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Women in Sports

Four NCAA softball players made history at the NCAA Super Regionals

May 30, 2024 by Tara S

The Gist

Superstars dominated the storylines at the long weekend’s Super Regionals.

The GIST: ICYMI, superstars dominated the storylines at the long weekend’s Super Regionals. National awards, NCAA records, and Women’s College World Series (WCWS) berths — oh my!

The accolades: Last night, USA Softball named No. 8–seed Stanford pitcher NiJaree Canady the Player of the Year. The sophomore leads the nation’s pitchers in earned run average by an unbelievably wide margin and will continue to tear up the circle as her Cardinal goes to work in the WCWS.

  • Joining Canady in the spotlight is infielder Jaysoni Beachum, who unanimously bagged Freshman of the Year last night. Although her heroics at the plate weren’t enough to help No. 15 Florida State reach the WCWS, the future’s bright in Tallahassee.

The records: Two players made Division I (DI) history over the long weekend. First, No. 4–seed Florida utility player Skylar Wallace set the career runs record when she crossed the plate for the 303rd time in Friday’s Game 1 win over Baylor. She’s a runner, she’s a track star.

  • Next, No. 7 Missouri pitcher Taylor Pannell is walking away a winner despite her squad’s season-ending loss to No. 10 Duke — her 15th save on Saturday tied the DI single-season record.
  • As for DI team records, No. 2 Oklahoma extended one of their own on Friday when the Sooners beat aforementioned Florida State 4–2 to advance to the WCWS, marking their 18th (!!!) straight NCAA Tournament win. Doesn’t get more dominant than that.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Softball, Women in Sports, Women's Sports

NEW USWNT COACH EMMA HAYES EMBRACING THE CHALLENGE

May 29, 2024 by Tara S

By: Emma Hruby | Just Women’s Sports

Emma Hayes has officially begun her tenure as USWNT manager ahead of the team’s June friendlies.

Hayes made the rounds on Thursday, appearing on the Today Show and speaking with select media about her goals and underlying principles with the team. It’s a quick turnaround for the decorated coach, who just won the WSL with Chelsea last weekend.

One thing that she won’t do, however, is shy away from the high expectations that come with managing the US. The squad is looking to reinstate its winning reputation at the Paris Olympics this summer following a disappointing World Cup in 2023. 

“I know the challenge ahead of me. There is no denying there is a gap between the US and the rest of the world,” she told ESPN. “We have to acknowledge that winning at the highest level isn’t what it was 10 years ago. It’s a completely different landscape. And my focus is going to be on getting the performances required to play at a high level against the very best nations in the world.”

While Hayes was formally hired six months ago to lead the USWNT, her deal stipulated that she remain with Chelsea through the conclusion of their season. In her stead, Twila Kilgore has led the team, with the coach “drip feeding subliminal messages” to the roster on Hayes’s behalf.

“It’s a bit ass-upwards,” Hayes joked to reporters. “I know about the staff, and the team, and the structure behind it. We got all of that. Now it’s time, I need to be with the team.”

With Olympics now just two months away, Hayes dropped hints this week regarding her thought process behind building the roster, saying there’s still time for players to make their case.

“You can’t go to an Olympics with a completely inexperienced squad. We need our experienced players, but getting that composition right, that’s my job between now and June 16th,” she said on the Today Show.

“What I can say from my time [in the US] is, I’ve always loved the attitude towards performance and the expectation to give everything you’ve got,” she later affirmed to reporters.

And as for winning gold?

“I’m never gonna tell anyone to not dream about winning,” she added. “But… we have to go step by step, and focus on all the little processes that need to happen so we can perform at our best level.

“I will give it absolutely everything I’ve got to make sure I uphold the traditions of this team.”

Filed Under: Soccer, Women in Sports, Women's Soccer

From crying in a food court to lifting the cup: Lion’s whirlwind week

May 29, 2024 by Tara S

By: Gemma Bastiani | AFL

Grand Final week was a rollercoaster of emotion for Dakota Davidson. For the first time, she lifts the lid on what really happened

FROM sobbing in the Carindale food court, to winning a second AFLW premiership, Brisbane’s Dakota Davidson experienced the full emotional gamut in the space of nine days last year.

