Tuesday, 31 May 2016

2016 JWOS All-Freshman Team

Fourteen athletes from eleven different schools comprise the inaugural JWOS All-Freshman Team. The list is made up of two pitchers; one catcher; four infielders; three outfielders; one utility player; and three "at-large" selections.

All three finalists for National Freshman of the Year made our list in Florida's Kelly Barnhill & Amanda Lorenz and Oklahoma's Shay Knighten.

Five SEC programs are represented with at least one selection, while Florida and Texas A&M enjoy two each. Oklahoma of the Big 12 is the only other program to be represented by two players.

Three players from mid-major schools made the list, including Kelsey Horton of New Mexico State; Taty Forbes of Coastal Carolina; and two-sport star Claire Oberdorf of Marist.

The full list of members of the All-Freshman Team can be found here:

P – Sydney Smith, LSU
P – Kelly Barnhill, Florida
C – Reagan Dykes, Alabama
IF – Shay Knighten, Oklahoma
IF – Kelsey Horton, New Mexico State
IF – Sydney Romero, Oklahoma
IF – Hailey Lunderman, Ole Miss
OF – Taty Forbes, Coastal Carolina
OF – Amanda Lorenz, Florida
OF – Kyla Walker, Baylor
UT – Claire Oberdorf, Marist
At-Large – Samantha Show, Texas A&M
At-Large – Ali Wester, Notre Dame
At-Large – Keeli Milligan, Texas A&M

Monday, 30 May 2016

Super Regionals Recap

Myers Wins the Rematch
There was more than a Super regional taking place in Auburn this weekend - the showdown between the Tigers and the Wildcats of Arizona also served as the renewing of an old rivalry. When Clint Myers still served as head coach of Arizona State (the job he left to take the reins at Auburn), the rivalry between the Sun Devils and the Wildcats' respective softball clubs was at its peak.

They traded wins, traded losses... both were perennial contenders for conference championships, World Series berths, and national titles.

This weekend was the rekindling of that rivalry between the coaches - though Myers may have worn navy & orange instead of maroon & gold, both legendary coaches wanted to head to the World Series at the other's expense.

Auburn emerged victorious, thanks to back-to-back victories on the second day of the series after Arizona came out on top in Game 1. Candrea's Wildcats headed home and Myers' Tigers boarded a plane bound for Oklahoma.

Harrisonburg, Virginia - The Next Softball Hotspot?
Rhoads Stadium in Tuscaloosa. Alumni Field in Michigan. Tiger Park in Baton Rouge. Easton Stadium in Los Angeles. Lamson Park in Lafayette. All are major softball venues famous for their raucous environments that are difficult for even the best opponents.

We may soon have to add Harrisonburg, Virginia to that list. The home of the James Madison Dukes, tickets to the Super regional sold out in MINUTES after being posted. The school, having added extra seating for the Regional round, then had to add even MORE seating... which also sold out in the span of just minutes.

The crowd was raucous and loud for their team, and while the Dukes didn't emerge successful, there's no reason to believe this was a one-time affair. Head coach Mickey Dean in a place primed for success and, as the movie saying goes, 'if you build it, they will come'. Dean has built a stellar program - and the fans are coming.

Upset of the Decade?
Coming into their hosted Super regional, the Florida Gators remained the favorite to take home the national title. Playing #16-seeded Georgia, they were widely picked to sweep through the Super Regional round to Oklahoma City with ease. Not so fast said the Bulldogs.

In the Super regional's leadoff game, Bulldogs ace Chelsea Wilkinson held the Gators to just three hits and shut out one of the nation's leading offenses. The Dawgs, for their part, scored three runs off of Gators star hurler Delanie Gourley and put nine runners on base.

The Gators would have had to win two back-to-back games on the Supers' second day, and looked like they were headed to  the winner-take-all game three with a one-run lead headed to the bottom of the 7th inning. With Aleshia Ocasio, the Player of the Year finalist and Gators ace, in the circle, the reigning national champions looked good and set for the winner-take-all matchup.

Enter pinch hitter Kaylee Puailoa. A senior coming off the bench, Puailoa stepped in with a runner on and proceeded to knock a no-doubter over the fence for the game-winning and Super-ending home run.

For the Gators, this will be the first year since 2012 that they aren't in Oklahoma City. The first time for the Class of 2016 that their season hasn't ended amongst the final eight. The first time for the Gator class of '17 that they'll watch the World Series from their couch.

Saturday, 28 May 2016

National Player of the Year Top 3 Finalists Named

Auburn's Kasey Cooper; Florida Aleshia Ocasio; and Michigan's Sierra Romero will be the three players vying for the title of National Player of the Year when the award is handed out prior to the Women's College World Series.

Cooper, the SEC Player of the Year, boasts a .431 batting average with nineteen home runs and seventy-five runs driven in. Her .906 slugging percentage leads the SEC and her .591 on-base percentage was second in the conference. The 2013 National Co-Freshman of the Year, 2016 is the first time Cooper has reached the final stage of finalists for Player of the Year.

Ocasio, the only non-upperclassman of the bunch, posted an 0.65 ERA mark prior to yesterday's upset loss to Georgia, an appearance that gave her only her second loss of the season and increased her ERA to all of 0.77. Opponents hit just .183 against the sophomore hurler and she stands in the top ten nationally in five different categories.

Sierra Romero, now a three-time top three finalist for the award, is in the final season of a stellar career in the maize and blue. Three times the Big 10's Player of the Year, Romero ranks in the top ten nationally of four categories, including with her .470 batting average and 934 slugging percentage. She also boasts nineteen home runs and seventy-six to her own credit.

An original list of twenty-five finalists was released earlier in the season, a grouping that was then trimmed down to ten from which the final three vying for the award were selected.

