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Deifel’s Decade of Work Pays Off as Hogs Reach First-Ever WCWS

Nobody handed Courtney Deifel a finished product at Arkansas, she buil WCWS program from scratch, one season at a time.

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Courtney Deifel

There’s a moment in every program-building story when the work finally speaks for itself.

For Arkansas softball and coach Courtney Deifel, that moment is Thursday night in Oklahoma City.

The Razorbacks are going to the Women’s College World Series for the first time in program history. Let that sink in for a second.

Not a deep regional run. No more heartbreak in a Super Regional. The actual WCWS — Devon Park, ESPN2, the whole thing. No. 5 Arkansas faces No. 4 Nebraska on Thursday at 8:30 p.m., and it’s a game this program has never played before in nearly 30 years of existence.

Deifel Walked into Program That Needed Everything

When Deifel arrived in Fayetteville in 2016, she wasn’t inheriting a sleeping giant.

She was taking over a program that had made just one NCAA Tournament appearance in the previous four years and was searching for its footing in one of the toughest conferences in college softball.

What she’s done since is remarkable. In her time at Arkansas, Deifel has guided the Razorbacks to a pair of SEC regular season championships, one SEC Tournament crown and eight straight NCAA Tournament appearances.

She did it building the roster, the culture and the expectations from the ground up.

Arkansas is the only Power 4 school in the country to increase its winning percentage by more than 20% over a comparable 10-year span. You don’t do that by accident.

That comes from outworking people year after year until the results can’t be ignored anymore.

In her very first season, the Razorbacks improved their win total by 17 games, the largest single-season increase among Power 5 programs in the country.

It was a signal of what was coming, even if not everyone was paying close enough attention at the time.

Validation Has Been Long Time Coming

Deifel’s coached this program through Super Regional trips that didn’t finish the way anyone in Fayetteville wanted. She’s coached through a pandemic-shortened season.

She’s watched other SEC programs make WCWS runs while her Hogs kept knocking on the door.
This year, the door finally opened and the Razorbacks didn’t just walk through it.

They kicked it off the hinges.

Arkansas is 47-11 on the season with a program-record 26 run-rule victories. They’re not sneaking into Oklahoma City.

They earned it with one of the most dominant stretches in program history.

The numbers that got them there are legitimately historic. Arkansas became just the second team in NCAA history to open NCAA Tournament play with five straight run-rule victories, joining the 1995 Arizona Wildcats, a team that went on to win the national championship.

Think about the company that puts the Hogs in. One team in 29 years of college softball had done that before. Now it’s two.

https://x.com/JaydenWells13/status/2058599181002944563?s=20

How They Got to Oklahoma City

The clincher came Saturday when Arkansas handled Duke 10-2 in five innings to punch the ticket to the WCWS.

First baseman Tianna Bell hit a two-run home run, second baseman Karlie Davison added a three-run shot and shortstop Atalyia Rijo went 3-for-3 at the plate.

That’s what this Arkansas team looks like when it’s locked in — multiple contributors, multiple ways to hurt you and no need to play a full seven innings to get the job done.

Nebraska Won’t Make It Easy

The Cornhuskers aren’t coming to Oklahoma City just to make up the numbers either.

Nebraska went 5-0 on its path to the WCWS and beat No. 15 Oklahoma State by scores of 9-1 and 8-1 in Super Regional play. Those aren’t close games.

It’s Nebraska’s first trip to the WCWS since 2013. Both programs are arriving with something to prove and Thursday night’s matchup figures to be one of the better first-round games in this year’s field.

But Deifel has built a team that doesn’t flinch. Eleven seasons of doing the hard work in the SEC will do that to a roster.

Arkansas and Nebraska is Thursday at 8:30 p.m. on ESPN2 from Devon Park in Oklahoma City.

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