OKLAHOMA CITY â Mike Candrea first saw Tucson native Carlie Scupin at one of his camps when she was a girl.
Candrea liked what he saw. For one, her bat speed was Jenny Dalton-Hill-like. Nobody since the Wildcatsâ 1996 national player of the year has been as quick to the ball.
As Scupin grew older, Candrea kept an eye on her.
He liked that âshe hit good pitching better than she had bad pitching. That was another big plus,â Candrea said. âBut, you know, it didnât take long for me to realize that we wanted her in a Wildcat uniform because sheâs big, sheâs strong. Sheâs very athletic for her size. I think is a will be a very, very good hitter for a long time here.â
As a true freshman, Scupin has started all 52 games at first base. Sheâs hitting .354 with nine home runs and 37 RBIs, and boasts a .984 fielding percentage. The Tucson High graduate was recently named to the Pac-12âs all-freshman team.
On Saturday, Scupinâs single to right field drove in two insurance runs as the Wildcats swept Arkansas in the Fayetteville Super Regional to claim a spot in the Womenâs College World Series. The Wildcats open play in the double-elimination tournament on Thursday against Alabama.
How Scupin got the hit is a testament to her maturity as a hitter.
âThey were going to a certain sequence â they were going inside and outside. I had two strikes and I was expecting something,â Scupin said. âI just told myself that I got to get my hands through and get that inside pitch. âĻ It was definitely cool to get that hit.â
Candrea would like to see Scupin refine her swing during the offseason, incorporating her bottom half more. When she can do that, Candrea said, Scupin âcan be scaryâ as a hitter.
In a way, she already is.
âIn the beginning of the year she put a few balls on the Gittings Building back there (behind Rita Hillenbrand Stadium) and I was blown away,â teammate Jessie Harper said. âI was like, âOh my goodness. Where did this girl come from?ââ
One island
The Wildcats say theyâre closer as a team now than they have been all season. Theyâre comparison their trip to Oklahoma City to being on âone islandâ together.
âThis year weâve kind of all been on 21 separate islands and playing that way,â sixth-year senior Alyssa Palomino-Cardoza said. âWe said, âweâre on one island and we need to be on one island and play together as one team.â We definitely bought into that and being able to say, âOK, Iâm not playing, Iâm on this island with whoeverâs putting in the circle or if Iâm in center, Iâm in a circle with whoever is pitching and Iâm with all my fielders and weâre on one island together.â Itâs not just our pitcher in a circle and then all of us are surrounding her.
âI think thatâs something that has definitely brought us all together, and knowing that we each have a role and weâre going to play that role â no matter what it is. Weâre going to be on an island together and weâre going to go out together.â
Alabama's Montana Fouts is one of the hardest-throwing pitchers in college softball.
Mulipola honored
Arizonaâs Dejah Mulipola has been named an NFCA First-Team All-American and the Division I Catcher of the Year, the organization announced Wednesday.
The pitcher sheâll face in Thursdayâs Womenâs College World Series opener, Alabama ace Montana Fouts, was a unanimous choice for the first team. Bailey Hemphill, Foutsâ Crimson Tide teammate and battery-mate, made the first team as an at-large player.
Mulipola was the only Wildcat to make the first team. Pac-12 rival UCLA landed four players on the 18-member squad.
Widely viewed as the best collegiate catcher in the country, Mulipola is hitting a career-high .401 with 21 home runs, 63 RBIs and a career-high .906 slugging percentage. Defensively, sheâs part of a UA unit thatâs on pace to post the best fielding percentage mark in program history.
Muipola is one of four UA players honored by the NFCA: Harper, pitcher Alyssa Denham and outfielder Janelle MeoÃąo were named third-team All-Americans.
Alabamaâs Montana
Fouts is 25-3 with a 1.49 ERA and boasts a fastball that routinely registers in the low 70s, making her one of college softball hardest throwers. To hit the Alabama ace, the Wildcats must simplify their approach.
âWe have to really make sure that weâre starting a little earlier than weâre used to, and making sure that weâre getting our front foot down in time, and then swing at good pitches,â Candrea said. âI mean, itâs a complicated puzzle, but truthfully at this stage of the game thatâs really what youâre trying to do is trying to simplify the game. Youâve got to get on time, you got to swing on a good pitch.â
Itâs not just the fastball, either. Candrea praised Foutsâ ability to âtunnelâ the ball â keeping the same release point regardless of what pitch sheâs throwing.
âThatâs going to be the challenge having some good competitive bats,â he said. âIf weâre seeing the ball well then weâll be fine.â
If Arizona faces the Tideâs No. 2 pitcher, Lexi Kilfoyl, the Wildcats try not to chase her rise balls out of the zone.
âThatâs easier said than done,â Candrea said. â âĻ The key for us is to lay off the ball up in the zone.â
Byrne and âBama
So far, there have been no friendly bets made between the schoolsâ athletic directors. Alabama is led by Greg Byrne, who served as the UAâs AD before being hired back to the Southeastern Conference four years ago. Byrne hired many of the Wildcatsâ top young coaches, including Adia Barnes, Jay Johnson and Tony Amato, the soccer coach who left last week for Florida.
Byrne and Candrea were coach during the ADâs time in Tucson. Byrneâs replacement, Dave Heeke, awarded Candrea a five-year extension and significant raise shortly after starting at the UA in 2017.
Limiting distractions
Candrea called the Womenâs College World Series âa business trip âĻ itâs not a vacation.â
The Wildcats will be kept busy practicing and playing. There wonât be time to be distracted by friends, family â or the upcoming Olympics.
âWe have a routine that we go through and a lot of it is team oriented,â Candrea said. âWe get up in the morning we have breakfast together. Normally, if we were playing at night I will have a session around 10 oâclock or 11 oâclock to get them out of the hotel to go hit somewhere for about 30 or 40 minutes. I think that routine is really important for them.
âIâm very excited that Oklahoma City is going to be wide open and itâs going to be packed. But we have to protect our bubbles still. There are just some things right now that we wouldnât want to happen to us at this stage. Iâm going to be very particular about âĻ kids going out with their parents probably arenât going to happen here, right now. I think most of the stuff weâre going to make sure that we are doing in our bubble and trying to keep as many people out of our bubble as we can to protect our athletes. A hug and a kiss, Iâm all for. âĻ I think parents will understand that and I think the kids understand that.â



