MSUB Softball Preview: Jackets Look for Improvement
in ‘07
Roster
Schedule
'06 Stats
BILLINGS, MT – To say that 2007
will be a year of transition for the Montana
State-Billings softball team would be an
understatement. The program will be under the direction
of its third head coach in as many seasons. The
Yellowjackets will also be competing in their final
season in the Heartland Conference and NCAA South
Central Region before moving to the Great Northwest
Athletic Conference and NCAA West Region.
Kim Lemmens is in her first season
at the helm of the Yellowjacket program that started in
2001. It is Lemmens’ first head coaching stint at the
collegiate level after spending time as an assistant at
Colorado State and Fort Hays State. Lemmens becomes the
program’s third head coach in its seven years. Jeff
Aumend guided the startup of the program from 2001 to
2005, taking the team to the NCAA West Region semifinals
in 2005. Sean McGary served as the interim head coach
last season after Aumend’s departure.
Lemmens inherits a relatively young
squad that is very similar to last year’s team that went
20-31. The only losses to graduation
were outfielders
Christy Wankel and Anna Henderson.
Wankel is the all-time school record holder for
games played, games started, hits, RBI, and total
bases. Henderson ranks ninth in
school history for games played and games started and is
eighth all-time for runs scored at MSUB. Wankel
and Henderson combined to start 302 games in the
outfield for the Yellowjackets over the last four years.
Also missing from the lineup will be Rachel Quarnburg, the school record holder for career batting
average and slugging percentage, who did not return for
her senior season.
The Yellowjackets will rely heavily
upon a large class of sophomores, including three of
their four pitchers.
Terina Stacks (Washougal, WA),
Lisa
Moore (Bakersfield, CA), and
Rebekah Tsatsa (Eagle, ID) combined for all but two
of the team’s nearly 320 innings pitched last season.
Moore logged the most innings with 128, posting an 8-13
record.
Stacks and Tsatsa came on in the
second half of the season, combining for 10 of the
team’s last 14 wins. Stacks led the team with a 3.62
ERA and posted a 6-10 record. Tsatsa had the best
winning percentage of the three pitchers, going 6-8.
Freshman
Lindsey Trenary (Helena, MT) is also expected to
become a productive member of the pitching staff. She
was an all-state selection at Helena Capital High School
the last two years.
“From the pitching standpoint, our
sophomores will need to be successful, and they are
working hard at practice. Rebekah will definitely get a
lot time,” says Lemmens. “She’s hitting her spots (in
practice) and controlling the hitter. Rebekah and
Terina will definitely compliment each other with their
different pitching styles."
After fielding one of the most
explosive offensive teams in the nation in 2005, the
Yellowjackets struggled at the plate for large parts of
last season. They averaged just 3.6 runs per game and
were shutout seven times. In 51 games, they scored two
or fewer runs 23 times. Lemmens will bring a different
offensive philosophy to a Yellowjackets program that has
thrived on the long ball. MSUB ranked in the top 25 in
the nation for home runs in 2004 and in the top 10 in
the nation in 2005. The 2007 version will implement
more of the short game philosophy and try to put
pressure on opposing defenses.
“For the most part, we’re going to
take advantage of every mistake the defense makes,” says
Lemmens. “We’re going to make sure we’re causing chaos
at every opportunity. The team is embracing the
element-of-surprise philosophy. For the most part, it’s
going to be a mixture of the short-game and long-ball.
Our identity is going to be ‘no easy outs.’ That’s what
we talk about on a regular basis, and so far, so good.
The majority are on board with that philosophy. It’s
not just ‘get up there and swing the bat.’ There’s more
to it. We’re going to try to take advantage of keeping
the defense at a disadvantage and capitalizing on any
mistakes that are made.”
The Jackets return two players who
batted over .300 last season. Junior
Jenna Haacke (Billings, MT) hit .301 and blasted 10
home runs. Sophomore
Stephanie Gosselin (Victoria, BC) hit .370 in 31
games.
Stephanie Rinehart (Gig Harbor, WA) hit .286, and
Jenna McCartney (Hamilton, MT) hit .275.
Defensively, the Yellowjackets will
rely on playing solid defense behind their young
pitchers. Lemmens says that fall and spring practices
have created good competition for starting spots in both
the infield and outfield. The emphasis in her first
season has been on fundamentals and situational
awareness.
“We’re going to
Aysha Maddox (Richland, WA) for more leadership as
our starting senior catcher,” says Lemmens. “We are
looking for her to blossom into a leader. We’re looking
to
Leslie Davis (Federal Way, WA) to be an outstanding
leader from a sophomore standpoint. She didn’t get a
lot of playing time last year, but right now she’s vying
for a starting shortstop position with
Jessica Frank (Great Falls, MT). I think Jessica is
right up there with everyone else. She’s a great
leader, has a great work ethic, and leads by example.
