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The Top 10 Softball Stories of 2025: #10… The Creation of the Armor Elite Fastpitch Organization (Dec. 23, 2025)

By Brentt Eads

December 23, 2025

The Top 10 Softball Stories of 2025: #10… The Creation of the Armor Elite Fastpitch Organization (Dec. 23, 2025)

Brittany Lewis, who had great success in the Mojo travel ball organization, has announced the formation of a new club organization called Armor Elite.

Today, we begin our year-end look at the Top 10 Softball Stories of 2025…  Here is the schedule for this list which will run the rest of December and into January 2025, when we’ll publish the No. 1 Softball Story of The Year:

  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #10Tue, Dec. 23, 2025 
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #9Wed, Dec. 24, 2025
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #8Thu, Dec. 25, 2025
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #7Fri, Dec. 26, 2025
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #6Sat, Dec. 27, 2025
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #5Sun, Dec. 28, 2025
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #4Mon, Dec. 29, 2025
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #3Tue, Dec. 30, 2025
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #2Wed, Dec. 31, 2025
  • Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year: #1Thu, Jan. 1, 2025

 

Also, on Jan. 2, 2026, Line Drive Softball will list all the Top 10 stories in a list and then on Jan. 3rd we’ll will run the “Other Stories Considered” List.

For each topic (story), an article that we ran earlier this year on Line Drive Softball is reposted along with any other articles that may be tied into the subject listed that day.

So how were the Top 10 picked?

We looked at what were considered the most memorable and important stories of the year as they impacted the sport.

In researching the Top 10, we talked to those in softball, including college and travel ball coaches, other media members and you—the fastpitch community.

Brentt Eads/Line Drive Softball

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The Top 10 Softball Stories of 2024: #10… The Armor Elite Fastpitch Organization Creation (Dec. 23, 2025)

Kicking off our Top 10 Softball Stories of the Year (2025) is the formation of a new organization that has brought together some of the top coaches and players in the country.

The Armor Elite Premier 2032/2033 – Lewis team.

As Becki Ushery, a key administrator in Armor Elite, explains:

“Armor Elite didn’t start with a business plan. It started with conversations.”

“After a lot of years in this game, our coaches kept coming back to the same feeling: something was getting lost. Clubs were getting bigger, but not always better. Growth started to matter more than purpose.”
 
“And it became harder to answer a simple question — what does this organization actually do for its players?”Armor Elite was created to get back to that answer.
One of the strengths of the newly-formed club program is the experience the organization has right out of the gate.
“Every coach in our organization has been coaching for at least 15 years,” Becki continues.
 
“These aren’t first-time head coaches learning on the fly. Everyone here has already helped players get recruited, navigated national schedules, and dealt with the realities of this level of softball.”

We posted two articles in November detailing this new program… here they are:

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Breaking News: Championship-Winning Club Coach Brittany Lewis Launching New Travel Ball Organization… “Armor Elite” (November 12, 2025)

Big news in the softball travel ball world as long-time head coach Brittany Lewis, who has had great success in the Mojo organization founded in 2011 by Brooks Cherry, has announced that she will be launching a new org that will begin next spring under the name of Armor Elite.

The name and logo of Coach Lewis’s new travel ball program.

And there’s some intrigue in the move as well as Brittany says she will be working with a “founding partner” well-known in the softball world but that the news can’t be released for a few weeks until the coach tells his players and parents about the pending move.

“I am partnering with someone who is significant in our softball world, but we can’t release the news yet as he hasn’t told his team as they have more tournaments to play first.”

Let’s just say this: the new partner is a renowned coach in a prestigious club program that features multiple P4 athletes.

As Lewis puts it:

“When it comes out that he is partnering with me, it’s going to be big! More will be revealed in two weeks!”

Coach Brittany had a Zoom meeting Tuesday night with her current team’s parents informing them of the move and made the news official by posting on social media.

Here’s how she launched the news publicly…

*****

A lot has taken place in 10 years in my travel ball world.

Three teams, 57 college commits (48 DI), a PGF National Championship, and too many memories to count!

I have been surrounded by the best athletes and families.

Thank you to my husband for always having my back… for coaching with me even when you didn’t feel like it. For showing up for these kids and hitting more fungo than anyone I know. My favorite times on the field involve you!

Thank you to all my former and present Assistant Coaches. Thank you for believing in what I do, showing up for the kids day in and day out, and becoming my friends.

