Category: Fast

1995 ISC Men’s Fast Pitch World Tournament

1995 held at Sioux City, Iowa on August 11-20.


Champion – Gators, Toronto, Ontario
Runner Up – Larry Miller Toyota, Salt Lake City, Utah


  • Cleo Goyette Memorial MVP Award – Brian Paton, Gators
  • Leroy Zimmerman Memorial Pitching Award – Darren Zack, Gators
  • Kevin Herlihy Newcomer of the Year – N/A
  • Leading Hitter – Paul Walford, Smokers – .538
  • Most RBI – Adam Smith, Gators – 11

1995 ISC FIRST TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Darren Zack, Toronto Gators (10-0, 0.10 ERA, 150K)
P – Peter Meredith, Larry Miller Toyota (5-2, 1.50 ERA, 63K)
P – Doug Middleton, Topeka Travelers (5-0 0.66 ERA, 48K)
C – Todd Garcia, Decatur Pride .500
C – Mark Sorenson, All-Car Roadrunners .436
IF – Marty Kernaghan, Gateway 2000 Soos .409
IF – Fred Wyatt, Broken Bow Travelers .500
IF – Adam Smith, Toronto Gators .387
IF – Dan Cronkright, Explorers .417
IF – James Blake, Gateway 2000 Soos .316
OF – Brian Paton, Toronto Gators .472
OF – Bill Boyer, Gateway 2000 Soos .500
OF – Bob Blakley, Topeka Travelers .318
OF – Tod Stevenson, All-Car Roadrunners .381
DH – Todd Moser, NJ Gators .421

1995 ISC SECOND TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Michael White, Gateway 2000 Soos 4-2 1.81 71
P – Jimmy Wana, Broken Bow Travelers 4-2 2.37 57
P – Scott Evans, Explorers 3-2 1.85 44
C – Paul Walford, Smokers .538
C – Randy Burnside, Gateway 2000 Soos .250
IF – Jesse Ellestad, Dukes .462
IF – Brian Pesko, Bonutti’s Orthopedics .389
IF – Chris Jones, Toronto Gators .281
IF – Kyle Magnusson, Larry Miller Toyota .227
IF – Gary Swann, The Farm Tavern .308
OF – Mike Nichols, Broken Bow Travelers .354
OF – Scott Christensen, Happy Chef .385
OF – Doug Kozeny, Broken Bow Travelers .364
OF – Dave Paetkau, South Surrey .353
DH – Mike Hineline, NJ Gators .375


FINAL STANDINGS

1. Gators, Toronto ON
2. Miller Toyota, Salt Lake City, UT
3. Gateway 2000 Soos, Sioux City, IA
4. Travelers, Topeka, KS
5t. The Farm Tavern, Madison, WI
5t. Travelers, Broken Bow, NE
7t. Explorers, Midland, MI
7t. All-Car Roadrunners, Green Bay, WI
9t. Ravens, South Surrey, BC
9t. Dukes, Denmark, WI
9t. Happy Chef, Mankato, MN
9t. Hearts, Bloomington, IL
13t. Decatur Pride, Decatur, IL
13t. Windmillers, Elizabeth, NJ
13t. Gators, West Milford, NJ
13t. Express, Napanee, ON
17t. North Americans, Winnebago, NE
17t. Class Walls, Whiteford, MD
17t. Payless, Victoria, BC
17t. Smokers, Tampa Bay, FL
17t. Stover Delivery Systems, Jefferson City, MO
17t. Dolan and Murphy Shamrocks, Aurora, IL
17t. Bonutti’s Orthpedics, Effingham, IL
17t. County Concrete, Marathon, WI
25t. Bombers, Long Beach, CA
25t. Jack & Do’s Pizza, Findlay, OH
25t. H.I.S. Construction, Houston, TX
25t. Si Senor Amigos, Tumacacori, AZ
25t. Red Dog Fastball Club, Winnipeg, MB
25t. Coors Griffins, Sioux City, IA
25t. Mahoney’s Tap, Cedar Rapids, IA
25t. Big Red Keno, Omaha, NE
33t. Black Sox, Las Cruces, NM
33t. Drive Train, Topeka, KS
33t. Wallbangers, Pleasant Grove, UT
33t. Area Softball Association, Grafton, WV
33t. Twins, Waterloo, ON
33t. Page Brake, Salt Lake City, UT
33t. Pride, Kokomo, IN
33t. Greco Twins, Summerside PEI
33t. Karp’s Bowling Bar, Reese, MI
33t. CNFA Dream Team, Invermore BC
33t. Billy Buck’s, Dubuque, IA
33t. Kegel Sign Co, Fargo, ND
33t. Quali-Graphs, Lincoln, NE
33t. Tiger Club, Aurora, IL
33t. Sports Magic, Texarkana, TX
33t. Brines Red Dogs, Stillwater, MN

1994 ISC Men’s Fast Pitch World Tournament

1994 held at Summerside, Price Edward Island on August 12-21.


Champion – All-Car Roadrunners, Green Bay, Wisconsin
Runner Up – Gators, Toronto, Ontario


  • Cleo Goyette Memorial MVP Award – Colin Abbott, All-Car Roadrunners
  • Leroy Zimmerman Memorial Pitching Award – Brad Underwood, All-Car Roadrunners
  • Kevin Herlihy Newcomer of the Year – N/A
  • Leading Hitter – Colin Abbott, All-Car Roadrunners – .500
  • Leading Hitter – Glenn Littlejohn, Greensleeves – .500
  • Leading Hitter – Todd King, Summerside 94’s – .500
  • Most RBI – Don Burnett, Gators – 9

1994 ISC FIRST TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Darren Zack, Gators (4-1, 0.55 ERA, 87K)
P – Mike Piechnik, Gateway 2000 Soos (4-1, 1.05 ERA, 57K)
P – Randy Parkhurst, Stover Delivery Farm (5-1, 1.14 ERA, 69K)
C – John Becker, All-Car Roadrunners .375
C – Bruce Casselman, Gators .273
IF – Mark Sorenson, All-Car Roadrunners .333
IF – Joe Vigil, Painters .435
IF – Glenn Littlejohn, Greensleeves .500
IF – Adam Smith, Gators .444
IF – Dan Baumgartner, Stover Delivery Farm .375
OF – Colin Abbott, All-Car Roadrunners .500
OF – Shawn Rychick, All-Car Roadrunners .444
OF – Brian Paton, Gators .367
OF – Terry Chalis, Gators .318
DH – Aaron Owens, Painters .350

1994 ISC SECOND TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Brad Underwood, All-Car Roadrunners (3-0, 2.80 ERA, 37K)
P – Glenn Davis, Painters (4-2, 0.37 ERA, 44K)
P – Todd Martin, Express (3-1, 0.53 ERA, 65K)
C – Kevin Reade, Cole Harbour Dairy Queen .429
C – Brian Stere, Twins .375
IF – Trent Rubley, Decatur Pride .318
IF – Brad Zomar, Fast as Flite .333
IF – Dave Palumbo, Class Walls .455
IF – Rick Hopkins, Painters .296
IF – Dan Cronkright, Explorers .400
OF – Bill Boyer, Gateway 2000 Soos .350
OF – Shane King, Gators .318
OF – Trevor Reading, Twins .353
OF – Steve Schott, All-Car Roadrunners .263
DH – Don Burnett, Gators .409