Obviously, junior transfer
Mandy Schaapveld (Puyallup, WA) will contribute
immensely out in the outfield with her speed and strong
arm.”
Maddox will be joined by
Megan Moeller (Ontario, OR),
Lorel Palmer (Ogden, UT), and
Jenna McCartney (Hamilton, MT) as the seniors on the
team. Along with juniors Frank, Haacke, and Schaapveld,
the Yellowjackets will have seven upperclassmen to help
the younger players learn the ropes. Lemmens admits
that this year’s sophomores will play a key role.
“With a team of eight sophomores, that is a good core of
athletes that we are building our team around," she
says. “We’re not forgetting about the juniors or
seniors, but the sophomores are the core. The juniors
are great; Jessica Frank is outstanding, and you can’t
say enough about Jenna Haacke. She’s a quiet leader,
gets the job done, and leads by example. We’ve got a
really good group of talented kids; it’s just being able
to put 'we' ahead of 'me' and put it together.”
Like all other teams from the
Northern parts of the country, the Yellowjackets will be
road warriors during the early season. They open with a
week’s worth of games in Phoenix, including an
appearance at the Schutt Sports Division II Leadoff
Classic. The season opener will be against Western New
Mexico on February 11 in Phoenix. The Jackets will be
tested early during the seven days in Phoenix with games
against WNMU, Grand Canyon, Dixie State, Minnesota
State-Mankato, Angelo State, and Cal State-Bakersfield.
“Going to Phoenix will be a great
trip because of the weather, and the opportunity to play
some great teams,” Lemmens says. “At this point, I’m
not very concerned with the opponent. I’m more
concerned about us executing and doing our job. Taking
care of ourselves it the most important part. We are
really excited to get outside and on the field”
Following the Phoenix trip, the
Yellowjackets will have a short turnaround before making
their annual pilgrimage to Washington for the Red Lion
Hotel Central Washington University Invitational on
March 1-4. The tournament will give the Yellowjackets a
sneak peak at their future conference foes in the GNAC.
MSUB is scheduled to meet six GNAC teams at the tourney.
The Yellowjackets are scheduled to
open the home schedule the week after the Central
Washington tournament, hosting University of Mary for a
doubleheader on March 7. If the weather allows the
games to be played, they will be the earliest games ever
played at Cenex Stadium. Last year the Jackets hosted
Dickinson State on March 11.
After the double-dip with Mary, the
Yellowjackets open Heartland Conference play in earnest
starting with a 14-game trip to Missouri, Oklahoma, and
Texas. A dozen of those games will be conference games,
four each against Lincoln, Oklahoma Panhandle State, and
St. Edward’s. In the middle of the trip, the Jackets
will sneak in a non-conference doubleheader at West
Texas A&M.
MSUB returns from their trip South
on March 26 and plays in Great Falls two days later.
UGF, a first-year NAIA program, will make a return trip
to Billings on April 22. The Argos are coached by Gary
Ehnes, father of former Yellowjacket great Joey Ehnes.
Joey serves as one of the Argos assistant coaches.
Following the trip to Great Falls,
the Yellowjackets play 12 of their next 14 games at
home. Eight of those are conference counters against
two of the best teams in the Heartland. St. Mary’s, a
perennial NCAA Tournament participant, visits Cenex
Stadium on April 5 and 6. Incarnate Word, the defending
Heartland champion and preseason conference favorite,
comes calling April 13 and 14. The Cardinals reached
the NCAA South Central Region finals last year, a week
after the Yellowjackets knocked them out of the
Heartland Conference tournament.
“I think Incarnate Word will be a
tough team,” says Lemmens. “They have a lot of players
coming back, including the player of the year. St.
Mary’s has the pitcher of the year coming back, and they
always seem to come to the forefront at the end of the
season.”
The games against Incarnate Word
will close out the Jackets’ conference slate. They play
at Idaho State, a first-year NCAA Division I program, on
April 20 and 21 before closing the regular season
against UGF at home the next day. MSUB will make one
more trip to Texas for the Heartland Conference
Tournament, April 26-28 in San Antonio. All six teams
in the Heartland will attend the tournament. In a
recent poll of league coaches and sports information
directors, MSUB was picked to finish fourth in the
six-team league.
“I
think the other teams in the conference will be
surprised,” says Lemmens of the Jackets. “Everyone in
the conference is aware of the talent we have; they’re
going to be surprised as to how we put it all together.
We have a very talented team. I think it’s a mixture of
fundamentals and getting them to understand and believe
in the different philosophies and strategies. With all
the talent we do have, people will be pleasantly
surprised.” |