Champion – Kentucky Steel Erectors, London, KY Runner Up – Graphic Packaging, Macon, GA
MVP – no info available
HR Leader – no info available
Batting Leader – no info available
ASA INDUSTRIAL ALL AMERICANS FIRST TEAM
P – Richie Champion, Kentucky Steel Erectors
C – Daniel Bays, Kentucky Steel Erectors
IF – Ronnie McCullough, Graphic Packaging
IF – Shaun Ballard, Kentucky Steel Erectors
IF – Scott Storie, Kentucky Steel Erectors
IF – Ron Acabbo, Sikorsky Aircraft
OF – Shannon Touchton, Graphic Packaging
OF – Dustin Martin, Kentucky Steel Erectors
OF – Jerod Rigney, Kentucky Steel Erectors
OF – Jay Fields, Bestway Semi Trailers
UT – Barney Schwarzkopf, Sikorsky Aircraft
UT – Jay Roger, Graphic Packaging
UT – Cody Johnson, Graphic Packaging
UT – Shaun Bridger, Graphic Packaging
UT – John Tokarz, Sikorsky Aircraft
ASA INDUSTRIAL ALL AMERICANS SECOND TEAM
P – Josh Robinson, Bestway Semi Trailers
C – Mark Mihalik, Sikorsky Aircraft
IF – Richie Morris, Kentucky Steel Erectors
IF – Chuck Ledington, Kentucky Steel Erectors
IF – Sean Greer, Graphic Packaging
IF – Dusty Payne, Bestway Semi Trailers
OF – Bill Giambra, Sikorsky Aircraft
OF – Joe Power, Kentucky Steel Erectors
OF – Chivas Clark, Graphic Packaging
OF – Randall White, Graphic Packaging
UT – Darrien Gray, Kentucky Steel Erectors
UT – Dwayne Gunnels, Graphic Packaging
UT – Scott Layfield, Graphic Packaging
UT – Craig Morrison, Team Toyota
UT – John Higginbotham, Maxwell AFB Owlz
FINAL STANDINGS
1st Kentucky Steel Erectors, London, KY (5-0)
2nd Graphic Packaging, Macon, GA (6-2)
3rd Sikorsky Aircraft, Stratford, CT (4-2)
4th Bestway Semi Trailers, Conley, GA (4-2)
5th Owlz (Maxwell AFB), Montgomery, AL (2-2)
5th Team Toyota, Princeton, IN (2-2)
7th Edwardsville Moose, Edwardsville, IL (2-2)
7th 7up/Dr. Pepper/Venom, Bethalto, IL (3-2)
9th Kabco, Boaz, AL (1-2)
9th Dirtbags, Longview, TX (1-2)
9th Diverse Power, LaGrange, GA (1-2)
9th Waste Management, Pine Bluff, AR (1-2)
13th Showerite Corp, Chicago, IL (0-2)
13th Grand American Devel, Fayetteville, GA (0-2)
13th City Of Dothan, Dothan, AL (0-2)
13th Shaw Industries, Resaca, GA (0-2)
13th American Cast Iron, Birmingham, AL (0-2)
2018 held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on May 31 – June 5.
Champion – Florida State Seminoles (58-12) Runner Up – Washington Huskies (52-10)
Standing in the circle with two outs in the seventh inning, Meghan King flung the ball toward the plate. The ball ricocheted off the bat of Taylor Van Zee and skipped along the ground. King took a step toward the ball; the crowd had gone quiet and she felt like everything was moving in slow motion. This was the moment, her moment. And all she could think about was how thankful she was for all those reps of pitcher fielding practice so that she wouldn’t screw this up.
King picked up the ball and threw it to first, getting the final out of the Women’s College World Series to give Florida State an 8-3 victory over Washington and its first softball national championship. It is also the first for the ACC.
It was a clean ending to a game that began as a comedy of errors Tuesday. Florida State, which had looked so collected the night before, was reeling in the first inning. Van Zee started it all with a leadoff hit off King. Then came a passed ball, a sacrifice bunt, a bad throw, a miscue in center field on a pop fly, and a line drive and grounder that drove in runs. When the dust settled, Washington was up 3-0.
