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2008 NCAA Division I softball tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2008 NCAA Division I
softball tournament
Teams64
Finals site
ChampionsArizona State (1st NCAA (3rd overall) title)
Runner-upTexas A&M (7th WCWS Appearance)
Winning coachClint Myers (1st title)
MOPKatie Burkhart (Arizona State)

The 2008 NCAA Division I softball tournament was held from May 15 through June 4, 2008. 64 NCAA Division I college softball teams met after having played their way through a regular season, and for some, a conference tournament, to play in the NCAA Tournament. The tournament culminated with eight teams playing in the 2008 Women's College World Series at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

National seeds

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Bold indicates WCWS participant.

Regionals and super regionals

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Bold indicates winner. * indicates host.

Gainesville Super Regional

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First round Second round Regional finals Super regionals
               
1 Florida 7
Georgia Tech 2
1 Florida 3
UCF 0
UCF 3
South Florida 2
1 Florida 0 10
Gainesville, FL Regional
UCF 1 0
Georgia Tech 9
South Florida 2
Georgia Tech 1
UCF 7
1 Florida 4 4
California 2 2
16 Fresno State 11
Sacramento State 0
16 Fresno State 0
California 3
San Diego State 1
California 4
California 2 7
Fresno, CA Regional
16 Fresno State 3 6
Sacramento State 1
San Diego State 7
San Diego State 0
16 Fresno State 2

Houston Super Regional

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First round Second round Regional finals Super regionals
               
9 LSU 8
Mississippi Valley State 0
9 LSU 4
Louisiana−Lafayette 9
East Carolina 1
Louisiana–Lafayette 2
Louisiana−Lafayette 6
Baton Rouge, LA Regional
9 LSU 3
Mississippi Valley State 2
East Carolina 4
East Carolina 1
9 LSU 9
Louisiana−Lafayette 6 3 4
8 Houston 4 6 0
8 Houston 9
Delaware State 0
8 Houston 2
Washington 0
Washington 2
Texas 1
8 Houston 2
Houston, TX Regional
Washington 1
Delaware State 2
Texas 3
Texas 3
Washington 5

College Station Super Regional

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First round Second round Regional finals Super regionals
               
5 Texas A&M 2
Stephen F. Austin 0
5 Texas A&M 4
Louisiana Tech 0
Louisiana Tech 1
Auburn 0
5 Texas A&M 6
College Station, TX Regional
Louisiana Tech 0
Stephen F. Austin 0
Auburn 2
Auburn 1
Louisiana Tech 2
5 Texas A&M 6 9
12 Stanford 1 4
12 Stanford 4
Lehigh 0
12 Stanford 3
UMass 0
UMass 6
Princeton 0
12 Stanford 1 6
Amherst, MA Regional
UMass 2 0
Lehigh 7
Princeton 4
Lehigh 1
UMass 3

Ann Arbor Super Regional

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First round Second round Regional finals Super regionals
               
13 Tennessee 3
Winthrop 0
13 Tennessee 0
Virginia Tech 4
Louisville 0
Virginia Tech 1
Virginia Tech 1 4
Knoxville, TN Regional
13 Tennessee 7 2
Winthrop 1
Louisville 4
13 Tennessee 8
Louisville 1
Virginia Tech 0 1 6
4 Michigan 1 0 1
4 Michigan 13
Wright State 5
4 Michigan 8
Notre Dame 0
Notre Dame 9
Kent State 1
4 Michigan 5
Ann Arbor, MI Regional
Kent State 0
Wright State 2
Kent State 3
Notre Dame 5
Kent State 7

Tuscaloosa Super Regional

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First round Second round Regional finals Super regionals
               
3 Alabama 8
Chattanooga 0
3 Alabama 10
Jacksonville State 1
Jacksonville State 4
Florida State 3
3 Alabama 4
Tuscaloosa, AL Regional
Jacksonville State 1
Chattanooga 3
Florida State 5
Jacksonville State 10
Florida State 1
3 Alabama 6 7
Missouri 1 1
14 Long Beach State 2
Creighton 1
14 Long Beach State 3
Missouri 5
Missouri 3
Iowa 2
Missouri 5
Iowa City, IA Regional
Iowa 4
Creighton 1
Iowa 2
Iowa 5
14 Long Beach State 2

