Oklahoma
‘The greatest to ever do it’: How Patty Gasso built a superpower at Oklahoma softball
NORMAN, Okla. — Patty Gasso pulled Jocelyn Alo into her office and told college softball’s eventual career home run queen to go home.
It was early April 2019, and Gasso, then in her 25th season coaching Oklahoma, had watched her budding superstar struggle for months. After leading the nation with 30 home runs as a freshman in 2018, Alo spent the initial weeks of her sophomore season mired in a slump, toiling under the heightened expectations and attention that followed her debut campaign. Across her first 40 games that spring, Alo homered just seven times.
“I didn’t know how to deal with it,” Alo said. “I felt it all fall and into the spring. I didn’t want to play softball. I didn’t enjoy showing up to practice. I lived with the pressure every single day.”
More than just a young hitter pressing in the batter’s box, Gasso saw Alo devolving into a frustrated presence capable of dragging the Sooners’ locker room down with her. So, Oklahoma’s coach handed Alo an enforced break before a three-game series at Kansas, barring her from practice, team workouts and the road trip.
For seven days, Alo lived as a normal student. Watching her teammates roll to a series sweep from her couch. Alo suddenly felt the perspective she had been missing wash over her. Alo returned to hit 85 home runs over the next three-and-a-half seasons, closing her career in 2022 as a two-time national champion and Division I softball’s all-time home run leader.
“As hard as I fought Patty on it, that was a monumental moment that shaped me and kind of propelled me into my success,” she said. “Coach Gasso knows how to bring greatness out of every player — not just on the field but in every aspect of life. There’s simply not enough words to explain how special she is and how important she’s been to the world of women’s sports.”
Perhaps there aren’t enough words to sum up Gasso’s legacy, but numbers paint the picture of a college softball pioneer and the game’s best coaching résumé. Since arriving to Oklahoma in 1994, Gasso has produced 1,565 wins, 84 All-Americans, 17 Women’s College World Series appearances and eight national championships, including four consecutive titles from 2021-24.
Gasso, 63, is authoring her latest triumph this spring. The defending champion Sooners open their latest WCWS trip against Tennessee on Thursday (2:30 p.m. ET, ESPN), favored to claim an unprecedented fifth straight national title.
“To stay at the top of the game and continually win year in, year out is incredible,” said Andrea Martensen [Davis], a member of the Sooners’ 2000 national title team. “She’s just the greatest to ever do it.”
How did Gasso transform Oklahoma into the sport’s preeminent modern dynasty, vault the Sooners into conversations with UConn women’s basketball and Alabama football and rise into status as one of the greatest coaches of all time? ESPN spoke with over a dozen former players and softball figures to capture the defining eras and near-constant evolutions that turned Gasso into college softball’s reluctant GOAT.
“My whole life all I wanted to ever be was a coach and a teacher,” Gasso told ESPN. “I love working with young people, I love watching girls turn into women, but I don’t love when someone credits me because the players have always been the ones doing it.
“I think of it like a symphony: The conductor is up there waving his wand around a little bit, but it’s the people playing the instruments that are really creating the music. That’s how I think about it.”
1990-2000: A coaching rise and a dynasty that almost never was
Oklahoma upset perennial power UCLA in the 2000 title game. Less than a year earlier, the Sooners’ nascent dynasty was on the verge of crumbling before it ever took off.
Oklahoma won 71.8% of its games from 1995-99 and reached the postseason in each of Gasso’s first five seasons, but the work of laying the foundation came at a cost. By the 1999 offseason, Gasso’s mind was essentially made up: She would coach the Sooners through the 2000 campaign, then resign and return to California.
“It was probably the hardest time of my life,” Gasso said. “I felt disconnected. I felt frustrated. I was running out of gas …. I really felt like I wasn’t being a very good mom or a very good coach.”
Five years earlier, Marita Hynes spent the early fall of 1994 on the patio of her Norman home making phone calls. A senior administrator and Oklahoma’s softball coach from 1977-84, Hynes had been appointed to identify a replacement for Jim Beitia, who’d left that September, months after leading the Sooners to the program’s first-ever NCAA tournament appearance.
Searching for a candidate who could build on Oklahoma’s momentum, Hynes sought particular influence from leaders within college softball’s West Coast power base. Arizona’s Mike Candrea. Sharron Backus and Sue Enquist at UCLA. Cal State Fullerton’s Judi Garman. Each told Hynes about a young coach who was dominating California’s junior college scene.