But what could have been the beginning of the end for FSU only put the team back in a familiar position. The infield huddled in the dugout around the watercooler and busted out in laughter. Coach Lonni Alameda joked with her players, saying, “This is perfect because we’re the Cardiac Kids and we need to be down in order to come back. We’re going to score some runs. We’ll be all right.”
Not one of the Seminoles had any doubt. Why would they? Although they came into the game with a 1-0 series lead — a position FSU had not been in all postseason long as it survived six elimination games — they have shown that they are most comfortable, and lethal, with their backs against the wall. Perhaps the only way they could win while ahead was to fall behind.
The comeback began in earnest just a few moments later when catcher Anna Shelnutt, dubbed “Postseason Anna,” smashed a two-run homer in the bottom of the first. It was her second home run in as many nights.
Then it was King, a redshirt junior, who returned to the circle and proceeded to pitch six scoreless innings. After giving up two hits in the first inning, she gave up just another three the rest of the night. The FSU bats did their jobs, extending the lead to 8-3, but it was King who shut down Washington’s offense to secure the victory.
King’s tournament ERA of 0.20 ranks as the lowest in Women’s College World Series history. In 34⅓ innings, she allowed just one earned run, in the first inning of Tuesday’s game. While discussion all tournament long focused on Paige Parker, Kelly Barnhill and Rachel Garcia, King turned in what can only be described as one of the greatest WCWS performances of all time.
Her focus and consistency — and her ability to shake off Tuesday’s rocky start — lifted Florida State (58-12) to a national championship few thought possible. With its sweep of Washington (52-10), Florida State became the third team in the 37-year history of the Women’s College World Series to lose its WCWS opener and still win the title.
Most Outstanding Player – Jessie Warren, Florida State
Batting Leader – Bubba Nickles, UCLA – .545
RBI Leader – Elizabeth Mason, Florida State – 9
Home Run Leader – 8 tied at 2. Bubba Nickles, UCLA; Jessie Warren Florida State; Jocelyn Alo, Oklahoma; Taylor Pack, UCLA; Sydney Sherrill, Florida State; Jordan Roberts, Florida; Elizabeth Mason, Florida State; Anna Shelnutt, Florida State.
ERA Leader – Meghan King, Florida State – 0.20
Strikeout Leader – Rachel Garcia, UCLA – 42
ALL-TOURNAMENT TEAM
P – Rachel Garcia, UCLA
P – Paige Parker, Oklahoma
P – Gabbie Plain, Washington
C – Taylor Pack, UCLA
C – Anna Shelnutt, Florida State
2B – Sydney Sherrill, Florida State
3B – Jessie Warren, Florida State
SS – Sis Bates, Washington
CF – Bubba Nickles, UCLA
RF – Trysten Melhart, Washington
UTIL – Jocelyn Alo, Oklahoma
UTIL – Meghan King, Florida State
UTIL – Elizabeth Mason, Florida State
SCORES
Oregon 11 Arizona State 6
Washington 2 Oklahoma 0
Florida 11 Georgia 3 (5 inn.)
UCLA 7 Florida State 4
Washington 6 Oregon 2
UCLA 6 Florida 5
Oklahoma 2 Arizona State 0 – Arizona State eliminated
Florida State 7 Georgia 2 – Georgia eliminated
Oklahoma 2 Florida 0 – Florida eliminated
Florida State 4 Oregon 1 – Oregon eliminated
Washington 3 Oklahoma 0 – Oklahoma eliminated
Florida State 3 UCLA 1
Florida State 12 UCLA 6 – UCLA eliminated
Florida State 1 Washington 0
Florida State 8 Washington 3 – Washington eliminated
FINAL STANDINGS
1. Florida State Seminoles (6-1)
2. Washington Huskies (3-2)
3. UCLA Bruins (2-2)
4. Oklahoma Sooners (2-2)
5t. Oregon Ducks (1-2)
5t. Florida Gators (1-2)
7t. Baylor Bears (0-2)
7t. Arizona State Sun Devils (0-2)
2018 Florida State Seminoles
NATIONAL SEEDS
Florida
Arizona
Oregon
Florida State
UCLA
Washington
Auburn
Tennessee
Texas A&M
Oklahoma
Utah
Ole Miss
LSU
Kentucky
Baylor
Alabama
REGIONALS
EUGENE REGIONAL
Drake 3 BYU 2
Oregon 4 Albany 0
Oregon 5 Drake 0
BYU 16 Albany 0 – Albany eliminated
Drake 3 BYU 0 – BYU eliminated
Oregon 3 Drake 0 – Drake eliminated
Oregon qualifies for the Super Regional, 3-0.
