- Source: Northwestern Wildcats softball
The Northwestern Wildcats softball team is an NCAA Division I college softball team and part of the Big Ten Conference. They play their home games at Sharon J. Drysdale Field in Evanston, Illinois. They have an overall record of 836-629-4.
History
The program was founded in 1976, posting a 1-6 record, and was coached by Mary Conway. Conway coached for 3 years until Sharon J. Drysdale took the helm in 1979.
Drysdale arrived at Northwestern in 1979 and spent the next 23 season building a program that would see 14 winning seasons under her tutelage. By 1984, Drysdale had taken a program still in its infancy and earned a berth to the NCAA championships. They finished a then-program-best third that season, setting a Women's College World Series benchmark that no Big Ten team would surpass for two decades.
She would return to the Women's College World Series two more times in her career, adding a fifth-place finish in 1985 and sixth-place finish in 1986. Drysdale's 'Cats also reached regional playoffs two times- 1987 and 2000.
Named Big Ten Coach of the Year three teams (1984, 1987, and 1995), Drysdale reached many personal milestones in the latter portion of her career. She hit the 500-victory mark in a 4-0 win over Loyola-Chicago on April 10, 1996. And in her final year at the helm she picked up win 700 in a 4-2 decision over Indiana.
However, Drysdale says the honors and awards earned by her players mean more to her than her own. There were five All-Americans, two Big Ten Players of the Year, four Big Ten Freshman of the Year, 31 NFCA All-Mideast Region players, and 36 All-Big Ten honorees. Her tenure also included one of the most decorated pitchers in collegiate softball. Lisa Ishikawa was a three-time All-American and during her freshman year she shattered the NCAA mark for strikeouts in a single season with 469. That year alone, she was named Big Ten Female Athlete of the Year, Big Ten Player of the Year, Big Ten Pitcher Year, and Big Ten Freshman of the Year. Off the field, Drysdale was actively involved in NCAA softball rules interpretation. She chaired the NCAA rules committee and was a member of the NFCA Bylaws committee.
Current team
In 2002, Kate Drohan, former assistant coach under Sharon Drysdale, assumed head coaching duties. Drohan brought on board associate head coach, and twin sister, Caryl Drohan. After 11 seasons as Northwestern's head coach, Kate Drohan's Wildcats have two Big Ten Titles, two Women's College World Series appearances (including one National Championship appearance), eight NCAA playoff appearances, 14 All-America nods, four Big Ten Freshman of the Year awards, five Big Ten Player of the Year awards, and three Big Ten Pitcher of the Year accolades. Her 2006 coaching staff- including Caryl Drohan, Tori Nyberg, and Amanda Rivera- was the Speedline/National Fastpitch Coaches Association Coaching Staff of the Year.
Field
On May 3, 2001, Anderson Field was renamed Sharon J. Drysdale Field in honor of her 23-year commitment as the Wildcats' head coach. For 1,155 games, Drysdale headed the Northwestern softball program and amassed a 640-512-3 record while sending 5 squads to the NCAA Tournament. Drysdale left Northwestern after the 2001 season to pursue a coaching certification program with the National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA), but her legacy continues to live on at Northwestern. As of Fall 2007, the field is undergoing renovations that will see a new and improved bleacher seating area as well as an enclosed press box to replace the press tent of the past.
