Winning big comes with a price.
For Courtney Deifel and the Arkansas softball program, that bill is coming due before the offseason’s even had time to settle and it starts with losing hitting coach DJ Gasso.
Reports surfaced Thursday that Gasso is set to be named the new head coach at Tulsa, departing Fayetteville after playing a central role in the Razorbacks’ first-ever trip to the Women’s College World Series.
It’s the kind of problem that comes with building something special. The Hogs built exactly that this past season.
Gasso’s name carries serious weight in the softball world. He’s a legacy coach and has been around national championship teams. Deifel probably wanted that around and he apparently was a big key.
He’s the son of Patty Gasso, the Oklahoma legend who won eight national championships and stands as one of the most celebrated coaches the sport has ever produced.
Brother JT and father Jim are also in coaching, making the Gasso name synonymous with the game at a lofty level. It’s never a bad sign for a coach do be surrounded by assistants with a winning pedigree.
Before joining that family coaching tree, DJ played college baseball at Bradley University, Hutchinson Community College and Central Oklahoma. When he turned to coaching, he made stops at Utah before landing in Fayetteville, where his reputation grew fast.
Over three seasons with Arkansas, Gasso helped turn the Razorbacks into one of the nation’s most dangerous offenses.
The Hogs set multiple program records under his watch, none bigger than this past season’s school-record 26 run-rule victories. The Hogs could hit … really hit.
He also helped develop some of the program’s best individual talent, including 2025 National Player of the Year Bri Ellis, an All-American who thrived in his system.
For Tulsa, landing someone with Gasso’s SEC-level experience and offensive track record is a significant hire. He arrives with proven credentials and a last name that carries instant credibility throughout college softball.
For Deifel, it means heading into the offseason with a key vacancy to fill on a staff that just reached the sport’s biggest stage. That’s the reality of reaching the Women’s College World Series.
That usually attracts the attention for job openings and the people who helped build it don’t always stay.
Deifel probably knew that. She’d likely take it again if it helps get the Hogs to Oklahoma City.




