FINAL STANDINGS

1. All-Car Roadrunners, Green Bay, WI
2. Gators, Toronto, ON
3. Gateway 2000 Soos, Sioux City, IA
4. Decatur Pride, Decatur, IL
5t. Painters, Long Beach, CA
5t. Miller Toyota, Salt Lake City, UT
7t. Stover Delivery Farm, Jefferson City, MO
7t. The Farm Tavern, Madison, WI
9t. Twins, Waterloo, ON
9t. Ozark Mountaineers, Springfield, MO
9t. Explorers, Midland, MI
9t. Cole Harbour Dairy Queen, Halifax, NS
13t. Greensleeves, St. Johns, NB
13t. Dolan & Murphy Shamrocks, Aurora, IL
13t. Fast as Flite, Abbotsford, BC
13t. Express, Napanee, ON
17t. Class Walls, Whiteford, MD
17t. Stewart Taylor Printing, Duluth, MN
17t. Dukes, Denmark, WI
17t. Pride/Fouts Tire, Kokomo, IN
17t. Heflin Builders, Ballston Lake, NY
17t. Adkins Properties, Houston, TX
17t. Ironhead Originals, Shedon/London, ON
17t. Abbott Labs, Ashland, OH
25t. Smokers, Tampa, FL
25t. North Americans, Winnebago, NE
25t. Thunder, Kemptville, ON
25t. Thunder, Pueblo, CO
25t. Federal Lock Falcons, Arlington, VA
25t. Star Collision Center, Middletown, NY
25t. Windmillers, Elizabeth, NJ
25t. Bryant Heating & Cooling, St. Joseph, MO
33t. Metros, Des Moines, IA
33t. Tiffany’s Food and Spirits, Frankenmuth, MI
33t. Blues, Taylorville, IL
33t. Mahoney’s Chiefs, Cedar Rapids, IA
33t. Bow Travelers, Topeka, KS
33t. Sting, Shelbyville, IN
33t. Page Brake, Salt Lake City, UT
33t. Minnesota Computers, Scandia, MN
33t. Sambetti’s Knights, Des Moines, IA
33t. Greco Twins, Summerside, PEI
33t. Fredericton Alpines, Frederiction, NB
33t. Ehrlich Tobacco, Boston, MA
33t. Pinch Hitters, Chicago, IL
33t. Jack & Do’s, Findlay, OH
33t. Windsor Legion Olands, Windsor, NS
33t. Summerside 94’s, Summerside, PEI

1993 ISC Men’s Fast Pitch World Tournament

1993 held at Kimberly, Wisconsin on August 12-22.


Champion – Gators, Toronto, Ontario
Runner Up – NHCD, Sioux City, Iowa


  • Cleo Goyette Memorial MVP Award – Terry Challis, Gators
  • Leroy Zimmerman Memorial Pitching Award – Darren Zack, Gators
  • Kevin Herlihy Newcomer of the Year – N/A
  • Leading Hitter – Scott Collins, Pabst/Barley Pop A’s – .500
  • Leading Hitter – Tom Montgomery, Pabst/Barley Pop A’s – .500
  • Most RBI – Scott Collins – 10

1993 ISC FIRST TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Darren Zack, Gators (8-1, 0.92 ERA, 108K)
P – Peter Meredith, Larry Miller Toyota (6-2, 1.00 ERA, 92K)
P – Mike Piechnik, Payless (2-1, 0.35 ERA, 23K)
C – Tim Wahl, NHCD .316
C – Scott Collins, Pabst/Barley Pop A’s .500
IF – Brian Martie, Hearts .474
IF – Gordon Eakin, Larry Miller Toyota Toyota .409
IF – Dan Cronkright, Explorers .455
IF – Lance Pratt, Larry Miller Toyota Toyota .333
IF – Tom Montgomery, Pabst/Barley Pop A’s .500
OF – Doug Levy, Adkins Properties .421
OF – Terry Challis, Gators .455
OF – Steve Schott, NHCD .263
OF – Tod Stevenson, NHCD .444
DH – Brian Sosnowski, NHCD .267

1993 ISC SECOND TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Rob Scheller, Decatur Pride (3-0, 0.00 ERA, 34K)
P – Dan Yantzi, Twins (4-2, 1.23 ERA, 59K)
P – Derwyn Hodgins, Adkins Properties (3-1, 0.26 ERA, 45K)
C – Bruce Casselman, Gators .300
C – Brad Burrup, Larry Miller Toyota Toyota .190
IF – Tim Macumber, All-Car Roadrunners .417
IF – Rick Hopkins, Painters .333
IF – Marty Kernaghan, .333
IF – Brad Zomar, Regents .389
IF – Mark Sorenson, NHCD .263
OF – Shane King, Gators .381
OF – Brian Lehrman, Larry Miller Toyota Toyota .292
OF – Alan Taylor, Twins .389
OF – Mark Dye, Painters .412
DH – Rick Dohogne, Decatur Pride .263


FINAL STANDINGS

1. Gators, Toronto, ON
2. NHCD, Sioux City, IA
3. Miller Toyota, Salt Lake City, UT
4. Decatur Pride, Decatur, IL
5t. Metros, Des Moines, IA
5t. Twins, Waterloo, ON
7t. The Farm Tavern, Madison, WI
7t. Gateway 2000 Soos, Sioux City, IA
9t. All-Car Roadrunners, Green Bay, WI
9t. Hearts, Bloomington, IL
9t. Dukes, Denmark, WI
9t. Payless, Victoria BC
13t. Painters, Long Beach, CA
13t. Adkins Properties, Houston, TX
13t. Explorers, Midland, MI
13t. Abbott Labs, Ashland, OH
17t. Lightning, Aurora, IL
17t. Pabst/Barley Pop A’s, Minot, MD
17t. Heflin/OTB, Middleton, NY
17t. Seafirst, Bellevue, WA
17t. Regents, New Westminster BC
17t. Class Walls, Whiteford, MD
17t. JS&K Engineering, Cedar Rapids, IA
17t. Blues, Taylorville, IL
25t. Bass Country Inn, Springfield, MO
25t. County Concrete, Marathon, WI
25t. Page Brake, Salt Lake City, UT
25t. Bombers, Clearwater, FL
25t. Hornets, Osawa, ON
25t. Cole County Jazz, Jefferson City, MO
25t. Summerside ‘94, Summerside PEI
25t. California Bullets, Santa Cruz, CA
33t. Happy Chef, Mankato, MN
33t. Rempel Construction, Saskatoon SK
33t. Capitols, Topeka, KS
33t. Jiffy Lube, Tulsa, OK
33t. Fouts Tire, Kokomo, IN
33t. Merchants, Akron, MI
33t. Miller Chevrolet, Salt Lake City, UT
33t. Si Senor, Tucson, AZ
33t. Merchants, Grafton, WV
33t. Federal Lock & Safe, Arlington, VA
33t. Sting, Shelbyville, IN
33t. Black Sox, Las Cruces, NM
33t. Softball Club, Scandia, MN
33t. North Americans, Winnebago, NE
33t. Jack & Dos Pizza, Findlay, OH

1992 ISC Men’s Fast Pitch World Tournament

1992 held at Salt Lake City, Utah on August 14-23.