GAINESVILLE REGIONAL
Ohio State 3 South Florida 0
Florida 8 Bethune Cookman 0 (6 inn.)
Florida 10 Ohio State 2 (6 inn.)
South Florida 3 Bethune Cookman 0 – Bethune Cookman eliminated
Ohio State 3 South Florida 2 – South Florida eliminated
Florida 4 Ohio State 0 – Ohio State eliminated
Florida qualifies for the Super Regional, 3-0.
LOS ANGELES REGIONAL
Cal St. Fullerton 2 Texas St. 1
UCLA 3 Sacramento St. 0
Cal St. Fullerton 3 UCLA 2 (9 inn.)
Texas St. 8 Sacramento St. 4 – Sacramento St. eliminated
UCLA 14 Texas State 1 (5 inn.) – Texas State eliminated
UCLA 3 Cal St. Fullerton 0
UCLA 6 Cal St. Fullerton 4 – Cal St. Fullerton eliminated
UCLA qualifies for the Super Regional, 4-1.
NORMAN REGIONAL
Tulsa 9 Missouri 1
Oklahoma 9 Boston U. 0 (5 inn.)
Oklahoma 8 Tulsa 0 (6 inn.)
Missouri 10 Boston U. 8 – Boston U. eliminated
Missouri 6 Tulsa 5 – Tulsa eliminated
Oklahoma 7 Missouri 0 – Missouri eliminated
Oklahoma qualifies for the Super Regional, 3-0.
SEATTLE REGIONAL
Texas 2 Minnesota 1
Washington 8 Boise St. 0 (5 inn.)
Washington 2 Texas 1
Minnesota 11 Boise St. 3 – Boise St. eliminated
Minnesota 3 Texas 0 – Texas eliminated
Washington 5 Minnesota 2 – Minnesota eliminated
Washington qualifies for the Super Regional, 3-0.
TALLAHASSEE REGIONAL
Auburn 5 Kennesaw St. 2
Florida State 8 Jacksonville St. 0
Florida State 2 Auburn 1 (8 inn.)
Jacksonville St. 5 Kennesaw St. 3 (10 inn.) – Kennesaw St. eliminated
Jacksonville St. 3 Auburn 2 – Auburn eliminated
Florida State 10 Jacksonville State 0 – Jacksonville St. eliminated
Florida State qualifies for the Super Regional, 3-0.
ATHENS REGIONAL
Northwestern 3 vs. California 2 (8 inn.)
Georgia 6 Harvard 2
Georgia 12 Northwestern 0 (6 inn.)