All three players suited up for teams that earned top-four national seeds in the NCAA tournament.

The National Player of the Year will be announced on May 31st. The National Freshman of the Year award will also be handed out that day; finalists for that award are Ocasio's teammates Kelly Barnhill and Amanda Lorenz and Oklahoma's Shay Knighten.

Thursday, 26 May 2016

George Washington Head Coach Stacey Schramm Resigns

George Washington head coach Stacey Schramm has resigned.

Schramm’s departure comes following the conclusion of her sixth season at the helm of the Colonials, a time during which she posted a 134-162-2 record and reached the postseason three times. In 2016, her squad garnered a berth in the Atlantic 10 conference tournament but were the first team eliminated with an 0-2 record in the double-elimination tournament.

Schramm previously spent time as the head coach at Division II Queens and Wheeling Jesuit; her resume also includes stops as an assistant coach at Drexel and Bucknell.


Schramm owns a lifetime 247-284-4 career record.

Super Regional Primer

What's on tap?
Eight Super Regionals, hosted by the top eight seeds of the tournament: Florida; Michigan; Oklahoma; Auburn; Oregon; Alabama; James Madison; and Florida State.

Every seeded team advanced to the Super Regional round, with the exception of Kentucky and Tennessee, the #9 and #13 seeds, respectively. 

Six teams from the SEC and five from the PAC-12 remain, while five other conferences (ACC, Big 10, Big 12, CAA, and Sun Belt) are represented by one remaining team a piece.

The Gainesville (Florida/Georgia) and Norman (Oklahoma/Louisiana-Lafayette) Super Regionals kick off on Thursday. Harrisonburg (James Madison/LSU), Tuscaloosa (Alabama/Washington), and Tallahassee (Florida State/Utah) begin on Friday. The Super Regionals in Ann Arbor (Michigan/Missouri), Auburn (Auburn/Arizona), and Eugene (Oregon/UCLA) begin on Saturday. 

All Supers go over a span of two days, with a single game being played on the beginning day and a second game followed by an "if necessary" game to determine the winner to be played day #2.

Where to Watch:
ESPN's family of networks will carry all eight Super Regionals.

The first two games of the Gainesville super will be seen on ESPN2, with the "if necessary" game being played on ESPNU. The same set-up goes for the games from Norman, with Oklahoma's games immediately following the Gators each night.

The pitching-heavy James Madison/LSU matchup will be seen on ESPNU for game 1, switch to ESPN for the second game, and move back to ESPNU for the "if necessary" game 3.

Friday's game 1 of Alabama/Washington from Tuscaloosa will be seen on ESPN2, while Saturday's game 2 will be on ESPN and game 3 on ESPN2.

Florida State hosts the surprising-upset entry Utah on ESPNU for game 1, ESPN2 for game 2, and ESPN for game 3, if it becomes necessary.

The first two games of the Michigan-hosted Super will be seen on ESPN on Saturday, while game 3 would be seen on ESPNU.

Auburn/Arizona could end up being seen on all three major networks, with game 1 on ESPN2, game 2 on ESPN, and game 3, if it is played, rounding out the trifecta on ESPNU.

The matchup of all-PAC-12 teams kicks off on ESPN Saturday evening and continues on ESPNU for the remaining games, both in a late-evening start in the Eastern time zone.

Expert Pick 'em
Our expert panel is back this way to pick the winners again, with some new faces and fresh takes. Let's see how their picks match up.

The Panel:
Justin McLeod, JWOS head writer
Lee Dobbins, JWOS staff writer/fmr. D1 head coach
Kristina Thorson, three-time all-American
Brittany Fowler, 2013 Sun Belt Player of the Year
Jeff Franquet, former collegiate & professional head coach
Michael Steuerwald, head coach, Chicago Bandits
Eric Lopez, 'In the Circle' podcast host
Ivy Renfroe, four-time all-SEC selection
Courtney Albritton, 4-time D2 all-American
WNY Softball, founder of MAAC Softball blog

The Picks:
Gainesville Super Regional:
JM: Florida
LD: Florida
KT: Florida
BF: Florida
JF: Florida
MS: Florida
EL: Florida
IR: Florida
CA: Florida
WNY: Florida

Ann Arbor Super Regional:
JM: Michigan
LD: Missouri
KT: Michigan
BF: Missouri
JF: Michigan
MS: Missouri
EL: Michigan
IR: Michigan
CA: Michigan
WNY: Michigan

Norman Super Regional:
JM: Oklahoma
LD: Oklahoma
KT: Oklahoma
BF: Louisiana-Lafayette
JF: Louisiana-Lafayette
MS: Louisiana-Lafayette
EL: Oklahoma
IR: Oklahoma
CA: Louisiana-Lafayette
WNY: Louisiana-Lafayette

Auburn Super Regional:
JM: Arizona
LD: Arizona
KT: Arizona
BF: Auburn
JF: Auburn
MS: Auburn
EL: Auburn
IR: Auburn
CA: Auburn
WNY: Auburn

Eugene Super Regional:
JM: Oregon
LD: Oregon
KT: Oregon
BF: Oregon
JF: Oregon
MS: Oregon
EL: Oregon
IR: Oregon
CA: Oregon
WNY: Oregon

Tuscaloosa Super Regional:
JM: Alabama
LD: Alabama
KT: Washington
BF: Alabama
JF: Alabama
MS: Alabama
EL: Alabama
IR: Washington
CA: Alabama
WNY: Alabama

Harrisonburg Super Regional:
JM: James Madison
LD: James Madison
KT: LSU
BF: LSU
JF: LSU
MS: James Madison
EL: LSU
IR: LSU
CA: LSU
WNY: LSU

