Maddie Houlihan and Amber Fiser were waiting to do TV interviews Thursday for a Channel 9 special on the Gophers softball team that would run that evening. The Gophers had hosted and finished winning a rain-delayed regional by defeating Georgia on Monday, and they were getting ready to meet LSU starting Friday in a best-of-three super regional.
Georgia and LSU were two of the 12 teams from the 13-team SEC that made it into the NCAA's 64-team bracket. Houlihan and Fiser were both around in 2017, when the Gophers were 54-3 after the Big Ten tournament, and then discovered the clout that the SEC carries with the NCAA's softball selection committee.
The Gophers were sent to a regional in Alabama, where they went 2-2 (and 0-2 vs. the Tide) and left with something of an empty feeling after what had been a season of startling excellence.
A reporter was talking casually with Houlihan and Fiser and offered a familiar refrain: "I still can't figure out how your team was made to go on the road for a regional two years ago."
Fiser, then the backup pitcher to Sara Groenewegen, now the junior star, offered a shrug. Houlihan said: "At least I wasn't a senior then. That would've been worse."
Houlihan is now a senior. She played and started her 232nd game for the Gophers on Friday. A major missing ingredient from 2017 — hosting and winning a regional — had been accomplished, and now there was a first chance ever to host a super regional.
And after that — well, don't try to engage Houlihan, or coach Jamie Trachsel, or the Gophers in general, in a conversation about the possibility of joining the eight-team field for next week's College World Series in Oklahoma City ... not yet.
Yet, the determination of Houlihan to end her career there, in an event that ESPN has turned into a popular showcase for the might of women's athletics, came through right on time Friday afternoon (and evening).