Wisconsin softball makes history in Big Ten Tournament

Wisconsin softball makes history in Big Ten Tournament

The Wisconsin women’s softball team became the first No. 11 seed to reach the Big Ten Semifinal Game after a win against Rutgers on Thursday.

UW’s 7-3 victory over the No. 3-seed Scarlet Knights clinched the program’s first birth to the semis since 2019.

Pitcher Tessa Magnanimo threw a complete game and freshman catcher Hillary Bloomberg powered in a 5-RBI performance to fuel the Badgers on the offensive end of the diamond.

Bloomberg first struck in the top of the first after Danielle Lucey stole second. Bloomberg’s single brought Lucey home, and UW established an early 1-0 edge.

Magnanimo did not allow a Rutgers run until the bottom of the fourth, that before the Badgers capitalized on a few Scarlet Knight errors to take a 5-1 lead in the fifth.

Wisconsin would only allow two more Rutgers runs in the contest and finished the game with a 7-3 triumph.

UW will now face No. 2 Michigan in the Big Ten Conference Tournament Semifinal. The game will be aired on the Big Ten Network Friday night at 6:30 p.m. central

Wisconsin softball pitcher Maddie Schwartz throws no-hitter, earns Pitcher of the Week

Wisconsin softball pitcher Maddie Schwartz throws no-hitter, earns Pitcher of the Week

Wisconsin’s Maddie Schwartz earned Big Ten Pitcher of the Week this week after a dominant, complete game no-hitter against Purdue.

It was the eleventh time a Badger pitcher has thrown a no-hitter. Wisconsin earned a sweep of Purdue and are now 7-2 in Big Ten play with a weekend series against first-place Northwestern looming.

Schwartz threw 13.1 scoreless innings highlighted by the no-hitter. She was just a walk away from throwing a perfect game, but helped lead the Badgers to a needed sweep of Purdue.

Overall, Wisconsin sits at 20-10 with a Tuesday matchup against DePaul on the schedule before a pair of home games against the University of St. Thomas.

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How to watch Wisconsin softball’s NCAA Tournament opener

The Badgers are headed to Florida

The Badgers are headed to Gainesville, Fla. this weekend after they earned a bid to the 2022 NCAA Tournament.

Wisconsin softball will take on Georgia Tech in their first matchup of the double-elimination opening round. No. 14 overall seed Florida and Canisius are the other two squads in the Gainseville region of the bracket.

Wisconsin and Georgia Tech are set to battle it out on Friday at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium, the home of the Florida Gators.

Here is how to watch Wisconsin’s opener:

Where: Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium, home of the Florida Gators

When:ย 1 p.m. CT

TV:ย ESPNU

Wisconsin softball is headed to the 2022 NCAA Tournament

The Badgers are dancing for the 4th time in 5 seasons!

Wisconsin softball is officially headed to the 2022 NCAA Tournament. On Sunday, the Badgers earned their ninth tournament bid in school history and their fourth appearance over the last five tournaments.

The Badgers finished the season 28-19 (12-11 Big Ten) overall and will head to Florida to play in the Gainesville Regional. Wisconsin will match up with Georgia Tech in the regional round on Friday and take on either Florida or Canisius if they advance with a win over the Yellow Jackets. The regional round is a double-elimination tournament.

Wisconsin has now been to six NCAA Tournaments under head coach Yvette Healy.

The Badgers will take on the Yellow Jackets on Friday, May 20 at 1 p.m. CT and the matchup will air live on ESPNU.

 

Wisconsin softball picks up their first sweep of the season at Rutgers

The Badgers earn the sweep

A young Wisconsin softball group got off to a shaky start after last year came to an abrupt end, but the Badgers have found their groove in April.

Wisconsin has now won five games in a row after a four-game sweep of Rutgers ended today with a 10-2 win.

It was Wisconsin’s first sweep of the year and it ended with a tricky play by Lauren Foster to slide to first base. The Badgers are now 12-16 on the year after cruising in New Jersey. Up next is a weekend series at Nebraska.

Wisconsin softball continues to roll, wins third-straight game

The Badgers win their third in a row

After winning their first series since the beginning of the year with a walk-off last Sunday against Iowa, the Badgers have continued to turn their season around in New Jersey at Rutgers.

