There is a moment in every dynasty when the numbers stop feeling real. Five straight state championships is already the kind of thing that makes people shake their heads. Six would put Taunton softball in a conversation all by itself.
That is exactly where the Tigers find themselves heading into the 2026 MIAA postseason.
A program that has owned Massachusetts Division 1 softball for half a decade is back again, undefeated through the regular season, and carrying the weight of something historic on their shoulders. Not that they seem bothered by it.
Coach Michelle Raposo has been at the center of all five titles and she has spent years building a culture in Taunton that is less about pressure and more about trust.
The girls on this roster did not arrive as strangers. Most of them have been playing together since they were kids running around local rec fields, long before any of this mattered.
That familiarity does not just make them a better team. It makes them harder to rattle when things get tight in a state semifinal and the game is still sitting at one run in the seventh inning.
That exact scenario played out more than once during the 2025 run to their fifth title. Taunton beat Wachusett Regional 10 to 4 in the final, but they had already survived moments before that where a lesser group would have folded.
They did not fold. They finished 25 and 0 and rode a 56 game winning streak into the summer.
Now a new group is trying to pick up where those seniors left off.
The program has always done a remarkable job of reloading without ever appearing to rebuild.
Raposo talks about that process in terms of standards rather than rosters. When players come through the Taunton program, they absorb something that does not leave just because the senior class graduates.
The way the team competes, the way they handle adversity, the way they show up in the big moments, that carries over.
What makes the six peat conversation so fascinating is not just the number itself. It is the fact that nobody in MIAA history has done it. Five straight titles was already uncharted territory.
If Taunton gets through June with another trophy, they will have done something that no school in the state has ever managed in any sport under this governing body. That is not a small thing.
The road ahead is not a soft one. Massachusetts softball has several programs chasing the Tigers this spring, and in a one loss elimination bracket, every game is its own kind of final.
Taunton has been in that pressure cooker every June for five years running and they keep coming out on the other side.
Whether they make it six is still to be decided. But the fact that the question is even being asked says everything about what this program has built in a small city in southeastern Massachusetts that most of the country has never heard of.
The rest of the state will be watching. Most of them are hoping to be the team that finally stops it. For now, Taunton just keeps showing up and winning.
That has been enough for five years. There is no reason to think it stops now.
