Oklahoma
Oklahoma’s Patty Gasso: Softball’s New Replay Rules ‘Taking Away From the Excitement of the Game’
AUSTIN, TX — This past weekend’s top five matchup between Oklahoma and Texas had a little bit of everything.
Great pitching, excellent defensive plays in the field, timely home runs, dramatic seventh innings and intrigue that captured the attention of the softball world.
But it also featured another constant fixture in 2024 — lengthy replay reviews.
In both Friday and Saturday’s contests, runs were wiped off the board after a challenge from each side deemed a runner left base early, and then Saturday’s final out of the plate delayed the finality of the play after the umpires took another look at Reese Atwood’s tag on Maya Bland.
This past offseason, runners leaving base early became a play that can be challenged, a decision that feels as if it’s slowed down every series across the country.
“It’s like having another umpire with the reviews,” OU coach Patty Gasso said after Saturday’s defeat to Texas. “Umpires can’t watch everything, and when you’re usually at second, you’re feeling, ‘Oh no one’s looking. No one’s paying attention.’
“Now you have every single person on your bench watching something. Everyone’s got eyes on something for a reason, and it can win you a game.”
Texas coach Mike White, who actually served on softball’s rules committee, said the ability to challenge such plays is being used in a manner that was never intended.
“I guess I can blame myself,” White said with a smile on Saturday. “But the purpose of the rule was to stop people leaving early on steals and now it’s become like more intertwined with base hits, home runs, doubles. And it’s very close because from what I understand it’s so close, like millimeters or centimeters within leaving or not, so close you can’t see it by eye. That’s why it’s not being called by the umpires.
“So when you have these TV cameras they can slow it right down. So it’s very, very hard and it’s really something we should probably look at (changing) for sure.”
Friday, the Sooners might have opened up an even bigger lead than the two-run advantage gained in the third inning.
Rylie Boone appeared to have moved Kinzie Hansen from first base to third with a no-out single in the top of the third inning, and Oklahoma looked as if it could open the floodgates by building on its 1-0 advantage.
Instead, Hansen was ruled to have left first base early after a replay review.
OU still added another run in the inning, but the Sooners had to wait until Jayda Coleman’s three-run blast in the fifth inning to really feel comfortable.
The shoe was then on the other foot on Saturday.
Oklahoma reliever Karlie Keeney was staring down disaster in the bottom of the sixth inning after inheriting a bases loaded, no-out jam.
Texas looked to effectively end the game with a pair of insurance runs, but it was Gasso who one a challenge on a runner leaving early to record the first out of the inning.
Keeney then battled back to keep the OU deficit at 2-1 heading into the seventh inning — a lead that the Sooners almost erased with Boone’s double that Gasso sent Bland home on.
The rules surrounding any replays obviously won’t change during the season, so it’s up to the players to adjust to the reality that every moment on-base can be reviewed, just at pitchers had to adjust to the pitch clock.
“This game is all about adjustments,” Hansen said on Saturday. “… We’ve trained our whole lives (to) kind of leave when the pitcher is at 12 o’clock (in the pitching motion)… So it’s an adjustment. It’s the game. That’s what happens.
“… It’s definitely something crucial that needs to be worked on. I’m interested to see how that rule plays out moving forward.”
Gasso, much like every coaching staff, is just working to best equip her team for all scenarios this year, even if she’d like to see the replay rules adjusted.
“Do I love it? No because I do think it’s taking away from the excitement of the game,” she said. “But it is what it is. What I would like to see if you ask for a review and you get it overturned, you get that review back… We’ve been burned by it, we’ve been helped by it.
“You know what’s happening now? No matter what. If it’s the winning run, someone’s gonna say do it just to check. What will it hurt? It’s kind of being taken advantage of now.”
Oklahoma won’t be concerned by what gets replayed or not on Tuesday.
The Sooners’ task will be to bounce back after dropping the program’s first Big 12 series since 2011.
Before diving back into league play, OU first heads north to take on Wichita State in a contest that was rescheduled from March 26.
First pitch between the Sooners (35-3, 13-2 Big 12) and the Shockers (18-14, 9-6 AAC) is slated for 6 p.m. at Wilkins Stadium, and the game will be broadcast on ESPN+.
Oklahoma
OKFB pleased with newly proposed settlement in long-running State of Oklahoma poultry case | Oklahoma Farm Bureau
Oklahoma Farm Bureau President Stacy Simunek released the following statement after the State of Oklahoma and 11 Arkansas-based poultry announced Monday, July 13, that a nearly $44 million settlement had been reached in the decades-long lawsuit regarding the application of chicken litter in the Illinois River Watershed.
