2009 NCAA Division I softball tournament

Last updated

2009 NCAA Division I
softball tournament
Teams64
Finals site
Champions Washington  (1st title)
Runner-up Florida (2nd WCWS Appearance)
Winning coach Heather Tarr  (1st title)
MOP Danielle Lawrie (Washington)

The 2009 NCAA Division I softball tournament was held from May 15 through June 3, 2009 as part of the 2009 NCAA Division I softball season. The 64 NCAA Division I college softball teams were selected out of an eligible 284 teams on May 10, 2009. 30 teams were awarded an automatic bid as champions of their conference, and 34 teams were selected at-large by the NCAA Division I Softball Selection Committee. The tournament culminated with eight teams playing in the 2009 Women's College World Series at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Contents

National seeds

Teams in italics advanced to the Super Regionals. Teams in bold have advanced to the Women's College World Series.

  1. Florida
  2. UCLA
  3. Washington
  4. Alabama
  5. Michigan
  6. Georgia
  7. Oklahoma
  8. Stanford
  9. Arizona
  10. Arizona State
  11. Ohio State
  12. Northwestern
  13. Tennessee
  14. Georgia Tech
  15. DePaul
  16. Florida State

Regionals and Super Regionals

Gainesville Super Regional

First Round Second Round Regional Finals Super Regionals
               
1 Florida 12
Florida A&M 0
1 Florida7
Texas A&M 1
Lehigh 0
Texas A&M 1
1 Florida9
Gainesville Regional
Lehigh 0
Florida A&M 0
Lehigh9
Texas A&M 2
Lehigh3
1 Florida22
California 0 1
16 Florida State 0
Oklahoma State 1
Oklahoma State 0
California2
California 8
Mississippi State 3
California2
Tallahassee Regional
Oklahoma State 1
16 Florida State5
Mississippi State 0
Oklahoma State1
16 Florida State 0

Stanford Super Regional

First Round Second Round Regional Finals Super Regionals
               
8 Stanford 10
Portland State 3
8 Stanford9
Nevada 1
Cal Poly 1
Nevada 4
8 Stanford4
Stanford Regional
Cal Poly 0
Portland State 0
Cal Poly5
Nevada 1
Cal Poly6
8 Stanford 63 5
9 Arizona4 76
9 Arizona 9
Tennessee–Martin 3
9 Arizona18
Louisville 4
Purdue 1
Louisville 4
9 Arizona4
Louisville Regional
Purdue 2
Tennessee-Martin 2
Purdue6
Purdue5
Louisville 4

Ann Arbor Super Regional

First Round Second Round Regional Finals Super Regionals
               
5 Michigan 11
Miami (OH) 3
5 Michigan2
Notre Dame 1
Cleveland State 1
Notre Dame 3
5 Michigan4
Ann Arbor Regional
Notre Dame 0
Miami (OH)5
Cleveland State 4
Notre Dame5
Miami (OH) 3
5 Michigan87
Baylor 1 1
12 Northwestern 0
Texas State 8
Texas State 4
Baylor7
Louisiana–Lafayette 1
Baylor 2
Baylor6
Waco Regional
Louisiana–Lafayette 1
12 Northwestern 2
Louisiana–Lafayette3
Texas State 0
Louisiana–Lafayette5

Tuscaloosa Super Regional

First Round Second Round Regional Finals Super Regionals
               
4 Alabama 12
Mississippi Valley State 3
4 Alabama10
Texas 1
Texas 1
Chattanooga 0
4 Alabama7
Tuscaloosa Regional
Texas 0
Mississippi Valley State1
Chattanooga 0
Mississippi Valley State0
Texas4
4 Alabama99
Jacksonville State 0 0
13 Tennessee 4
James Madison 3
Nebraska 2
13 Tennessee5
Nebraska 4
Jacksonville State 2
13 Tennessee 1 1
Knoxville Regional
Jacksonville State62
James Madison 0
Jacksonville State6
Nebraska 1
Jacksonville State4

Atlanta Super Regional

First Round Second Round Regional Finals Super Regionals
               
3 Washington 9
Sacred Heart 1
3 Washington3
UMass 1
Cornell 0
UMass 8
3 Washington1 6
Amherst Regional
UMass 51
Sacred Heart3
Cornell 1
UMass8
Sacred Heart 0
3 Washington77
14 Georgia Tech 1 0
14 Georgia Tech 5
Boston University 1
14 Georgia Tech4
Auburn 1
Iowa 0
Auburn 1
14 Georgia Tech7
Atlanta Regional
Boston University 2
Boston University3
Iowa 0
Auburn 0
Boston University5