Future USA Softball Hall of Famer Mickey Davis, an old friend and the athletic director of Long Beach City College at the time, implored Hynes to take a chance on Gasso, who was eight months pregnant with her second son, DJ, when she accepted the Oklahoma job.
“She came to visit the campus with her husband, Jim, and we were sat in my tiny office in the football stadium,” Hynes said. “They asked if they could go somewhere to talk it over privately. I didn’t know if Patty was going to take the job or not. A few minutes later, they busted back into the room with little ‘OU’ stickers on their cheeks. The rest is history.”
A California native who starred at El Camino Junior College and Long Beach State, Gasso rose through the local high school coaching ranks in the late 1980s. She was 27 when she took over Long Beach City College’s softball program prior to the 1990 season. Over five seasons with the Vikings, Gasso instilled blue-collar principles, exacting standards and compiled a 161-59-1 record, collecting four conference championships and two regional junior college titles.
Members of Gasso’s earliest LBCC teams grumbled through mandated six-mile jogs each week, wondering when they’d ever have to cover such distance on the field. Only later did players like infielder Christine Benyak understand the purpose behind the early-morning runs.
“It wasn’t about physical fitness — Patty wanted us to have mental endurance,” Benyak said. “We were a team of nobodies, and she got every single ounce out of us that she could.”
Gasso brought three LBCC players, including Benyak, and the same ethos with her to Oklahoma prior to the 1995 season. The Sooners had a dress code on road trips, daily 5:30 a.m. workouts and a fierce coach dedicated to perfecting every single detail.
“She’d drop by our apartments and say, ‘Let’s see what’s in your fridge,’” Benyak recalled.
There were, however, reasons behind all of Gasso’s methods. Kisha Washington, a Sooners’ infielder from 1998-2001, remembers how infectious Gasso’s passion was. While Oklahoma collected a trio of Big 12 conference titles from 1996-99, a collective spirit formed in the years leading up to the 2000 title.
“The high standards she held for herself and everyone in her program — Patty changed our whole mindset,” Washington said. “She pulled stuff out of people that they didn’t even know they were capable of. By 2000, there was no stopping us.”
In the backdrop of the Sooners’ ascendence, Gasso was running on fumes.
The move to Oklahoma presented Gasso with a new challenge, but also a pay cut. “In the Midwest, women’s athletics was nowhere near where it is today in terms of investment,” said Gasso, who made less per year at Oklahoma than in her final season at junior college LBCC.
After Jim returned to California in 1999 to lead Fullerton Junior College’s soccer program, Gasso found herself managing a Division I program on a slim salary and raising two sons alone, smothered by the juggling act.
“I couldn’t manage all of it,” Gasso said. “I was worrying about my kids when I should have been thinking about my job and vice versa, and the money wasn’t worth living life that way.”
Hynes saw the stress on Gasso’s face daily, but noticed an unbending resilience, too. On May 21, 2000, as the Sooners celebrated the regional win over Oregon State that clinched the program’s first-ever WCWS appearance, Hynes made a beeline for Gasso.
“You’ve seen Patty smile a lot in the last four years, but she didn’t do a lot of that back then,” Hynes said. “I remember that day, she hugged me so hard and we just cried together.”
2001-12: Building a winner through evolution
Oklahoma’s triumph at the 2000 WCWS kept Gasso in Norman with a healthy pay bump.
But as the Sooners chased that success, they often fell short over the ensuing decade. From 2001-04, Oklahoma made four consecutive trips back to the WCWS without advancing past the second round. Super regional losses in 2005, ’07, ’08 and ’10 became dents during the program’s leanest run of Gasso’s tenure.
Seven years after the Sooners’ last WCWS appearance, the program returned but exited early in 2011, then fell to Alabama in the 2012 WCWS finals.
“There was just a different level of teams out there in those years,” said JT Gasso, who joined his mom’s staff as a graduate assistant in 2012. “We were always just missing a couple of those key pieces.”
Mississippi State head coach Samantha Ricketts never reach the WCWS as a player at Oklahoma from 2006-09. Thinking back to the spring she joined Gasso’s staff after graduation, Ricketts recalled seeing the early embers of a transformation.
“I remember having a conversation with Patty after she made some personnel moves,” Ricketts said. “She knew she needed people who were going to buy into the vision of the program. But Patty also seemed to know that she needed to make some bigger changes to push us forward.”