Tallahassee Super Regional:
JM: Florida State
LD: Florida State
KT: Florida State
BF: Utah
JF: Florida State
MS: Florida State
EL: Florida State
IR: Utah
CA: Florida State
WNY: Utah

Matchups to Watch:
James Madison pitching vs. LSU pitching
     >>> Both teams are made and broken on the backs of their pitching staffs, and the work from the circle should be the highlight of the weekend in Harrisonburg. For JMU, senior Jailyn Ford and sophomore Megan Good combine for a 0.89 ERA coming in. While Good has shouldered a bit more work than her veteran counterpart, the duo make a deadly 1-2 punch for the Dukes and, even against an SEC opponent with bats like the Tigers', they're far from pushovers. Opponents - including three early-season SEC teams and seventeen Power Five teams overall - have collectively hit just .152 against the pair and .161 against the Dukes staff as a whole. On the Tigers' part, their three-headed beast is led by the fiery Carley Hoover. Statistically, though, Hoover's allowance of 2.25 runs per game ranks third on her squad, a mark far more to the credit of the staff's viability and dominance than anything else. Freshman Sydney Smith boasts a 0.92 mark, while sophomore Allie Walljasper checks in a 1.89. The group, along with seldom-used but equally-gifted Baylee Corbello, can brag of an even 400 strikeouts thus-far on the year, while opponents have hit sub-.220 against the quartet. Hitting coaches may not want to watch too much of this Super regional pairing.

Delanie Gourley vs. Tina Iosefa
     >>> The newest addition to the USA Elite Team's circle will have her hands full with a familiar Bulldog lineup. Iosefa is coming off of a Regional final performance where she set the SEC's single-season RBI record and catapulted the Dawgs into the Supers thanks to her bat. Gourley, the latest in a long recent line of Gator aces, boasts a 0.70 ERA in more than 150 innings this year, allowing more than a single just five times and more than three runs just once. Gourley boasts all of two innings of work against the Dawgs in her career, with four strikeouts, no runs, and just one hit allowed in those brief appearances. She has never faced Iosefa, so the first-ever meeting of this power pitcher and power hitter should be an interesting one.

Danielle O'Toole vs. Auburn offense
     >>> After dispensing with one SEC team in the Regional round, Mike Candrea's club has their sights set on besting another to reach Oklahoma City. The Cats' run thus-far can be attributed to a lot of things, but one need look no further than the circle to find one of the biggest reasons for the squad's success. Riding the arm of the SDSU transfer O'Toole, the Cats will now face an offense that ranked #13 in the nation in batting average and hit seventy-nine home runs. O'Toole vs. Kasey Cooper will itself be riveting viewing, but thanks to the protection Clint Myers has around his Player of the Year finalist & star slugger, O'Toole will catch no breaks in the Tigers lineup. For the Tigers' part, three players continue to boast .400+ batting averages and Emily Carosone deserves nearly as much applause as Cooper for her work at the plate, and in the field. Speedsters Tiffany Howard and the surprisingly-great Victoria Draper give the Tigers the whole offensive package.

JWOS Bracket Challenge Standings
Nine individuals are tied atop the Justin’s World of Softball Bracket Challenge standings after the Regional round – with twenty-eight points a piece, tied for the lead are: Jason W., Emily R., Bob P., Willie S., Sarah W., Brent B., Melinda B., Chris D., and Kevin M.

Just two points behind and tied for tenth are six others, namely Don M., Marcie B., Scott R., Andy G., Nate M., and Karalee M.

With twenty-four points are Brian S., Kathy M., and Hannah L.  Heidi B., Chad B., and Tex G. all have twenty-two. Farrah S. has twenty points, while Rommel B. (the only one to pick the surprising Utah upset over Kentucky) and CA S. are at eighteen.

Tuesday, 24 May 2016

Where Are They Now: Mariah Gearhart

Who is she? Mariah Gearhart, a former all-conference and all-region third baseman and NCAA record holder for the Oklahoma State Cowgirls.

What is she known for? Gearhart was three times named an all-conference selection and earned all-region honors in each of the last three years of her career. She held the NCAA all-time career record for hit-by-pitches, a record that stood for years until it was broken earlier this season. 

Here's something interesting... Continuing her athletic career post-softball, Mariah has become an all-star National CoEd Flag Football star. A 3-time United States Flag & Touch Football League national champion (twice on a CoEd team and once as part of an all-women’s team), in just four years of playing, Mariah’s achievements have made her eligible for the association’s Hall of Fame. The only remaining qualification for admittance into the Hall has to do with longevity, so she says “I will be playing flag football for at least another six years!”.

Quotable quote: "Never be satisfied. This generation is starting to lose the true meaning of hard work and dedication with the opportunities that have been created. Young players have so many different outlets now to play and gain experience and the appreciation for it all gets lost. The numbers haven’t changed though; there are still only a certain amount of players that can make a Division 1 roster, only a certain number of girls that get to play college ball, and even less that are able to do it for 4 years and graduate. Your hard work and dedication to your skill starts when you decide to commit to this sport and that commitment doesn’t end until that diploma is in your hand."

What's she up to now? Since her graduation in 2011, 
Mariah has worked in the production department for ESPN and their variety of networks… whether it’s preparing graphics or something else related to an event’s broadcast, chances are you have seen Mariah’s work on-screen! She was promoted to the position of Associate Producer late last year and moved to Orlando from Charlotte, her former headquarters.
 Keep up: You can find Mariah on Twitter @riahGhart

Monday, 23 May 2016

2016 Regionals Roundup

Parity Returns
The selection of eight SEC teams to hosting opportunities for the regional round led to some extensive discussion about favoritism on the part of the selection committee, but that apparently didn't bother the teams out west. Of the eight PAC-12 teams that made the field of sixty-four, five remain standing, a 62.5% conference percentage. With six SEC teams alive and kicking, a 55% mark for the conference that has produced three of the last four national champions. The Super Regionals feature two SEC v. PAC matchups, as well a single in-conference matchup for each league.