California 10 Harvard 1 – Harvard eliminated
Northwestern 4 California 3 – California eliminated
USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year – Rachel Garcia, UCLA (.339, 11 HR, 54 RBI, 29-4, 1.31 ERA, 315 K)
NFCA National Player of the Year – Rachel Garcia, UCLA (.339, 11 HR, 54 RBI, 29-4, 1.31 ERA, 315 K)
ALL-AMERICAN FIRST TEAM
P – Kelly Barnhill JR. Florida Gators
P – Megan Kleist JR. Oregon Ducks
P – Giselle Juarez SO. Arizona State Sun Devils
C – Gwen Svekis SR. Oregon Ducks
1B – Alyssa Palomino SO. Arizona Wildcats
2B – Aubrey Leach JR. Tennessee Lady Vols
3B – Sydney Romero JR. Oklahoma Sooners
SS – Sis Bates SO. Washington Huskies
OF – Aaliyah Jordan FR. UCLA Bruins
OF – Jessie Scroggins SR. Baylor Bears
OF – Amanda Lorenz JR. Florida Gators
UTIL – Rachel Garcia SO. UCLA Bruins
UTIL – Jocelyn Alo FR. Oklahoma Sooners
AL – Holly Speers JR. Kent State Golden Flashes
AL – Paige Parker SR. Oklahoma Sooners
AL – Vanessa Shippy SR. Oklahoma State Cowgirls
AL – Meghan Beaubien FR. Michigan Wolverines
AL – Ivie Drake SR. Georgia State Panthers
ALL-AMERICAN SECOND TEAM
P – Miranda Elish SO. Oregon Ducks
P – Kylee Hanson SR. FSU Seminoles
P – Brittany Gray SR. Georgia Bulldogs
C – Kendyl Lindaman SO. Minnesota Golden Gophers
1B – Victoria Vidales SR. Texas A&M Aggies
2B – Kylee Perez SR. UCLA Bruins
3B – Nicole DeWitt SR. Florida Gators
SS – Lili Piper JR. Ohio State Buckeyes
OF – Kaylee Tow FR. Alabama Crimson Tide
OF – Cortni Emanuel SR. Georgia Bulldogs
OF – Annie Murphy SR. Boston College Eagles
UTIL – Savannah Heebner JR. Houston Cougars
UTIL – Taylor Rowland SO. Long Beach State 49ers
AL – Allie Walljasper SR. LSU Tigers
AL – Rachel Lewis FR. Northwestern Wildcats
AL – Jessica Warren SR. FSU Seminoles
AL – Janae Jefferson FR. Texas Longhorns
AL – Taran Alvelo JR. Washington Huskies
ALL-AMERICAN THIRD TEAM
P – Carly Hoover SR. LSU Tigers
P – Nicole Newman JR. Drake Bulldogs
P – Randi Rupp SR. Texas State Bobcats
C – Libby Sugg JR. BYU Cougars
1B – Jessica Hartwell JR. Texas Tech Red Raiders
2B – Sydney Sherrill FR. FSU Seminoles
3B – Jena Cozza SR. UMass Minutewomen
SS – Alyssa DiCarlo JR. Georgia Bulldogs
OF – Kara Shutt SR. Elon Phoenix
OF – Kate Gordon SO. James Madison Dukes
OF – Paige Murphy SR. Eastern Kentucky Colonels
UTIL – Odicci Alexander SO. James Madison Dukes
UTIL – Maddie Roth JR. Kennesaw State Owls
AL – Meghan Gregg SR. Tennessee Lady Vols
AL – Faith Canfield JR. Michigan Wolverines
AL – Gabbie Plain FR. Washington Huskies
AL – Katie Prebble FR. Gardner-Webb Runnin’ Bulldogs
AL – Jenna Lilley SR. Oregon Ducks
The TPS Power Ratings are intended to reflect a team’s strength using the results from the 4 Associations top Levels of competition. Points are awarded on the basis of where a team places in any of the following regular and post season events:
USSSA Major NITs
ASA Super Qualifiers
NSA Class-AAA Qualifiers (AAA was Highest NSA class)
USSSA Class-AA Championship
ASA Major National
NSA Class-AA National
ISA Class-AA National
Points for Tournament Placements are
1st 30 Points
2nd 20
3rd 15
4th 10
5-6th 6
7-8th 4
9-12th 2
Six (6) points are awarded for each win over a Super Team. Three (3) points are deducted (from any Super team) for any loss to a non-Super team. Points for placement and Super Wins (Super Losses will be deducted) will be awarded at triple value for each of the four (4) post season Grand Slam Championships:
USSSA World Series
ASA Super Nationals
NSA World Series
ISA Super World Series
In case of an event being cancelled, points will be combined and divided among the teams sharing those positions in the event. In the event of ties at the end of season, ties will be broken first by head-to-head play and secondly by overall won-loss record.