While the core principles the Sooners used to build their first national title team have remained central, it’s been Gasso’s willingness to evolve that unlocked a dynasty.
“She’s the same age as some of these other legendary coaches. But while so many of them seemed to get left behind, she just got better,” said Northwestern pitching coach Michelle Gascoigne, who pitched for the Sooners from 2010-13 and was an assistant under Gasso from 2014-15.
Gasso and her staff were quick to jump on the video tools and other scouting technologies that began creeping into softball in the late 2000s. She’s long been committed to exposing her players to the latest fitness trends, too. In the early 2010s, Gascoigne recalls the program introducing the Sooners to a game-changing new program: CrossFit. More recently, Gasso has embraced the transfer portal and welcomed name, image and likeness (NIL).
However, the single most transformative shift came in recruiting. By the mid-2000s, Gasso not only understood she needed the right people around her but that the Sooners wouldn’t contend consistently until they broke the West Coast powerhouses’ hold over the nation’s top recruits.
The bluebloods of the Pac-10 owned the three decades that followed the inaugural WCWS in 1982. UCLA emerged as the sport’s first dynasty and claimed six of the first nine national championships. Candrea and Arizona followed next with five titles in the 1990s.
Between 1982-2012, all but four national champions came from programs in Arizona, California or Washington. And the West Coast dominance reflected itself on the recruiting trail in the talent-rich pockets of Southern California, where the best players from elite travel teams funneled to the major college programs across the region, and seldom outside of it.
With her roots in Long Beach, Gasso remained tied in with the travel ball scene. But it was only after the Sooners lifted the 2000 trophy that Gasso was able to begin chipping away at Southern California’s talent pipeline in earnest and bolster Oklahoma’s credibility as an attractive landing spot.
Of the 16 players on the Sooners’ 2000 national title team, only three came from the West Coast. Over time, the scales of Oklahoma’s roster slanted further west. In 2013, Oklahoma rode a core of Californians — Gascoigne, Lauren Chamberlain, Destinee Martinez, Keilani Ricketts and Jessica Shults — to the program’s second national championship. From 2021-24, nearly a third of the 47 players who suited up across the Sooners’ four-peat hailed from California.
“There’s a point in coaching where you have to sell people on your program. If you’re successful, the program sells itself and then you become a destination,” said Candrea, who retired in 2021 after 36 seasons at Arizona. “Patty’s gotten kids from Southern California that back in the day never would have left California. She turned Oklahoma into a destination.”
2013-17: Gasso, IHOP aficionado and master motivator
A few years ago, at a coaches convention in San Antonio, JT Gasso attended a dinner of former Sooners. Around a table of former players from every era of his mother’s career, he realized that each generation had experienced a distinct version of her.
“The players from the early 2000s talked about how grateful they were for how hard she was on them,” JT said. “The next generation of players appreciated having more of a connection with my mom. And now, I think she’s kind of blended the two ways of coaching our players.”
Gasso’s longevity atop the sport is rooted in part to her appetite for reinvention, continually reshaping her coaching style while maintaining unwavering principles. Members of Gasso’s earliest teams are often awed when they return to Norman to see their former coach cracking a smile in the coaching box and dancing with her players after wins.
Another habit that would have seemed foreign to earlier generations: the one-on-one breakfast/lunch meetings Gasso began holding with her players in the 2010s.
“The thing I probably changed the most is I started listening instead of talking,” Gasso said. “I realized that I needed to be more connected with them … they yearn for that. They want that.”
A particular fan of IHOP, Gasso uses the time to check in with her players away from softball, often centering the conversations on school, faith and family. Among her players, the meals have developed a deeper trust and connection with a coach who says she’s “surrendered her ego” in recent years.
After a disjointed fall camp, Gasso met with each of her 20 players prior to the 2023 season. In May, they gave her an IHOP gift card to commemorate Gasso’s 61st birthday.
“We’re people to her, first and foremost,” two-time champion Shay Knighten said. “It’s why we were able to play the way we were able to play …. She doesn’t want to change you. She just wants you to be better and grow.”
Stories of Gasso’s feel for knowing what her teams need in a given moment — and her creative toolbox of motivational tactics — are legend, too.
“She’s a master motivator,” said Gasso’s youngest son DJ, an assistant coach at Arkansas. As a child, DJ watched his mother get ejected from a game, then helped her stage a faux locker room tantrum. “We basically decorated the locker room to make it look like she’d torn it up, tossing chairs and throwing stuff everywhere just so she could send a message to the team after.”
