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Arkansas Is One Win Away From Something It Has Never Done Before

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Arkansas sophomore Ella McDowell and senior Kailey Wyckoff cheer as Tianna Bell comes home after her home in a NCAA Super Regional game against Duke. | Arkansas Communications

A four-hour weather delay could have turned Friday into a mess.

It could have drained the energy out of Bogle Park, stalled Arkansas’ momentum, and handed Duke a chance to upset the home team.

Instead, Arkansas walked back onto the field like nothing had happened and played some of its sharpest softball of the postseason.

That’s the part that stands out. Not just the 14-5 run-rule win. Not just the program-record 14 runs in an NCAA Tournament game. It was the poise. The reset. The way the Razorbacks treated a long, awkward pause like a minor inconvenience on the way to something bigger.

And now they’re one win away from the Women’s College World Series.

“I’m just really proud of our team for collectively getting that win,” Arkansas coach Courtney Deifel said. “I thought the early conditions that we were playing in were not fair to the student-athletes. They’ve worked really hard, and both teams deserved better conditions to line it up in.

“I’m glad we had the break and could come back out and play in sunny weather. I thought our players handled the break as well as I expected them to, and I thought they were dominating when they came out.”

Arkansas is 4-0 in the NCAA Tournament, and all four wins have ended early. Only one other team has ever opened a postseason with four straight run-rule wins, and that was Arizona back in 1995 when it won a national championship.

That’s not normal. That’s not even common. That’s a team playing with a level of confidence that travels deep into May.

Friday showed why. Arkansas didn’t just respond after the delay. It took control. Tianna Bell’s grand slam was the obvious turning point, but the bigger picture was how the lineup kept coming. Dakota Kennedy kept driving in runs. Karlie Davison delivered the final swing. Ella McDowell reached base like it was her job. Brinli Bain scored three times. It wasn’t one player carrying the day. It was a lineup that looked comfortable, patient, and ready to punish mistakes.

The pitching handled the day’s weird rhythm, too. Robyn Herron and Saylor Timmerman split the work, and neither let Duke build anything meaningful after the second inning. That matters in a game where the delay could have thrown everything off.

And now look at where Arkansas sits. 46 wins. 25 run-rule victories. A 28-3 record at Bogle Park. A postseason run that has turned into a string of early finishes. A chance to clinch the program’s first WCWS berth on its home field.

“I think the big thing is we have a lot of confidence from today, but the runs don’t roll. We have to start fresh tomorrow, and there’s still work to be done. We know that,” Deifel said. “We’ve been in situations like this before. It’s just staying focused on the task at hand and knowing they’re going to throw some punches, and we’re going to throw some, too. We’ll just fight and go for it.”

There’s no guarantee in softball, especially in May, but this team is playing like it understands the moment. Friday wasn’t smooth, but Arkansas handled it with the kind of maturity that separates good teams from the ones that get remembered.

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