College softball: Florida takes gamble, and national title

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OKLAHOMA CITY — Florida coach Tim Walton took a chance, and it paid off and helped Florida win its first NCAA softball championship.

Walton chose not to start ace pitcher Hannah Rogers, but she entered the game in the sixth inning after Lauren Haeger and freshman Delanie Gourley handed her a lead. Rogers gave up one run in two innings and earned the save as the Gators defeated Alabama 6-3 on Tuesday night to sweep the best-of-three championship series.

Walton told Haeger Monday night that she would start Tuesday, and Walton said he didn’t sleep well afterward because Rogers had been nearly untouchable during postseason play. He still thought the decision made sense because he felt depth was important in a best-of-three series, and he was confident in the rest of his staff.

“Hannah was just on fire, and to take her out of this game and to throw the other two, I know was gutsy, and I know it was bold,” Walton said. “But we’ve talked all year long — we don’t have a superstar on our team. We have a bunch of players who do their job, and today was a tribute to that. We got a Lauren-quality start, and Delaney gets the ‘W,’ and Hannah gets the save.”

He has at least one superstar. Rogers was named the tournament’s most outstanding player after going 4-0 in five appearances at the World Series and posting a 1.00 earned run average.

Alabama’s Jackie Traina, one of the nation’s best pitchers, gave up five runs in 1 1/3 innings before getting pulled for Alabama (53-13). Walton didn’t start Rogers on Tuesday for fear that what happened to Traina would happen to his ace. The Gators had some success against Traina in Game 1 on Monday and started figuring things out. Tuesday was Traina’s shortest start of the year.

“We’ve seen her (Traina) a lot, and we think that was kind of beneficial to us,” Walton said. “We got a lot of runs off of her after we faced her yesterday, and I think that could have been the same result if we started Hannah. Back-to-back days against good hitting teams that use video and have smart coaches — they’re going to make adjustments.”

Florida, the national runner-up in 2009 and 2011, beat its Southeastern Conference rival despite committing four errors and giving Alabama (53-13) plenty of chances to score.

“We just couldn’t get that big inning,” Alabama coach Patrick Murphy said. “We hit into way too many double plays — you know — unlucky. But I’m really pleased with my team. I thought it was one of the easiest teams I’ve ever had to coach.”