Wallace State-Hanceville Tops NCJAA Poll

Undefeated Wallace State-Hanceville (28-0) has claimed the top spot in the latest NJCAA DI Top 20 Poll. The previous No. 2 received all nine first-place votes.

PlaceNameRecordPoints1st PlacePrev.
1Wallace State Community College-Hanceville28-018092
2Yavapai College29-217103
3Florida Southwestern State College27-416201
4Seminole State College (OK)15-115304
5Odessa College22-214405
6Butler Community College – KS17-113506
7McLennan Community College28-412608
8Chattanooga State Community College23-311709
9Pensacola State College26-4108012
10Chipola College28-49907
11Central Arizona College26-390010
12Grayson College19-581011
13Gulf Coast State College31-772016
14San Jacinto College-South22-963013
15Three Rivers Community College – MO13-354015
16Northwest Florida State College30-745017
17Crowder College24-436014
18Howard College15-527018
19College of Southern Idaho19-6180N/A
20Eastern Arizona College25-59020

Receiving Votes: Bossier Parish, Volunteer State, Dyersburg State, Paris, Hutchinson

Maryland Coach Montgomery Scores 600th Win

Maryland Coach Mark Montgomery collected his 600th career coaching victory at home Sunday in a 5-3 win over North Dakota State. Montgomery is in his third season coaching the Terrapins. He has also had coaching stops at Louisiana Tech, Northern Colorado, Centenary (LA), and Georgetown (KY).

Joyce Collects 1,000th Win

The legendary Hall of Fame Coach Joan Joyce has reached another milestone in her storied career. The Florida Atlantic skipper scored her 1,000 career coaching victory on Friday in a 1-0 Conference USA win over North Texas. Joyce is in her 28th season coaching the Owls.

On Deck With Dobbins: Lindsay Fico, Mercer University

In this edition of On Deck, RTS’s Lee Dobbins sits down with new Mercer University Head Coach Lindsay Fico. The first time Division I Coach took over the Bears last June after spending the previous three seasons on the Junior College level as head coach at Santa Fe College in Florida.  During the 2021 season, Fico led the Saints to a 31-16 record and the school’s 16th all-time appearance in the FCSAA State Tournament. The former Florida Gator started her coaching path after graduating from UF in 2006 in the private sector giving individual instruction and coaching on the club level.

Lee Dobbins: You have had a meteoric rise in the coaching ranks. Starting in the private sector of the game with instruction and being involved on the club level, to getting your first collegiate job on the JUCO level and now moving right to the Division I. Talk a bit about your journey and how you were able to reach these heights so quickly. 

Lindsay Fico: I have been very blessed to be in the right place at the right time multiple times throughout my coaching career. I do feel like everything has happened very quickly for me and understand it’s not the norm. It’s certainly a blessing that the universe has aligned so nicely, and I am very appreciative of every opportunity to coach the game I love.  

When coaching travel ball started to get a little more serious, I realized just how much I enjoyed the profession, however I couldn’t have imagined it would snowball so quickly. I feel like coaching Florida JUCO ball gave me a leg up when it came to making the jump to the DI level. I learned many tricks of the trade that I wouldn’t have if I was a DI assistant, and I feel like the level of play, especially in the state of FL, is comparable to most mid-major programs in DI softball. I have just focused on trying to make anyone I meet better either athletically, academically, or even socially speaking.  

I measure my success as a coach by focusing the “person” before the “athlete.” If our players are holding themselves to a higher standard on and off the field, success will fall into place. There are several people throughout who have been willing to stick their neck out for me, so I don’t discount that I have had support along the way. I have also been quite lucky to have a staff that fosters the same type of culture that I strive to maintain. 

Dobbins: A lot of times coaches tend to be all-in on JUCO Athletes in that they can help their programs immediately experience wise, or shy away from them due to different stereotyping of those athletes and why they might be on the JUCO level to begin with. Talk a little about your experience with that. Do you plan to recruit the JUCO level at Mercer? 

Fico: I think there is a balance to everything. We have already reaped the benefits of having JUCO products. A lot of times, players end up playing JUCO because timing just wasn’t right for them when they graduated high school, it doesn’t discount their ability to play at a higher level and most go on after their years in the JUCO circuit. 