Her Lions, perennial finalists, were forced to approach the 2023 season a little differently after significant player turnover in the previous trade period. But against the odds they had reached yet another preliminary final, hosting Geelong at Brighton Homes Arena.

Davidson had been key to that surge deep into finals, heading up a new-look forward line and playing career-best footy.

But just a quarter away from another Grand Final, Davidson buckled in what looked like a textbook anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) rupture.

What ensued was a week of scans, second opinions, and a harsh spotlight on the key forward’s availability for Brisbane’s fifth Grand Final in eight seasons.

“I cried every night, it was just hectic,” Davidson told AFL.com.au.

“To go from tearing my ACL to playing in a Grand Final. It’s pretty mind-blowing.”

02:04

Dec 3 2023

‘No ACL, no worries’: Davidson never in doubt

Premiership Lion Dakota Davidson speaks to AFL.com.au about her final-quarter heroics after overcoming an injury scare throughout the week

Fearing the worst

In a see-sawing preliminary final against an impressive Geelong outfit, the Lions were up by four points as the seconds ticked down to the final break.

Davidson, who had kicked two important goals to that point, worked into the pocket to lay a tackle on Cats captain Meghan McDonald. In the contest Davidson’s leg folded awkwardly under the defender’s body.

As the siren blew, the Lion was still on the deck clutching her left knee with a pained look on her face.

Helped from the ground, the joint was tested by physios on the bench while tears streamed down her face.

“I remember them doing testing and they were like ‘brace for the worst’,” Davidson said.

01:45

Nov 25 2023

Davidson distraught after horror knee concern

Brisbane’s star forward Dakota Davidson is reduced to tears after succumbing to a cruel injury following this tackle

It was nearly a year to the day since the Lions’ Grand Final loss to Melbourne. On that day Brisbane captain Breanna Koenen injured her knee – a posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) – at the same ground, inside the same 50m arc.

In that game, Koenen’s injury sucked the air out of the side despite the defender’s strength to play through the pain.

The Lions, and specifically head of women’s football Breeanna Brock, weren’t going to allow a knee to impact the mindset of the group again, still with a quarter to play in a tight final.

“Bree Brock looked me dead in the eyes and she was just like ‘pull it together, show the girls nothing’s wrong, win the game and we’ll sort it out tomorrow’,” Davidson said.

“So, I went to the sheds and got my s*** together and then came back out and sat on the bench.”

Dakota Davidson celebrates after the preliminary final between Brisbane and Geelong at Brighton Homes Arena on November 25, 2023. Picture: AFL Photos

Once the game was over, and the Lions had edged out Geelong in a thriller, Davidson let the reality of her situation wash over her.

“I went home and just bawled and cried. Your doctors tell you to brace for the worst, so I’m trying to mentally set myself up for my season to be over, plus the 2024 season,” Davidson said.

“I can get really in my head about injuries.”

The aftermath

Davidson was sent for a scan the following day, before meeting with then-Brisbane AFLW player development manager Sally Young to work through the emotion of it all.

“I remember sitting in the Carindale food court just sobbing,” Davidson said.

“We tried to come up with a plan on how to do it. Where to go, how to go about it. It wasn’t just the footy, it was my off-season as well, thinking well into the future. I know you shouldn’t do that, but you’ve got to prepare.”

After that hard conversation, Davidson went to watch the other preliminary final, between North Melbourne and Adelaide, alongside her teammates that afternoon. That game was to decide Brisbane’s opposition for the Grand Final.

“I was with the girls and that’s when I got the phone call,” Davidson said.

“It was a whirlwind because I got, not the wrong news, but (the doctor) didn’t have the full prognosis. I got told ‘look, it’s probably an ACL but let me just get a second opinion’ and I just ran with that. I said ‘f*** I’ve done it’ but he said ‘no, just let me get a second opinion’.

“I gave myself five minutes alone to break down before I went back out to the girls.”

Brisbane players celebrate a goal during round five, 2023. Picture: AFL Photos/Getty Images

A mere hour later, however, another phone call brought better news.