Tempe Super Regional

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First round Second round Regional finals Super regionals
               
11 Northwestern 6
Western Illinois 0
11 Northwestern 6
DePaul 0
Drake 1
DePaul 3
11 Northwestern 2 3
Evanston, IL Regional
DePaul 3 2
Drake 1
Western Illinois 3
Western Illinois 0
DePaul 6
11 Northwestern 1 0
6 Arizona State 3 9
6 Arizona State 2
Stony Brook 0
6 Arizona State 10
Hawaii 0
Mississippi State 7
Hawaii 9
6 Arizona State 8
Tempe, AZ Regional
Hawaii 0
Stony Brook 3
Mississippi State 8
Mississippi State 4
Hawaii 7

Tucson Super Regional

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First round Second round Regional finals Super regionals
               
7 Arizona 11
Canisius 0
7 Arizona 10
Hofstra 0
Long Island 0
Hofstra 1
7 Arizona 5
Hempstead, NY Regional
Hofstra 0
Canisius 3
Long Island 2
Canisius 1
Hofstra 5
7 Arizona 3 0 5
10 Oklahoma 1 2 2
10 Oklahoma 6
Oregon 0
10 Oklahoma 6
Arkansas 5
Arkansas 7
Tulsa 5
10 Oklahoma 11
Norman, OK Regional
Oregon 0
Oregon 1
Tulsa 0
Oregon 3
Arkansas 0

Los Angeles Super Regional

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First round Second round Regional finals Super regionals
               
15 Georgia 9
Campbell 0
15 Georgia 9
BYU 3
BYU 3
North Carolina 0
15 Georgia 4
Chapel Hill, NC Regional
BYU 0
Campbell 7
North Carolina 6
BYU 1
Campbell 0
15 Georgia 1 0
2 UCLA 6 6
2 UCLA 8
Cal State Fullerton 3
2 UCLA 6
Nevada 4
Nevada 4
Purdue 1
2 UCLA 4
Los Angeles Regional
Nevada 3
Cal State Fullerton 3
Purdue 4
Purdue 1
Nevada 2

Automatic bids

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Women's College World Series

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Participants

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School Conference Record (conference) Head coach WCWS appearances†
(including 2008 WCWS)
WCWS best finish† WCWS W–L record†
(excluding 2008 WCWS)
Alabama SEC 56–5 (25–3) Patrick Murphy 5
(last: 2006)
5th
(2000, 2005)
2–8
Arizona Pac-10 41–16 (13–8) Larry Ray (acting coach) 20
(last: 2007)
1st
(1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2006, 2007)
57–25
Arizona State Pac-10 61–5 (18–3) Clint Myers 7
(last: 2007)
3rd
(1982, 2002)
5–12
Florida SEC 67–3 (27–1) Tim Walton 1 0–0
Louisiana–Lafayette Sun Belt 51–12 (19–3) Michael Lotief
Stefni Lotief
5
(last: 2003)
3rd
(1993)
5–8
Texas A&M Big 12 54–7 (17–1) Jo Evans 7
(last: 2007)
1st
(1983, 1987)
18–10
Virginia Tech ACC 49–17 (16–5) Scot Thomas 1 0–0
UCLA Pac-10 48–6 (17–4) Kelly Inouye-Perez 24
(last: 2006)
1st
(1982, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1999, 2003, 2004)
88–27

† Excludes results of the pre-NCAA Women's College World Series of 1969 through 1981.

Tournament notes

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  • Florida and Virginia Tech were the first teams in their respective school histories to reach the WCWS in the NCAA era.

