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
Jack Van Dorselaer: ‘No-Brainer’ to Follow Jason Witten to Oklahoma
NORMAN — Located just 190 miles from Norman, Southlake, TX, sits comfortably within Oklahoma’s recruiting footprint. Many Dallas–Fort Worth prospects grow up viewing OU as either a favorite destination or a local option thanks to its close proximity.
New Oklahoma tight end Jack Van Dorselaer, however, had a different perspective during his recruitment at Southlake Carroll High School.
“Honestly, growing up, I wasn’t the biggest OU fan,” Van Dorselaer said Monday during Oklahoma’s Spring Media Day. “When I was getting recruited, I was really into Tennessee and going to Tennessee.”
He wasn’t exaggerating — his recruiting profile backs it up. Oklahoma extended an offer to Van Dorselaer on March 25, 2023, never took a visit. At the time, former tight ends coach Joe Jon Finley’s track record probably didn’t do much to boost confidence in a highly-touted tight end’s development.
Van Dorselaer would go on to pledge to the Volunteers, playing in all 13 games — an experience where he “learned some things as the season went on,” — before entering the transfer portal.
If Oklahoma’s previous tight ends coach left doubts lingering, one phone call changed everything. Ironically, it came from a Tennessee alum — now tabbed to coach that same position in Norman. For Van Dorselaer, it was the pitch that finally landed.
“I guess that was kind of a funny coincidence (getting a call from Jason Witten), but once he got the job, it was kind of a no‑brainer for me,” Van Dorselaer said. “To not pass that up and also to come back home and play in the SEC and play for Oklahoma.
“And I just felt like this offense was better for me and a better opportunity for me to succeed at the next level,” he added.
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The irony ran deeper than Van Dorselaer’s plan to leave Tennessee — only to get recruited by a Tennessee legend for Oklahoma.
It also sprang from his Southlake roots, where he grew up idolizing hometown hero Witten through his Hall of Fame Cowboys career — an opportunity Van Dorselaer sees as being able to make him a more complete tight end.
“I think last year at Tennessee, I was really utilized in the run game,” Van Dorselaer said “I feel like I have the ability to do everything — not just run block, not just pass catch, but to do everything. A lot of tight ends just want to catch and not block. I think coach Witten offers that coaching that really helped me in the pass game.”
Van Dorselaer joins fellow transfer tight ends Hayden Hansen and Rocky Beers — all tasked, as general manager Jim Nagy put it, with “flipping the room” from last year under Witten. Each brings a unique skill set that Ben Arbuckle will channel his inner Dr. Frankenstein to stitch together.
If Hansen is the bigger body that can help open lanes for Sooner ball carries and Beers is the field-stretching tight end, Van Dorselaer already seems him as a bridge between then two.
“I think (Arbuckle) sees me more as like a hybrid guy — not just blocking, not just pass catching, but doing everything,” he said. “I think that’s kind of also what drew me to Oklahoma, was that aspect of it.”
For that vision to be fully realized, Van Dorselaer will have to use this spring and summer as the time to build chemistry with his new quarterback, John Mateer, who appealed to the tight end during his transfer portal recruitment.
“I think his mindset is a big thing for me,” Van Dorselaer said. “But I mean, just being around him more, I think his mindset is something that’s cool for me to be a part of. He holds me to a standard that is going to make me a better football player and a better person.”
Van Dorselaer enters spring ball with a clean slate, syncing his hybrid skill set alongside Mateer’s winning mindset and under coach Witten’s complete-tight-end blueprint.
Oklahoma
Christian Coleman ‘motored up’ as Oklahoma State basketball advances in Big 12 Tournament
KANSAS CITY, MO — Christian Coleman reached high but couldn’t grab the alley-oop pass from Jaylen Curry.
But it glanced off his fingertips, hit the backboard, then the rim and fell in the basket.
It wasn’t the prettiest clutch play by the Oklahoma State forward, but it was as important as any of them.
Coleman’s alley-oops layup with just over two minutes remaining helped the 14th-seeded Cowboys stretch their lead on the way to a 92-83 win over No. 11 Colorado in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament on Tuesday at T-Mobile Center.
Had Coleman gotten his hands on the ball, it would have been a massive exclamation-point jam, yet as he rose for it, he could tell it was out of his reach.
“But God had his hands around it and it kinda fell in for me,” Coleman said with a laugh. “So we count it.”
Coleman finished with 17 points and a season-high 14 rebounds, backing guard Anthony Roy, who had 17 of his game-high 24 points in the second half. Curry added 15 points, five rebounds and four assists.
Late in the game, the lanky 6-foot-8 Coleman moved to center as coach Steve Lutz was forced to put a small lineup on the floor.
The Cowboys were without their two most-used bigs, Parsa Fallah and Andrija Vukovic, because of injuries. Their freshman replacements, Benjamin Ahmed and Mekhi Ragland, found themselves in foul trouble.
