College Sports

Women's College

World Series

Ambrey Taylor and the Crimson Tide are the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. Gary Cosby Jr. / Imagn Images

This college softball season has brought it all so far: a home run chase, pitching prowess and thrilling matchups. But we all know that when it comes to the NCAA Tournament, everything gets kicked up a notch. The path to the Women’s College World Series begins on Friday, and none of what went down in the last couple of months matters anymore: It’s all about winning the next game, the next inning, the next pitch.