Wisconsin improved to 10-16 on the year with a 5-0 win in game one of their doubleheader at Rutgers, as Haley Hestekin dominated in the circle with a complete game. While the Badgers have a young core that struggled early, they are finally finding themselves down the stretch in Big Ten play. The Badgers have not allowed a run in two wins over Rutgers, and will look for the sweep in today’s doubleheader and tomorrow morning’s matchup.

 

WATCH: Wisconsin softball wins in walk-off fashion over Iowa

The Badgers walk it off vs Iowa

After having their season cut short in 2020, a young Wisconsin softball team is finding their stride in 2021. Head coach Yvette Healy has known nothing but success in her 11 years at the helm of the program, but this year the Badgers got off to a difficult start with a young core.

In a Big Ten only 2021 season, the freshman Badgers are beginning to play their best softball at the right time. Playing at home in Madison this past weekend, Wisconsin took three games out of four against Iowa to improve to 8-16 on the year. The series ended on Sunday with true freshman Peyton Bannon, Wisconsin’s best hitter, finishing off Iowa with a walk-off double:

Up next, Wisconsin heads to Rutgers for another four-game weekend series beginning on Friday.

Wisconsin softball has a senior class worth celebrating after an ending nobody deserved

Although it did not end like anybody thought it would, the class of 2020 had careers that should be remembered for a long time in Madison

[lawrence-newsletter]There are many devastating stories from around the sporting world over the last couple of months. The endings that seniors in spring sports were expecting, the goodbyes and senior day celebrations, the curtain closing on memorable Badger careers; none of it could happen because of circumstances that were out of the athletes control. We know that at UW, the decision has been made surrounding granting an extra year of eligibility to spring seniors. That answer is that there will not be an extra year granted to any senior athletes. As I wrap up my senior year online at the University of Wisconsin, one spring team will stick with me in a different way than any other did at UW, and that team is Wisconsin softball. Here is why.

I had the pleasure of calling numerous Badger softball games over the past couple of seasons and there was nothing I enjoyed more while at UW. Goodman Softball Complex, the home of Badger softball, is tucked away behind the busy areas of campus. Nestled behind the UW hospital and just beyond the soccer fields, the environment can best be described in one three-letter word: fun. Wisconsin softball feels what college sports should feel like. Athletes are playing the game for the love of their team and their school, and it’s just pure fun to watch. The tremendous senior class of 2020 deserves recognition for having a huge part in not only what made my Wisconsin experience, but what made so many experiences and memories possible for Badger fans young and old.

The 2020 softball class of Kayla Konwent,ย Kaitlyn Menz,ย Stephanie Lombardo, Jordan Little, Caroline Hedgcock andย Heather Rudnickiย were part of an inspiring run last season by Head Coachย Yvette Healy’sย group. 2019 was arguably the greatest year in Wisconsin softball history. The Badgers went 43-14 overall, and pulled off one of the most shocking wins in program history to end Oklahoma’s 41-game winning streak. Konwent was especially remarkable to watch last season, and Badger fans were waiting to see what the senior would do in the rest of 2020. The 5-10 first baseman started all 57 games and was named a unanimous First Team All-American while taking home Big Ten Player of the Year honors. The list of accolades goes on and on. The powerful hitter set the UW record for batting average by hitting an incredible .459.

After a fantastic junior season in the circle that earned her second-team All-Big Ten honors, pitcher Kaitlyn Menz,ย was ready for an encore. She already had ten wins in 2020 before the season was cut short. Heather Rudnicki, a senior speedster, was an important part of UW’s historic 2019 team, and went 5-for-5 on stolen bases. Jordan Little was Wisconsin’s do-it-all utility knife, and she started 51 games in 2019 while playing six different positions.

Although she didn’t know it at the time, Stephanie Lombardo had the perfect finale in the batters box. In 2019, after an incredible regular season, UW had to beat Notre Dame twice in order to advance in the NCAA tournament and face number one overall seed Oklahoma. Facing elimination, Wisconsin was down 4-0 heading into the seventh inning. They were three outs away from their season being over. After the Badgers cut the deficit in half, runners were at the corners with two outs. Enter “Slambardo” as she is known around Madtown:

Wisconsin was not done there in 2019, because this class of 2020 refused to let things end without a fight. Facing Oklahoma, the best team in America who had won 41-straight games, UW lost their first contest in the best of three. Then, the Badgers found a way to end the Sooner winning streak. Caroline Hedgcock, who had been extremely reliable for Coach Healy all season, came up clutch in the biggest moments by laying down a perfect bun that scored Taylor Johnson and tied the game in the sixth inning. After yet another sacrifice squeeze byย Jolie Fish to give UW the lead, Menz did the rest in the circle and Wisconsin pulled off one of the biggest wins in program history.