“He’s versatile,” said OSU point guard Kanye Clary, who had seven points, six assists and five rebounds. “He can guard the 1-5. He switches and plays hard.
“When he’s motored up, I don’t really think there’s nobody who can stop him. He’s the only person who can stop himself. And tonight, he went out there and showed how impactful he is.”
The Cowboys (19-13) will take on sixth-seeded TCU at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday as they try to once again keep their NCAA Tournament hopes alive.
“Our mentality has been the same every game in the Big 12, because the league is so darn hard,” Lutz said. “If you look forward, you have no chance.
“I’m proud of the guys for sticking together and banding together, because we’ve had some key people, teammates, go down and we had to piece it together. I’m just happy for them and excited to face TCU tomorrow night.”
Here are three takeaways from the OSU victory:
Anthony Roy settles in for big game
In an odd twist, Colorado was hit with a technical foul for not submitting its lineup in time prior to the game, and that put Roy on the free throw line before the tipoff.
He missed the attempt, but it was the only one he’d miss all night, hitting the next 10.
Roy hit some rough patches throughout the first half, at one point getting quickly subbed out after missing an awkward 3-pointer from the corner.
But in the second half, he found his rhythm, going 5 of 6 from the floor with a pair of 3-pointers and a couple tough drives for layups.
“He got to the free-throw line and made 10 of 11,” Lutz said. “I thought he did a good job with that. And we tease him a bunch about his defense, but I thought at the end of the game when it mattered, he played good defense. And he rebounded the basketball.”
Freshmen Benjamin Ahmed, Mekhi Ragland play key minutes
With the Cowboys thin in the frontcourt, Ahmed made his third straight start, and Ragland was the first center off the bench.
Ahmed went to the bench after getting his fourth foul with 7:20 to play and didn’t return, but still played his second-most minutes in a game this season at 21. He finished with seven points, six rebounds and a blocked shot.
“Parsa going down, he spoke to me about it that I have a big role to fill,” Ahmed said. “It’s a learning process for me. I’m just excited to see what the future holds for me.”
Ragland had four points, a rebound and an assist in eight minutes — his most against a Big 12 opponent.
“It felt good being able to step up,” Ragland said. “I’ve wanted to show myself and show what I can do all year.
“The first couple up-and-downs, you’re a little nervous, but that goes away fast. It’s just basketball at the end of the day, so I was ready for the moment.”
OSU by the numbers
∎ The Cowboys are now 29-1 under Steve Lutz when scoring at least 81 points. The only loss came to TCU earlier this year, 95-92 in overtime at Gallagher-Iba Arena.
∎ The 92 points scored Tuesday are the most by OSU in the Big 12 Tournament. The previous high was 87, scored against Colorado in 2005.
∎ Coleman’s 14 rebounds were his season high and tied his career high.
∎ Adding a new combination Tuesday, OSU has used 19 different starting lineups this season.
∎ Clary led the team in plus-minus at 17, followed by Vyctorius Miller at 14.
Scott Wright covers Oklahoma State athletics for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Scott? He can be reached at swright@oklahoman.com or on X at @ScottWrightOK. Sign up for the Oklahoma State Cowboys newsletter to access more OSU coverage. Support Scott’s work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at subscribe.oklahoman.com or by using the link at the top of this page.
Oklahoma State vs. TCU
TIPOFF: 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Mo. (ESPNU)
Oklahoma
Severe weather threat increasing for Oklahoma tonight
OKLAHOMA CITY (KOKH) — Severe weather is still expected tonight across much of our area. In fact, the threats have increased since this morning due to more clearing skies in western Oklahoma. More sunshine means more instability to work with.
SPC Severe Weather Outlook. (KOKH)
Due to this, the Storm Prediction Center has increased all hazards for our part of Oklahoma. The strongest storms could produce winds up to 80 mph, baseball size hail, and a few tornadoes. This would be from essentially now until early Wednesday morning.
SPC Tornado Outlook. (KOKH)
The tornadic potential has increased across much of the area generally along and east of I-44/I-35.
The general thinking is that discrete supercells will form in western North Texas in the 3:00 PM to 5:00 PM window and begin to make their way towards southwest Oklahoma. These storms will then quickly go from being individual cells to more clusters of storms. This would increase the wind potential and make it possible for brief spinup tornadoes to form. These QLCS (quasi-linear convective systems) tornadoes can form and develop quickly.
Once the storms are generally east of I-35, there won’t be any more cells anymore and we’d be looking at a larger squall line. Check out the below model images for a look at the evolution of the storms tonight:
There is also the potential for very heavy rain with these storms too.
A cold front will sweep the storms away to the east tonight. After the front, strong northerly winds are possible. Due to this, there is a Wind Advisory Wednesday for parts of our area.
Wednesday Wind Gusts. (KOKH)
These strong winds will increase the fire danger Wednesday afternoon.
To stay up to date with the latest forecast, be sure to download the Fox 25 Weather App.
Download the Fox 25 First Warning Weather App. (KOKH)
Stay with Fox 25, we’ve got your back.
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