Results

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Bracket

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First round Second round Semifinals Finals
               
1 Florida 2
Louisiana–Lafayette 3
Louisiana–Lafayette 1
5 Texas A&M 2
5 Texas A&M 1
Virginia Tech 0
5 Texas A&M 1 1
1 Florida 6 0
1 Florida 2
Virginia Tech 0
1 Florida 2
2 UCLA 0
5 Texas A&M 0 0
6 Arizona State 3 11
3 Alabama 1
6 Arizona State 3
6 Arizona State 4
2 UCLA 0
2 UCLA 1
7 Arizona 0
6 Arizona State 3
3 Alabama 1
3 Alabama 5
7 Arizona 1
3 Alabama 3
Louisiana–Lafayette 1

Game results

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Date Game Winner Score Loser Notes
May 29, 2008 Game 1 Louisiana–Lafayette 3–2 Florida In 8th inn., ULL pitcher Ashley Brignac threw 21 straight pitches after reaching a count of 3 balls, 2 strikes before the batter was retired.[1][2]
Game 2 Texas A&M 1–0 Virginia Tech A throwing error allowed Texas A&M to score an unearned run in the 6th inning.[3][4]
Game 3 Arizona State 3–1 Alabama ASU erased a 0-1 deficit and scored 3 runs in the 7th inning.[5][6]
Game 4 UCLA 1–0 Arizona Two errors in the first inning helped UCLA score their only run.[7][8]
May 30, 2008 Game 5 Texas A&M 2–1 Louisiana–Lafayette Louisiana–Lafayette tied the game in the bottom of the 6th inning;
Texas A&M scored the winning run in the top of the 7th inning.[9][10]
Game 6 Arizona State 4–0 UCLA Arizona State scored 2 runs in both 3rd and 5th innings;
UCLA had 4 hits and Arizona State had 3 hits.[11][12]
May 31, 2008 Game 7 Florida 2–0 Virginia Tech VT eliminated in 9 innings; UF scored 2 runs in top of the 9th, VT pitcher Angela Tincher missed tying WCWS record for SO in extra-inning game by 1.[13][14]
Game 8 Alabama 5–1 Arizona Alabama scored 4 runs in the 6th inning to knock out 2-time defending champion Arizona.[15][16]
Game 9 Florida 2–0 UCLA Florida scored on a pitching error and an RBI single in the first and sixth inning, respectively, to eliminate UCLA. UCLA's class became the first in school history to not win a WCWS title.[17]
Game 10 Alabama 3–1 Louisiana–Lafayette Louisiana–Lafayette eliminated;
Alabama scored the winning runs in the 5th inning.[18]
June 1, 2008 Game 11 Florida 6–1 Texas A&M Florida used 3 unearned runs in the 4th inning aided by a catcher's error to break a 1–1 tie and a 2-run HR extended the lead in the 7th inning.[19]
Game 12 Arizona State 3–1 Alabama ASU scored on a three-run home run. ASU advances to the National Championship series, and Alabama is eliminated.[20][21]
Game 13 Texas A&M 1–0 Florida Texas A&M advances to the National Championship series.
Macie Morrow scored on Kelsey Spittler's triple in the top of the 9th inning.[22][23]
June 2, 2008 Finals game 1 Arizona State 3–0 Texas A&M Arizona State had a run in the 1st, 3rd, and 5th innings.
Krista Donnenwirth hit a home run.[24][25]
June 3, 2008 Finals game 2 Arizona State 11–0 Texas A&M Arizona State scored 7 runs in the 7th inning to make the game an 11-run game, blanking the Aggies and taking home the national championship trophy.[26]

Championship game

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[27]

School Top Batter Stats.
Arizona State Sun Devils Kaitlin Cochran (CF) 1-2 3RBIs HR 2BBs
Texas A&M Aggies Megan Gibson (P) 1-2 2B BB SB
School Pitcher IP H R ER BB SO AB BF
Arizona State Sun Devils Katie Burkhart (W) 7.0 4 0 0 1 13 25 26
Texas A&M Aggies Megan Gibson (L) 7.0 10 11 10 3 5 31 35

Final standings

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Place School WCWS record
1st Arizona State 5–0
2nd Texas A&M 3–3
3rd Florida 3–2
Alabama 2–2
5th UCLA 1–2
Louisiana–Lafayette 1–2
7th Arizona 0–2
Virginia Tech 0–2

All Tournament Team

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The following players were members of the All-Tournament Team:[28]