Rank
Team
City
State
Points
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
1
*Shen Valley/Superior/Taylor/TPS
Bridgewater
VA
749
8
5
2
2
2
*Ritch’s/Superior/Tri-Gems/Beloli/TPS
Windsor Locks
CT
617
10
2
1
2
3
*Lighthouse/Worth
Stone Mountain
GA
583
4
3
9
1
4
*Sunbelt/Easton
Centerville
GA
506
8
3
1
0
5
Dan Smith/Easton
San Jose
CA
348
2
8
2
0
6
*Steele’s Silver Bullets/Hit Men
Brook Park
OH
245
1
2
5
1
7
Bell II/Easton
Orlando
FL
210
1
4
2
1
8
SoJern/Specialty Tank/TPS
Cedarbrook
NJ
134
1
1
0
3
9
Franklin/Grover
Los Angeles
CA
119
0
2
1
1
10
Hague/Ohio Transport/Wessel/TPS
Columbus
OH
114
1
0
3
0
11
Herrin/Dudley
Savannah
GA
104
0
3
0
0
12
Whips/Instant Landscape/TPS
Milwaukee
WI
89
0
0
3
1
13
Spectrum/Easton
Golden Valley
MN
82
1
0
2
1
14
Southland/Back Porch/Moulton Furniture/TPS
Gainesville
GA
72
0
0
2
0
15
Converters Unlimited/TPS
Kinston
NC
69
1
0
1
1
16t
Ranier/TPS
Seattle
WA
62
0
0
0
2
16t
No Limit/TPS
Concord
CA
60
0
0
0
1
18
Herb’s/TPS
San Diego
CA
60
0
1
2
0
19
Long Haul/TPS
Albertville
MN
52
0
0
0
1
20
Liquid Blue
Providence
RI
48
0
0
0
0
21
Chip’s/Easton
Nashville
TN
46
0
0
0
0
22
AJ’s/Worth
Richmond
VA
44
0
0
0
2
23
Hinson’s/TPS
Houston
TX
43
0
0
1
0
24
Sonny’s/TPS
Boston
MA
41
0
1
0
0
25
Harrison’s
Portsmouth
VA
38
0
1
0
1
26t
AJA/TPS
Houston
TX
26
0
0
0
1
26t
D’s Dynasty/Easton
Valley Center
CA
26
0
0
0
0
28
Long Pest Control/TPS
Tacoma
WA
22
0
0
0
0
29
Belcher/Steele’s
Manteno
IL
21
0
0
0
1
30
SportsWorld/Reece/Worth
Lebanon
TN
20
0
0
0
1
The TPS Power Ratings are intended to reflect a team’s strength using the results from the four associations’ top levels of competition. Points are awarded on the basis of where a team places in any of the following regular and postseason events: USSSA Major NITs; ASA Super Qualifiers; NSA Class AAA Qualifiers, USSSA Class AA Championship; ASA Major Nationals; and NSA Class AA Championship. Points for tournament placements are: 1st–30; 2nd–20; 3rd–15; 4th–10; 5th–6; 7th–4; 9th–2. Six (6) points are awarded for each win over any Super team (identified by an asterisk * in front of the team’s name). Three (3) points are deducted (from any Super team) for any loss to a non-Super team. Points for placement and Super wins (Super losses will be deducted) will be awarded at triple value for each of the four post-season Grand Slam Championships; USSSA World Series, ASA Super Nationals, NSA World Series, and ISA Super Major World Series. In the case of an event being cancelled prior to its finish, points will be combined and divided amongst the teams sharing those positions in the event. In the event of ties and the end of the season, ties will be broken first by head-to-head play and secondly by overall won-loss records in these events.
The Official explanation of “The Birth of Softball” as written by Bill Plummer III
Softball was invented on a blustery, windy day in November 1887 in Chicago, IL inside the Farragut Boat Club. There a bunch of Yale and Harvard alumni anxiously awaited the results of the Harvard-Yale football game. When the news came that Yale had defeated Harvard, 17-8, one Yale supporter, overcome with enthusiasm, picked up an old boxing glove and threw it at a nearby Harvard alumni, who promptly tried to hit it back with a stick. This gave George Hancock, a reporter for the Chicago Board of Trade, an idea. He suggested a game of indoor baseball. Naturally, Hancock’s friends thought he was talking about playing a game outdoors, not indoors. Hancock, however, wasn’t kidding. Using what was available, he tied together the laces of a boxing glove for a ball. Using a piece of chalk, Hancock marked off a home plate, bases and a pitcher’s box inside the Farragut Boat Club gymnasium, with the two groups divided into two teams. The final score of the game was 41-40, but what was significant was that Hancock and his friends had invented a sport that would grow in popularity to where today more than 25 million people enjoy playing it in the United States and millions more internationally in more than 100 countries.
