2023 D1Softball Preseason Top 25: Everyone Chasing No. 1 Oklahoma Again
Top StoriesThe race to Oklahoma City has become the race to catch Oklahoma.
And as a new NCAA softball season begins, no one is any closer to solving that riddle than they were the past two seasons. Seeking to match UCLA as the only programs to win three consecutive NCAA Division I titles, Oklahoma takes the field in 2023 as the unanimous No. 1 team in the D1Softball Top 25.
With returning players who account for fully 10 percent of the D1Softball Top 100, led by Tiare Jennings (No. 1), Grace Lyons (No. 4), Cydney Sanders (No. 6), Jordy Bahl (No. 9) and Jayda Coleman (No. 15), the Sooners were an easy pick atop the rankings. After that, it’s a traffic jam worthy of Los Angeles at rush hour — which makes it fitting that UCLA edges out the competition at No. 2. The Bruins need to replace runs and veteran poise, but coming off a trip to the World Series semifinals, they have time to grow behind Megan Faraimo.
Indeed, with so much uncertainty across the softball map, returning aces are the coin of the realm.
No. 3 Oklahoma State can lean on Kelly Maxwell as it adjusts to another crop of talented transfers. Kathryn Sandercock leads restocked No. 4 Florida State, while Montana Fouts is the cornerstone for No. 6 Alabama.
And while No. 5 Florida may not have a lone returning All-American in the circle, most programs only wish they had Lexie Delbrey and Elizabeth Hightower backing up a deep and potent lineup.
Danielle Williams hopes to make it back-to-back trips to OKC with No. 7 Northwestern, and reigning SEC Pitcher of the Year Chenise Delce will give No. 8 Arkansas plenty of time of sort out a lineup retooling without some high-profile bats.
Rounding out the top 10, No. 9 Clemson is ready to try and take the next step after reaching its first super regional, while No. 10 Georgia begins with three top-100 players in Sara Mosley, Shelby Walters and Sydney Kuma.
After reaching the national championship series following a thrilling postseason run that began as an unseeded regional road team, No. 14 Texas starts the post-Dolcini era (a brief but prosperous era) as a projected regional host this time around. Another World Series surprise a season ago, No. 18 Arizona checks in solidly inside the top 20 in Caitlin Lowe’s second season.
And while No. 15 UCF again carries the banner for the programs beyond the Power 5, hoping to repeat last season’s achievement as a national seed in regionals, keep an eye on No. 24 North Texas. A regional finalist a season ago, the Mean Green return almost everyone.
The SEC leads all conferences with nine ranked teams, while the Pac-12 checks in with five. The ACC (four) and Big 12 (three) also boast multiple ranked teams, while the American Athletic, Big Ten, Conference USA and Sun Belt all place one team in the rankings.
Rank | Team | Final 2022 Record | Final 2022 Rank |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Oklahoma | 59-3 | 1 |
2 | UCLA | 51-10 | 2 |
3 | Oklahoma State | 48-14 | 3 |
4 | Florida State | 53-7 | 12 |
5 | Florida | 49-19 | 5 |
6 | Alabama | 44-13 | 18 |
7 | Northwestern | 45-13 | 6 |
8 | Arkansas | 48-11 | 8 |
9 | Clemson | 42-17 | 15 |
10 | Georgia | 43-18 | 23 |
11 | Stanford | 39-22 | 16 |
12 | Tennessee | 41-18 | 20 |
13 | Virginia Tech | 46-10 | 7 |
14 | Texas | 47-22-1 | 4 |
15 | UCF | 49-14 | 13 |
16 | Kentucky | 37-19 | 19 |
17 | LSU | 34-23 | NR |
18 | Arizona | 39-22 | 9 |
19 | Auburn | 40-17 | NR |
20 | Louisiana | 48-13 | 24 |
21 | Washington | 38-17 | 21 |
22 | Duke | 44-11 | 14 |
23 | Oregon | 33-19 | NR |
24 | North Texas | 38-15 | NR |
25 | Ole Miss | 41-19 | NR |