power: UCLA is back in the WCWS act this season after missing the show last year. The Bruins' last title came in 2004. A year later, they lost to Michigan in the championship series. Now they're looking to make it a dozen titles since 1982 and they've never gone more than three years without winning the national championship.
Who wants a sno-cone?
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