“He got another person’s opinion and goes ‘you haven’t done it. You haven’t. The second opinion was you’ve torn your meniscus, so you have done something’,” Davidson said.

“He said he didn’t know how, judging by how I collapsed… I was the one per cent that hasn’t done it.”

She was reassured that, although it would be painful, playing through the injury would not cause any further structural damage.

Davidson was now wholly focused on getting herself right for the Grand Final in a week’s time.INDIGENOUS ROUNDDad’s bush tucker business connecting Lion to her roots

Speculation and elation

Since then-Western Bulldogs captain Katie Brennan’s suspension ahead of the 2018 Grand Final, there had not been so much intrigue around a player’s availability for an AFLW decider.

Davidson’s role in Brisbane’s attacking structure could not be overstated in 2023. The side’s leading goalkicker, she had played all but one game that season – only missing a round four clash with the Kangaroos through suspension – and provided a crucial target inside 50.

External expectation was that without Davidson, a Grand Final victory over a humming North Melbourne outfit seemed near-on impossible.

“I was very tense and anxious. We sat down as a group and I said to everyone ‘look, obviously the media has been hectic this week, I’m pretty overwhelmed’. I was just trying to focus on one of the biggest games of my career,” Davidson said.‘My teammates thrive off my energy’: The powerhouse Lion with eye-popping celebrations

Questions over her fitness continued to swirl until teams were announced that Friday.

Adding to the emotion of the week, on the Monday evening Davidson was named in the All-Australian side for the first time.

“I said to myself in the mirror after a week of preseason, I go ‘Daks, you’re going to make All-Australian this year’. I remember this very specifically,” Davidson said earnestly.

“I said ‘Daks, you’re going to make All-Australian, you’re going to be the best forward in the game’ and it sat with me. Before every game, or before I left for travel, I looked myself in the mirror and said it. Then I got named in the squad, and I kept manifesting it in the mirror.

“When I got named All-Australian, it was a pretty mind-blowing moment.”

Brisbane’s All-Australian players Ally Anderson, Dakota Davidson and Sophie Conway during the 2023 AFLW Awards on November 27, 2023. Picture: AFL Photos

The enjoyment of that moment was stymied, however, with focus quickly switching to doing all she could to be in the best possible shape for that Sunday’s Grand Final.

“I had physio, I had the ice machine, I had the compacts,” Davidson listed.

“I did everything in my capability, knowing that I could play if I passed the (fitness) test, so I did everything I could… I’d never had bigger quads in my life.”

Passing the fitness test meant she could play, but it didn’t mean it wouldn’t be without pain. Learning to adapt to that pain, and still be the powerful presence her team had come to know her as, was the next big challenge.

“I remember doing a little running session on the Wednesday with a bit of ‘S’ running and changing direction. It was pretty heavily strapped, and I could definitely feel it, but I was like ‘just wait for adrenaline. I’ll just wait for the adrenaline to start pumping’,” Davidson said.

Dakota Davidson at Brisbane training in November, 2023. Picture: AFL Photos

The big day

Soon enough, it was game day.

It was Davidson’s third Grand Final, so the build-up was familiar, outside the intense scrutiny on her knee.

“Everyone had faith in me, I’d been cleared, so I just had to mentally get myself out of that pain zone,” Davidson said.

“I wasn’t fully ready until I did the warm-up on game day. (Head coach Craig Starcevich) was like ‘take as much time as you need’… I did that, I felt alright, there were a few tweaks here and there, but I knew adrenaline would kick in.”

Dakota Davidson warms up ahead of the 2023 AFLW Grand Final. Picture: AFL Photos

From there, trying to take in the Grand Final was the focus, but it passed in a blur.

G-Flip performed before the game, with two former Lions forwards at their side. Erin Phillips was honoured after announcing her retirement a month prior. Fans packed into the sold-out stands of Ikon Park. Melbourne’s sun shone bright.

“I don’t even remember running out. I don’t remember what I was feeling, I don’t remember what I did, or who I looked at, or who I ran next to,” Davidson admitted.

But once the opening siren sounded with the roar of the crowd, Davidson’s focus was singular; do as much for the team as she could.

Statistically her opening half was a quiet one, but that didn’t worry her coach, Starcevich. A quiet word at the main break was all that was needed to keep Davidson’s head up.