Dobbins: Recruiting is always evolving and maybe not always for the positive as of late with showcase softball, recruiting services, and the challenges the pandemic have brought. Where do you think recruiting is now compared to say when you competed and started coaching and even when you played? What are the challenges you have seen and maybe the fixes needed to be made? 

Fico: For one thing, social media didn’t exist when I was being recruited. It was so much harder to know if you were getting the right looks from the schools you were interested in, but also less “watered down.” I lean on my relationships with fellow coaches, instructors, and friends within the softball world when it comes to recruiting. I was also in sales for more than 10 years before I coached…that experience helps tremendously when we are looking for athletes to join our program. We want players who know how to compete outside of “showcase ball.” Players who play for something bigger than themselves learn the stresses and success that comes in college. The more they learn that, the better prepared they will be when they find their college home. 

Dobbins: Following up on the recruiting question; Where do you believe the newest innovation of the Transfer Portal fits in college recruiting? Will Mercer take advantage of the portal, or are you staying the course of recruiting high school/club age Prospective Student-Athletes and possibly JUCO Athletes? 

Fico: Again, I think we must find the right balance when it comes to “portal” players vs. the traditional high school recruit. Both can bring a lot of value to a program. If we are using the portal with integrity and doing our due diligence with high school talent, we should be fine. Considering my experience at the JUCO level, we will also take advantage of finding the best players we can in that world. 

Dobbins: College softball tends to be divided in the “haves and have nots”. The gap seems to be particularly wide between the major Division I/Power 5s and everyone else. Talk a little about that from the standpoint of having played at a major program like Florida and having coached at the JUCO level at Santa Fe and now mid-major level at Mercer. Do you see those gaps closing, or just getting wider with innovations like the NIL and the push to treat athletes more like employees than students? 

Fico: I cherished my time at UF, but I also understand that the UF of today is very different from the one I know. I think the gap between the Power 5s and mid-majors will remain somewhat the same. They are just too different not to, but it doesn’t mean a mid-major can’t be extremely competitive because at the end of the day, the culture of a program and respect within a team carries a lot of weight and can achieve huge amounts of success. As for the NIL, athletes are still athletes, not employees. They just want to be “heard” as much as they are “seen.” If the lines of communication stay open and honest, the NIL shouldn’t become an issue, especially in the mid-major DI world. 

Dobbins: Who are some of the peers and mentors that shaped you as an athlete and now on your coaching journey? 

Fico: Coach Walton was and is an integral part of my success. He brought a whole new light and expectation to Florida softball, and I knew from his very first practice, he was going to win…and win big! He has been an both advocate and mentor throughout my entire coaching career. Coach Rocha was also pivotal, and I still feel like she is just a phone call/text away. Her quiet, warm spirit taught me so much about coaching. I feel very blessed to have been shaped by both in their own, specific ways and I am thankful to have the continued relationship with them to this day.  

I loved my time at Santa Fe, and I met so many thoughtful, successful coaches who helped me learn the ropes. Courtney Miller (Seminole State), Jen McKibben (Pensacola), Alissa Smith (formerly St. Johns River) and Patti Townsend (TCC), to name a few, provided constant support and great advice during my 3 years at SF. It would’ve been so much more difficult without them, and I am truly thankful for each and every one of them. 

Troy Coach Mullins Resigns

Troy University announced the resignation of head coach Beth Mullins this morning. Mullins had been on a medical leave of absence since before the season started. She was in her eighth season leading the Trojans. Mullins guided Troy to the NCAA Postseason in 2021 for the first time in 25 years.

WOU Coach Sargent To Retire

Western Oregon Head Coach Lonny Sargent will retire at the end of the 2022 season. Sargent has led the Wolves the past 10 seasons and is the program’s all-time winningest coach with 243 victories. The former GNAC Coach of the Year puts a bow on a 34 year career in coaching. Assistant Coach Aly Boytz will move into the interim head coach role after this season.

The Spring Games Officiating Woes Continue

The woes continue for The Spring Games hosted by PFX in their recently reported umpire shortage. The lack of officials at the Central Florida event that had become an issue in the last week, hit a new low today as multiple teams are recruiting fans to umpire games. Doane University is currently using an assistant coach to call the plate and a fan on the bases for their contest against Spring Arbor.

