Live updates: Texas vs. Texas Tech in the Women’s College World Series Finals
☝️ Longhorns take Game 1: Texas 7, Texas Tech 3
Just as it did in last year's WCWS series opener, Texas leaned on persistent offense and a complete-game win by star pitcher Teagan Kavan to take the first of the series. She got plenty of help from the offense, which banged out 10 hits and seven runs against the vaunted Texas Tech pitching staff.
Kavan pitched all seven innings, allowing three hits, three runs and two walks for a 2.4 ERA.
Texas Tech will look to even the series with ace Nijaree Canady, who only threw in relief for just over an inning tonight, but Texas will look to make it a quick series and claim its second National Championship tomorrow.
game 1, game WON 🤘
— Texas Softball (@TexasSoftball)
Texas 7, Texas Tech 3 | Bottom 6th
It seems like every time Texas Tech gets it going, Texas has a response. The Longhorns tack another in the bottom of the sixth.
Viviana Martinez drove in her second runner of the night with Kaitlyn Terry back in to pitch, scoring Jaycie Nichols with the bases loaded. The Red Raiders now have just three outs to get four runs to try to extend this game with the bottom of the order on deck.
another ribby for Vivi 🤘
— Texas Softball (@TexasSoftball)
📖 Home run record broken at the 2026 WCWS
Mihyia Davis' first-inning home run was the 37th total for the tournament across all games and a new women's college world series record. And the two teams have only added to that record since then.
The previous record was set in 2022, when Oklahoma won its second of eventually four straight titles.
Home runs by team:
| Rank | Team | Home Runs |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | UCLA | 9 |
| T-2 | Texas Tech* | 8 |
| T-2 | Texas* | 8 |
| 4 | Alabama | 6 |
| 5 | Nebraska | 4 |
| 6 | Tennessee | 3 |
| 7 | Arkansas | 1 |
*Still playing
Mia Williams two-run homer gets Texas Tech back in the game
MIA WILLIAMS 2️⃣ RUN SHOT 🚀 x 🎥 ESPN /
— NCAA Softball (@NCAASoftball)
Texas 6, Texas Tech 1 | End 4th
Vivi Martinez's bat is hotter than a summer day in Texas 🔥🔥🔥
— Texas Softball (@TexasSoftball)
Nijaree Canady back out: Texas 5, Texas Tech 1 | End 3rd
Another new pitcher for Texas Tech. Instead of Kaitlyn Terry or NiJaree Canady, Reese Atwood will lead off the bottom half of the inning, facing Samantha Lincoln. Lincoln has only pitched 71.1 innings this season. Canady is now out for the game as she prepares for tomorrow's Game 2.
Texas 5, Texas Tech 1 | End 2nd
Texas 5, Texas Tech 1| End 1st
Another hit two outs later, and Nijaree Canady entered to clean up. Texas was unfazed, Kaiah Altmeyer singled to second base for an RBI single, and Ashton Maloney tripled to send another Altmeyer and Wells home.
STORM'S A STEWIN' ☔
— Texas Softball (@TexasSoftball)
Mihyia Davis home run gets Texas Tech on the board
After Mi Williams opened the game with the leadoff strikeout, Mihyia Davis' 10th home run of the season put Texas Tech up 1-0 over Texas in the first inning.
There are now nine Red Raiders who have hit 10+ homers on the season.
The 9th Red Raider to hit double figures on HR's this season!
— Texas Tech Softball (@TexasTechSB)
⏳ 30 minutes until first pitch of Game 1
Get ready, softball fans.
We are just over 30 minutes away from first pitch, and we are on-site in OKC to bring you all the action.
Now remember, this is Game 1 of the best-of-three championship series, which will take place over the next couple of days. So the winner tonight will have to win one more before being crowned the champion of college softball.
No. 1 Texas and No. 3 Texas Tech are set for a rematch of the 2025 NCAA championship, when the Longhorns earned the title in Game 3 from a 10-4 victory. This marks the first time since 2003-04 that the same teams have faced each other in back-to-back national finals at the WCWS.
After a cloudy afternoon and a few scattered thunderstorms throughout the day, the sky has cleared as the sun sets in OKC for the 8 p.m. ET first pitch.
Just as you'd imagine with both teams from Oklahoma's southern neighbor, the stands at Devon Park are filling in at a pretty even rate with crowds of burnt orange and red coming in masses.
Whether Texas defends its title or the Red Raiders avenge their loss from last year — we'll be here providing you updates throughout each game. Stay tuned!
