Here’s what’s known about the 1999 NCAA Division I softball tournament and the Women’s College World Series (WCWS) that year.
Direct answer
- UCLA won the 1999 Women’s College World Series, capturing the national championship (their ninth NCAA title, and tenth overall) by defeating Washington 3-2 in the final game. Julie Adams of UCLA was named the WCWS Most Outstanding Player. [Sources note: multiple summaries of the 1999 WCWS confirm UCLA as champion and Washington as runner-up, with Adams earning MOP.]
Context and key details
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The 1999 WCWS took place in Oklahoma City at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium, May 27–31, and the event marked the WCWS’ return to Oklahoma City after a one-year hiatus. UCLA finished the tournament with a 63-6 overall record for the season. The Bruins posted a dominant season, including a school-record long winning streak to start the year and a strong Pac-10 performance. [Source notes consistently place the WCWS in Oklahoma City in 1999, UCLA’s 63-6 record, and Adams as MOP.]
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The final featured UCLA vs. Washington, with UCLA taking the title. Washington earned runner-up status, and California and DePaul were among the top finishers in the event’s standings. The 1999 tournament also saw adjustments to the bracket format, with the WCWS expanding and regional play continuing to shape the field. [Overview taken from season/tournament summaries of 1999, including final standings and notable participants.]
Additional context (season-wide)
- The 1999 season overall saw Arizona win the NCAA title in some summaries of the broader season narrative, but in the Women’s College World Series itself UCLA emerged as the champion in the WCWS bracket, defeating Washington in the final. Different sources occasionally distinguish between the WCWS champion and the earlier-season NCAA title context; for WCWS purposes, UCLA is listed as champion in 1999. [Cross-referencing multiple historical pages on the 1999 season and WCWS results.]
If you’d like, I can pull together a concise win-loss timeline for UCLA in the 1999 WCWS, or a quick side-by-side of final WCWS standings and key players.
Sources
the Rocky Mountains to win the title since 1987 and the first host institution in Division I softball history to win the title. The Sooners jumped ahead in the title game, 3-0, in the third inning with a two-run home run by Lisa Carey and an RBI single later in the inning by Kelli Braitsch. Although the Bruins would
fs.ncaa.orgThe University of Oklahoma earned the No. 1 seed in the NCAA Division I Softball Championship as the 64-team field was announced today by the NCAA Division I Softball Committee. The Sooners will host the University of Maryland, Baltimore County an automatic qualifier from the America East.
www.ncaa.comMay 18, 1999 East Lansing, Mich. - For the second time in three years, the Michigan State softball team has earned a bid to NCAA Regional play. The Spartans ...
msuspartans.com1999 held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on May 27-31. Champion – UCLA Bruins (63-6) Runner Up – Washington Huskies (51-18) The event returned to Oklahoma City a…
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