First NAIA Top 25 Regular Season Poll Released

NAIA has released its first regular season Softball Coaches Top 25 Poll. Oregon Tech (19-3) which was picked No. 1 in the preseason poll, remains in the top spot with nine first-place votes. Oklahoma City (17-0) follows closely at No. 2 with eight first-place votes.

RANKLAST WEEKSCHOOL [1st Place Votes]RECORDFINAL POINTS
11Oregon Tech [9]19-3488
24Oklahoma City [8]17-0484
32College of Idaho18-2468
T415Freed-Hardeman (Tenn.) [1]15-0426
T43Science & Arts (Okla.)11-4426
65Southern Oregon15-5417
716William Carey (Miss.)18-3391
T88Indiana Wesleyan8-2377
T8RVMobile (Ala.)15-0377
10RVCoastal Georgia17-1363
1113Central Methodist (Mo.)8-3357
1212Grand View (Iowa)5-1288
1323Lindsey Wilson (Ky.)12-4269
1411Georgia Gwinnett13-10251
15RVTexas A&M Texarkana14-4237
1618Marian (Ind.)2-0232
1722Cumberlands (Ky.)14-8227
1814Madonna (Mich.)5-1224
199Olivet Nazarene (Ill.)2-2215
2021Milligan (Tenn.)11-1197
21NRSoutheastern (Fla.)12-4163
22RVVanguard (Calif.)21-5147
237Ottawa (Kan.)8-7119
246Columbia (Mo.)7-8102
2520Morningside (Iowa)7-495

Dropped from the Top 25: Saint Xavier (Ill.), Hope International (Calif.), Houston-Victoria (Texas), Campbellsville (Ky.), Central Baptist (Ark.)

Others Receiving Votes: Saint Xavier (Ill.) 83, Aquinas (Mich.) 76, Baker (Kan.) 73, Hope International (Calif.) 67, Embry-Riddle (Ariz.) 55, Tennessee Wesleyan 49, Rio Grande (Ohio) 45, Houston-Victoria (Texas) 35, Northwestern (Iowa) 32, Eastern Oregon 22, Blue Mountain (Miss.) 12, Mount Vernon Nazarene (Ohio) 12, Thomas (Ga.) 6, William Jessup (Calif.) 6, Our Lady of the Lake (Texas) 3, Cottey (Mo.) 3.

NW-SCC Names Brown Head Coach

Northwest-Shoals Community College has named Angel Brown their new head coach. Brown has most recently served as an assistant coach at Alabama-Huntsville and West Alabama. She was also the head coach at her alma mater Bevill State. NW-SCC is reinstating their athletics program for the first time since 2011.

DIII Has New No. 1

DIII has a new unanimous No. 1. Texas Lutheran (9-3) sits atop this week’s NFCA Division III Top 25 Coaches Poll. The Bulldogs took home victories last weekend against two ranked teams and two squads receiving votes to move into the top spot.

RankTeamPoints2022 RecordPrevious
1Texas Lutheran (10)2509-32
2Salisbury24014-28
3Virginia Wesleyan2309-32
4East Texas Baptist22013-54
5Birmingham-Southern2109-35
6Eastern Connecticut State2004-26
7Tufts1900-07
8Belhaven18012-118
9Christopher Newport1709-019
10DePauw1605-51
11Linfield15011-220
12The College of New Jersey1401-010
13Berry13010-517
14Milwaukee School of Engineering1205-111
15Rochester1101-59
16Wisconsin-Oshkosh1005-312
17Randolph-Macon6610-1NR
18Rowan563-2NR
19Roanoke5410-0NR
20Millikin496-021
21Gettysburg483-124
22Moravian3010-0NR
23Saint Benedict (Minn.)276-0NR
T24Brandeis256-222
T24Trine250-616

Others receiving votes:  Babson 23, Case Western Reserve 17, Wartburg 14, Mount St. Joseph 8, Huntingdon 3, Concordia (Wis.) 1, Maryville (Tenn.) 1, and St. John Fisher 1.

Dropped out: Alfred, Aurora, Benedictine, Calvin, Coe, Emory, and Piedmont.