Extra-Inning Affairs
If you like "free softball", the South was the place to be Saturday night. Two mid-major schools taking on two PAC-12 schools in two SEC parks. The stars were aligned and the full moon must've been taking effect. Both games went to the 14th inning before ending in walk-off fashion. In Auburn, improbable candidate Jacksonville State, they of the Ohio Valley Conference, upended Oregon State, thanks in no small part to ace pitcher Whitney Gillespie (more on her later). To make matters worse? The Gamecocks had to turn around and play another elimination game that very night - a game that they also won to catapult them into the regional championship after playing 21 innings of softball in a seven-hour period.

Down in the Red Stick, McNeese State and Arizona State battled it out in a late-night elimination game for the chance to face hosting LSU on Sunday. Near complete-game performances by Cowpoke seniors Emily Vincent and Jamie Allred were stellar, as they allowed just seven hits between them and only a single run a piece. On the Sun Devil side of the equation, starter Kelsey Kessler went nearly eight and was effective, striking out eight and limiting the Cowpoke offense to just two runs on ten hits. The performance of the night, though, may have come from ASU's Dale Ryndak, who came in in relief in the eighth inning and went the rest of the way. As the night wore on, Ryndak allowed just one hit and absolutely suffocated McNeese's hitters at nearly every turn, eventually earning the "W" for her efforts.

Tigers Make a Statement
In the midst of countless off-field distractions, including an athletic department investigation and a player protest in support of head coach Ehren Earleywine, the Missouri Tigers were definitely intent on proving a point with their play this weekend, and prove that point they did. Winning every game in run-rule fashion and without allowing a single run, while scoring twenty-six of their own, the Tigers followed the lead of ace Paige Lowary, who pitched every inning of the regional and allowed just seven hits all weekend long. The Tigers excelled in every area: Three players hit home runs; five different players stole a total of nine bases; and senior Emily Crane and sophomore Amanda Sanchez each registered five-RBI games.

As the controversial saga has drawn on, one thing has remained abundantly clear - whatever feelings the Tiger administration has for Earleywine, the fans and those that matter most, the players, are firmly in his corner.

O'Toole Stays Hot
In the midst of her team's eventually-successful upset bid in Knoxville, O'Toole was as sharp as ever. Through her team's first two games in the Regional, a victory over Ohio State and the first upset win over Tennessee, O'Toole pitched every one of her team's innings, holding both opponents scoreless while scattering three hits and ten strikeouts. Though she floundered a bit in the third and final game, she still earned the victory and is now primed for another run at an SEC squad in the Auburn-hosted Super regional this weekend.

Jax State's Gillespie Boosts Her Team with the Bat 
and in the Circle
The afore-mentioned redshirt sophomore hurler deserves more than footnote after her performance in the first two days of the regional round. On Friday, in a game that ultimately swayed to the Tigers on a walk-off, game-ending sacrifice fly, Gillespie still held the SEC champions to three hits and two runs in 6.2 innings pitched, striking out seven. Working out of the loser's bracket, she pitched all but an inning and 2/3 of the marathon game vs. Oregon State, striking out eleven and holding the Beavers scoreless in all but two innings. In the bottom of the 13th inning, with two outs, her team down a run, and down to her last strike, the stud sophomore knocked an RBI double to knot the game up and buoy her team for one more inning, which turned out to be all that the Gamecocks needed.

Given the start off for the second game of the evening, Gillespie came in and closed out the victory over USC-Upstate, getting two outs on six pitches to seal her team's spot in the regional final. Even in the eventual season-ender for her squad on Sunday, Gillespie held the Tigers to just four hits and one earned run in a single recorded inning of work before being replaced in the circle.

The Gamecocks should be very, very excited about their in-state native ace.

No More Streaking
Coming into the NCAA tournament, the Florida Atlantic Owls were riding a twenty-one game win streak. The Conference USA champs, riding the stellar arm of ace Kylee Hanson, had firmly entrenched themselves in the conversation as possible sleeper pick for the Super regionals round. Even after being placed in the regional with #1 overall seed Florida, the Owls gathered some consideration as a possible upset pick.

Cross-state in Tallahassee, Ken Eriksen's South Florida club had enjoyed a twenty-three game winning streak in the middle of the season and an American regular-season title, earning them some brief consideration as a potential host. 

Out West, Fresno State had their own twenty-three game winning streak snapped in the last game of the regular season, but behind senior ace Jill Compton, they hoped to earn a late-seed hosting bid or a "winnable" regional placement. Just missing out on hosting, the Bulldogs were placed in the Los Angeles regional with one of the PAC-12's best in UCLA.

All three teams had different paths throughout the season, but one thing is similar between all three - all will be sitting at home on Super Regional weekend after bowing out in less-than-graceful fashion. All three sported 1-2 records in tournament play and all were eliminated without ever facing their hosting, seeded team.

USF was twice shut out against SEC foe South Carolina, giving up eight runs over two games to the Gamecocks.

Fresno, facing an underrated Big West foe in Cal State Fullerton, failed to even make the elimination game competitive, bowing out after a 7-1 second defeat at the Titans' hands.

Joan Joyce's Owls headed back to Boca Raton after two hard-luck losses to in-state rival UCF. Both pitcher's duels, as expected, FAU's staff gave up just three runs and Owls ace Kylee Hanson ended her junior campaign with a 0.78 ERA.

Three teams with lengthy, impressive winning streaks during the season, but short, unimpressive and disappointing stays in the postseason.