Although, UW ultimately came up short in their third and final game against the Sooners, the class of 2020 had delivered postseason memories in 2019 that no Badger fan would soon forget. There was plenty to be proud of at the end of that season.

The class of 2020 will go down in Wisconsin softball history first and foremost for their greatness on the field. Even without an ending to their senior season, they gave us memories that no Badger fan who witnessed them will soon forget. I am sure I speak for many Badger fans in saying I cannot wait to be back at Goodman watching Wisconsin softball.

Three takeaways from Oklahoma softball practice ahead of first home-stand of the season

Oklahoma softball had an up-and-down weekend. Here are three takeaways from their practice following their back-to-back losses.

Oklahoma softball had an up-and-down weekend, starting off with three-straight wins before dropping their final two games to No. 2 Washington and unranked Wisconsin.

The Sooners fell to No. 5 in the USA TODAY Coaches Poll, and understand have some work ahead of them to reach the level head coach Patty Gasso expects of them. Here are three takeaways from their practice following their back-to-back losses.

Motivational Videos

Motivational videos were referenced more than once at Oklahoma’s practice on Tuesday, starting with Kinzie Hansen. “We watched a video about this woman who climbed to the top of Mt. Everest,” Hansen said. “It was a lot about being a selfless teammate and having to adjust and readjust,”

Coach Gasso echoed Hansen’s sentiment, saying the video was similar to the Sooner’s situation. “The message is, each weekend that we play it’s like climbing a mountain,” she said. “and when you climb Mt. Everest you climb a little way and then come back to base camp. Then you recover, you recuperate, then you go to the next level. It’s really relevant to what we’re doing right now. We’re back at base camp trying to recover and be better,”

Home Sweet Home

The Sooners have spent 14 games on the road, and are understandably ready to play in front of their home crowd. “I feel like it’s gonna be really cool,” said junior Taylon Snow, who transferred to Oklahoma from Auburn in the offseason. “Finally getting to feel what the Sooner family is really about for all of us newcomers, I think it’s gonna be great.”

Letting It Go

Back-to-back losses weren’t an ideal way to finish the weekend for Gasso and her Sooners, but with 25 years of coaching experience under her belt, she knew exactly what to tell her team. “It’s just understanding that losses are not the end all be all,” she said. “That no matter what we’re not gonna surrender and I felt like we did.”

Jocelyn Alo, who’s been thrust into a leadership role in her junior season, had plenty of advice for the newcomers on the team.ย “Just to let it go,” she said when asked what advice she’s giving the freshman. “There’s always gonna be another game, there’s always gonna be another pitch. There’s always gonna be a new day and there’s always room to improve.”

Oklahoma’s home-opener against Northwestern at Marita Hynes Field is on Friday at 3 p.m.

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Oklahoma softball falls to No. 5 in USA TODAY Coaches Poll

After suffering back-to-back losses in last weekend’s Mary Nutter Classic, Oklahoma fell two spots to No. 5 in the USA TODAY Coaches Poll.

After suffering back-to-back losses in last weekend’s Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic, Oklahoma fell two spots to No. 5 in the USA TODAY Coaches Poll.

The Sooners began their weekend with three-straight wins, but dropped their final two games to No. 2 Washington and unranked Wisconsin.

On Saturday, the second-ranked Huskies got all over Oklahoma early, scoring six runs off three home runs in the first two innings to take an insurmountable lead.

Two runs in the fifth inning would be all the Sooners could muster on a lackluster offensive day.ย Only Kinzie Hansen, Taylon Snow, Jocelyn Alo and Alycia Flores finished with hits.

On Sunday, the Badgers scored early and often against Oklahoma as well, scoring four runs in second inning that the Sooners wouldn’t overcome. Their best effort came in the form of a three-run third inning highlighted by back-to-back hits from Alo and Hansen. It wouldn’t be enough as Oklahoma fell to 11-3 and Shannon Saile took her second loss of the year in the circle.

After 14 games on the road, the Sooners open their five-game home stand, the Courtyard Marriott Tournament, with Northwestern on Friday at 3 p.m.