Hancock’s invention eventually caught on in Chicago with the Farragut team challenging other gyms to games. In the spring, Hancock took his game outdoors and played it on fields not large enough for baseball. It was called indoor-outdoor and Hancock emerged as the recognized authority in the 19th century. Hancock appended 19 special rules to adapt the outdoor game to the indoor game. The rules were officially adopted by the Mid-Winter Indoor Baseball League of Chicago in 1889.
Hancock’s game gradually spread throughout the country and ultimately flourished in Minneapolis thanks to the efforts and ingenuity of Louis Rober, a Minneapolis Fire Department lieutenant, who wanted to game to keep his firemen fit during idle time. Using a vacant lot adjacent to the firehouse, Rober laid out bases with a pitching distance of 35 feet. His ball was a small sized medicine ball with the bat two inches in diameter. The game became popular overnight and other fire companies began to play.
In 1895, Rober transferred to another fire company and organized a team he called the Kittens. George Kehoe, captain of the Truck Company No. 1, named Rober’s version of softball “Kitten Ball.” Rober’s game was known as Kitten Ball until 1925 when the Minneapolis Park Board changed it to Diamond Ball, one of at least a dozen names used during this time for softball. The name softball didn’t come about until 1926 when Walter Hakanson, a Denver YMCA official and a former ASA president and commissioner, suggested it to the International Joint Rules Committee. Hakanson had come up with the name in 1926, but the committee didn’t include the ASA until 1934.
Efforts to organize softball on a national basis didn’t materialize until 1933 when Leo Fischer and Michael J. Pauley, a Chicago Sporting Goods salesman, conceived the idea of organizing thousands of teams in America into cohesive state and metro organizations and state/metro organizations into a national organization. To bring the teams together, Fisher and Pauley invited them to participate in a tournament in conjunction with the ’33 World’s Fair in Chicago. With the backing of the Chicago American newspaper, Pauley and Fisher invited 55 teams to participate in the tournament. Teams were divided into three classes–fastballers, slow pitch and women. A 14-inch ball was used with a single elimination format.
During the 1934 National Recreation Congress, membership on the Joint Rules Committee was expanded to add the ASA. Until the formation of the ASA, softball was in a state of confusion, especially in the rules area where the length of the bases and pitcher’s box (mound) were constantly being changed. Depending on the state they were playing in, teams often played under different rules. The formation of the ASA gave softball the solidarity and foundation it needed to grow and develop throughout the U.S. under the network of associations proposed by Pauley and Fisher. Pauley and Fisher visited many of the states inviting teams to participate in the tournament. Fischer and his sports promotion director, Harry Wilson, sold the Century of Progress Exposition on the idea of sponsoring the tournament and providing a field inside the Fair Grounds. The American’s sports pages promoted the tournament daily and Chicago businessmen raised $500 to finance the event.
On the opening day of the 1933 tournament, the Chicago American said, “It is the largest and most comprehensive tournament ever held in the sport which has swept the country like wildfire.” With admission free, 70,000 people saw the first round of play. Chicago teams won the three divisions of play with ASA National Softball Hall of Famer Harry (Coon) Rosen leading the J.L. Friedman Boosters to the men’s title, one-hitting the famed Briggs Beautyware of Detroit, MI in the finals. It was the first loss of the season for Briggs after 41 consecutive wins. It was evident that softball finally had a foundation from which to grow and in 1935, the Playground Association Softball guide wrote, “The years of persistent effort, constant promotion and unchanging faith of believers in softball proved to have not been in vain, for in 1934 softball came into its own.
All over America hundreds of leagues and thousands of players enthusiastically accepted this major team game. “The promotional activities of the ASA played an important part in stimulating the interest that has been developing for many years. The battle for recognition of this splendid game is over. Softball has won a place among America’s foremost sports.” The recognition of the sport increased tremendously when softball was finally accepted as an Olympic sport in 1991, thanks to the efforts of former ASA Executive Director and International Softball Federation President, Don E. Porter, who spent numerous hours and traveled thousands of miles lobbying for softball to be accepted on the Olympic program. That became a reality in 1996 in Atlanta, GA where the softball competition was an overwhelming success drawing more than 120,000 people to Golden Park in Columbus, GA. The USA won the first-ever gold medal in softball and repeated as gold medalists in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, Australia where another attendance record was set. In 2004, softball will again be part of the Olympics in Athens, Greece. Besides the Olympics, softball also is an official Pan American sport, and is played in various international tournaments and events sanctioned by the International Softball Federation, which is in its sparkling new offices in Plant City, FL after sharing office space with the ASA for many years.