Thursday, 19 May 2016

Expert Pick 'em - Regionals

As the first Regionals get set to begin today, here are our eight-member expert panel's predictions for how things will go this weekend.

The Panel:

Justin McLeod, JWOS head writer
Lee Dobbins, JWOS staff writer/fmr. D1 head coach
Kristina Thorson, three-time all-American
Brittany Fowler, 2013 Sun Belt POTY
Eric Lopez, 'In the Circle' podcast host
Courtney Albritton, 4-time D2 all-American
WNY Softball, founder of MAAC Softball blog

The Picks:
Gainesville regional:
JM: Florida
LD: Florida
KT: Florida
BF: Florida
EL: *
CA: Florida
WNY: Florida

Ann Arbor regional: 
JM: Michigan
LD: Michigan
KT: Michigan
BF: Michigan
EL: Michigan
CA: Michigan
WNY: Michigan

Norman regional:
JM: Oklahoma
LD: Oklahoma
KT: Oklahoma
BF: Mississippi
EL: Oklahoma
CA: Oklahoma
WNY: Oklahoma

Auburn regional:
JM: Auburn
LD: Auburn
KT: Auburn
BF: Auburn
EL: Auburn
CA: Auburn
WNY: Auburn

Eugene regional:
JM: Oregon 
LD: Oregon
KT: Oregon
BF: Oregon
EL: Oregon
CA: Oregon
WNY: Oregon

Tuscaloosa regional:
JM: Alabama
LD: Alabama
KT: Alabama
BF: Alabama
EL: Alabama
CA: Alabama
WNY: Alabama

Harrisonburg regional:
JM: James Madison
LD: James Madison
KT: James Madison
BF: James Madison
EL: James Madison
CA: James Madison
WNY: James Madison

Tallahassee regional:
JM: South Florida
LD: Florida State
KT: Florida State
BF: Florida State
EL: Florida State
CA: Florida State
WNY: South Florida

Lexington regional:
JM: Kentucky
LD: Kentucky
KT: Kentucky
BF: Kentucky
EL: Kentucky
CA: Kentucky
WNY: Kentucky

Baton Rouge regional:
JM: LSU
LD: LSU
KT: LSU
BF: LSU
EL: LSU
CA: LSU
WNY: LSU

Seattle regional:
JM: Minnesota
LD: Washington
KT: Washington
BF: Washington
EL: Washington
CA: Washington
WNY: Washington

Los Angeles regional:
JM: Fresno State
LD: Fresno State
KT: UCLA
BF: UCLA
EL: UCLA
CA: UCLA
WNY: Fresno State

Knoxville regional:
JM: Arizona
LD: Arizona
KT: Arizona
BF: Tennessee
EL: Tennessee
CA: Tennessee
WNY: Tennessee

Lafayette regional:
JM: Texas A&M
LD: Texas A&M
KT: Louisiana-Lafayette
BF: Louisiana-Lafayette
EL: Louisiana-Lafayette
CA: Texas A&M
WNY: Louisiana-Lafayette

Columbia regional:
JM: Missouri
LD: Nebraska
KT: Louisville
BF: Missouri
EL: Missouri
CA: Missouri
WNY: Missouri

Athens regional:
JM: Georgia
LD: Georgia
KT: Georgia
BF: Georgia
EL: Georgia
CA: Georgia
WNY: Georgia


* - Eric Lopez will not predict the Gainesville due to a conflict with duties with the UCF Softball team, who will participate in that regional.

Virginia, Head Coach Blake Miller Part Ways

Virginia and head coach Blake Miller have parted ways. 

Miller leaves after a three-year stint at UVA during which he amassed a 42-116 record and was never able to grab a firm hold of the success that was expected when he came over from Oregon after helping lead the Ducks to three consecutive Super Regional appearances.

The Cavaliers had gotten better in conference play as Miller's tenure went on, winning seven ACC games in 2016 after winning a total of five the two years prior.

A former Team USA men's fastpitch player, Miller's head coaching resume has included stops at Oregon; Texas A&M-Kingsville; and Darton College in Georgia. He has also served as an assistant at East Tennessee State; Missouri Western State; and Mesa State.

Wednesday, 18 May 2016

Portland State Releases Head Coach Barb Sherwood

Justin's World of Softball has learned that Portland State has decided not to renew their contract with head softball coach Barb Sherwood, a move that is expected to be announced within the day.

Sherwood just completed her third season at the PSU helm, amassing a 38-106 overall record and an 18-41 mark in Big Sky conference play.

After doubling the team's win total from eight in her first season to sixteen a year ago, the Vikings took a step back this season, amassing just fourteen wins. They did earn a berth in the conference tournament as the sixth of eight teams in the conference, but were quickly dispensed with an 0-2 record in the double-elimination tournament.

Sherwood presided over fifteen all-conference selections during her tenure at Portland State, including 2015 first-team selection Brittany Hendrickson, who picked up the team's triple crown that season.

Prior to her arrival as Vikings head coach, Sherwood spent seven seasons at Virginia Tech. Her resume also includes stops at Florida State; Wisconsin; and Troy, her alma mater.

Tuesday, 17 May 2016

Five Matchups to Watch in Regionals

5. Kristen Brown & Kendra Lynch vs. Jailyn Ford & Megan Good – Harrisonburg Regional
    Brown led North Carolina with a .397 batting average and eighteen home runs, as well as an .808 slugging percentage. Her teammate Lynch, for her part, hit .323 on the year with twelve home runs of her own and added a sub-4.00 ERA and the lion's share of the team's innings of work in the circle. She had some stellar clutch performances later in the regular season and will undoubtedly be relied upon with both her bat and her arm. JMU's Ford and Good, easily one of the top three pitching staffs in the nation, have a combined ERA below 1.70 and average more than a strikeout an inning, while opponents are hitting a dismal .164 against them. Both, similar to Lynch, can get it done with the bat, as well.