Athens Super Regional

First Round Second Round Regional Finals Super Regionals
               
6 Georgia 3
Radford 1
6 Georgia6
North Carolina 0
North Carolina 21
Campbell 2
6 Georgia4
Chapel Hill Regional
North Carolina 2
Campbell 5
Radford9
North Carolina9
Radford 4
6 Georgia67
11 Ohio State 4 6
11 Ohio State 3
Canisius 2
11 Ohio State5
BYU 4
BYU 6
Kentucky 2
11 Ohio State7
Columbus Regional
Kentucky 2
Canisius 0
Kentucky7
BYU 2
Kentucky4

Tempe Super Regional

First Round Second Round Regional Finals Super Regionals
               
7 Oklahoma 0
North Dakota State 1
North Dakota State3
Tulsa 2
Tulsa 6
Arkansas 0
North Dakota State4
Norman Regional
Tulsa 1
7 Oklahoma21
Arkansas 2
Tulsa5
7 Oklahoma 3
10 Arizona State311
North Dakota State 0 0
10 Arizona State 5
San Diego State 0
10 Arizona State 2
LSU10
LSU 3
Cal State Fullerton 2
LSU 4 0
Tempe Regional
10 Arizona State65
San Diego State 2
Cal State Fullerton8
10 Arizona State7
Cal State Fullerton 0

Los Angeles Super Regional

First Round Second Round Regional Finals Super Regionals
               
2 UCLA 4
Long Beach State 2
2 UCLA4
Fresno State 2
Fresno State 2
UNLV 1
2 UCLA9
Los Angeles Regional
Fresno State 5
Long Beach State3
UNLV 1
Fresno State12
Long Beach State 2
2 UCLA 1 51
Missouri22 9
15 DePaul 0
Bradley 1
Missouri2
Bradley 1
Illinois 1
Missouri 5
Missouri1
Columbia Regional
15 DePaul 0
15 DePaul6
Illinois 0
15 DePaul2
Bradley 1

Automatic bids

Women's College World Series

Participants

SchoolConferenceRecord (conference)Head coachWCWS appearances†
(including 2009 WCWS)
WCWS best finish†WCWS W–L record†
(excluding 2009 WCWS)
Alabama Southeastern 52–9 (21–6) Patrick Murphy 6
(last: 2008)
3rd
(2008)
4–10
Arizona Pacific-10 46–15 (13–7) Mike Candrea 21
(last: 2008)
1st
(1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2006, 2007)
57–27
Arizona State Pacific-10 46–17 (10–11)Clint Myers8
(last: 2008)
1st
(2008)
10–12
Florida Southeastern 60–3 (26–1) Tim Walton 2
(last: 2008)
3rd
(2008)
3–2
Georgia Southeastern 44–10 (18–7)Lu Harris-Champer1--
Michigan Big Ten 46–10 (17–3) Carol Hutchins 9
(last: 2005)
1st
(2005)
7–16
Missouri Big 12 50–10 (12–6)Ehren Earleywine4
(last: 1994)
5th
(1991)
1–6
Washington Pacific-10 46–11 (14–7) Heather Tarr 9
(last: 2007)
1st
(2009)
15–14

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

Tournament notes

Bracket and Results

First round Second round Semifinals Finals
               
1 Florida 3
9 Arizona 0
1 Florida1
5 Michigan 0
4 Alabama 1
5 Michigan 6
1 Florida6
4 Alabama 5
9 Arizona 0
4 Alabama14
10 Arizona State 2
4 Alabama6
1 Florida 0 2
3 Washington83
3 Washington 3
6 Georgia 1
3 Washington1
10 Arizona State 0
10 Arizona State 7
Missouri 3
3 Washington8 9
6 Georgia 93
6 Georgia5
Missouri 2
5 Michigan 5
6 Georgia7

Game results

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

Championship game

[3]

SchoolTop BatterStats.
Washington Danielle Lawrie (P)2-3 RBI
Florida Francesca Enea (LF)2-3 2B SB K
SchoolPitcherIPHRERBBSOABBF
Washington Danielle Lawrie (W)7.0721382733
Florida Stacey Nelson (L)6.0632152426

Final standings

PlaceSchoolWCWS Record
1stWashington5-1
2ndFlorida3-2
3rdGeorgia3-2
Alabama2-2
5thMichigan1-2
Arizona State1-2
7thMissouri0-2
Arizona0-2

All-Tournament Team

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

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

WCWS records tied or broken

Post-Series Notes

See also

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. "Dunne Keeps Jacksonville State Hitless Again; Alabama Softball Advances to Women's College World Series". University of Alabama Athletics Media Relations. May 23, 2009. Archived from the original on July 8, 2009. Retrieved May 23, 2009.
  2. AWakefield. "SEC Advances 3 Teams to WCWS" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on December 30, 2006. Retrieved May 30, 2009.
  3. "Dawgs Fetch A Championship!". Gohuskies.com. June 2, 2009. Retrieved June 9, 2018.
  4. "Softball has Three Named to WCWS All-Tournament Team". University of Alabama Athletics Media Relations - RollTide.com. June 2, 2009. Archived from the original on June 25, 2009. Retrieved June 3, 2009.