2009 Women's College World Series

The 2009 Women's College World Series was held May 28 through June 3, 2009 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Eight NCAA Division I college softball teams met after having advanced through a 64-team bracket to play in the World Series at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium. The official host for the event is the University of Oklahoma. The tournament was won by the Washington Huskies of the Pac-10. It was their first softball national championship.

Participants

SchoolConferenceRecord (Conference)Head CoachWCWS Appearances†
(including 2009 WCWS)
WCWS Best Finish†WCWS W-L Record†
(excluding 2009 WCWS)
AlabamaSoutheastern52-9 (21-6)Patrick Murphy6
(last: 2008)
3rd
(2008)
4-10
ArizonaPacific-1046-15 (13-7)Mike Candrea21
(last: 2008)
1st
(1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2006, 2007)
57-27
Arizona St.Pacific-1046-17 (10-11)Clint Myers8
(last: 2008)
1st
(2008)
10-12
FloridaSoutheastern60-3 (26-1)Tim Walton2
(last: 2008)
3rd
(2008)
3-2
GeorgiaSoutheastern44-10 (18-7)Lu Harris-Champer1--
MichiganBig Ten46-10 (17-3)Carol Hutchins9
(last: 2005)
1st
(2005)
7-16
MissouriBig 1250-10 (12-6)Ehren Earleywine4
(last: 1994)
5th
(1991)
1-6
WashingtonPacific-1046-11 (14-7)Heather Tarr9
(last: 2007)
1st
(2009)
15-14

† Excludes results of the pre-NCAA Women's College World Series of 1969 through 1981.

Tournament notes

  • Alabama advanced to the Women's College World Series after sophomore pitcher Kelsi Dunne, threw back-to-back no-hitters in the Tuscaloosa Super Regional, an NCAA record.[1]
  • The SEC advanced three teams to the Women's College World Series for the first time in conference history; it was also the first time a conference outside the Pac-10 had done it.[2]

Bracket

2009 Women's College World Series bracket

  First round Second round Semifinals Finals
                                           
1 Florida 3  
9 Arizona 0  
  1 Florida 1  
  5 Michigan 0  
4 Alabama 1
5 Michigan 6  
  1 Florida 6 -  
  4 Alabama 5 -  
9 Arizona 0  
4 Alabama 14  
  10 Arizona State 2
  4 Alabama 6  
  1 Florida 0 2 -
  3 Washington 8 3 -
3 Washington 3  
6 Georgia 1  
  3 Washington 1
  10 Arizona State 0  
10 Arizona State 7
Missouri 3  
  3 Washington 8 9
  6 Georgia 9 3  
6 Georgia 5  
Missouri 2  
  5 Michigan 5
  6 Georgia 7  

Game Results

DateGameWinnerScoreLoserNotes
May 28, 2009Game 1Washington3-1GeorgiaNiki Williams hit a 2-run HR; Danielle Lawrie allowed 6 hits in a complete game victory.
Game 2Arizona State7-3Missouri
Game 3Michigan6-1AlabamaIncluding this game, Alabama has gone 0-6 on opening day of the WCWS.
Game 4Florida3-0ArizonaAgainst the top home-run-hitting team in the history of college softball, Florida pitcher Stacey Nelson gave up only two singles.
May 29, 2009Game 5Washington1-0Arizona StateWashington won on a walk-off single from Morgan Stuart in the bottom of the 8th that scored Kimi Pohlman.
Game 6Florida1-0MichiganFlorida pitcher Stacey Nelson threw 71 pitches, only 14 of which were balls, in a complete game.
May 30, 2009Game 7Georgia5-2Missouri
Game 8Alabama14-0ArizonaAlabama broke the record for largest margin of victory in WCWS history.
Game 9Georgia7-5MichiganGeorgia broke the record for home runs in a game at the World Series with four.
Game 10Alabama6-2Arizona StateJazlyn Lunceford hit a pinch-hit grand slam in the bottom of the fourth to propel Alabama to a 6-2 win.
May 31, 2009Game 11Georgia9-8WashingtonAfter 4h15m, the game ended in the bottom of the 9th inning when UW's Danielle Lawrie walked a batter with bases loaded.
Game 12Florida6-5AlabamaAli Gardiner's walk-off grand slam with two outs in the bottom of the 7th inning clinched Florida's spot in the finals.
Game 13Washington9-3GeorgiaWith Washington's victory, the Pac-10 has sent at least one team to the WCWS finals 23 consecutive times.
June 1, 2009Finals Game 1Washington8-0FloridaDanielle Lawrie struck out 12 in a 2-hit shutout; Ashley Charters & Jenn Salling both had 2 RBIs and scored 2 runs.
June 2, 2009Finals Game 2Washington3-2FloridaWashington won its first softball national title and became the fifth Pac-10 team to win the WCWS.