Interviews of Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan; films including “Gladiator” and “Secretariat;” covert ice cream under the noses of strict team nutritionists; Gasso has used them all over the years to catalyze her teams. She spent the early weeks of the 2019 season sprinkling anonymous Janet Jackson lyrics into her pregame speeches. Eventually, her players figured it out.
“For the rest of the year, Janet Jackson was the end all, be all,” said former outfielder Nicole Mendes. “If you wanted to say something, it had to be a Janet Jackson quote.”
Keilani Ricketts remembers the day Gasso dealt her players a needed dose of perspective weeks before the Sooners’ 2013 national title.
Oklahoma hosted Texas A&M for a super regional on May 24, 2013. Days earlier, an EF5 tornado had torn through Moore, Oklahoma, killing 26 people including 9-year-old Sydney Angle, whose family and youth softball team were invited to attend Game 1.
“The game ended up getting rained out and pushed to the next day,” Ricketts said. “But Patty said, ‘The kids are here, let loose and have some fun.’ She organized a bunch of relay races and I just remember sloshing around in the rain with these little 10-year-old girls who were so happy to be there.”
“Those were my last few weeks of college softball and it felt like there was so much on the line at that moment,” she continued. “Those races were a reminder of what matters and why we play.”
Weeks later, the 57-4 Sooners swept through the WCWS field before downing Tennessee in the finals and clinched the second title in program history. Back-to-back titles in 2016 and ’17 capped a run that cemented Oklahoma’s status as a national power.
2018-present: Managing from the mountaintop
The peak years of Gasso’s reign at Oklahoma, which saw the Sooners tally a 232-15 record on the way to four consecutive championships from 2021-24, coincided with a national boom in college softball’s popularity.
Veterans like Hynes and Candrea recall a simpler time when you could look up from the dugout and count the fans in the stands at the WCWS. Last June, the finals hosted a record crowd of 12,324 for Oklahoma’s title-clinching victory. Another 2.5 million viewers tuned in from home.
“The magnitude of everything in the sport has just exploded,” said Alo. “It was incredible to be a part of that. But it came with a lot more pressure to perform.”
Oklahoma’s four-peat stands as the most dominant stretch in the game’s history, but the expectations and heightened attention that surrounded the Sooners in those years weighed heavily. As storylines like Alo’s pursuit of the all-time home run record in the spring of 2022 and a record-setting, 71-game win streak that began a year later stoked the flames, Gasso felt the temperature rising around her program.
In the midst of the historic title run, she made insulating her players a chief priority.
“When it came to them playing, my attitude was to stay out of their way,” Gasso said. “I understood that group, where they were really, really going to be challenged was on the mental side because of the amount that was asked of them the past few years. They were exhausted.”
Managing a group fresh off back-to-back titles, Gasso took steps to protect her team and pushed the Sooners to look inward ahead of the 2023 season.
Weekly media obligations were cut down; daily routines recalibrated. The program even scaled back the presence of its official social media accounts. Yet, no opponent, outlet or online troll worked harder to test Oklahoma’s resolve at the height of the dynasty than Gasso, who dialed in on sharpening her team’s collective mentality.
“It was all about slowing things down,” said three-time All-American Jayda Coleman. “Some days, Coach Gasso had us doing visualization exercises in cold tubs. Other times, we would meditate in the outfield grass with our shoes and socks off and see how long we could just concentrate on one thing. She wanted us to lock in on all the smallest details.”
Oklahoma’s national title teams in 2023 and ’24 adopted a siege mentality. “We called it our bubble — 21 [players] versus everyone,” said pitcher Alex Storako. “It became about the process more than the results.” The Sooners posted a .937 winning percentage over those two seasons.
“That mentality allowed us to play free,” said Storako, a transfer from Michigan in 2023. “And when you get players playing free like that, you get the results that Coach Gasso got from us day in, day out and keep lifting trophies in June.”
While Gasso is loath to look toward the finish line — on both this spring or her coaching career — she has already cemented a legacy.
Some will measure it by her trophy case. Others, including Gasso herself, may point to the hundreds of lives her program has shaped. A torchbearer who raised the bar on investment into the sport, Gasso’s impact as the first softball coach to earn $1 million annually and a central driver behind the $48 million ballpark Oklahoma opened in 2024 ripples across the game.
