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Jul 27, 2025

2025 ACC Championship

It didn’t start with a speech. It started as a whisper – in fall weight room sessions, in Saturday scrimmages throughout January, in conversations between returners who’d come up just short in seasons past. ‘Why Not Us?’ became more than a slogan. It became a challenge.

Everyone talks about the blue bloods of the softball world. The programs that have been around much longer than the still ‘infant’ Clemson program in only its sixth season. Originally picked to finish seventh in the conference by league head coaches in the 2025 preseason poll, Clemson Softball decided to storm through the ACC Championship without asking for permission.

Head Coach John Rittman never needed to sell the message – the entire 22-player roster took it and ran. By the time Saturday’s championship game started, it was the heartbeat of a team that refused to be counted out.

The 2025 season and ACC Championship run wasn’t one that cruised. It twisted. It tested. It took everyone’s buy-in to reach that moment. In a year that started with a 3-6 overall record and ended on a 38-6 stretch, it saw the Tigers continue to reach new heights. Each challenge peeled back a layer of who they were – not just a talented team that had to rebuild after losing 11 seniors after the 2024 season, but a family consisting of a well-balanced mix of returners with experience and newcomers that brought a revitalized spark to the program.

The veterans, led by Maddie Moore, Aby Vieira, Brooke McCubbin and Alex Brown, took on mentorship roles. The newcomers to the roster, powered by Macey Cintron, Marian Collins, Taylor Pipkins and Reese Basinger, stepped into big moments. The bench continued to provide an energy that was necessary for the team to thrive. Week by week, game by game, the Tigers evolved. Their culture wasn’t built on comfort – it was built on trust.

Becoming the first team to not only win a game but take a series at Stanford in 2025, battling back for an extra-inning comeback against South Carolina at McWhorter Stadium in mid-April, earning the road win against top-ranked Tennessee and securing four ACC series sweeps felt like a prelude to something bigger. They didn’t dominate. They responded. More than that, they set the stage for what came next.

After securing their spot in the ACC Championship tournament in the middle of April, the Tigers locked up the No. 2 seed following a series sweep at Georgia Tech to end the regular season. This meant Clemson was staring down three opponents the Tigers hadn’t crossed paths with during the regular season should they continue to advance. With a first round bye, Clemson geared up for its first test in the tournament with a rematch of the 2024 ACC Quarterfinal game against Virginia.

The story that came out of the three-game weekend proved to be that anyone of the 22-player roster could win a game for the Tigers. When the first game against Virginia came around on Thursday evening, Clemson looked for any spark they could find to mount the first of three comebacks. After trading runs in the fourth and fifth innings, Virginia took the lead in the top of the sixth with a two-run homer.

With no hesitation, and a “Why Not Us?” mindset in the batter’s box, the Clemson freshman class came up with three of the four most crucial at bats in the sixth for the come from behind win. Cintron and Collins joined Vieira on base to load them for Pipkins to step to the plate. In a 2-2 count, the freshman belted one well over the left field wall for a grand slam that gave the Tigers a 7-4 advantage with three outs to go. McCubbin put up a quick 1-2-3 inning in the top of the seventh to secure the quarterfinal win and advance the Tigers to Friday’s action.

In the same fashion as Clemson’s other victories throughout the regular season, there was an unwavering belief amongst both the players and the coaching staff that anyone could step into the big moments without an ounce of hesitation and deliver – and like Pipkins on Thursday, that’s exactly how the Tigers rolled through the rest of the weekend.

The Tigers took that belief into Friday’s semifinal matchup against Virginia Tech. The forecast turned bleak at best with a call for rain to start roughly an hour into the originally scheduled game time. Unknowing at the time, the Tigers would be grateful for the downpour that would eventually hit and for the poise that came from believing in their training.

Around the second inning, the sky opened into a downpour. After both coaches and umpires discussed it, all sides agreed that the game would continue. With the Tigers staring down what started as a four-run deficit and grew to seven runs in the top of the sixth after errors riddled the defense, Clemson had its work cut out offensively for a statement to be made. Even with the scoreboard not leaning in Clemson’s favor, the dugout never stopped believing.

Clemson’s largest comeback victory in program history began in the bottom of the sixth when seniors Brown and Moore sparked the Tigers’ “Why Not Us?” mentality in the pouring rain. After a VT error allowed the first two runs to score, Clemson’s patience and poise took over. Collins plated two off a double and then the remaining runs – which not only tied the game but ultimately brought in the game-winning run – were due to walks and a hit by pitch. In total, Clemson responded from a 9-2 deficit to hold a 10-9 lead following a gritty sixth inning. It wasn’t flashy, but it was disciplined.

After battling through the rain offensively, the Tigers needed a shutdown inning defensively to secure their second comeback of the weekend. The rain proved to be no match for McCubbin in the circle who notched a scoreless top of the seventh to push Clemson to its third ACC Championship game in program history and first since 2022.

Staring down a situation two other teams in program history had faced before, Team 6 had a belief that any person on the 22-player roster could win that game for Clemson because ‘Why Not Us?’

A comeback was once again needed by the Tigers after Florida State hit a solo home run in the third for the 1-0 lead. Despite it all, Clemson continued to embrace the chaos.

Down to their final two outs with the tying run on first, another Tiger rose to the occasion and embraced their moment as sophomore Kylee Johnson drove a 2-2 pitch to center field for a two-run homer that would prove to be the hit heard around the ACC as Clemson claimed its first ACC Championship in program history.

This championship was more than a win – it was a statement. A program still building its legacy took a giant step forward in not only the league but on a national level. A very young team got their first taste of glory. The seniors left a mark that will live on long after their cleats have been hung up.

It wasn’t about proving others wrong. It was about proving what each player and coach knew was within reach the entire season.

The Clemson Softball program didn’t see itself as a Cinderella. They saw themselves as contenders – forged in comebacks, bonded by belief.

The names of the members of Team 6 will be etched across Clemson’s record book for eternity as the first team to bring an ACC Championship back from the conference tournament. They will be remembered for the hardware. The true legacy of Team 6 will be the heart they brought to the field.

Because Why Not Us? Wasn’t about hoping for a miracle. It was about creating one.

When the final out of a three-game historic stretch dropped into Jamison Brockenbrough’s glove in center field, the Tigers no longer asked, ‘Why Not Us?’ They knew – it was always them.

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