Husband and wife Ty & Brittany Lewis.

Thank you to Brooks & all my Mojo family for the past almost decade. My teams have worn the “M” proudly and I am forever grateful for my time here. I will always be a Mojo fan and this org helped shape who I am as a coach. I wish them nothing but the best.

As 2026 is about to begin, so is something that has been on my heart for a long time. Same purpose, same passion, same calling…just with a different name.

A name I created and now get to help put on the map in this softball world. A name that means something deeper… a symbol of resilience, strength, and discipline.

The mission is the same: to develop young women on and off the field to excel at all things, be strong & independent, work hard, and be a light for Jesus.

However, it won’t be just another org. Think old-school travel ball days. It’s going to be ELITE. It’s going to be prestigious. It’s going to be super competitive. It’s going to be set apart.

It’s also going to so so fun and rewarding to be a part of as our coaches & teams will be taken care of and receive a product not currently offered in this arena.

I am super excited to share that starting in spring of 2026 I will now be in Black & Gold and talking the field as Armor Elite!

Thank you everyone for the support and stay tuned as more exciting things will be released in the coming weeks! God has truly been in this story and I am eternally grateful.

–Coach Brittany Lewis 

“Put on the full armor of God, so that you can take your stand against the devil’s schemes.” — Ephesians 6:11

#ProvenElite #ArmorUp 

*****

Breaking News: Armor Elite Club Announces Founding Leadership… & Long-Term Vision (November 17, 2025)

Last week, we broke the news of championship-winning club coach Brittany Lewis establishing a new club organization, Armor Elite Fastpitch.

Click HERE to read that article.
Brittany Lewis (right) with Florida State-bound pitcher Addie DeRoche.

Today, we learned more about the organization and how it will make a huge impact in the club space.

Armor Elite Fastpitch—an emerging national-level travel club—has officially announced its formation, led by co-founding partners Brittany Lewis and Chad O’Neal of Georgia Impact along with Josh Lynch of the Atlanta Vipers who will head the program’s first team.s

The trio bring decades of experience, reputation and credibility to a club built on purpose, structure, and athlete-centered development.

In 2024, Lewis’s Tennessee Mojo 16U won the PGF Nationals in Huntington Beach, Calif. and now has partnered with two other highly successful coaches.

“Chad O’Neal and I are co-founders,” Lewis told Line Drive Softball this weekend, “and Josh Lynch Vipers team is our first team. He’s also a board member.”

Today, Elite Fastpitch released a promo video introducing the club program to the fastpitch softball club world:

The creation of the Armor Elite’s lineup of teams has begun with Lynch’s Vipers and O’Neal’s teams being brought into the Armor Elite fold. The players and parents on those teams were informed over the weekend of the change.

And how will teams be created in the organization?

“We are looking to fill our premier teams in each age group first before adding others,” Lewis responded.

*****

The Origins of Armor Elite

Lewis talks about the genesis of creating what today has become Armor Elite.

“Something I’d been thinking about for a long time—there were other people involved in the discussions and the thinking. About a month and a half ago I was at a tournament, and I ran into Brittany. We just started talking and catching up a little bit, and she told me what she was thinking.”

“She said, ‘I’m going to leave.,” and I asked why—why did she want to leave? She wasn’t thinking about starting a new organization at that point. She was just going to go somewhere else, but she had been thinking, just like I had, about starting something but just never worked out.

“My momentum on that had really gotten ratcheted up and was moving quickly, but I wasn’t sure when or how.

“When I met with her that day and she told me what she’d been feeling, it was perfect timing. We started talking, and it made a lot of sense.”

*****

Investment in Kids
Coach O’Neal doing what he loves to do: coach and develop players.

O’Neal stresses that the organization will grow methodically and will avoid the “build fast” mentality:

“We don’t have a specific goal,” he begins. “We don’t need a certain number of teams by a certain age. We want to grow it organically.”

“Ideally, we’d like 20 teams in each region,” Lynch continues, “with two teams in each age group—a Premier and a Regional. The Premier team takes care of the big national events, and the Regional teams develop.”

He also addressed misconceptions about this being done for primarily financial reasons.:

“There’s a misconception that anybody who runs a club is making money,” he stresses. “After running Georgia Impact for two years at about 45 to 50 teams — nobody was making money.”