“Everyone in the sport has a nicer stadium because of Patty, and I think establishing the credibility of Oklahoma softball is the hardest thing she’s accomplished here,” said Hynes. “But her desire for perfection is what she’ll be remembered for. That’s never stopped in 31 years.”
Oklahoma run-ruled Alabama on Saturday to punch its ticket to Oklahoma City, extending the nation’s longest active streak of consecutive WCWS appearances to nine.
The 13-2 win was a vintage Gasso-era victory. But with 14 new players on the roster in 2025, the road to this latest WCWS trip was hardly so straightforward. Gasso’s voice cracked Saturday as she spoke about the “scattered” roster she began molding last September.
Of her 18 super regional wins with the Sooners, few have been sweeter than this one.
“It’s been an incredible journey,” Gasso said. “The fact that we are wearing these [super regional champion] hats, I still can’t grasp how big this is. I didn’t expect this. … I think there’s some things that we can do at the World Series that are going to surprise some people.”
Oklahoma
2026 NBA Playoffs: Oklahoma City Thunder at Los Angeles Lakers best bet, odds, prediction
Their end is inevitable, but the Los Angeles Lakers (0-3) can stave off elimination when they host the Oklahoma City Thunder for Game 4 of the 2026 Western Conference Semifinals.
At BetMGM, Oklahoma City opened as -500 on the moneyline (Los Angeles at +375) and -10.5 favorites. However, the flood of pro-Thunder money has steamed them up to -11.5 favorites at the time of writing.
THE REFS IN THE OKC-LA SERIES WERE SO BAD, THE LAKERS HAD TO HAVE A POSTGAME MEETING WITH THEM
Oklahoma City Thunder’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander gets a layup vs. the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 2 of the 2026 Western Conference Semifinals at Paycom Center. (Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images)
OKC has won every game this series by 18+ points and has a seven-game winning streak over LA. That’s despite reigning NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander not putting up his typical crazy numbers.
Shai is scoring only 21.0 points per game in this series, slightly behind Thunder big man Chet Holmgren’s 21.3 PPG average, which leads the team.
LeBron James Is Trying To Avoid Another Sweep
LeBron James has only been swept three times in his career: the 2007 NBA Finals by the San Antonio Spurs, the 2018 NBA Finals by the Golden State Warriors and the 2023 Western Conference Finals by the Denver Nuggets.
FLOPPING IS RUINING THE NBA AND LEBRON SHOULD TAKE SOME BLAME FOR THAT
Maybe the sweep is a foregone conclusion, like the New York Knicks vs. Philadelphia 76ers series, but I’m counting on the Lakers dying on their sword and going out with honor.
Los Angeles Lakers All-Star LeBron James shoots over the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 3 of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images)
Los Angeles held a first-half lead in Games 2 and 3 and still lost by 18 and 23 points, respectively. Granted, perhaps that’s just OKC playing with its food more than anything the Lakers are doing right.
Still, it’s something for L.A. to build on.
Lakers Need Oklahoma City’s Role Players To Cool Off
The Lakers are hitting 39.3% of their 3-pointers in this series. Unfortunately for them, the Thunder are shooting 42.3% from behind the arc.
But Oklahoma City’s role players are doing most of the damage from deep. Thunder guards Jared McCain, Cason Wallace and Isaiah Joe, along with big man Jaylin Williams, are a combined 25 for 41 from 3-point range, good for a ridiculous 61.0%.
The Oklahoma City Thunder bench reacts after making a 3-pointer vs. the Los Angeles Lakers in the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images)
That’s not sustainable.
If these randoms hit fewer shots in Game 4, the Lakers can cover the spread.
Betting Market Is Overwhelmingly On OKC
Finally, 95% of the money at BetMGM is on Oklahoma City as of Monday morning, according to John Ewing.
While I’m not someone who bows at the altar of betting splits, 95% of people don’t beat the sportsbooks. We all know this.
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I know that’s simple logic, but if you blindly fade teams this popular in the betting market, you’ll probably have a positive return on investment.
Best Bet: Los Angeles Lakers +11.5
_____________________________
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Oklahoma
Tulsa Race Massacre reparations is soul-redeeming work for the US, Oklahoma civil rights lawyer says
NEW YORK (AP) — It wasn’t until his junior year of college that civil rights attorney Damario Solomon-Simmons learned about a devastating massacre that took place in his hometown of Tulsa, Oklahoma.
