Missouri’s NCAA Tournament hopes took a hit Friday, falling to No. 8/9 Tennessee 4-2 at Mizzou Softball Stadium and dropping below the .500 threshold required for at-large eligibility.
The Tigers led early but couldn’t hold on. A Stefania Abruscato single in the first drove in Addy Waits, who led off the inning with a walk. Abby Hay and Sidney Forrester added two more singles to load the bases, but Tennessee pitcher Sage Mardjetko struck out back-to-back batters to limit any further damage.
“We had some opportunities,” head coach Larissa Anderson said. “Especially with the bases loaded in the first inning. We couldn’t capitalize on that, you don’t get many chances with runners in scoring position against a team like Tennessee and we let that slip away from us.”
Mardjetko settled in for the rest of the game, striking out seven batters while holding Missouri to a pair of earned runs and five hits in five innings pitched. In relief, Karlyn Pickens struck out four while holding Missouri to zero hits in two innings.
“[Pickens] got great movement,” Anderson said. “I felt like they were swinging at good pitches. They were getting beat on some movement, but I just wanted them to control what they could control.”
Ella Dodge tied the game in the third with a leadoff home run before Missouri’s defense unraveled in the fourth. With two outs, Bella Faw reached on a throwing error from Madison Uptegrove. Maddi Rutan then singled to left field, where another throwing error from Saniya Hill moved Faw to third. Dodge then drove both runners home with a two-run single to give Tennessee a 3-1 lead.
It was the second straight game Missouri’s defense hurt the Tigers, as two errors in Game 1 of the series similarly cost Missouri two runs. The mistakes are uncharacteristic for a team that led the nation in fielding percentage heading into the weekend.
“We beat ourselves because of defense,” Anderson said. “We could’ve easily been out of that inning. Errors are gonna happen, mistakes are gonna happen, balls hit hard. It's how we respond after it. That’s where we got to be stronger.”
Tennessee extended its lead in the fifth, as Makenzie Butt hit an RBI single to give Tennessee a 4-1 lead. Missouri responded in the bottom, as a Forrester groundout scored Abruscato who doubled earlier.
In the circle for Missouri, Marissa McCann struggled early, receiving the loss on six hits, one walk and one earned run through 3⅔ innings. Courtney Donahue followed in relief, giving up one earned run and two hits before Abby Carr closed the game. Carr finished with two strikeouts and just three hits in 2⅓ innings.
Now at 27-28, Missouri needs to find wins in order to get back above the .500 threshold required to make the NCAA Tournament. If they win Saturday, Missouri would be back at .500, but would need to win again in the SEC Tournament to remain eligible. If they lose Saturday, the Tigers will need three wins in the SEC Tournament in order to get back to .500.
“We’ve made some deep runs, we’ve played through this conference, we know how tough it’s gonna be,” Anderson said. “We’re playing really, really hard right now, but we have to play better on all three sides of the game.”
Even if Missouri does finish at .500, it will not guarantee a bid. The Division I Softball Championship Subcommittee selects 33 at-large teams, weighing RPI, strength of schedule and results against ranked opponents before making its selections. Missouri currently ranks 41st in RPI with a top-20 strength of schedule.
“We’ve been in this situation since March,” Anderson said. “We know we have to win every single game that we possibly can and we just have to continue that mentality and fight until the game is over.”
First pitch of the series finale is noon Saturday, and will be streamed to SEC Network.
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