  • Francesca Enea, Florida
  • Charlotte Morgan, Alabama
  • Stacey Nelson, Florida
  • Holly Tankersley, La.-Lafayette
  • Angela Tincher, Virginia Tech
  • Megan Gibson, Texas A&M
  • Jami Lobpries, Texas A&M
  • Kaitlin Cochran, Arizona State
  • Krista Donnenwirth, Arizona State
  • Lesley Rogers, Arizona State
  • Jackie Vasquez, Arizona State
  • Katie Burkhart, Arizona State (Most Outstanding Player)

WCWS records tied or broken

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  • 6,240 Session 1 (Games 1 and 2) total attendance — WCWS record[29]
  • 8,230 Session 3 (Games 5 and 6) total attendance — WCWS record[30]
  • In Game 11, Florida left fielder Francesca Enea hit two home runs to allow her team to defeat Texas A&M 6–1. She tied the WCWS record for the most home runs in a game in the NCAA era that was set by UCLA's Yvonne Gutierrez in 1992 and tied by Arizona's Lindsey Collins in 1999 and UCLA's Andrea Harrison in 2010.[31]
  • Arizona State's 11-0 victory over Texas A&M was the largest margin of victory in an NCAA championship clinching game.[32]

Post-series notes

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  • At the conclusion of their run in the series, Florida compiled a 70–5 overall record, becoming the first NCAA team to record 70 wins.[33]
  • The 2008 WCWS marked the first time that Arizona did not return to the championship game/series while defending one of their eight national championships.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Ragin' Cajuns stun top-seeded Florida 3-2".
  2. ^ "Gators upset on eighth-inning homer".
  3. ^ "Slip-up sinks Hokies".
  4. ^ "Errant throw allows Texas A&M to edge Hokies".[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ "Women's College World Series: Late Arizona State rally bedevils Tide".
  6. ^ "ASU softball rallies to win opener".
  7. ^ "Softball: Unusual call goes against Cats".
  8. ^ "UCLA beats defending champion Arizona, 1-0".
  9. ^ "Aggies take advantage of error again".
  10. ^ "Cajuns stalled: UL drops game to Texas A&M".
  11. ^ "Bruins' strategy backfires vs. Devils".
  12. ^ "UCLA strategy thwarted".
  13. ^ "Virginia Tech can't capitalize on error, loses to Florida in CWS". Archived from the original on June 6, 2008. Retrieved May 31, 2008.
  14. ^ "Tincher ends career without title, but with lasting legacy".
  15. ^ "Alabama Softball Defeats Arizona, 5-1". Archived from the original on June 5, 2008. Retrieved June 1, 2008.
  16. ^ "'Bama bounces Arizona Wildcats from softball tournament".
  17. ^ "Arizona, UCLA out of Women's College World Series".
  18. ^ "WOMEN'S COLLEGE WORLD SERIES: Alabama advances to semifinals".
  19. ^ "WCWS: Florida Forces If-Game, Defeats Texas A&M 6-1". Archived from the original on June 6, 2008. Retrieved June 2, 2008.
  20. ^ "Tide run ends with 3-1 loss to Arizona State".
  21. ^ "ASU softball advances to World Series final".
  22. ^ "Women's College World Series Blog: Game 5 vs. Texas A&M".
  23. ^ "Once unheralded recruit, Lobpries comes up big for Texas A&M".
  24. ^ "Texas A&M falls to Arizona State 3-0 in softball World Series opener".
  25. ^ "Freshman delivers in ASU victory".
  26. ^ "Arizona State wins NCAA softball title in rout". Archived from the original on June 10, 2008.
  27. ^ "National Champions!". Thesundevils.com. June 3, 2008. Retrieved June 9, 2018.
  28. ^ "Tincher named to WCWS All-Tournament Team".
  29. ^ "UA softball team loses in 1st round of WCWS after delay". Archived from the original on May 31, 2008. Retrieved May 30, 2008.
  30. ^ "WCWS Notebook: Getting 'Pearl'sonal".
  31. ^ "Women's College World Series Notebook". June 2, 2008.
  32. ^ Sun Devils - NCAA champs! Archived 2011-08-23 at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ Gators' NCAA run ends
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