Champion – NHCD, Sioux City, Iowa
Runner Up – Payless, Victoria, British Columbia


  • Cleo Goyette Memorial MVP Award – Dave Brdovinac, Payless
  • Leroy Zimmerman Memorial Pitching Award – Darren Zack, Magicians
  • Kevin Herlihy Newcomer of the Year – N/A
  • Leading Hitter – Clark Bosch, Canadian Tire – .545
  • Leading Hitter – Trevor Reading, Twins – .545
  • Most RBI – Jody Hennigar, Bombers – 8
  • Most RBI – Boomer Brush, Bombers – 8

1992 ISC FIRST TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Michael White, NHCD (3-0, 0.37 ERA, 30K)
P – Darren Zack, Magicians (7-2, 0.83 ERA, 136K)
P – Mike Piechnik, Payless (5-2, 0.68 ERA, 84K)
C – Tim Wahl, NHCD .294
C – Ken Eriksen, Bombers .292
IF – Dave Badovinac, Payless .464
IF – Marty Kernagan, NHCD .389
IF – Terry Wiebe, Bombers .308
IF – Mark Sorenson, NHCD .429
IF – Kevin Harvey, Summerside ’94 .429
OF – Avon Meacham, Bombers .400
OF – Billy Weiss, Class Walls .429
OF – Shane Hunuhunu, Faultless/ESS .429
OF – Kenny Hill, Metros .500
DH – Jody Hennigar, Bombers .391

1992 ISC SECOND TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Rob Scheller, Bombers (3-0, 0.36 ERA, 23K)
P – Ty Stofflet, Class Walls (4-2, 1.03 ERA, 36K)
P – Peter Meredith, Larry Miller Toyota (3-2, 1.27 ERA, 54K)
C – Barry Penman, Bombers .172
C – Doug Chase, Payless .258
IF – James Blake, Gateway 2000 Soos .375
IF – Dan Nessler, Happy Chef .412
IF – Todd Shultz, Explorers .500
IF – Byron Peyton, Metros .353
IF – Brett Alvey, Larry Miller Toyota .500
OF – Randy Burnside, NHCD .250
OF – Trevor Reading, Twins .545
OF – Clark Bosch, Canadian Tire .545
OF – Dave Paetkau, Bellevue .545
DH – Eric Wilson, The Farm Tavern .429


FINAL STANDINGS

1. NHCD, Sioux City, IA
2. Payless, Victoria BC
3. Bombers, Clearwater, FL
4. Magicians, Vancouver, BC
5t. Guanella Bros, Rohnert Park, CA
5t. Metros, Des Moines, IA
7t. Faultless/ESS, Ashland, OH
7t. Gateway 2000 Soos, Sioux City, IA
9t. Heflin/OTB, Middleton, NY
9t. Diamonds, Portage La Prairie MB
9t. Midwest GMC Truck and Van, St. Louis, MO
9t. Seafirst, Bellevue, WA
13t. Hearts, Bloomington, IL
13t. The Farm Tavern, Madison, WI
13t. Explorers, Midland, MI
13t. Class Walls, Whiteford, MD
17t. Summerside ‘94, Summerside, PEI
17t. Page Brake, Salt Lake City, UT
17t. Larry Miller Toyota, Salt Lake City, UT
17t. Hertz/Capitols, Topeka, KS
17t. Decatur Pride, Decatur, IL
17t. Canadian Tire, Owen Sound, ON
17t. Hurricanes, Baltimore, MD
17t. Colonial Baking, Aurora, IL
25t. Cole County Jazz, Jefferson City, MO
25t. Mustangs, Prescott, AZ
25t. Stout Tower Jets, Lakewood, CA
25t. CSE Bullets, Santa Cruz, CA
25t. Happy Chef, Mankato, MN
25t. T L Sund A’s, Minot, MD
25t. Twins, Waterloo, ON
25t. Joe’s Auto, Wilcox, AZ
33t. All-Car Roadrunners, Green Bay, WI
33t. Black Sox, Las Cruces, NM
33t. Davis Drillers, Wooster, OH
33t. Texarkana Magic, Texarkana, TX
33t. Adkins Properties, Houston, TX
33t. Sports Page Lounge, Kansas City, KS
33t. Stewart-Taylor Printing, Duluth, MN
33t. Softball Club, Logan, WV
33t. Dolan & Murphy, Aurora, IL
33t. Sports Med, Flint, MI
33t. Raiders, Austin, TX
33t. Rangers, Little Rock, AR
33t. Bombers, Vista, CA
33t. Tichy Electric, Cedar Rapids, IA
33t. Miller Chevrolet, Salt Lake City, UT
33t. Sting, Shelbyville, IN

1991 NCAA Women’s College World Series

1991 held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on May 23-26.


Champion – Arizona Wildcats (56-16)
Runner Up – UCLA Bruins (56-7)


Arizona wins its first women’s team national championship in any sport. Pitching (Debby Day 30-8, 0.50; Susie Parra 14-3, 0.43; Julie Jones 12-5, 1.21) and defense (.970 team fielding percentage, Julie Standering 187 assists at shortstop) were keys to the season. The Cats also stole 119 bases. Jones (.350), Jamie Heggen (.330), Kristin Gauthier (.300), Standering (.296) and Jody Miller (.272) had outstanding seasons at the plate.

The Cats beat No. 1-ranked UCLA twice at the College World Series to earn the championship, including a 5-1 victory in the title game. UA had four extra-inning games in the classic. The Cats used short-game tactics much of the year and were led by Standering with 30 and Miller with 20 stolen bases. Arizona finished the year 56-16 overall. The Cats were frustrated in the tough Pac-10 Conference at 11-9 and a fourth-place finish.