“Craig actually came up to me at half-time and said ‘Daks, this is a game of moments, you haven’t had much obviously in the first half, but just relax. Your time will come, and when you do take it with both hands’,” Davidson said after the game.

Isabel Dawes and Dakota Davidson celebrate a goal during the 2023 AFLW Grand Final. Picture: AFL Photos

Her aggression and chatter continued throughout the third quarter, again generating little reward on the stats sheet, but she and her teammates knew they were on the right track.

“I went into three-quarter-time, and I didn’t feel like I had two touches, I didn’t feel like I hadn’t made an impact… I didn’t catch a ball, but I made it to contests, I tackled,” Davidson said.

And, as Starcevich had assured Davidson, taking your moment when it comes is all that was needed. That moment came early in the final quarter with Belle Dawes twisting out of danger on the boundary line and neatly hitting up the forward at the top of the attacking 50.

Down by seven points, but swiping back the game’s momentum, the Lions held their breaths as Davidson went back to take the set shot. One that was eerily similar to one she had missed in the Grand Final a year prior.

“I said to myself, ‘I’m kicking this goal’. I didn’t even realise how far out it was,” Davidson said.

Kick it she did, adding another six minutes later to put the Lions back in front. It was a lead they didn’t again cede for the day. At that point, her knee was merely an afterthought in premiership celebrations.

00:47

Dec 2 2023

Electrifying Davidson explodes with game-turning double

An injury-hampered Dakota Davidson steps up when Brisbane needs most with two huge marks and goals in the final term

After that hectic week, Davidson gave herself some time to just enjoy what she had achieved, the personal goals she was able to tick off as well as the club-wide success.

Once things had settled down, surgery to repair the torn meniscus in her knee took place in February, giving her plenty of time to be fit and firing for the official start of preseason in June.

But one eye is already on the prospect of becoming the first AFLW club to go back-to-back, and defying external expectation once more.

“We always get written off, but we love it,” Davidson said.

“We prefer that status.”

Filed Under: Australian Football, Australian Rules Football, USAFLA, Women in Sports, Women's Sports

Malkamaki Wins Back-to-Back World Titles

May 22, 2024 by Tara S

By: DuPaul Athletics

The Blue Demon brings home her second gold

KOBE – DePaul Track and Field’s Noelle Malkamaki won her second consecutive gold at the 2024 Para Athletics World Championships, early Thursday morning. The Blue Demon successfully defended her World title after achieving a final mark of 13.12m. 

This is a back-to-back win for the Blue Demon, after she dominated her first World title last year, claiming gold in the women’s F46 shot put at her world championship debut last year. Malkamaki broke the world record three times during the event, before her final throw of 13.32m. 

In March, Malkamaki competed for a Team USA roster spot at the 2024 U.S. Paralympics Track & Field National Championships in Walnut, Calif., dominating the women’s F46 shot put and taking home a national title with a final mark of 13.21m. 

UP NEXT: Following the World Championships, Malkamaki will turn her attention to the 2024 U.S. Paralympic Team Trials, July 18-20 in Miramar, Fla. with the hopes of earning a berth on Team USA at the Paralympic Games.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Collegiate Sports, Track and Field, Women in Sports, Women's Soccer

Meet Queens Park Ladies, ‘Invincible’ Under-11 UK Girls Football Team

May 9, 2024 by Tara S

By: Tanya Savkoor | She The People

An under-11 girls football team in the UK has won the title of ‘invincibles’ after an unbeaten streak of wins. The team recently garnered laurels when it won a boys’ league.

An under-11 girls football team in the UK has won the title of ‘invincibles’ after an unbeaten streak of wins, the latest one being at a boys’ league. The Queens Park Ladies finished top of division three of the Bournemouth Youth Football League with 18 wins, four draws and no defeats. The Guardian reported that the team scored 61 goals across the league, conceding only 11. The girls amassed 58 points, a whopping 16 more than the team that came second.

Queens Park Ladies Rule Boy-Dominated League

The Under-12 girls team made history when they secured a win at the boy-dominated Bournemouth Youth Football League. Earlier, the Queens Park Ladies had defeated Moordown and Southbourne boys’ teams to top the league.