First a Pan Am demonstration sport in Winnipeg, Canada in 1967, softball was officially added to the Pan American program in 1979, with both men’s and women’s fast pitch softball contested. The Pan American Games is held every four years. The persistent efforts of thousands of people and their faith in a sport that was conceived inside the Farragut Boat Club has been well worth the effort because softball is America’s game and reached the pinnacle of the sports world in 1996 that for many years some people thought would never happen. Fortunately, there were enough people who believed softball belonged on the Olympic program, and after the record-setting past two Olympic Games there isn’t any more doubt where softball belongs. Softball has found its place–not only in the hearts and souls of the people who play but those who watch it in the Olympic arena.
Softball fanatic. That’s Steve Dimitry of Norristown, Pa.
By day, he’s a software engineer for Lockheed Martin in King of Prussia, Pa. By night, he’s a slow pitch player who also spends a couple hours each week updating his website. “Steve Dimitry’s Slow Pitch Softball History Page”, which is comparable to browsing a softball encyclopedia. The website is: http://www.angelfire.com/sd/slopitch
“It’s the most comprehensive, all-embracing, all-inclusive and extensive treatment of the game since its inception” wrote Mark Linnemann, editor of Cincinnati SOFTBALL News in the March 2002 edition.
Steve’s website has information on slow pitch as well as fast pitch and from college to pro softball. There is a section on legends of the game (slow pitch) complete with stats and photos. “All the information you ever wanted to know about slow pitch softball is in here,” says the introduction. The site covers all national championships of all the softball organizations, past and present, and from men’s and women to seniors.
A 1982 graduate of West Chester State, Steve started his website in 1998 after finding out information wasn’t available about some of the softball greats his Dad, James, had played against during his softball career playing fast pitch and slow pitch for Grumman. People like Jim Galloway, Bert Smith and H.T. Waller. A frequent visitor to the Dimitry home when Steve was growing up was Hall of Fame fast pitch pitcher Roy Stephenson.
“I looked on the internet and couldn’t find anything about them,” said Steve. “Then I checked some old copies of Balls and Strikes. (ASA’s official publication).”
Dimitry eventually met the late Jerome Earnest, former softball historian and writer who chronicled slow pitch softball for more than two decades before his untimely death April 9th, 2000. “He had a lot of information,” Dimitry said. “I realized then that my Dad wasn’t pulling my leg and had played against these guys.”
Steve went as far to call some of the Hall of Famers, requesting information from them, including
Myron Reinhardt, a member of the ASA National Hall of Fame who was instrumental in helping establish slow pitch’s identity on America’s softball fields when it was added to the ASA championship program in 1953.
“I was kinda like a detective in trying to find his name in the phone book,” Dimitry said. “I eventually found him in Alexandria, Kentucky and he sent me a pile of stuff. And what a nice person.”
Steve has since continued to contact ball players and has appreciated their “help and cooperation” in making his website as accurate and complete as possible.
“I enjoy doing it,” Dimitry said. “And I still enjoy playing slow pitch. I started out as an outfielder but I’ve slowed down a bit so I’ve switched to catching and DH.”
As a player rep for District 14 of the Pennsylvania ASA, Steve was instrumental in helping to upgrade the Pennsylvania website, and was honored with the ASA of PA Media Award in 2003.
“I got to know him (Steve) through the Pennsylvania ASA,” said Guy DeMaio. “Steve’s been a tireless worker and put a lot of effort in locating information and putting it all together.’’
Dimitry has gone above and beyond in providing a valuable service to softball aficionados that otherwise wouldn’t exist. They should be thankful Dimitry cares that much for a thankless task that is time consuming, yet rewarding and satisfying.