Championship Game

[3]

School Top Batter Stats.
Washington Huskies Danielle Lawrie (P) 2-3 RBI
Florida Gators Francesca Enea (LF) 2-3 2B SB K
School Pitcher IPHRERBBSOABBF
Washington Huskies Danielle Lawrie (W) 7.0721382733
Florida Gators Stacey Nelson (L) 6.0632152426

Final standings

Place School WCWS Record
1st Washington 5-1
2nd Florida 3-2
3rd Georgia 3-2
Alabama 2-2
5th Michigan 1-2
Arizona State 1-2
7th Missouri 0-2
Arizona 0-2

All-Tournament Team

The 2009 Women's College World Series All-Tournament team:[4]
Kelley Montalvo, Alabama
Charlotte Morgan, Alabama
Brittany Rogers, Alabama
Alisa Goler, Georgia
Taylor Schlopy, Georgia
Megan Bush, Florida
Stacey Nelson, Florida
Ashley Charters, Washington
Kimi Pohlman, Washington
Morgan Stuart, Washington
Niki Williams, Washington
Danielle Lawrie, Washington (Most Outstanding Player)

Breakdown by school:
Washington: 5
Alabama: 3
Florida: 2
Georgia: 2

WCWS records tied or broken

  • In Game 8, Alabama broke the record for largest margin of victory in a NCAA-era WCWS game by defeating Arizona 14-0. The record was previously set by Arizona's 12-0 victory over Fresno State in the 1989 WCWS.
  • In Game 9, Georgia broke the NCAA-era home run record in a single WCWS game with four: two from Taylor Schlopy, one from Brianna Hesson, and one from Ashley Pauly. Schlopy became only the fourth player in NCAA-era WCWS history to hit two home runs in one game.
  • In game 11, Washington's Niki Williams broke the NCAA-era WCWS single-game RBI record with seven RBIs, including a fifth inning grand slam.

WCWS Leaders

Post-Series Notes

  • Despite having 3 teams advance to the semifinals, the SEC failed to win its first ever WCWS, and Washington continued the West Coast's dominance in college softball. As of 2009, only two teams east of the Mississippi River have won the WCWS (Michigan in 2005 and Michigan State in 1976, the latter in the pre-NCAA era).

See also

2009 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament

References

  1. "Dunne Keeps Jacksonville State Hitless Again; Alabama Softball Advances to Women's College World Series". University of Alabama Athletics Media Relations. 2009-05-23. Archived from the original on 2009-09-08. Retrieved 2009-05-23.
  2. AWakefield. "SEC Advances 3 Teams to WCWS" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2009-09-08. Retrieved 2009-05-30.
  3. "Dawgs Fetch A Championship!". Gohuskies.com. 2009-06-02. Retrieved 2018-06-09.
  4. "Softball has Three Named to WCWS All-Tournament Team". University of Alabama Athletics Media Relations - RollTide.com. 2009-06-02. Archived from the original on 25 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.