This is Brentt Eads of Line Drive Softball…
Starting Monday, we’ll do our Top 10 Softball Stories of 2024 as we’ll countdown from No. 10 to No. 1 which will be published on Jan. 1, 2025.
This won’t be the first time I’ve done a “Top 10 Stories” feature… I’ve been doing it wherever I’ve worked—be it at Student Sports, ESPN, FloSports, Extra Inning Softball and, now, at Line Drive Softball.
Eight years ago, I worked at FloSports as part of the FloSoftball team. I wrote an article specific to the club world and thought it’d be interesting to show what was happening back then.
Here is the link to the original article on FloSoftball from Dec. 30, 2016 titled Best of 2016: Top 10 Club Softball Stories which is still live on the site and links to articles from that year giving more background details on each of the Top 10.
Note: all content included in this article is the property of FloSports unless indicated otherwise…
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There are some organizations that have been around for decades and continue to place highly and Tony Rico’s Firecrackers 18U team has been one of them. This year, his premier team started off the summer slowly but peaked at the right time to win PGF Nationals behind the dominant pitching of Brooke Vestal. And then there is the Beverly Bandits program which has been to a PGF National Championship game four years in a row with three different coaches and four completely different teams. Two of the teams won 16U titles: the 2013 squad coached by Jen Tyrrell and led by current Oregon pitcher Miranda Elish and the 2016 team coached by Bill Conroy and led by pitchers Meghan Beaubien (Michigan commit) and Sydney Supple (Northwestern). And at the USA Softball JO Cup, two long-time Southern powers—the East Cobb Bullets and Atlanta Vipers—made sure the 18U and 16U titles would stay in the Peach State as the championship hosted in Atlanta was won by both Georgia-based programs. And you can’t forget about Bruce Richardson’s So Cal A’s—which won the first four PGF National titles—and took the crown at the prestigious Boulder Independence Day Tournament.
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And, as the traditional powers continue to win, there are always new teams emerging and becoming nationally relevant. The Texas Blaze 18U Gold team has risen from barely cracking the top 100 teams in the nation four years ago to winning the TC/USA Nationals in New York City this year and looks to be one of the top Lone Star State programs know along with traditional powers Texas Glory and the Texas Bombers. And at PGF 16U Nationals, people were asking if the “SD Renegades” were a new team from San Diego; nope, the Renegades hail from South Dakota and with only one player committed gave the Bandits all they could handle in the National Championship game, losing by just one run. It’s great to see teams from states other than ones like California, Texas and Georgia producing nationally competitive teams. For example, Iowa now has the Iowa Premier program, which won PGF 18U Platinum; Rhode Island has Dave Lotti’s Rhode Island Thunder that draws from all over the Northeast, and a program like the Tri-State Thunder from Maryland are rising to be competitive at PGF Nationals and giving young organizations hope that they too can be nationally relevant no matter where they come from.
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It must be really good to be Patty Gasso right now. Not only has she established herself as a sure-fire future Hall of Famer after winning another WCWS Championship in this year’s thrilling three-game series triumph over Auburn, but she and her staff—including Melyssa Lombardi and Coach Gasso’s son, JT Gasso—are tearing it up in recruiting top talent. Showing that freshman can come in and contribute right away, as happened this year with infielders Shay Knighten and Sydney Romero, the Sooners are getting elite talent reaching down into the younger classes. In the recently released FloSoftball 2018 Hot 100, Oklahoma got three of the Top 10 players in the class including No. 1 overall prospect Brooke Vestal. And in the following years, 2019 and 2020, OU also has the top-rated players in catcher Kinzie Hansen and infielder Jayda Coleman, respectively. Everyone will be gunning for the National Champs, but one thing’s clear: the pipeline of talent over the next few years is definitely full and should make Oklahoma always nationally competitive.
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When you have a community as large as you do in softball, it’s inevitable that we will lose some each year but it’s always a shock when a coach or player dies, especially when it seems to be before their time due to accidents or unforeseen medical reasons. We lost some good coaches and players this year including:
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Many people don’t know, even in the softball space, the size and reach of the USSSA organization which has 4.3 million members across all sports and over 23,000 teams in softball alone. This year, USSSA made a big, successful splash in the elite Nationals space producing its first World Fastpitch Championship which was held in Kansas City during July. The event drew top teams from around the country getting prestigious programs like the OC Batbusters—which won the 18U title—and the Texas Glory which, as one coach said, “was a big coop to get such great teams in the first year. The WFC got a good TV game, had solid championships and was overall a really good event.” Along success at the team level, USSSA produced an impressive player-focused event called the USA Select 30 which got elite softball athletes to compete against each other in classes as young as 2020 and 2021. Look for both events to continue to grow and be highly sought after by top teams and players.
