Southern Oregon’s improbable run heads into winner-take-all finale

Published 4:18 pm Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Raiders run elimination game win streak to six after Wednesday victories over Georgia Gwinnett, Eastern Oregon and Oklahoma City

COLUMBUS, Ga. — One win away from another championship after stealing a sixth consecutive NAIA World Series elimination game, Southern Oregon is testing the limits of how much pressure-cooked heat one team can take during a single trip to the South.

The Raiders (54-9), on the back of their cold-blooded freshman pitcher, showed no signs of budging yet in a 6-0 defeat of Oklahoma City on Wednesday at the South Commons Softball Complex, forcing a winner-take-all rematch at 7 a.m. Pacific Thursday.

SOU freshman Ayla Davies earned three shutout victories Wednesday and has four shutouts in the Raiders’ last five games at the NAIA Softball World Series. (Photo by Matthew Hicks/MSH Visual)

Ayla Davies disarmed the Stars (53-10) with her third shutout in a row and fourth in SOU’s last five games at the tournament. She struck out 10 while allowing just four softly-hit singles after the Raiders capitalized on two OCU errors by scoring four unearned runs in the first inning. She also became the first pitcher to blank OCU in a span of 210 games dating back to 2022.

The decision was Davies’ third of the day, which started with the last half-inning of a 3-0 victory against Georgia Gwinnett and continued with an 8-0, five-inning knockout of rival Eastern Oregon. It made her 37-5 and the new SOU single-season record-holder for pitcher wins. She remains the only Raider who has appeared in the circle at the World Series, posting a 1.04 ERA and 64 strikeouts over 54 innings and 780 total deliveries.

The Raiders’ defeat of EOU — which featured Sammie Pemberton’s two-run home run and four costly Mountaineers errors — made them the first team since 2002 to advance to the final after dropping a tournament opener. One more win against OCU would make them the first team ever to take that path to a title, which would be their fourth in six years.

The Stars had outscored their first three World Series opponents 24-1 combined. They were on their heels from the time Sarah Kerling reached on a leadoff error and Kailer Fulton followed her with a bunt single. Kennedy Kila drove in the first run with a hit down the line; another throwing error made it 2-0; a first-and-third steal play then caught them off guard; and Vanessa Lang capped the disastrous start with a sacrifice fly, giving Davies a four-run cushion.

SOU tagged OCU star pitcher Emerson Heron for six hits and knocked her out with Kerling’s two-run double in the sixth inning. Meanwhile, Davies rendered star hitter Analise Rayburn 0-for-3 with a pair of strikeouts after she entered the day with a .495 average and 27 home runs.

The Raiders have trailed for only half an inning since losing their tournament opener 3-2 to Marian (Ind.) in 12.

A few more things to note heading into Thursday’s finale:

♦ In seven World Series appearances under coach Jessica Pistole, the Raiders are 18-3 in win-or-go-home contests. Since that run began in 2017, they’re 29-4 overall in national tournament elimination games.
♦ Thursday’s game will be a rematch of the 2019 winner-take-all matchup. That year, OCU forced the decisive game before SOU won Game 2, 8-3, for its first title.
♦ Kerling has possessed SOU’s hottest bat during the six-game streak, going 13-for-23 with two doubles and seven RBIs. On Wednesday, she became the fourth player in team history to accumulate 250 career hits.
♦ Davies is two strikeouts away from breaking the 39-year-old tournament record of 65. With a start on Thursday, she’ll also tie the record for total appearances at one World Series (8).
♦ The Stars haven’t lost back-to-back games since March. They had to win three consecutive elimination games in the Opening Round to keep their season alive.
♦ If the Raiders win, they’d match Simon Fraser (B.C.) for the second-most championships in NAIA history with their fourth. If the Stars win, it’d be their 12th.
♦ In the Raiders’ last championship run (2023), they played a total of 23 innings while outscoring their opponents 35-2 combined at the World Series. By the end of this run, they’ll have played a minimum of 59 innings.

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