Oklahoma needed a big play and Jayda Coleman clearly had one more in her.

On her final at-bat in a Sooner uniform, Coleman went to the plate with the bases loaded in a one-run game in the bottom of the sixth inning. The senior poked a single through the right side of the infield to extend the Sooners’ lead to two.

Ella Parker kept the Sooners rolling with a two-run single to take a four-run lead with three outs remaining. A three-run sixth inning helped the Sooners turn the tide of the second game of the Women's College World Series Championship Series on Thursday at Devon Park.

Senior Kelly Maxwell took over in the circle late in the sixth and retired the final three batters in order for her own memorable ending to her career.

The Sooners followed up a nine-hit performance in the opener on Wednesday with a 12-hit game to secure the sweep with an 8-4 win.

In doing so, they became the first program to ever win four consecutive national championships.

“We lost one game last year. We lost one game,” Gasso said. “We lost six this year, and you would think, ‘Oh, man, they're going down.”

The Sooners played five different pitchers on Thursday. Karlie Keeney got the start, followed by Paytn Monticelli, Kierston Deal and Nicole May.

Maxwell started Wednesday’s opener and the semifinal the day before, throwing 267 pitches in the two wins.

“We knew we couldn't throw Kelly,” Gasso said. “We just can't. I did that one time with a girl named Paige Parker. I'd never do it again. It wasn't worth it.”

Keeney walked two batters in the second inning and Kayden Henry singled to score the first run of the game. She left two runners stranded, but got in another jam with two outs down in the third.

Viviana Martinez and Reese Atwood singled in back to back pitches and Katie Stewart was walked in five pitches to load up the bases. Alyssa Washington drove in another run on a single up the middle and the Sooners brought in Paytn Monticelli to relieve Keeney.

Monticelli had not played in a game since May 9 and had pitched just 19 innings all season.

After facing a full count, she forced the next batter ground out to leave the bases loaded.

“It was really, really cool,” Gasso said about the pitching staff. “That's one thing I'll always remember, is just what this felt like. It was probably the least tense I've ever been.

“I mean, I'm looking around like, ‘This is the national championship.’ We could be winning this right now. Usually (my) heart is doing that all the time. But I'm laughing. Having a wonderful time with them because it just felt easy. It just felt, I don't know, so real. It was so real.”

Deal took over in the fourth and the Longhorns scored another run to take a 3-2 lead.

In the bottom of the inning, Kinzie Hansen, Kasidi Pickering and Rylie Boone each had consecutive hits to put three runners on with one out. On the next at-bat, Cydney Sanders cleared the bases with a double into the gap in right center field.

Oklahoma’s 5-3 lead was cut to just one in the top of the sixth on a double by Ashton Maloney. May got a strikeout with two runners in scoring position to pave the way for Maxwell to close out the win.

The first batter Maxwell faced, Mia Scott, hit an infield single to load up the bases and move within striking distance of retaking the lead. However, Scott took a big lead off the first base bag.

Maxwell noticed this and yelled to second baseman Avery Hodge to throw her out at first base. The base running mistake shifted the momentum of the game back in the Sooners’ favor.

In the bottom of the sixth, Rylie Boone hit a single, Sanders was walked and Hodge was hit by a pitch to set up Coleman’s big hit. They scored their three runs in the inning on three hits, two walks and a hit-by-pitch.

Maxwell was awarded the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament. The senior lefty pitched 8.1 innings, allowing five hits, three runs (one earned) with nine strikeouts in her two appearances in the championship series.

She faced the final four batters and allowed one hit with no walks and a strikeout.

A season ago, it was Jordy Bahl that won Most Outstanding Player and led the Sooners to a national title. Bahl transferred in the offseason and Maxwell announced that she would be transferring to Oklahoma from Oklahoma State.

She went 23-2 in the circle with a 1.94 ERA.

“It's been awesome. This whole team, they're special,” Maxwell said about the past year. “I’m just thankful that I got to be a part of this. We've been through a lot this year.”

Tarik Masri is the sports editor for The Transcript covering OU athletics and area sports. You can reach him by emailing tarik@normantranscript.com

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