  • Honda Sports Award – Lisa Fernandez, UCLA (20-3, 0.25 ERA, 165 K, .341 BA, 2 HR 32 RBI)
  • Batting Leader – Debby Day, Arizona – .385
  • RBI Leader – 3 tied at 3. Julie Jones, Arizona; Lorraine Maynez, UCLA, DeDe Weiman, UCLA
  • Home Run Leader – Lisa Fernandez, UCLA – 1
  • Home Run Leader – Kim Maher, Fresno State – 1
  • ERA Leader – Karen Snelgrove, Missouri – 0.00
  • ERA Leader – Susie Parra, Arizona – 0.00
  • Strikeout Leader – Terry Carpenter, Fresno State – 23

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM

P – Heather Compton, UCLA
P – Debbie Day, Arizona
C – Kerry Dienelt, UCLA
1B – Julie Jones, Arizona
2B – Julie Smith, Fresno State
3B – Lisa Fernandez, UCLA
SS – Julie Standering, Arizona
OF – Kristin Gauthier, Arizona
OF – Yvonne Gutierrez, UCLA
OF – Lorraine Maynez, UCLA
AL – Kim Maher, Fresno State
AL – Terry Carpenter, Fresno State


SCORES

  1. UCLA 1 Florida State 0
  2. Arizona 1 UNLV 0 (13 inn.)
  3. Long Beach State 1 Missouri 0
  4. Fresno State 2 Utah 0
  5. Florida State 3 UNLV 1 – UNLV eliminated
  6. Missouri 2 Utah 0 (9 inn.) – Utah eliminated
  7. Arizona 1 UCLA 0 (9 inn.)
  8. Long Beach State 3 Fresno State 0
  9. Fresno State 3 Florida State 0 – Florida State eliminated
  10. UCLA 5 Missouri 0 – Missouri eliminated
  11. Arizona 1 Long Beach State 0 (8 inn.)
  12. Fresno State 1 Arizona 0 (8 inn.)
  13. UCLA 1 Long Beach State 0 – Long Beach State eliminated
  14. UCLA 5 Fresno State 1 (13 inn.) – Fresno State eliminated
  15. Arizona 5 UCLA 1 – UCLA eliminated

FINAL STANDINGS

1. Arizona Wildcats (3-1)
2. UCLA Bruins (4-2)
3. Fresno State Bulldogs (3-2)
4. Long Beach State 49ers (2-2)
5t. Missouri Tigers  (1-2)
5t. Florida State Seminoles (1-2)
7t. Utah Utes (0-2)
7t. UNLV Rebels (0-2)


REGIONALS

Regional No. 1

  1. Florida State 1 Louisiana-Lafayette 0
  2. Oklahoma State 3 Louisiana-Lafayette 2 – Louisiana-Lafayette eliminated
  3. Florida State 2 Oklahoma State 0
  4. Florida State 4 Oklahoma State 3 – Oklahoma State eliminated

Florida State qualifies for the WCWS, 3-0.

Regional No. 2

  1. UCLA 4 Central Michigan 0
  2. UCLA 5 Central Michigan 0

UCLA qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 3

  1. UMass 3 Connecticut 1
  2. UNLV 3 Connecticut 0
  3. UNLV 4 UMass 0
  4. UNLV 5 UMass 0

UNLV qualifies for the WCWS, 3-0.

Regional No. 4

  1. Arizona 4 Arizona State 2
  2. Arizona 4 Arizona 0

Arizona qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 5

  1. Cal State Fullerton 3 Long Beach State 2 (10 inn.)
  2. Long Beach State 2 Cal State Fullerton 1
  3. Long Beach State 5 Cal State Fullerton 1

Long Beach State qualifies for the WCWS, 2-1.

Regional No. 6

  1. Missouri 2 Southern Illinois 0
  2. Iowa 2 Southern Illinois 0 – Southern Illinois eliminated
  3. Missouri 2 Iowa 0
  4. Missouri 4 Iowa 0

Missouri qualifies for the WCWS, 3-0.

Regional No. 7

  1. Fresno State 2 California 0
  2. Fresno State 8 California 1

Fresno State qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 8

  1. Utah 1 Minnesota 0
  2. Minnesota 3 Texas A&M 0
  3. Texas A&M 1 Utah 0
  4. Utah 2 Minnesota 0 – Minnesota eliminated
  5. Utah 3 Texas A&M 0 – Texas A&M eliminated

Utah qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.


ALL-AMERICAN FIRST TEAM

P – Heather Compton, UCLA
P – Terry Carpenter, Fresno State
P – Michele Granger, California Golden
C – Diane Pohl, Iowa
1B – Julie Cavanaugh, Oregon
2B – Julie Smith, Fresno State
3B – Camille Spitaleri, Kansas
SS – Julie Standering, Arizona
OF – Yvonne Gutierrez, UCLA
OF – Pam Stanley, Central Michigan
OF – Tricia Popowski, South Carolina
UTIL – Lisa Fernandez, UCLA

ALL-AMERICAN SECOND TEAM

P – Karen Snelgrove, Missouri
P – Karen Jackson, Iowa
P – Missi Young, Texas A&M
C – Erica Ziencina, UCLA
1B – Julie Jones, Arizona
2B – Michelle Delloso, South Carolina
3B – Gina LoPiccolo, Fresno State
SS – Tiffany Tootle, South Carolina
OF – Rachel Brown, Arizona State
OF – Leigh Ross, Toledo
OF – Charmelle Green, Utah
UT – Kelly Brookhart, Creighton
AL – Kari Blank, Minnesota

1991 Arizona Wildcats

1991 ISC Men’s Fast Pitch World Tournament

1991 held at Sioux City, Iowa on August 9-18.


Champion – Penn Corp, Sioux City, Iowa
Runner Up – Canadian Tire, Owen Sound, Ontario


  • Cleo Goyette Memorial MVP Award – Tim Wahl, Penn Corp
  • Leroy Zimmerman Memorial Pitching Award – Brad Underwood, Canadian Tire
  • Kevin Herlihy Newcomer of the Year – N/A
  • Leading Hitter – Tim Wahl, Penn Corp – .600
  • Leading Hitter – Richie Pfaff, Class Walls – .545
  • Most RBI – Eric Isenhart, Explorers – 10

1991 ISC FIRST TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Chubb Tangaroa, Guanella Bros. (4-2, 0.66 ERA, 85K)
P – Michael White, Penn Corp (2-0, 0.00 ERA, 29K)
P – Brad Underwood, Canadian Tire (6-2, 0.89 ERA, 110K)
C – Tim Wahl, Penn Corp .500
C – Greg Stockton, Colonial Baking .294
IF – Steve Hebeler, Bosch-Rausch .467
IF – Dan Cronkright, Explorers .421
IF – Al Burnham, Canadian Tire .296
IF – Denny Place, Decatur Pride .400
IF – Mark Sorenson, Penn Corp .278
OF – Jim Clark, Guanella Bros. .320
OF – Bill Boyer, Penn Corp .304
OF – Richie Pfaff, Class Walls .500
OF – Kevin Litz, Spirit .381
DH – Eric Isenhart, Explorers .400

1991 ISC SECOND TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Marty Grant, Decatur Pride (3-1, 0.50 ERA, 45K)
P – Dan Yantzi, Explorers (4-2, 1.79 ERA, 34K)
P – Paul Algar, Colonial Baking (3-0, 1.08 ERA, 40K)
C – Doug Fillmore, The Farm Tavern .250
C – Don Trotter, Guanella Bros. .090
IF – Keith Mackingtosh, Merchants .417
IF – Bob Richardson, Canadian Tire .296
IF – Tim Balsi, Midwest GMC Truck & Van .462
IF – Mike Cork, Colonial Baking .286
IF – Denny Rich, Decatur Pride .400
OF – Pete Turner, Guanella Bros. .269
OF – Doug Peyton, Bosch-Rausch .429
OF – Kevin Hartwig, The Farm Tavern .357
OF – Al Staats, Canadian Tire .161
DH – Mike Tranal, Bosch-Rausch .357