4. Erika Piancastelli vs. LSU's pitching – Baton Rouge Regional
     The sophomore Italian continued the hot streak from her inaugural season, hitting .420 this season with twenty-one home runs and a .993 slugging percentage for the Cowgirls of McNeese. For the Tigers, their pitching staff is undoubtedly their bread and butter, led by a quartet of players all with ERAs under 2.40 and averaging nearly a strikeout an innings. As a team, opponents are hitting just .217 when the Tigers are in the circle. During the teams' regular-season single-game matchup, the Cowgirl hitters only faced Hoover. Piancastelli was held hitless in that game, reaching base only on a walk. It will be interesting to see if she can learn from that performance and make an adjustment before facing Hoover and the rest of the Tigers staff this weekend.
     
3. Danielle O’Toole vs. Meghan Gregg – Knoxville Regional
     Two of the finest somewhat-surprising upstart players of the season are likely to match up at least once over the course of the weekend. While any of the Lady Vols' lineup facing Arizona's dominant O'Toole should be interesting, I chose Gregg for this spot because of team-leading statistics and the fact that the burden to fill the void left by Rainey Gaffin will likely fall heavily on her shoulders. Gregg, who hit .391 this year with ten home runs, will have to up the ante even a bit more to account for the injury-induced absence of Gaffin, a .380 hitter in her own right. O'Toole, the redshirt transfer, posted a 2.14 ERA for the Wildcats and came through under pressure in several situations down the stretch. A strikeout machine, she averaged almost exactly one per game and opponents hit sub-.230 against her.
     
2. Casey Stangel vs. Sara Groenewegen – Seattle Regional
     The two hitting pitchers have both proven real catalysts for their teams this season, and as the two are likely to face off at least once over the weekend, it will be interesting to see how they approach pitching to and hitting off one another, considering their vast similarities. Groenewegen posted a sub-2.00 ERA on the season for the Gophers and has thus far averaged more than 1.44 strikeouts/inning. She's given up just fifteen home runs and opponents haven't even hit .200 off of her. Washington's Stangel will likely be a part of any rally the Huskies get going in their inevitable matchup against Groenewegen and they will have to rally well if they expect the Canadian Gopher to wind up in the loss column.

1. Shelby Turnier vs. Kylee Hanson – Gainesville Regional
     It's the battle of the aces as the Gainesville regional is packed with power pitching, and it's not likely we'll see much offense coming out of the swamp during this week's series of games. For Turnier and Hanson, the job is a tough one as they are tasked with staving off the lineup of the twice-defending champion Gators at some point, but first must meet one another in a matchup where somebody unfortunately has to take the loss. For Turnier, while her 2016 hasn't been as stellar as her all-American junior campaign of 2015, she is still an effective, overpowering pitcher who can get batters out with ease and is a strikeout machine. For Hanson's part, there is a very good reason she is a top ten finalist for National Player of the Year; she holds a 0.73 ERA with 286 strikeouts in 210 innings and opponents have hit just .135 against her. Known for stifling even great offenses, either of these pitchers could find themselves in a showdown with the Gators and either could make trouble for the defending champs and make some noise in the upset department before all is said and done.

Monday, 16 May 2016

Stephen F. Austin Parts Ways with Head Coach Gay McNutt

UPDATE 5/17/16 14:30: The move has been confirmed via a press release on the school's website today. They termed McNutt's departure a "resignation".

Stephen F. Austin has parted ways with head softball coach Gay McNutt, sources have said.

McNutt wrapped up her ninth year at the helm of the Ladyjacks with the 2016 season's close, during which time she led the club to a 213-259 overall record. In her first season in Nacogdoches, McNutt led the Ladyjacks to a 36-25 record and their first-ever NCAA tournament berth at the Division I level.

Since 2010, however, SFA failed to put together a winning record and reached the 20-win mark just twice. Since the turn of the decade, McNutt led her club to a 119-189 record, including barely sub-.500 mark in the 2016 season.

Formerly the head coach at Northwestern State and Southern Miss, McNutt also spent time on the staffs of Louisiana-Lafayette and Alvin Community College, as well as a support-staff role at Houston for four years. 

A four-year Texas A&M Aggie, McNutt was an all-American player in her senior season of 1985.

Her successor will inherit a roster that includes 2016 team batting champ Brittany Lewis (.368/11/53) and workhorse pitching tandem Callee Guffey and Makayla Sikes, who combined to hold opposing hitters to a .244 batting average and collected more than 240 innings of work this season.

Justin's World of Softball Annual Bracket Challenge - ENTER HERE

For the upteenth year in a row, Justin's World of Softball is glad to announce our Postseason Bracket Challenge with a prize chest chock full of goodies for the winner and a couple of door prizes to be disbursed among those who participate.

The rules are simple:
- You must pick your bracket "all the way", from the regional round to your pick for the championship winner and runner-up. A properly-completed bracket will contain picks for sixteen regional winners; eight Super regional winners; a WCWS winner; and a WCWS runner-up.

- No changes may be made to a bracket after it has been submitted. This includes the changing of picks prior to the tournament's start.

- All brackets must be turned in by the start of game one of the tournament on Thursday, May 19 @ 5:30 ET.

- Incomplete brackets will not be accepted and are subject to disregarding without notice to the competitor.

- Justin's World of Softball reserves the right to disqualify or eliminate any competitor in the Bracket Challenge at any time, for any reason at our discretion.