His African American studies professor lectured about what is known today as the Tulsa Race Massacre — the days in 1921 when white mobs carried out a scorched-earth campaign against an outnumbered Black militia protecting the fabled Black Wall Street, a prosperous all-Black community.
“I actually told a teacher, ‘I’m from Tulsa. That’s not true,’” Solomon-Simmons recalled. “And of course, I was wrong.”
That day planted a seed for the then-aspiring attorney, who went on to lead a reparations campaign for the living survivors of the massacre and their descendants. Nearly 105 years later, no one has been compensated for what they lost, and none of the culprits have been held accountable.
That fight for reparations is the subject of Solomon-Simmons’ first book, “Redeem a Nation: The Century-Long Battle to Restore the Soul of America,” which is intended as a blueprint for justice in historic atrocities that Black Americans endured but never received reparations for. The book hits shelves Tuesday.
After the massacre, more than 35 city blocks of the neighborhood known as Greenwood were leveled in fires, an estimated 191 businesses were destroyed, and roughly 11,000 Black residents were displaced. The state of Oklahoma declared the death toll to be only 36 people, although many historians and experts who have studied the event put the death toll between 75 and 300.
Greenwood, founded in 1906, had been a bustling city within a city, with Black-owned grocery stores, soda fountains, cafés, barbershops, a movie theater, music venues, cigar and billiard parlors, tailors and dry cleaners, rooming houses and rental properties.
“If you can ignore Greenwood, which was the beacon of Black prosperity and Black progress in the history of this country, then you can ignore Black people in general,” Solomon-Simmons recently told The Associated Press. “I think that’s why people around the nation are so focused on the work that we’re doing, because they understand what it means to all of Black America.”
Solomon-Simmons’s book comes just months before the United States will mark 250 years since its founding in 1776. That was 89 years before the institution of chattel slavery — meaning an enslaved person was held as legal property of another — was abolished. The civil rights attorney questions the idea that Americans can truly celebrate the country’s accomplishments when it has yet to pay reparations, which historians say informs modern day disparities in wealth between Black and white people.
“We cannot talk about what America has been and will be, without making sure that these issues are discussed and we get reparatory justice for both” slavery and the Tulsa massacre, Solomon-Simmons said.
‘America has never had a soul’
In 343 pages, Solomon-Simmons does more than recite the history of the massacre or make a legal thriller out of his reparations campaign. For him, securing justice for the survivors and descendants of the massacre is also about healing a nation whose earliest promises of equality for all rang hollow.
“When I speak of repairing America’s soul, I do not mean restoring something that was once whole,” Solomon-Simmons writes in the book. “America has never had a soul. … There was no moral center to recover.”
He suggests that America’s soul cannot be repaired if it is forced to choose between rebuilding the nation or repairing Black America. They must do both, he says.
“The struggle for justice in Greenwood is not about returning to a mythical past. It is about proving whether America can build a soul at all through truth, through justice, through repair.”
Reparations for slavery and other historical racial injustices has been debated in the U.S. since Reconstruction, through the Civil Rights Movement and for much of the 21st century. Jennifer L. Morgan, a professor of history at New York University, said such debates are complicated by the question of exactly who pays the reparations and exactly who receives the payment.
“I don’t think that we’re talking about individuals who owe anybody else reparations. I think we’re talking about states, about institutions, about the nation,” Morgan said. “America is still grappling with reparations because America is still grappling at the legacy of slavery, racial discrimination, Jim Crow, and violent exclusion of Black people from the body politic.”
Some opponents of reparations argue there are no living culprits or direct victims of enslavement, much less people with verifiable claims of harm that can be presented in a court of law.
Solomon-Simmons disagrees.
“We know who did the massacre — the perpetrators are still living in Tulsa,” he said referring to the city and the chamber of commerce, which plaintiffs alleged had a hand in obstructing Greenwood’s recovery.
There is one remaining massacre survivor involved in the reparations lawsuit: 111-year-old Lessie Benningfield Randle.
“If we cannot get her reparations while she’s alive, for the massacre, it’s gonna make it that much harder for us to get reparations for enslavement, Jim Crow, redlining and all those things that we are owed,” Solomon-Simmons said.
Fight for Tulsa reparations continues
In the book, Solomon-Simmons reflects on what committed him to the reparations fight.