FINAL STANDINGS

1. Penn Corp, Sioux City, IA
2. Canadian Tire, Owen Sound, ON
3. Guanella Bros., Rohnert Park, CA
4. Colonial Baking, Aurora, IL
5t. Seafirst, Bellevue, WA
5t. Explorers, Midland, MI
7t. Decatur Pride, Decatur, IL
7t. The Farm Tavern, Madison, WI
9t. Larry Miller Toyota, Salt Lake City, UT
9t. Spirit, Amsterdam, NY
9t. Payless, Victoria, BC
9t. Merchants, Camrose AB
13t. Page Brake, Salt Lake City, UT
13t. Hearts, Bloomington, IL
13t. Soos, Sioux City, IA
13t. Cole County Jazz, Marshall, MO
17t. ESS/Planggers, Ashland, OH
17t. Midwest GMC Truck & Van, St. Louis, MO
17t. Mustangs, Prescott, AZ
17t. Bosch-Rausch, Cedar Rapids, IA
17t. Carnation, Green Bay, WI
17t. Sting, Shelbyville, IN
17t. Diamonds, Portage La Prairie, MB
17t. Class Walls, Whiteford, MD
25t. Rangers, El Cajon, CA
25t. York Sundance, Toronto, ON
25t. Black Sox, Las Cruces, NM
25t. Knights, Des Moines, IA
25t. Carp Valley Pride, Carp, ON
25t. Silver Bullets, St. Paul, MN
25t. Faultless-Garber, Ashland, OH
25t. Metros, Des Moines, IA
33t. Stewart Taylor-Printing, Duluth, MN
33t. Stout Tower Eagles, Lakewood, CA
33t. Lusby’s Rebels, Pine Bluff, AR
33t. Nogales Sonora Amigos
33t. Magicians, Vancouver, BC
33t. Texas Flyers, Houston, TX
33t. Oilers, Shreveport, LA
33t. Beer Nuts, Bloomington, IL
33t. Athletics, Orlando, FL
33t. Pro Sportwear, Davenport, IA
33t. Asham Fastball Club, Winnipeg, MB
33t. R E Scott, Sioux City, IA
33t. Flora Craft, Ludington, MI
33t. Hawks, Baytown, TX
33t. Hertz, Topeka, KS
33t. United Surgical Steel, Montgomery, AL

1990 NCAA Women’s College World Series

1990 held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on May 23-27.


Champion – UCLA Bruins (62-7)
Runner Up – Fresno State Bulldogs (29-7)


This year was the first WCWS held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City and it has been the host ever since except for 1998 when it was run at the site of the Olympics.

The Bruins quickly dispatched of Northern Iowa in Regional play and won their first four contests at the initial Women’s College World Series to be played in Oklahoma City. For the third straight season, Fresno State stood in the way of UCLA and a national championship. Attempting to avenge their previous two losses, the Bulldogs won a 1-0, elimination game against the Bruins to force a winner-take-all final.

UCLA jumped out to an early 1-0 lead with a first-inning run when Shanna Flynn scored on a wild pitch. Then in the third inning, a downpour caused the game to be suspended and resume the following afternoon.

The Bruins came out the next day and immediately tacked on an insurance run in the bottom of the third when Kerry Dienelt drove in Michelle Montgomery. Compton took care of the rest, one-hitting the Bulldogs to finish off the three-peat.

Dienelt, Fernandez, Flynn, Gutierrez and Longaker were all named to the All-Tournament Team.


  • Batting Leader – Missy Phillips, UCLA – .467
  • RBI Leader – Kim Harris, UNLV – 4
  • RBI Leader – Yvonne Gutierrez, UCLA – 4
  • Home Run Leader – 6 tied at 1.
  • ERA Leader – 3 tied at 0.00. Marcie Green, Fresno State; Dena Carter, Oklahoma State; Lisa Longaker, UCLA
  • Strikeout Leader – Marcie Green, Fresno State – 15

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM

P – Lisa Longaker, UCLA
P – Marcie Green, Fresno State
C – Shannon Kimberling, Oklahoma State
1B – Kerry Dienelt, UCLA
2B – Dawn Lange, Oklahoma State
3B – Lisa Fernandez, UCLA
SS – Martha Noffsinger, Fresno State
OF – Shanna Flynn, UCLA
OF – Yvonne Gutierrez, UCLA
OF – Leslie Barton, Florida State
AL – Julie Smith, Fresno State
AL – Debbie DeJohn, Florida State


SCORES

  1. UCLA 4 Kent State 0
  2. Long Beach State 2 UNLV 0
  3. Oklahoma State 3 Arizona 0
  4. Florida State 1 Fresno State 0
  5. UNLV 5 Kent State 0 – Kent State eliminated
  6. Fresno State 1 Arizona 0 – Arizona eliminated
  7. UCLA 6 Long Beach State 0
  8. Oklahoma State 4 Florida State 1
  9. Florida State 4 UNLV 1 – UNLV eliminated
  10. Fresno State 2 Long Beach State 0 – Long Beach State eliminated
  11. UCLA 2 Oklahoma State 1
  12. UCLA 3 Florida State 0 – Florida State eliminated
  13. Fresno State 1 Oklahoma State 0 (10 inn.) – Oklahoma State eliminated
  14. Fresno State 1 UCLA 0
  15. UCLA 2 Fresno State 0 – Fresno State eliminated

FINAL STANDINGS

1. UCLA Bruins (5-1)
2. Fresno State Bulldogs (4-2)
3. Oklahoma State Cowgirls (2-2)
4. Florida State Seminoles (2-2)
5t. Long Beach State 49ers (1-2)
5t. UNLV Rebels (1-2)
7t. Arizona Wildcats (0-2)
7t. Kent State Golden Flashes (0-2)


REGIONALS

Regional No. 1

  1. UCLA 2 Northern Iowa 0
  2. UCLA 4 Northern Iowa 0

UCLA qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 2

  1. Fresno State 11 Creighton 1 (6 inn.)
  2. Fresno State 2 Creighton 1

Fresno State qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 3

  1. Arizona State 1 Arizona 0
  2. Arizona 1 Arizona State 0
  3. Arizona 9 Arizona State 5

Arizona qualifies for the WCWS, 2-1.

Regional No. 4

  1. Cal State Fullerton 3 Long Beach State 2 (8 inn.)
  2. Long Beach State 4 Cal State Fullerton 0
  3. Cal State Fullerton 2 Long Beach State 1 (16 inn.)

Cal State Fullerton qualifies for the WCWS, 2-1.