“You’ve got responsibilities and, at the end of the day, there’s no money.”

He clarified why he continues to coach:

“My kid graduated in 2018. Ever since then, I’ve done this because I love it.”

“Whether people love us, hate us, or are somewhere in between, no parent who’s ever played for me—or for Brittany—can question the investment we’ve made in their kid.”

*****

Culture & Chemistry Matter
Head Coach Josh Lynch
Screenshot

Lynch, whose Georgia-based team anchors the launch, says the intent is crystal clear:

“We’re going to be quality over quantity and we’re not going to water this down. Armor Elite will only be carrying what we can develop the right way.”

He emphasized that all three coaches bring full teams and full commitment:

“My whole team is coming and Chad’s team is coming. Eventually Brittany’s will too, once everything is lined up.”

Lynch describes the timing as natural—almost inevitable:

“This whole thing feels like destiny…. I didn’t plan it. We’re in a good place right now and, as soon as this begins moving forward, it’s only going to build.”

“Chad’s been in the game a long time and is very reputable. I might not agree with 100 percent of everything he does — that’s fine — but he’s solid and he’s proven.”

Coach Lynch working with a young player.
Coach Lynch working with a young player.

Lynch underscores how the recruiting landscape is shifting and how Armor Elite will face the changes.

“Recruiting has evolved,” he begins. “It’s different now. The world we live in – September 1 is going to be fuel for most of us.”

Coach Lynch's new Armor Elite team.

And it’s gotten personal, he reveals.

“I’ve lost sleep the past two years over recruiting because of how much it’s changed. I’m not an organization jumper. That’s not what this is. It’s about making sure the girls have somewhere to land as they age up.”

“When you love the game, you talk to people from all over the country. You see what they do, how they do it.”

“I’m rare — I’ve got 13 girls from the state of Georgia.”

“We practice three hours on Wednesday and seven hours on Sunday. That’s ten hours a week together and that much practice time builds chemistry.”

“I’ve done this since my girls were tiny — culture and chemistry matter.”

*****

Building & Evolving with Structure
The Georgia Impact Premier 09 team coached by Chad O'Neal.
Georgia Impact Premier-O’Neal 16U. Photo provided by Chad O’Neal.

O’Neal is blunt about expectations:

“We want the Premier teams built first, and then we’ll look outward from there.”

“Everybody says the same things—monthly Zoom calls, coaching plans… then they realize they don’t have as much time as they thought.”

“Very few clubs stay on top of it. Very few stay on task.”

“If you want to be good at it, you do those things no matter what. You have a list of things you do not deviate from—whether it’s three teams or 30.”

With three accomplished coaches aligned on standards, culture, development and stability, Armor Elite enters the national landscape with a clear identity and a long-term plan—focused entirely on doing right by athletes, families, and the game.

*****

Armor Elite’s Team Roster Size

“We don’t want to be 100 teams,” O’Neal stresses. “We want to be 50 teams and want to have 20 teams in each region with two in each age group: a Premier and a Regional.

“The plan is for teams to take care of their berths. Take care of their national events with the top team in the age group. Then you have the more regional teams that develop.”

SCoach Lynch with his family.o how many and how soon?

“It really depends on the interest.”

And it’s not about getting rich, either, he says.

“Well, I can tell you, after running Georgia Impact for two years at about 45 to 50 teams, nobody was making money.”

“You’ve got other responsibilities. You’ve got to fund a Gold team. You’ve got to pay a couple of people. You’ve got to pay for Christmas parties and this and that.”

“At the end of the day, there’s no money.”

“At 60-plus teams, you start to get into some money. At 100-plus teams, you’re really in it. I’m not trying to suggest everybody running a club is getting rich, but our emphasis is not on getting to a number so we can get paid.”

*****

The Need for Growth & Stability

For him, Armor Elite is the solution:

“Now having Lewis and O’Neal,” Lynch says, “that helps me as a dad. This founding group helps the other girls whose parents trust us. I feel like I’m finally doing right by them with this move.”

“Moving to a new organization lets us have the teams these girls need for growth and stability, so my kids have a place to go.”

Lynch also credits Brittany Lewis for her development pedigree:

“I’ve watched Brittany coach from afar because my second oldest played in that world. I saw her grow as a coach and get kids to the next level.”

He summed it up simply:

“You’ve got three great coaches coming on board. That’s huge for me.”

Brentt Eads

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