On May 5, the team defeated Lymington Town boys 3-0, securing the ‘invincibles’ title. Team manager Toby Green said that securing a win against a team that had won six games in a row was the highlight of the season.

The Guardian reported that the team was initially met with resistance for playing against the 11 boys’ teams. The football association officials insisted that the girls play in ‘all girls’ championships’.

However, Green insisted on letting the girls showcase their prowess in a league where gender does not define skill. He told Sky News that the immensely dedicated girls deserved the shining win.

“The girls have done really, really well. They’ve worked so hard all season, not just in the games, but in their training as well. They have been disciplined … they deserve it,” he told the outlet.

About The Team

Toby Green started the team Queens Park Ladies when his little girl Olivia started showing interest in football. He had already coached his older daughter as the only girl in a boys’ team and decided to put together a girls’ side.

However, Green insisted on letting the girls play in a boys’ league. Queens Park Ladies under-12s train twice a week and will now be promoted to the under-13s second division.

Four of the girls in the 14-player squad have been playing together since they were five years old. Green said he hopes the Queens Park Ladies’ success will inspire more young girls to take up football.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, Women in Sports, Women's Soccer, Youth Sports

Thriving Through Sport

May 7, 2024 by Tara S

THE TRANSFORMATIVE IMPACT ON GIRLS’ MENTAL HEALTH

Women’s Sports Foundation

This new report examines the relationship between girls’ sport participation and mental health. The data provides strong evidence that in high quality sport settings, playing sports can help lower depression and anxiety and enhance peer relationships and meaning and purpose. The study helps to identify the aspects of the sport setting that drive these outcomes, including levels of autonomy, coach relationships and more. The report also explores the unique qualities of sport relative to other extracurricular activities as well as the connection between them. Findings from the report are integrated into policy and practice recommendations that demonstrate how they can be applied in the field.

Thriving Through Sport Executive Summary

Report Data Highlights

Infographic

Filed Under: Women in Sports, Women's Sports, Youth Sports

Lindsey Munday Selected as U.S. Women’s Sixes National Team Head Coach

April 18, 2024 by Tara S

By Brian Logue | USA Lacrosse

USA Lacrosse has announced that two-time World Cup champion Lindsey Munday has been selected as the U.S. Women’s Sixes National Team head coach. Munday’s appointment will include two international championships – The World Games 2025 in China and the inaugural World Lacrosse Sixes Championship, scheduled for 2026.

Munday, the head women’s lacrosse coach at the University of Southern California, won gold medals with the U.S. at the 2009 and 2013 World Cups, serving as a team captain for the 2013 squad. Munday earned All-World honors at both championships and holds U.S. national team records for assists in tournament (21) and career (35).

“As we look to build our U.S. national team sixes program, Lindsey brings the experience of building a program from scratch at USC,” said USA Lacrosse CEO Marc Riccio. “She carries herself with professionalism and has a great understanding of the international game through her significant contributions to two gold medals.”

“I always knew that I would love the opportunity to coach for Team USA,” Munday said. “To be able to represent your country and play at the highest level is just something that you dream of, so if I had the opportunity to come back as a coach, I knew that’s something that I wanted.”

Munday will coach the new sixes discipline of the sport that will be utilized for the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Sixes is a fast-paced version of the sport played on a smaller field (70 x 36 meters), with fewer players (6-v-6), a condensed game length (four 8-minute quarters) and a 30-second shot clock.

“As someone who just loves the sport of lacrosse, I love innovation,” Munday said. “Everyone is still learning, and the game is still growing. I think that is something that drew me to sixes. I’m excited to learn more about the game and to really push sixes forward so that in 2028 the U.S. will be at our very best to compete at the highest level.”

Munday was the first coach in USC history and the program launched with the 2013 season. In just over a decade of leading the Trojans, the program has won four conference championships and qualified for the NCAA tournament six times.

Her 2016 and 2017 teams each reached the NCAA quarterfinal round with her 2016 team winning a school-record 20 games and finishing the year ranked No. 5 in the country. In 2023, the Trojans captured their second Pac-12 championship.

