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The Amateur Sports Alliance of North America (ASANA) is a non-profit women's softball organization. ASANA formed in 2007 as an offshoot of the North American Gay Amateur Athletic Alliance (NAGAAA). The current commissioner is Angela Smith of Atlanta, Georgia .
Massachusetts Community College Athletic Association Salem University: Tigers Salem: West Virginia: Independent (NCAA Division II) Shaw University: Bears Raleigh: North Carolina: Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (NCAA Division II) Southeastern Illinois College: Falcons Harrisburg: Illinois: NJCAA Division I
Carol Vice (Clay) - Clay Coaches' Hall of Fame, Ohio High School Fastpitch Softball Coaches Association Hall of Fame (2010); [37] Star on Portsmouth's Wall of Stars, [36] made it to the Final Four in softball 9 of 10 years as a coach, won three OHSAA state softball titles (1980, 81, & 83) while also finishing as runners-up twice (1979 & 1988 ...
The North American Gay Amateur Athletic Alliance (NAGAAA) is a non-profit, international association of gay and lesbian softball leagues. [1] As of 2023, NAGAAA rebranded, and currently doing business as International Pride Softball .
Lauren Bay-Regula (born August 9, 1981) is a Canadian softball pitcher. She played college softball at Oklahoma State from 2000 to 2003, where she holds several all-time school records. [ 1 ] She was a part of the Canadian softball team who finished ninth at the 2002 World Championships in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan , and fifth at the 2004 Athens ...
The Cleveland Jaybirds (1977–78), later named the Cleveland Stepien's Competitors (1979–80) and finally the Cleveland Competitors (1982), were a professional softball team that played in three professional softball leagues between 1978 and 1982 at two different locations in the Cleveland, Ohio area.
The Toledo Area Athletic Conference (TAAC) is a high school athletic conference located in northwest Ohio, with member schools stretched across Lucas, Williams, and Wood counties. It was formed in 1988, [ 1 ] and the league sponsors football , cross country , volleyball , golf , basketball , wrestling , baseball , softball , and track & field .
The 1969 Women's College World Series of softball was organized by the Omaha Softball Association and recognized by the Division for Girls' and Women's Sports (DGWS) as a championship tournament. Softball teams from nine colleges met on May 16–18 in Omaha and Fremont, Nebraska.