- 2 points will be awarded for every correctly-picked Regional winner. 5 points will be awarded for every correctly-picked Super Regional winner. 10 points will be awarded for a correctly-picked WCWS first runner-up. 15 points will be awarded for a correctly-picked WCWS winner. The individual with the most points at the end of the Women's College World Series will be crowned the Bracket Challenge champion.

Questions? Ask 'em here, on the Justin's World Facebook page, or find me on Twitter @justfactsmaam.

The full bracket can be found here; completed submissions for the Bracket Challenge will be accepted via the Justin's World Facebook page or via Twitter.

Best of luck to all!

2016 NCAA Tournament Bracket/Seedings Announced

The NCAA tournament selection committee announced the field of sixty-four teams that will ultimately whittled down to one National Champion.

The Top 8 seeds will host a Regional and, if they emerge victorious, a Super Regional. The top eight seeds are:
#1 Florida
#2 Michigan
#3 Oklahoma
#4 Auburn
#5 Oregon
#6 Alabama
#7 James Madison
#8 Florida State

Teams seeded 9-16 will host a Regional, but will have to travel to their bracketed opponent's home park should they make it to Supers. The remaining Regional-hosting teams are:
#9 Kentucky
#10 LSU
#11 Washington
#12 UCLA
#13 Tennessee
#14 Louisiana-Lafayette
#15 Missouri
#16 Georgia

The SEC picked up three of the top eight seeds and eight of the top sixteen.

You can find the bracket in full here.

The defending champion Gators welcome SWAC champion Alabama State, UCF, and Conference USA champion Florida Atlantic into Gainesville. This is a surprisingly-tough regional for the back-to-back national champs. FAU (RPI #23) and UCF (#31) both have put together impressive campaigns this season. UCF continues to be led by the stellar arm of Shelby Turnier, while FAU relies on junior hurler Kylee Hanson (28-3, 0.73) and are riding a twenty-one game winning streak that dates back to the first weekend of April.

Michigan picked up a bit of a more manageable grouping, though they do bring the ACC's 41-11 Notre Dame to town. ND earned the #16 overall seed last season and were upset in South Bend. The Wester sisters lead the Fighting Irish at the plate and on the basepaths and could make some work for the Blue pitching staff. Valpo holds the tournament's worst record with just eighteen wins, but earned a berth by virtue of a Horizon League tournament championship. Miami, Ohio could make some games interesting out of the MAC.

Norman, Oklahoma is the site of the regional hosted by the #3-overall squad. The Sooners bring Ole Miss, Tulsa, and Wichita State in. The berth is the first-ever for Mike Smith's rejuvenated Ole Miss squad, while Tulsa and Wichita State, both conference champions, stay relatively close to home or in familiar territory. Though the Sooners should ultimately escape to the Super Regional round, there could be some serious noise in the process of that in Norman.

Fresh off an SEC championship, their second in a row, the Auburn Tigers bring in a PAC-12 team of their own in Oregon State, as well as Atlantic Sun champs and perennial mid-major power USC-Upstate and Ohio Valley champions Jacksonville State. For the Upstate Spartans, this is their fourth consecutive Regional berth in the state of Alabama but the first outside of Tuscaloosa.

Oregon earned the PAC-12's highest seed at #5... the conference champions will certainly be tested as Baylor, Fordham, and Long Beach State come to town. LBSU earns an at-large bid on the Big West's behalf while the Bears get a surprisingly-tough draw after they were thought to be a bubble candidate for a high-seed hosting gig. Geography may be the determining factor in this one, as the Ducks use wet, West-Coast Eugene to their advantage.

Former National champs Alabama get the #6 seed and are the third SEC team in the top six. They bring in-state rival Samford into TTown, accompanied by the Golden Bears of California. Annie Aldrete, formerly the star catcher for Tennessee, makes her return to SEC country, while former Crimson Tide great Kelly Kretschman returns on the other side of the diamond, as an assistant coach for Texas State.

James Madison, one of the best stories of 2016, not only pulls a National seed but were one of the few teams not to get a high-seeded opponent brought to town - Power Five squad North Carolina are the #2 seed in the regional, followed by Big South champion Longwood and Princeton. Longwood finally gets a regional placement that isn't in Knoxville vs. the Lady Vols, while UNC can't rely too much on their Power Five credentials against an exceptional JMU Dukes pitching staff and a solid offense.

Florida State earned the 8th and final National seed and bring in two in-state squads in South Florida and Florida A&M, as well as the SEC's South Carolina. The Noles will have to be cautious and on the ball against USF and are on high upset alert against Ken Eriksen's jumpstart club. Despite a dismal in-conference record, South Carolina put together a resume that equaled a high RPI ranking and earned their way into the tournament.

Kelsey Nunley's Kentucky fell just short of a National seeding, but still played their way into the top ten and will have as close to an easy ride as a team might have in the regional round - Big East champs Butler, the PAC-12's Utah, and Illinois, a surprise out of the B1G, will flock to John Cropp Stadium. Riding the arm of Nunley, and finally with a formidable staff behind her, the Wildcats should have a fairly simple road to Supers.

Riding a somewhat-surprising surge that took them to the conference championship game, LSU earned the first double-digit seed at #10 and bring in-state rival tough-to-beat McNeese State to the Red Stick. LIU-Brooklyn and Arizona State will join them there. Buoyed by sophomore stud Erika Piancastelli, the Cowgirls of McNeese will be no easy pickings. The Tigers will have to maintain consistency in all facets of the game, including offensively, defensively, and in the circle and they'll need Sandra Simmons to keep up her hot streak into the tournament. Arizona State's selection may be the biggest surprise of the night after a dismal record in conference play and finishing just five games over .500 overall and shouldn't repeat the fits they gave LSU in this same scenario last year.