Prior to coming to USC, Munday spent four years as an assistant coach at her alma mater, Northwestern. The Wildcats went 85-4 in her four seasons, winning three consecutive national championships from 2007 to 2009.

As a player, Munday helped Northwestern to its first two national championships in 2005 and 2006, serving as a team captain her senior year. She was a two-time first team All-American and finished her career with 268 career points.

The U.S. has only competed in international competition in sixes on three previous occasions. In 2021, USA Lacrosse hosted a three-team Super Sixes event with Canada and the Haudenosaunee. The U.S. and Canada each went 3-1 at the round-robin event. In 2022, Canada defeated the U.S. 14-12 in the gold medal game at The World Games. Last fall, the U.S. beat Canada 8-7 in the championship game of the Super Sixes event in Canada.

The U.S. Women’s National Team trains and plays using game-changing, high-performance equipment from Cascade Maverik, Gait Lacrosse and STX and best-in-class products from Enovis (sports bracing).

In addition to these partners, Gatorade, MedStar Health and Stryker are official sponsors of the U.S. National Team Program. Team training is also aided by products from Athletic Republic.

Funding for the national teams also comes from generous donors to the USA Lacrosse Foundation. Help support the team.

Filed Under: Lacrosse, Women in Sports

Acacia Walker-Weinstein Named as U.S. Women’s Senior National Team Head Coach

April 18, 2024 by Tara S

By Brian Logue | USA Lacrosse

USA Lacrosse has announced that two-time U.S. gold medalist Acacia Walker-Weinstein has been selected as the U.S. Women’s Senior National Team head coach. Walker-Weinstein’s appointment will run through the 2026 World Lacrosse Women’s Championship, which will be held in Japan.

Walker-Weinsten, the head women’s lacrosse coach at Boston College, was just 14 years old when she was tried out for the 1999 U.S. U19 team. She made the team and helped bring home a world championship from Perth, Australia. In 2009, she played on the U.S. women’s senior team that won the world championship in Prague, Czech Republic.

“Acacia brings a positive energy into every situation and has used that enthusiasm to take the Boston College program to new heights,” said USA Lacrosse CEO Marc Riccio. “From being the youngest player on our 1999 U19 team, to being one of the final cuts from our 2005 senior team to winning gold in 2009, she’s had a long history with our national team program that will help her connect with the players.”

Walker-Weinstein knows the goal is to win a gold medal, but she also wants to make an impact on the sport with the way the U.S. team plays under her leadership, building on the success of the coaches who have come before her.

“I want it to be exciting to watch,” Walker-Weinstein said. “I want the players to feel liberated and free to play with their own personal brand. I want the lacrosse to be exciting to watch. I want it to be difficult for the opponents to stop. I want it to be a product that makes the fans say, ‘That is the way women’s lacrosse should be played.’”

Walker-Weinstein has been the head coach at Boston College since the 2013 season and has transformed the Eagles into one of the nation’s elite programs. Boston College has played in six straight NCAA championship games and won the school’s first national title in 2021.

Walker-Weinstein was the IWLCA National Coach of the Year in 2017 and 2021 and compiled 173 wins in her first 11 seasons, including a school-record 22 in the 2018 and 2019 seasons. Three of her Boston College players – Sam Apuzzo, Dempsey Arsenault and Charlotte North – played on the 2022 U.S. women’s team that won the world championship and another, Kristin Igoe, played on the 2013 world championship team.

She first came to Boston College as the associate head coach and in 2011 helped the school reach the NCAA tournament for the first time in program history. Prior to coming to BC, she spent two seasons as the associate head coach at the University of Massachusetts, helping the team win back-to-back Atlantic 10 championships. From 2005 through 2008 she was an assistant coach at Northwestern, helping the school win three national championships.

As a player, Walker-Weinstein was an All-American and captain at the University of Maryland, helping the Terps reach the NCAA tournament all four seasons. She spent a decade, from 2002 through 2012, as a member of the U.S. women’s senior team.

The U.S. women’s senior team has won a record nine world championships, including the four most recent. The U.S. won the inaugural championship in 1982, followed by Australia winning in 1986. The U.S. then won four straight championships before Australia beat the U.S. in the 2005 gold medal game. Walker-Weinstein was on the 2009 U.S. team that started the current string of four straight world titles, including the 2022 event which marked the first time the host nation had won the championship.