Regional No. 5

  1. UNLV 2 San Jose State 1
  2. California 2 San Jose State 1 – San Jose State eliminated
  3. UNLV 1 California 0
  4. California 1 UNLV 0
  5. UNLV 1 California 0 – California eliminated

UNLV qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.

Regional No. 6

  1. Adelphi 1 Connecticut 0 (20 inn.)
  2. Oklahoma State 5 Connecticut 0 – Connecticut eliminated
  3. Oklahoma State 1 Adelphi 0
  4. Oklahoma State 3 Adelphi 0 – Adelphi eliminated

Oklahoma State qualifies for the WCWS, 3-0.

Regional No. 7

  1. Florida State 5 Texas A&M 0
  2. Southwestern Louisiana 1 Texas A&M 0 – Texas A&M eliminated
  3. Florida State 4 Southwestern Louisiana 3
  4. Florida State 2 Southwestern Louisiana 1 (10 inn.) – Southwestern Louisiana eliminated

Florida State qualifies for the WCWS, 3-0.

Regional No. 8

  1. Kent State 4 Ohio State 0
  2. Ohio State 2 Oregon 0
  3. Kent State 3 Oregon 0 – Oregon eliminated
  4. Kent State 5 Ohio State 3 – Ohio State eliminated

Kent State qualifies for the WCWS, 3-0.


 

1990 UCLA Bruins

This picture is of ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City from 1992. In 1990 it looked much like this and has seen many changes in and upgrades in its history.


REGULAR SEASON INFORMATION

  • Honda Sports Award – Lisa Fernandez, UCLA (11-1, 0.25 ERA, 51 K, .310 BA, 1 HR 22 RBI)

ALL-AMERICAN FIRST TEAM

P – Lisa Longaker, UCLA
P – Stefni Whitton, Southwestern Louisiana
P – Michele Granger, California
C – Diane Pohl, Iowa
1B – Rhonda King-Randolph, Toledo
2B – Julie Smith, Fresno State
3B – Camille Spitaleri, Kansas
SS – Martha Noffsinger, Fresno State
OF – Yvonne Gutierrez, UCLA
OF – Vivian Holm, Arizona
OF – Charmelle Green, Utah
UTIL – Lisa Fernandez, UCLA
AL – Michelle Delloso, South Carolina

ALL-AMERICAN SECOND TEAM

P – Carie Dever, Fresno State
P – Ann Van Dortrecht, Cal State Fullerton
P – Mary Letourneau, Long Beach State
C – Shelly Stokes, Fresno State
1B – Julie Cavanaugh, Oregon
2B – Tricia Reimche, UNLV
3B – Joy Tiner, Cal State Fullerton
SS – Vicki Bartolucci, Connecticut
OF – Pauline Maurice, Kent State
OF – Tricia Popowski, South Carolina
OF – Pam Stanley, Central Michigan
UTIL – Julie Jones, Arizona
AL – Kim Braatz, New Mexico
AT – Ann Rowman, Arizona State

1990 ISC Men’s Fast Pitch World Tournament

1990 held at Victoria, British Columbia on August 10-19.


Champion – Seafirst, Bellevue, Washington
Runner Up – Penn Corp, Sioux City, Iowa


  • Cleo Goyette Memorial MVP Award – Bill Boyer, Penn Corp
  • Leroy Zimmerman Memorial Pitching Award – Jimmy Moore, Seafirst
  • Kevin Herlihy Newcomer of the Year – N/A
  • Leading Hitter – Randy Peck, Carp Valley Pride – .600
  • Most RBI – Mike Parnow, Guanella Bros. – 9

1990 ISC FIRST TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Chubb Tangaroa, Guanella Bros. (3-2, 0.21 ERA, 73K, 9 BB)
P – Peter Meredith, Larry Miller Toyota (6-1, 0.35 ERA, 100K, 14 BB)
P – Jimmy Moore, Seafirst (7-1, 0.63 ERA, 82 K, 3 BB)
C – Steve Defazio, Guanella Bros. .350
C – Tim Wahl, Seafirst .167
IF – Marty Kernaghan, Penn Corp .391
IF – Mark Smith, Payless .438
IF – Jamie Gifford, Seafirst .333
IF – Mike Parnow, Guanella Bros. .238
IF – John Green, Payless .429
OF – Bill Boyer, Penn Corp .348
OF – Tom Gray, Larry Miller Toyota .400
OF – Bob Blakley, Harold’s Supermarket .375
OF – Randy Peck, Carp Valley Pride .600
DH – Rick Ruzesky, Rempel Construction .500

1990 ISC SECOND TEAM ALL WORLD

P – Paul Magan, Penn Corp (3-0, 0.86 ERA, 49 K, 9 BB)
P – Mike Piechnik, Payless (4-2, 1.02 ERA, 72 K, 7 BB)
P – Glen Jevin, Merchants (5-1, 0.82 ERA, 47 K, 8 BB)
C – Doug Chase, Payless .263
C – Brad Burrup, Larry Miller Toyota .231
IF – Brian Sosnowski, Merchants .360
IF – Lance Pratt, Larry Miller Toyota .265
IF – Bob Court, Payless .353
IF – Marty Albertson, Harold’s Supermarket .318
IF – Scott Summers, Harold’s Supermarket .300
OF – Brian Lehrman, Larry Miller Toyota .231
OF – Darrell Clarkson, Payless .300
OF – Jerry Bauer, Kent Feed .429
OF – Mike Larabee, Seafirst .250
DH – Eric Isenhart, Explorers .467


FINAL STANDINGS

1. Seafirst, Bellevue, WA
2. Penn Corp, Sioux City, IA
3. Miller Toyota, Salt Lake City, UT
4. Guanella Bros., Rohnert Park, CA
5t. Payless, Victoria, BC
5t. Decatur Pride, Decatur, IL
7t. Merchants, Camrose, AB
7t. Harold’s Supermarket, Lexington, MO
9t. Stewart Taylor-Printing, Duluth, MN
9t. Hearts, Bloomington, IL
9t. Rempel Construction, Saskatoon, SK
9t. Regents, New Westminster, BC
13t. Kent Feed, Waterloo, IA
13t. Hertz, Topeka, KS
13t. Explorers, Midland, MI
13t. Allsteel, Aurora, IL
17t. Ferrell Mobile Homes, Keiso, MO
17t. Faultless-Garber, Ashland, OH
17t. Page Brake, Salt Lake City, UT
17t. The Farm Tavern, Madison, WI
17t. United Surgical Steel, Montgomery, AL
17t. Ol’ Mexico/Coors/Gatsby’s, St. Paul, MN
17t. Canadian Tire, Owen Sound, ON
17t. Metro’s, Des Moines, IA
25t. Scott Business Insurors, Sioux City, IA
25t. Chymer’s, Waterloo, ON
25t. Stout Tower Eagles, Lakewood, CA
25t. Carp Valley Pride, Carp, ON
25t. Paddock Pools, Scottsdale, AZ
25t. WTD Industries, Olympia, WA
25t. Schoenherr Investments, Ludington, MI
25t. Softball Club, New Martinsville, WV
33t. T W Perry, Baltimore, MD
33t. Los Lobos, Houston, TX
33t. Lusby’s Rebels, Pine Bluff, AR
33t. Class Walls, Baltimore, MD
33t. Mustangs, Prescott, AZ
33t. Liber’s Tavern, Amsterdam, NY
33t. Wright Oil, San Diego, CA
33t. Belgian Village Inn, Moline, IL
33t. Tampa Bay Merchants, Tampa, FL
33t. Nogales Sonora Amigos
33t. Bombers, Vista, CA
33t. Dukes, Denmark, WI
33t. Sting, Shelbyville, IN
33t. Asham Fastball Club, Winnipeg, MB
33t. Magicians, Vancouver, BC
33t. TNT, Las Cruces, NM

1989 NCAA Women’s College World Series

1989 held at Twin Creek Sports Complex in Sunnyvale, California on May 24-28.


