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This week in Pac-12 softball

Jun 1, 2016

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BRUINS TO WCWS: UCLA advanced to the WCWS for the 26th time in program history after taking two games from the Ducks in Eugene. The Bruins won the 2010 WCWS title, the program’s 11th, and moved its streak to 17 straight seasons of qualifying for the NCAA Tournament. UCLA won 8 of the first 11 WCWS titles, beginning in 1982. The Super Regionals were comprised of 16 teams, held May 26-29 on eight campus sites. At each site, two teams played in a best-of-three tournament format. The winners from each site advanced to the NCAA® Women’s College World Series (WCWS). 

FIVE ADVANCED TO SUPERS: For the first time since 2012, five Pac-12 squads advanced to the NCAA Super Regional round. The league’s three teams holding top-16 seeds advanced in No. 5 OREGON, No. 11 WASHINGTON and No. 12 UCLA. Joining the seeded trio include ARIZONA and UTAH. 

QUEENS OF THE LEAGUE: With Oregon’s 5-1 win over the Utes in Eugene, the Ducks sealed their fourth-straight Pac-12 softball title. The feat has been achieved once before, with UCLA winning four-consecutive titles in 1988-91.

ALL REGION: 36 Pac-12 players earned All-Region recognition, and 17 league players earned first-team honors. The awards honor softball student-athletes from the Association’s 10 regions with first, second team and third team selections. NFCA member coaches from each respective region voted on the teams, and all the honorees now become eligible for selection to the 2016 NFCA Division I All-American squads.

IN THE RANKINGS: Five league teams make appearances in the final national top-25 polls. OREGON slipped slightly to fourth in both the USA Today/NFCA Division I poll and ESPN.com/USA Softball poll. WASHINGTON ranks No. 12/14 in respective polls. UCLA comes in at No. 14/13 while ARIZONA ranks at No. 18/22. UTAH ranks No. 25 in the NFCA poll and receives votes in the ESPN. com poll, while Oregon State receives a nod in the NFCA poll.

AROUND THE LEAGUE: OREGON ranks second in slugging percentage (0.618) and in home runs per game (1.64) while WASHINGTON ranks ninth (1.35). The Huskies average 1.81 doubles per game, ranking second. They rank fourth nationally in slugging percentage at 0.558. WASHINGTON’s Ali Aguilar wrapped her impressive season at the plate, ranking third in the country with .39 home runs per game and fifth with 1.30 RBIs/game. She homered 21 times this season to lead the Conference along with ARIZONA’s Katiyana Mauga.  Duck pitcher Cheridan Hawkins comes in at fifth nationally in strikeouts per seven innings at 10.3. Hawkins, the two-time All-American and three-time Academic All-American finished her career with top active career rankings in strikeouts (1,081), wins (108) and shutouts (33). Hawkins became the first Pac-12 player since Arizona State’s Dallas Escobedo in 2014 and 15th overall to reach 1,000 career strikeouts. UCLA leads the nation in double plays, turning two at a rate of 0.80. UTAH comes in at No. 2 at .73 per game. 

BATTING PROWESS: Four Conference teams rank in the top-30 in batting average in the nation.  OREGON leads the nation at .360 and WASHINGTON comes in at No. 7 nationally at a mark of .342.  UCLA (No. 19, .326) rounds out the Pac-12 presence.

RPI RELEASED: Eight league teams rank in the final top-40 in the latest RPI release. OREGON and WASHINGTON headline the Pac-12’s presence, as the Huskies come into the week at number eight while the Ducks rank No. 9. UCLA hits No. 15 and ARIZONA comes in at No. 22. OREGON STATE climbs to No. 24, UTAH up to No. 27, CALIFORNIA at No. 36, ARIZONA STATE No. 40 and STANFORD at No. 139.

NCAA TOP 10: OREGON (No. 7) and WASHINGTON (No. 9) made the initial NCAA Top 10 Ranking (Apr. 26) The ranking is based on the criteria used to select and seed the 64 teams for the Division I Softball Championship and include strength of schedule, Rating Percentage Index, head-to-head competition, results versus common opponents, significant wins and losses and locations of contests. Additionally, input is provided by the regional advisory committees for consideration by the Division I Softball Committee.

HISTORIC MILESTONES: After taking the series sweep over Stanford, Arizona head coach Mike Candrea earned his 1,458th career victory. Candrea passes legendary Margie Wright, who won 1,457 games from 1980-2012 coaching for Illinois State and Fresno State.  Candrea now only trails Michigan’s Carol Hutchins, who hit the mark on April 2. Utah softball celebrated its 40th anniversary last week in the series sweep of Arizona State.

WEST COAST UPGRADES: 11-time NCAA National Champion UCLA Softball announced a generous donation that will be used to support improvements, including a new scoreboard, to Easton Stadium. Oregon opened Jane Sanders Stadium on March 24th, which seats 1,500. Washington unveiled its new center field videoboard in March.

NPF DRAFTEES: Five players from the Conference were drafted in the 2016 NPF Draft, representing three different schools. College seniors are eligible for the draft, which consisted of six rounds to select 40 players. OF Allexis Bennett of UCLA was selected in the second round at eighth overall to the Pennsylvania Rebellion.  A trio of Ducks were drafted, including UT Geri Ann Glasco (No. 20, Akron Racers), LHP Cheridan Hawkins (No. 29, Dallas Charge) and OF Alyssa Gillespie (No. 38, Dallas Charge). OREGON STATE’s INF Mikela Manewa was selected No. 40 overall to the Scrap Yard Dawgs.

CoSIDA ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA: Four Pac-12 student-athletes received CoSIDA Academic All-America honors. Utah's Hannah Flippen Oregon's Koral Costa earned first team honors, Oregon's Cheridan Hawkins earned second team distinction and Washington's Kimberlee Souza was named to the third team.