The U.S. Women’s National Team trains and plays using game-changing, high-performance equipment from Cascade Maverik, Gait Lacrosse and STX and best-in-class products from Enovis (sports bracing).

In addition to these partners, Gatorade, MedStar Health and Stryker are official sponsors of the U.S. National Team Program. Team training is also aided by products from Athletic Republic.

Funding for the national teams also comes from generous donors to the USA Lacrosse Foundation. Help support the team.

Filed Under: Lacrosse, Women in Sports

Softball and baseball on same day! Woman makes NCAA history

April 10, 2024 by Tara S

Melanie Martinez-Lopez | MLB

Jillian Albayati continues to be a pioneer for women in the game of baseball.

On Sunday, she became the second player in collegiate history — and the first in Division II — to play baseball and softball on the same day when she accomplished the feat for Cal State San Marcos.

According to the San Diego Union-Tribune, the Cal State San Marcos baseball team was down four pitchers, including three starters, and were considering open tryouts in the middle of chasing the California Collegiate Athletic Association title.

Softball coach Stef Ewing immediately thought of Albayati, a right-handed pitcher for baseball and a third baseman for softball.

The move made sense, given Albayati began to play baseball when she was 3 years old — and she played throughout high school. The All-CIF pitcher from Anaheim went 20-0 with a 1.68 ERA in her high-school career, all while hitting .360.

“I piped up and said, ‘We’ve got Jill on our team, and she played high school baseball,’” Ewing told San Diego Union-Tribune reporter Kirk Kenney. “She pitches and plays third base for the U.S. Women’s National Baseball Team. She can throw.’”

It was not the first time Albayati made a mark on women’s baseball.

She was selected to play in the inaugural Trailblazer Series. It was created in 2017 to provide girls with an opportunity to play baseball with other girls in a highly competitive environment.

The following year, Albayati participated in the 2018 Girls Baseball Breakthrough Series, a program that focuses on developing girls who play baseball.

Now, she has once again made her mark nearly seven years later — this time, just days before the 2024 Trailblazer Series gets underway on Saturday.

When Albayati was offered the opportunity to pitch in a baseball game Sunday for Cal State San Marcos — a first for Division II sports (Christina Elsbury did it last year for Division III Gallaude) — there was no hesitation. According to the Union-Tribune, she threw a bullpen session on Friday to showcase her skills, and soon after, Albayati was added to the roster.

“We’re in a place where we’re pretty banged up on the mound,” Cougars baseball manager Jose Garcia told the newspaper. “It’s not asking her to come in and pitch in high-leverage situations. It’s more to give us a cushion, to eat some innings and help keep everybody as healthy as possible.”

Albayati’s complete game

When Sunday came around, the 5-foot-6 Albayati was ready to pitch in.

First came the softball game against Cal State Monterey Bay. After celebrating her teammate’s walk-off grand slam in a dramatic 4-3 win, the sophomore switched out of her softball jersey and sprinted over to the nearby baseball field. She was called in from the bullpen two batters into the ninth inning.

Albayati was not intimidated by the seven batters she faced. She allowed two runs (one earned) off three hits and one walk to close out the inning.

She then returned to the softball field after her collegiate baseball debut for the second game of a doubleheader. She went 2-for-6 in the softball team’s 4-2 victory to help the club complete the sweep — before once again returning to the baseball dugout to end her day.

“It’s just amazing,” Albayati said to Kenney. “I’m so grateful for the opportunity to be able to do that.”

Albayati hopes to be able to continue playing both sports, but she told Ewing her priority is softball.

“But I know her love is baseball,” Ewing said. “I thought we made a kid’s career in more ways than you can imagine by having her go out there. … We made her dream come true today.”

With both teams on the road an hour away for the next series, there is a chance she may travel with the baseball team while the injured pitchers continue to recover.

The newspaper also reported that Albayati was invited to pitch for the Savannah Bananas over the summer.

Filed Under: Athlete Spotlight, baseball, Softball, Women in Sports, Women's Sports

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