Oklahoma Farm Bureau members are pleased with the proposed settlement reached between the State of Oklahoma and 11 poultry companies operating in Oklahoma’s Illinois River Watershed over the state’s long-running lawsuit that was based on outdated science and production methods.
The original lawsuit, filed in 2005, created uncertainty for family farmers and ranchers for more than two decades, and this agreement provides a way for Oklahoma farm and ranch families to continue their important work to feed Americans without being unnecessarily burdened.
We appreciate Attorney General Drummond working with the poultry industry to reach a proposed solution that allows the poultry companies and our family farmers to continue to produce the food products we all rely upon while ensuring our shared natural resources are safeguarded for generations to come.
Our state’s farmers and ranchers, including poultry producers in the Illinois River Watershed, are committed to implementing voluntary environmental stewardship practices each and every day to ensure their land is productive and our rural communities are protected.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Ford Sports Blitz: July 12, 2026
In this week’s Your Vote Counts, Jason Dunnington and Sen. Paul Rosino discuss the importance of Oklahoma’s runoff election, Oklahoma insurance lawsuits, and mental health issues.
Oklahoma
Where Every Oklahoma Player was Selected in the MLB Draft
This tracker will be updated as the MLB Draft progresses throughout the weekend.
Oklahoma is still basking in the shine of capturing the program’s third national title last month.
The players have spread out to participate in summer leagues across the country, and head coach Skip Johnson has been hard at work finalizing the roster for next year through the transfer portal and rounding out the coaching staff, which now includes his son Tyler Johnson to fill the void left by Todd Butler, who departed for Florida.
A handful of OU upperclassmen will have big decisions to make.
The MLB Draft got underway on Saturday, meaning a few Sooners will have to decide whether to return to school for an additional year or start their professional careers.
Here are the Oklahoma players who have been selected in the draft.
|
Player |
Position |
Round |
Pick |
Team |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Brendan Brock |
C/OF |
3 |
99 |
New York Yankees |
|
Jaxon Willits |
INF |
5 |
141 |
Los Angeles Angels |
|
LJ Mercurius |
RHP |
5 |
148 |
Arizona Diamondbacks |
|
Deiten Lachance |
C |
6 |
184 |
Cleveland Guardians |
|
Camden Johnson |
INF |
9 |
269 |
Kansas City Royals |
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Oklahoma’s Draft Picks
- Brendan Brock did a bit of everything for the Sooners. He started 65 of OU’s 66 games either at catcher, in the outfield or as the Sooners’ designated hitter. He hit .302 for the year, totaling 74 hits, 11 doubles, two triples and he scored 60 runs. Brock bashed 13 home runs, finished with 55 RBIs and stole 28 bases. He hit .400 in the Men’s College World Series, which included a home run, a double and three RBIs.
- Oklahoma shortstop Jaxon Willits was the second Sooner off the board. The junior started 64 games and hit .313 with seven home runs, 55 RBIs, 20 doubles and three triples. Willits truly shined in the World Series. He was named the Most Outstanding Player in Omaha. Willits went 13-for-26 at the plate, setting the school record for hits in a single MCWS, and he had a home run, four doubles and seven RBIs. He’s the son of OU associate head coach Reggie Willits, and his brother, Eli, was the first-overall pick in the 2025 MLB Draft.
- Right-handed pitcher LJ Mercurius was selected a few picks after Willits. The junior transferred to OU from UNLV and was able to play alongside his brother, Xander. LJ began the year as one of Oklahoma’s starters, landing him on the Golden Spikes Award Midseason Watch List, but later in the year he transitioned to a bullpen role, where he thrived. He ended the year with a 4.43 ERA in 83 1/3 innings. He started 12 games and made 22 appearances, ending with a 7-7 record and four saves. He struck out 103 batters and issued 27 walks while also hitting 10 batters. Mercurius held opponents to a .235 batting average against him in 2026.
- A member of the MCWS All-Tournament Team, catcher Deiten Lachance was the man for the big moment throughout the postseason. He finished the year batting .327 with 18 home runs and 69 RBIs in 65 appearances, and he also added 12 doubles and two triples. Lachance homered three times at the World Series, including a pair of bombs in the first contest of the Championship Series against North Carolina.
- Camden Johnson started 62 games at third base and appeared in all but one game for the Sooners. He hit .298 for the season with 11 doubles, three triples and nine homers, and Johnson drove in 48 runs. He also stole 31 bases.
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