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There have been national softball club/high school All-American games before—at the turn of the century the Under Armour All-American Games in Orlando were impressively produced—but nothing has been at the level of this year’s game. Following right after four PGF National Championship contests at Bill Barber Park in Irvine, California, the All-American Game featured an amazing array of talent as assembled by OnDeck Softball’s Derek and Joann Allister and benefited from most of the elite seniors in the country having been in Southern California competing in the PGF Nationals. The coaching staff was stellar: the West team was coached by Jennie Finch, Toni Mascarenas and Crystal Bustos, while the East was coached by Jennie Ritter, Garland Cooper and Suzy Brazney. Even the uniforms were impressive, but the action on the field was what capped off the well-run event. Just hours after helping her Firecrackers team win the 18U title, Utah-bound infielder Alyssa Barrera slapped a single up the middle in the bottom of the 7th inning to give the West squad a walk-off 4-3 victory. However, the capper to the first-year event was a play that occurred in the first inning when UCLA-bound outfielder Aaliyah Jordan hit a ball deep that looked for sure to be a home run, but at the last second Georgia signee Ciara Bryant leapt over the 10-foot centerfield fence and, despite crashing into the fence, pulled down the ball to make a play that later that night would be the No. 1 play of the day on ESPN’s SportsCenter. Immediately after the event, 10 of the top hitters in the country then began their weekend of participating in the second year of the prestigious Louisville Slugger Hit Club and working with from elite players and coaches like Sue Enquist, Amanda Freed, Shay Knighten and Amanda Lorenz. They were also rewarded with fun activities including a trip to Disneyland, a game at Angel Stadium and a beach bonfire. Now, between the two events, the top players in the country something to shoot for before heading to their respective colleges.
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Here we are at the end of the year and this choice for the Top 10 is still unfinished, but it suddenly took on a whole new dramatic meaning on August 3 when it was announced officially that softball was back in the Olympics. Suddenly, the Junior National Team was seen as the entry point for strong consideration and the all-important internal game experience to be considered for the Women’s National Team that in three years will be competing for Olympic Gold in Japan. The selection camp takes place this weekend in Clearwater, Florida with an Open Tryout on Friday and then the main Training Camp running over the weekend. About two dozen high school standouts have been invited to compete for a roster spot over the next year including the FloSoftball Hot 100 top picks for the 2017 class (Bri Perez, UCLA signee) and 2018 class (Brooke Vestal, Oklahoma). If anything, the invitational process has sparked great discussion on who has been invited and who should have been invited and has given young softball players of all ages a clear starting point on a key step to realizing the dream of one day playing in the Olympics.
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Athletics is a great stage to see the human spirit conquer adversity and in softball we’ve seen some great examples this year of inspiring players overcoming great trials, especially daunting physical obstacles, that serve to show us how strong the will to succeed can be. Here are three amazing athletes who have battled imposing ailments and come out on top:
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Few in softball would argue that early recruiting, where girls as young as 13-years-old and their families, are feeling the pressure of committing early or facing the possibility of losing a scholarship offer to another middle-schooler. It’s become a necessary evil with no apparent way to fix it, but that may change if one conference gets its way. In October the Ivy League proposed that the NCAA update its rules to prevent contact between college coaches and athletes until the player’s junior year in high school. Verbal offers and commits wouldn’t be allowed until that time and coaches would be blocked from setting up unofficial visits, making or receiving calls and even discussing recruiting with athletes until the start of the athlete’s junior year. The proposal will be discussed at the NCAA Convention held January 18-21 in Nashville. If it passes—and even if so it would probably take a year or two to implement—the new stipulations would have a drastic impact on recruiting as it takes place now.
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The big changes that impacted softball at the highest levels, meaning international and pro play, had nothing directly to do with club softball and yet everything to do with travel play. How? Because some of the major develops in the sport gives young players new hope to play beyond college or find alternate ways to continue working in softball or sports in general.
Here are some of them:
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