While in law school, he was introduced to high profile civil rights attorneys working for the Reparations Coordinating Committee – the late Harvard Professor Charles Ogletree Jr., who mentored Barack and Michelle Obama; and the late Johnnie Cochran, who is widely known for defending O.J. Simpson during his trial for murder of his ex-wife. Solomon-Simmons became a law clerk for the committee.
After witnessing Ogletree argue a Tulsa reparations case in federal court in 2004, Solomon-Simmons said the practice of law stopped being just a credential for speaking, writing, or teaching. It became a calling.
In 2020, Solomon-Simmons led a lawsuit on behalf of 11 plaintiffs, including the last three known living survivors of the massacre, against the City of Tulsa and seven defendants. The suit was the first of its kind in state court and the first to get far enough to see a judge. In 2024, the Oklahoma Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit. In the final days of the Biden administration, the Justice Department released a report saying it had determined there is no longer an avenue for criminal prosecution over the massacre.
But the fight continues, Solomon-Simmons says, for cash payment to Randle and other descendants, as well as the return of land stolen after the massacre and during a period of urban renewal in Tulsa.
In 2025, the city’s first Black mayor, Monroe Nichols, endorsed a broad proposal dubbed Project Greenwood, which calls for financially compensating Randle, funding a scholarship program for descendants of victims, and designating June 1 as Tulsa Race Massacre Observance Day.
Solomon-Simmons also runs the nonprofit Justice for Greenwood, which he founded a year before the community marked the centennial of the massacre in 2021.
“One thing I’ve learned from this work, and as a lawyer in general, is that people want justice,” he said. “People want reparations, but people (also) want acknowledgment. They want to be seen. They want people to understand that something happened to them and their family, and they want an apology.”
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Aaron Morrison is the race and ethnicity news editor at AP.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma Hosts Ole Miss in Norman Once Again for Potential Playoff Primer
Earlier this year, Sooners On SI broke down Oklahoma’s opponents in 2026. With spring football in the rearview window, how do the Sooners’ foes look heading into the summer following their March/April practices? We continue with the Ole MIss Rebels.
As Oklahoma journeys deeper into November, the talent level keeps rising.
While Oklahoma worked to secure a pivotal player’s return for one final season, Ole Miss had already pulled off one of the offseason’s most impactful moves — locking in an extra year of eligibility for quarterback Trinidad Chambliss.
Exit Lane Kiffin, enter Pete Golding. Well, that already happened before the College Football Playoff, but now the country waits to see if Golding will be able to continue his impressive run as a head coach into an offseason.
How did spring treat the Rebels? Even if Ole Miss appears strong on paper. OU does get the benefit of hosting the Rebels for a second straight season once November arrives.
The Injury Front
Good news and bad news for Ole Miss during spring ball: The good is that no players will be dealing with injuries deep into the summer.
The bad news was that an “injury bug” plagued the offensive line, causing the defensive-minded coach to scale back on full-contact drills and practice during the spring to avoid further injury.
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While injuries weren’t a large concern for Ole Miss this spring, they have to deal with replacing top-end talent — mostly on defense. Talents like edge rusher Princewill Umanmielen, who transferred to LSU to follow Kiffin.
Ole Miss Strength
Chambliss ranks among the best quarterbacks in the country, and the way he rises to the occasion in Ole Miss’ biggest games makes the Rebels dangerous every time he takes the field.
Even without Kiffin, Ole Miss was busy during the transfer portal in trying to replenish a great deal of skill talent that either exited the program or graduated.
Post-Spring Oklahoma Opponent Breakdowns
With Kewan Lacy in the backfield and tight ends Dae’Quan Wright and Luke Hasz, the Rebels’ offense will no doubt be one of the tougher units Oklahoma will face.
If Golding is able to maintain his impressive control of the program he showcased during last season’s College Football Playoff, the offense should still be one of the best in the country.
The Final Verdict
Ole Miss has had Oklahoma’s number in the Sooners’ first two years in the SEC. Could a fortitous schedule factor — a second game in Norman in back-to-back years — finally get Oklahoma over the Rebels?
No matter the feelings prior to the game, Ole Miss may be one of the tougher games on the schedule for OU — including the first six-week crucible. Chambliss has proven to be that good, and despite the defensive departures, Ole Miss has proven to reload talent quickly.
Depending on Oklahoma’s record at the time of the game, their match with the Rebels could prove to pivotal for either team’s playoff chances. Last season for OU, this was the road game against Alabama.
OU will have the talent to combat Ole Miss, but the Rebels will have a sure-fire Heisman contender under center.
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