➡️ BRACKET: Click or tap here to view the official bracket
📺 Texas vs. Texas Tech WCWS finals schedule
The stage is set for the Women's College World Series finals, with Texas and Texas Tech squaring off in Game 1 on Wednesday in a championship rematch. Below is the full schedule:
- Wednesday, June 3
- Championship Series Game 1
- Thursday, June 4
- Championship Series Game 2 | 8 p.m. on ESPN
- Friday, June 5
- Championship Series Game 3 | 8 p.m. on ESPN (if necessary)
➡️ BRACKET: Click or tap here to view the official bracket
🛣️ How they got here
TEXAS:
The Longhorns powered their way back to the WCWS championship series for the third straight year by sweeping No. 8 Tennessee in a Monday doubleheader, winning 5–2 and 4–0. Texas advanced to their fourth finals appearance in five seasons and remained perfect in elimination games in that time at 6–0.
In the first win-or-go-home against the Vols, senior right‑hander Citlaly Gutierrez set the tone early. She retired the first 11 batters she faced and held Tennessee to one earned run across 6 and two-thirds innings. Texas broke a scoreless tie in the fourth when senior catcher Reese Atwood launched her 19th home run. After Tennessee briefly tied it, Texas answered with a three‑run fifth, highlighted by Hannah Wells, who knocked in two runs on her single off the center field wall. Teagan Kavan entered with two outs in the seventh and recorded a strikeout to secure the win.
Kavan started and dominated Game 2, throwing a two‑hit shutout with 10 strikeouts to clinch the finals berth. She retired the first 11 batters without allowing a walk or extra‑base hit. Texas turned in three runs in the third, sparked by Viviana Martinez’s RBI single and a double‑steal sequence that allowed Kayden Henry to score. Atwood added an RBI double, and Katie Stewart crushed her program‑record 30th home run in the fifth.
Texas outhit Tennessee in both games and continued its record‑setting power surge, reaching 97 home runs on the season, looking to do more damage in the final series of the year.
TEXAS TECH:
Texas Tech earned its second straight trip to the WCWS Finals by knocking off No. 1 Alabama twice on Monday, capped by a 2–0 shutout behind ace NiJaree Canady. The Red Raiders have now won over 60 games this season.
Texas Tech forced the second semifinal match with a 5–4 walk‑off win in Game 1. Mia Williams, hitless in her first three at‑bats, delivered the game‑winner with her 26th home run after Alabama tied the game in the seventh. Tech hit three homers in the opener, including a two‑run shot from Taylor Pannell and a solo blast from Lauren Allred. Canady earned the win in relief, striking out four and allowing one run in two and two-thirds innings.
In Game 2, Canady returned to the circle and dominated. She threw a complete‑game two‑hit shutout with six strikeouts. Jasmyn Burns provided the early spark, drilling a leadoff home run in the fourth for a 1–0 lead. Tech added insurance in the seventh when Allred singled up the middle, scoring Mihyia Davis from first after an errant throw. Davis went 2‑for‑3 and extended her program‑record hit total to 100.
The Red Raiders finished with 10 hits, including two each from Williams, Davis, Allred and Burns. Alabama managed only two hits against Canady, who improved to 29–6 after throwing 57 pitches in the first game and returning to finish the night.
The Longhorns won the 2025 national title over Tech in three games, but the Red Raiders enter this year’s rematch with momentum and an improved pitching staff.
⏮️ A rematch of the 2025 title series
Texas captured its first Women’s College World Series championship, winning a dramatic three‑game showdown against in‑state rival Texas Tech, taking the decisive finale 10–4.
Game 1 set the tone for the series, with Texas rallying late for a 2–1 win after a misfired intentional walk allowed Reese Atwood to drive in two runs. Texas Tech answered in Game 2, winning 4–3 behind stellar pitching from NiJaree Canady, who returns for this year's iteration, striking out the final batter with the tying run on third.
In the winner‑take‑all Game 3, however, Texas’ offense overwhelmed the Red Raiders from the opening inning. The Longhorns opened Game 3 with a five‑run first inning, sparked by four straight singles and a three‑run homer from Leighann Goode.
Texas added another run in the third and broke the game open in the fourth when Mia Scott launched a grand slam to make it 10–0 and essentially out of reach.
Texas Tech avoided a run‑rule loss with a three‑run fifth inning and added another run in the seventh, but the early deficit was too steep. Texas right‑hander Teagan Kavan threw a complete game, allowing no earned runs across seven innings and earned Most Outstanding Player honors after setting a WCWS record with 31.2 consecutive innings without an earned run.