Champion – UCLA Bruins (48-4)
Runner Up – Fresno State Bulldogs (29-7)


The Bruins made it back-to-back NCAA Championships in 1989, again besting Fresno State in the title game. Losing just four games during the season with 48 wins, the Bruins steamrolled through the Pac-10 with a league-best 18-2 record. UCLA had winning streaks of eight, 11 and 13, to go along with a season-ending streak of 16. The Bruins didn’t allow a run until the ninth game of the season (88 innings) and had shutouts in their first 10 wins. In all, UCLA hurlers tossed 34 shutouts and gave up only 30 runs in 52 games.


  • Honda Sports Award – Janice Parks, UCLA (.426 AVG, 2 HR, 36 RBI)
  • Batting Leader – Lorraine Maynez, UCLA – .588
  • RBI Leader – Nicki Dennis – 6
  • Home Run Leader – 3 tied at 1. Rhonda King, Toledo; Kerry Dienelt, UCLA; Shelly Stokes, Fresno State
  • ERA Leader – Tiffany Boyd, UCLA – 0.33
  • Strikeout Leader – Tiffany Boyd, UCLA – 29

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM

P – Carie Dever, Fresno State
P – Tiffany Boyd, UCLA
C – Shelly Stokes, Fresno State
1B – Kerry Dienelt, UCLA
2B – Missy Phillips, UCLA
3B – Janice Parks, UCLA
SS – Martha Noffsinger, Fresno State
OF – Lorraine Maynez, UCLA
OF – Kristin Gauthier, Arizona
OF – Jill Polanco, Fresno State
AL – Nicki Dennis, Arizona
AL – Michele Smith, Oklahoma State


SCORES

  1. UCLA 3 South Carolina 0
  2. Cal Poly Pomona 1 Oregon 0
  3. Arizona 12 Fresno State 0 (5 inn.)
  4. Oklahoma State 3 Toledo 1
  5. Oregon 1 South Carolina 0 – South Carolina eliminated
  6. Fresno State 3 Toledo 0 – Toledo eliminated
  7. UCLA 9 Cal Poly Pomona 0
  8. Oklahoma State 4 Arizona 0 (8 inn.)
  9. Arizona 4 Oregon 0 – Oregon eliminated
  10. Fresno State 5 Cal Poly Pomona 1 – Cal Poly Pomona eliminated
  11. UCLA 2 Oklahoma State 1
  12. UCLA 3 Arizona 0 – Arizona eliminated
  13. Fresno State 7 Oklahoma State 0 – Oklahoma State eliminated
  14. UCLA 1 Fresno State – Fresno State eliminated

FINAL STANDINGS

1. UCLA Bruins (5-0)
2. Fresno State Bulldogs (3-2)
3. Oklahoma State Cowgirls (2-2)
4. Arizona Wildcats (2-2)
5t. Cal Poly Pomona Broncos (1-2)
5t. Oregon Ducks (1-2)
7t. Toledo Rockets (0-2)
7t. South Carolina Gamecocks (0-2)


REGIONALS

Regional No. 1

  1. UCLA 5 Long Beach State 1
  2. UCLA 3 Long Beach State 0

UCLA qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 2

  1. Oklahoma State 2 Wichita State 0
  2. Oklahoma State 3 Wichita State 1

Oklahoma State qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 3

  1. Fresno State 1 California 0 (10 inn.)
  2. Fresno State 6 California 0

Fresno State qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 4

  1. Cal Poly Pomona 1 Cal State Fullerton 0 (10 inn.)
  2. Cal Poly Pomona 4 Cal State Fullerton 1

Cal Poly Pomona qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

Regional No. 5

  1. Connecticut 1 Massachusetts 0
  2. Oregon 2 Massachusetts 0 – Massachusetts eliminated
  3. Connecticut 2 Oregon 1
  4. Oregon 3 Connecticut 2 (10 inn.)
  5. Oregon 6 Connecticut 0 – Connecticut eliminated

Oregon qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.

Regional No. 6

  • Arizona State 2 Utah State 0
  • Arizona 8 Utah State 3 – Utah State eliminated
  • Arizona 3 Arizona State 2 (10 inn.)
  • Arizona 4 Arizona State 0 – Arizona State eliminated

Arizona qualifies for the WCWS, 3-0.

Regional No. 7

  • Creighton 6 Toledo 0
  • Toledo 1 Iowa 0
  • Creighton 6 Iowa 0 – Iowa eliminated
  • Toledo 8 Creighton 3
  • Toledo 3 Creighton 1 – Creighton eliminated

Toledo qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.

Regional No. 8

  • South Carolina 2 Florida State 1 (10 inn.)
  • Louisiana Tech 3 Florida State 1 – Florida State eliminated
  • South Carolina 3 Louisiana Tech 1
  • Louisiana Tech 1 South Carolina 0 (9 inn.)
  • South Carolina 8 Louisiana Tech 2 – Louisiana Tech eliminated

South Carolina qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.


ALL-AMERICAN FIRST TEAM

P – Lisa Longaker, UCLA
P – Melanie Parrent, Fresno State
P – Debbie Nichols, Louisiana Tech
C – Karen Sanchelli, South Carolina
1B – Jody Schwartz, Creighton
2B – Alison Stowell, Cal Poly Pomona
3B – Janice Parks, UCLA
SS – Liz Mizeria, Texas A&M
OF – Jill Justin, Northern Illinois
OF – Lorraine Maynez, UCLA
OF – Dee Brewer, Oklahoma State
UTIL – Michele Smith, Oklahoma State

ALL-AMERICAN SECOND TEAM

P – Gretchen Koenig, South Carolina
P – Teresa Cherry, Arizona
P – Carie Dever, Fresno State
C – Kris Tipmore, Central Michigan
1B – Gena Strang, Fresno State
2B – Julie Thomas, Sam Houston State
3B – Valerie Douglas, Cal State Fullerton
SS – Shari Johnson, Oklahoma State
OF – Linda Smolka, Princeton
OF – Amy Lienhardt, Bowling Green
OF – Angie McDonald, Eastern Michigan
UTIL – Kris Peterson, Adelphi

1989 UCLA Bruins

1988 NCAA Women’s College World Series

1988 held at Twin Creek Sports Complex in Sunnyvale, California on May 25-29.


