The number is 30. For decades, no freshman in Division I softball had reached it. Three players before Kendall Wells managed to get there, and each of those performances was considered extraordinary. Wells reached it last Saturday in just 40 games — 22 fewer games than any of them.
The Oklahoma true freshman hit her 30th home run of the season on April 4, 2026, during a 12-2 run-rule win over Kentucky at Love’s Field in Norman. The Sooners completed a three-game sweep, and Wells’ historic blast was the defining moment of the weekend. Named the D1Softball National Player of the Week and the SEC Player of the Week on April 7, Wells is doing things in her first college season that even the most optimistic projections could not have predicted.
The Record Books She’s Rewriting
Before Wells, the NCAA single-season freshman home run record was shared by three players: Lauren Chamberlain (Oklahoma, 2012), Jocelyn Alo (Oklahoma, 2018), and Kelly Majam (Hawaii, 2010). Each hit exactly 30 in their freshman seasons. Wells now joins that group — but the pace at which she arrived sets her apart entirely.
Every player who previously held the mark needed at least 62 games to reach 30. Wells got there in 40. That is not a marginal improvement. That is a generational gap in production speed.
Wells also set the SEC single-season home run record earlier this season. She broke that mark on March 31 when she hit her 27th home run against Wichita State — surpassing the previous conference record in the process.
The Next Record in Sight
Jocelyn Alo, the greatest power hitter in the history of college softball, set the all-time NCAA single-season home run record at 37 in 2021. Wells currently needs seven more to tie it. With at least 25 or more regular-season games left — and a schedule that includes the Oklahoma-Texas series, the SEC Tournament, and potentially the Women’s College World Series — the record is absolutely within reach.
If Wells breaks Alo’s all-time mark, she will have done so as a true freshman. No one has ever broken that record as a first-year player. Alo set it in her senior season.
The Bigger Picture
Oklahoma’s offensive production in 2026 has been historically dominant. The Sooners average 3.5 home runs per game as a team. Wells, hitting out of the heart of that lineup, has been the catalyst. With 60-plus RBI and a .383 batting average alongside her 30 home runs, she is a legitimate contender for every major individual award in college softball.
The program has produced record-setting freshmen before — Chamberlain and Alo both did it in Norman. But no one, anywhere in Division I history, did it this fast.
What’s Next
Wells and the Sooners face their toughest test of the season this weekend when No. 2 Oklahoma travels to Austin to play No. 4 Texas in the Red River Showdown. Three games, all on national television, with the SEC title and WCWS seeding on the line. For Wells, it is also the most high-profile stage yet for her record chase — seven home runs away from becoming the greatest power-hitting freshman the sport has ever seen.