Wildcat honors
= National awards
=NFCA National Freshman of the Year
Danielle Williams (2019)
Softball America Freshman of the Year
Danielle Williams (2019)
Softball America Defensive Player of the Year
Jordyn Rudd (2021)
= Conference awards
=Big Ten Distinguished Scholar-Athletes
Robin Thompson (2010)
Kelly Quinn (2011)
Marisa Bast (2012)
Marisa Bast, Julia Kuhn, Amanda Mehrsheikh, Kristin Scharkey (2013)
Sammy Albanese, Marisa Bast, Andrea DiPrima, Julia Kuhn, Paige Tonz (2014)
Big Ten Pitcher of the Year
Lisa Ishikawa (1984)
Eileen Canney (2006, 2007)
Lauren Delaney (2008)
Danielle Williams (2022)
Ashley Miller (2024)
Big Ten Player of the Year
Lisa Ishikawa (1984, 1985)
Brooke Siebel (2000)
Garland Cooper (2005, 2006, 2007)
Tammy Williams (2008, 2009)
Rachel Lewis (2022)
Big Ten Freshman of the Year
Lisa Ishikawa (1984)
Ndidi Opia (1986)
Chinazo Opia (1987)
Brooke Siebel (1998)
Eileen Canney (2004)
Tammy Williams (2006)
Nicole Pauly (2007)
Adrienne Monka (2009)
Danielle Williams (2019)
Big Ten Coach of the Year
Sharon Drysdale (1987, 1995)
Kate Drohan (2005, 2006, 2019, 2022, 2023, 2024)
= All-Americans
=1982 Sue Hebson (2nd)
1984 Lisa Ishikawa
1985 Lisa Ishikawa
1987 Lisa Ishikawa (2nd)
1993 Anne Carpenter (3rd)
2005 Garland Cooper, Stephanie Churchwell (2nd), Courtnay Foster (3rd)
2006 Eileen Canney (2nd), Garland Cooper (3rd), Tammy Williams (3rd)
2007 Eileen Canney (2nd), Garland Cooper (3rd), Tammy Williams
2008 Tammy Williams
2009 Adrienne Monka, Tammy Williams
2011 Adrienne Monka
2012 Marisa Bast (3rd)
2018 Rachel Lewis (2nd)
2019 Danielle Williams (3rd)
2022 Rachel Lewis
2022 Danielle Williams
CoSIDA Academic All-District V
1989 Chinazo Opia
1990 Kim Metcalf, Chinazo Opia
2002 Lauren Schwendimann (2nd)
2003 Erin Mobley
2004 Carri Leto
2005 Garland Cooper, Erin Mobley
2006 Kristen Amegin, Garland Cooper
2007 Garland Cooper
2009 Kelly Quinn (2nd)
2010 Nicole Pauly (2nd)
2011 Robin Thompson
2013 Marisa Bast
2014 Marisa Bast
CoSIDA Academic All-America
1985 Karen Lemke (HM)
1989 Chinazo Opia (3rd)
1990 Chinazo Opia, Kim Metcalf (3rd)
2006 Garland Cooper (3rd)
2007 Garland Cooper
2011 Robin Thompson (3rd)
2013 Marisa Bast (2nd)
2014 Marisa Bast (2nd)
NFCA All-America Scholar-Athletes
1994 Angela Alessandrini, Shannon Norton
1995 Angela Alessandrini, Jennifer Coon, Susan Hofbauer
1996 Katie Ballman, Peggy Mandel, Erin Robson
1997 Katie Ballman, Lauri Gillis, Tricia Kay, Erin Robson
1998 Stacy Austin, Kathryn Breneman
1999 Jenni Beseres
2012 Sammy Albanese, Marisa Bast, Amanda Mehrsheikh, Kristin Scharkey
2013 Sammy Albanese, Emily Allard, Marisa Bast, Julia Kuhn, Mari Majam, Amanda Mehrsheikh, Kristin Scharkey, Paige Tonz, Lauren Tyndall
Women's College World Series All-Tournament Team
1984 Lisa Ishikawa
2006 Eileen Canney, Garland Cooper, Tammy Williams
2007 Tammy Williams
Wildcats in National Professional Fastpitch
Carri Leto - in 2004, Leto became the first NU female student-athlete to be drafted by a professional franchise. Leto began her professional career with the N.Y./N.J. Juggernaut of National Professional Fastpitch (NPF) and then moved to the Philadelphia Force after two seasons. She is a three-time NPF All-Star and was the named the league's Defensive Player of the Year in 2006. She also played for the New England Riptide.
Caryl Drohan - current Northwestern Associate Head Coach was an assistant for the Philadelphia Force in 2006. In 2007, she served as an assistant coach for the Chicago Bandits.
Courtnay Foster - in 2006, Foster was drafted in the NPF, but elected not to play.
Eileen Canney - in the 2007 draft, Canney was the second overall pick and the first pitcher selected. She played for the New England Riptide.
Garland Cooper - was the fourth overall pick in the 2007 draft. She joined teammates Eileen Canney and Carri Leto on the New England Riptide which was coached by legendary former NU coach, Sharon Drysdale.
Tammy Williams - Drafted 10th overall in the 2009 Draft by the Chicago Bandits.
Nicole Pauly -
Robin Thompson -
Adrienne Monka -
Emily Allard
Source of information
2007 Northwestern Softball Media Guide
See also
Northwestern Wildcats
2007 Women's College World Series
List of NCAA Division I softball programs
References
External links
Northwestern Softball
Northwestern University
Big Ten
National Fastpitch Coaches Association
National Professional Fastpitch[usurped]
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Northwestern Wildcats softball
- Northwestern Wildcats
- Tammy Williams
- Kate Drohan
- Arizona Wildcats softball
- Northwestern University
- Arizona Wildcats
- Danielle Williams (softball)
- 1984 NCAA Division I softball season
- Lisa Byington