Champion – UCLA Bruins (53-8)
Runner Up – Fresno State Bulldogs (29-5)


The 1988 event was the first WCWS played in Sunnyvale.

The NCAA Tournament began with a two-game sweep of Cal State Fullerton in Regional play. For the first time, the Women’s College World Series was held in California, as the Bruins traveled north to Sunnyvale. UCLA won its first four games by a 16-2 margin to advance to the championship against Fresno State. Needing to win a pair from the Bruins, the Bulldogs took the first step with a 2-1 victory in game one, setting up a winner-take-all showdown for the title.

As she had done all season, Longaker was masterful in the circle, hurling her 23rd shutout of the year. The Bruins gave her the only offense she needed in the fourth inning when Parks doubled in Stacy Sunny and Maynez to put UCLA on top 2-0.

The Bruins added an insurance run in the seventh on a Shanna Flynn RBI single and won the sport’s fifth national championship.

Flynn, Longaker and Sunny were joined on the All-Tournament Team by Kerry Dienelt and Missy Phillips.


  • Honda Sports Award – Lisa Longaker, UCLA (31-4, 0.29 ERA, 240 K)
  • Batting Leader – Shanna Flynn, UCLA – .450
  • RBI Leader – Kathy Mayer, Fresno State – 4
  • Home Run Leader – 7 tied at 1
  • ERA Leader – Lori Sippel, Nebraska – 0.00
  • Strikeout Leader – Lisa Longaker, UCLA – 20

ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM

P – Carie Dever, Fresno St.
P – Lisa Longaker, UCLA
C – Stacy Sunny, UCLA
1B – Kerry Dienelt, UCLA
2B – Missy Phillips, UCLA
3B – Julie Standering, Arizona
SS – Heidi Lievens, Arizona
OF – Shanna Flynn, UCLA
OF – Margie Ogrodowicz, Nebraska
OF – RaeAnn Pifferini, Fresno State
AL – Gena Strang, Fresno State
AL – Karin Richter, Fresno State


SCORES

  1. UCLA 1 Northern Illinois 0
  2. Fresno State 3 Texas A&M 0
  3. Arizona 1 Adelphi 0
  4. Cal Poly Pomona 3 Nebraska 0
  5. Texas A&M 3 Northern Illinois 0 – Northern Illinois eliminated
  6. Nebraska 5 Adelphi 1 – Adelphi eliminated
  7. UCLA 6 Fresno State 1
  8. Arizona 4 Cal Poly Pomona 1
  9. Fresno State 1 Nebraska 0 (9 inn.) – Nebraska eliminated
  10. Cal Poly Pomona 1 Texas A&M 0 – Texas A&M eliminated
  11. UCLA 5 Arizona 0
  12. Fresno State 4 Arizona 0 – Arizona eliminated
  13. UCLA 4 Cal Poly Pomona 1 – Cal Poly Pomona eliminated
  14. Fresno State 2 UCLA 1
  15. UCLA 3 Fresno State 0 – Fresno State eliminated

FINAL STANDINGS

1. UCLA Bruins (5-1)
2. Fresno State Bulldogs (4-2)
3. Arizona Wildcats (2-2)
4. Cal Poly Pomona Broncos (2-2)
5t. Texas A&M Aggies (1-2)
5t. Nebraska Cornhuskers (1-2)
7t. Adelphi Panthers (0-2)
7t. Northern Illinois Huskies (0-2)


REGIONALS

At-Large Regional

  1. California 3 Fresno State 0 (8 inn.)
  2. Fresno State 3 California 0
  3. Fresno State 5 California 2

Fresno State qualifies for the WCWS, 2-1.

Central Regional

  1. Creighton 3 Iowa State 2
  2. Nebraska 5 Iowa State 2 – Iowa State eliminated
  3. Creighton 3 Nebraska 2
  4. Nebraska 7 Creighton 2
  5. Nebraska 4 Creighton 1 – Creighton eliminated

Nebraska qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.

Mideast Regional

  1. South Carolina 1 Minnesota 0
  2. Arizona 5 Minnesota 0 – Minnesota eliminated
  3. South Carolina 1 Arizona 0
  4. Arizona 1 South Carolina 0
  5. Arizona 4 South Carolina 3

Arizona qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.

Midwest Regional

  1. Northern Illinois 4 Bowling Green 3
  2. Illinois State 2 Bowling Green 1 (10 inn.) – Bowling Green eliminated
  3. Illinois State 1 Northern Illinois 0
  4. Northern Illinois 3 Illinois State 1
  5. Northern Illinois 2 Illinois State 0 – Illinois State eliminated

Northern Illinois qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.

Northeast Regional

  1. Adelphi 6 Oklahoma State 2
  2. Oklahoma State 5 Adelphi 0
  3. Adelphi 1 Oklahoma State 0 (10 inn.)

Adelphi qualifies for the WCWS, 2-1.

Northwest Regional

  • UCLA 3 Cal State Fullerton 0
  • UCLA 2 Cal State Fullerton 0

UCLA qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.

South Regional

  • Texas A&M 1 Florida State 0
  • Louisiana Tech 6 Florida State – Florida State eliminated
  • Texas A&M 2 Louisiana Tech 0
  • Louisiana Tech 4 Texas A&M 0
  • Texas A&M 1 Louisiana Tech 0 (8 inn.) – Louisiana Tech eliminated

Texas A&M qualifies for the WCWS, 3-1.

West Regional

  • Cal Poly Pomona 2 Long Beach State 0
  • Cal Poly Pomona 2 Long Beach State 1

Cal Poly Pomona qualifies for the WCWS, 2-0.


ALL-AMERICAN FIRST TEAM

P – Lisa Longaker, UCLA
P – Melanie Parrent, Fresno State
P – Debbie Nichols, Louisiana Tech
C – Karen Sanchelli, South Carolina
1B – Jody Schwartz, Creighton
2B – Alison Stowell, Cal Poly Pomona
3B – Janice Parks, UCLA
SS – Liz Mizeria, Texas A&M
OF – Jill Justin, Northern Illinois
OF – Lorraine Maynez, UCLA
OF – Dee Brewer, Oklahoma State
UTIL – Michele Smith, Oklahoma State

ALL-AMERICAN SECOND TEAM

P – Gretchen Koenig, South Carolina
P – Teresa Cherry, Arizona
P – Carie Dever, Fresno State
C – Kris Tipmore, Central Michigan
1B – Gena Strang, Fresno State
2B – Julie Thomas, Sam Houston State
3B – Valerie Douglas, Cal State Fullerton
SS – Shari Johnson, Oklahoma State
OF – Linda Smolka, Princeton
OF – Amy Lienhardt, Bowling Green
OF – Angie McDonald, Eastern Michigan
UTIL – Kris Peterson, Adelphi