Washington brings regional play back to Seattle and along with them come Minnesota, the walk-off Big Ten champions; red-hot Summit League champs North Dakota State; and Big Sky twice-defending champs Weber State. NDSU has been to the Supers before, so they're no cakewalk, and Minnesota has gotten used to hosting duties in recent years and won't like having to travel every round of the tournament. Expect them to be hungry. Heather Tarr's Huskies squad will have some work to do, but Casey Stangel will help lead the pack, possibly en route to Supers.

UCLA jumps in at #12, the third and final PAC-12 team to earn a top-sixteen seeding. They'll host an all in-state trio, including the continually-hot Fresno State; Cal State Fullerton; and Cal State Bakersfield. Jill Compton and Fresno State have no winning streak to uphold now, having lost on Senior Day this weekend for the first time since March 22. They will surely give the Bruins a lot to handle and are more than worth an Upset Alert acknowledgement.

At #13, the Tennessee Lady Vols pull in. They host MAAC champs Marist; Mike Candrea's Arizona Wildcats; and Ohio State out of the B1G. Led by the Oberdorf sisters, Marist will not be the traditional #4 seed and any team in the regional could find themselves ousted first or headed to Supers in short order. The Lady Vols will surely be handicapped by Rainey Gaffin's injured left arm, which is scheduled to be evaluated again today.

Louisiana-Lafayette earns the #14 seed and has what might be the toughest regional of them all, as Texas A&M, Texas, and Boston U come to town. The Aggies and Longhorns are well used to still playing come Supers weekend and the Cajuns are sure to have trouble with either and both. The famous environment that is Lamson Park will surely play a key factor in the Cajuns' quest to hold their seed and advance past the reigonal round. Alex Stewart will have to be just as on as she was in the Sun Belt conference tournament and the Cajuns offense needs to click on all cylinders if they don't want to bow out at the hands of one of their Power Five opponents.

In the midst of many off-the-field storylines and after an early extra-innings exit at the SEC Tournament, the Missouri Tigers earned the #15 seed. BYU enters CoMo as the #4 seed, meaning this regional will start on Thursday to accomodate BYU's policy of not playing on Sundays. ACC foe Louisville and the Big 10's Nebraska. Missouri undoubtedly has the talent in place to make quick work of their opponents, but will have to work hard to keep the off-field issues just there. If that happens, Ehren Earleywine's squad should pave the road to the Super Regionals.

Pulling out the 16th and final seed were the surprising Georgia Bulldogs. Rarely entering the pre-selection show conversation for the spot, the Bulldogs became the 8th SEC team to host a Regional and got a gift from the committee, to boot. America East champions Maine will face the Bulldogs first, while Northwestern and Oklahoma State will also join the party in Athens. Outside of Arizona State, Northwestern is easily the most questionable inclusion in the field of 64, while Kenny Gajewski continues his impressive first season at the helm of OK State, leading the squad to their first postseason berth since the program's Women's College World Series appearance in 2011.

UPSET ALERT:
4. UCLA - (don't let their mid-major status fool you - Fresno State is the real deal and can get the job done against just about anybody.)

The Cajuns will be held to the fire
this weekend.
3. Florida State - (will have their hands full with the streaking South Florida and should be glad that Gainesville got the equally-hot Florida Atlantic.)

2. Tennessee - (Arizona and Danielle O'Toole can never be counted an easy out, and without difference-maker Gaffin, could pull a less-than-surprising upset in Knoxville.)

1. Louisiana-Lafayette - (the committee did the Cajuns no favors; Lamson Park will play a factor, to be sure, but with both Texas and Texas A&M coming to town, they will have to play their best to withstand the test.)




WHAT WERE THEY THINKING: 
Ask any college football fan who chairs the Playoff seeding/selection committee, and they're likely to quickly respond with the name of Jeff Long, who chaired the committee through the last two playoff seasons (though he has since been replaced as chairman, per committee rules). After the release of every set of rankings, Long went on ESPN and answered questions live on-air and defended the committee's selections and seedings. College football fans were able to put a face, an individual, and some reasoning, whether they agreed with it or not, behind the selections and Long provided transparency and candor on the way the committee worked.

Softball fans are still longing for this kind of transparency and explanation. More than a couple of lingering questions hold over from yesterday evening, including some noticeable snubs and nearly-illogical inclusions. Cases in point:

- The inclusion of Arizona State and Northwestern. Both were noted above, but let's delve into them each a bit more. Arizona State finished at #39 in the RPI with a 30-24 overall record and a 6-17 mark in conference play. They recorded a 9-4 mark against non-conference Power Five opponents, but won just two conference season series' all year, bookending a losing streak that spanned nearly the entire month of April and into May. The Sun Devils were 2-9 in away games did not have a pitcher that recorded below a 3.00 ERA. For the Wildcats of Northwestern's part, they finished the year at #45 in RPI with an even-keeled .500 record, while going 4-9 against non-conference Power Five opponents and won just one season series against a B1G tournament-bound team, a doubleheader victory over Illinois. ASU's inclusion is glaringly awful, but neither pass the eye test.

- The exclusion of Virginia Tech and South Alabama. Thanks to automatic bids and the inclusion of such teams as mentioned above, higher-ranked teams with better records, but of perceived-lower stature were left on the outside looking in. The Hokies and Jags, as the highest-ranked exclusions were the most penalized as both clubs (ranked #42 and #43, respectively) now find themselves done for the year. Despite a 33-18 record and a 17-6 mark in conference play, Becky Clark's USA squad will find themselves at home on Regionals weekend for the first time since 2011. Scot Thomas' Hokies finished the year one game above .500 and with a winning record in conference, yet were excluded in lieu of the lower-ranked, worse-record Wildcats.