- March
- Roll Tide: Alabama garners top spot in Top 25 poll
- Florida’s Michelle Moultrie named Player of the Week
- Assistant coaches named for the 2011 WNT program
- 2011 Junior Women's National Team schedule announced
- Florida takes top spot in ESPN.com/USA Softball poll
- Thomas named USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Week
- Schedule released for World Cup of Softball VI in OKC
- Georgia on top of ESPN.com/USA Softball Collegiate Top 25
- Kentucky’s Yocke named Player of the Week
- Athletes accept invite to tryout for Women
- Alabama regains No. 1 spot in collegiate Top 25
- Luna named USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Week
- Candrea honored with U.S. Olympic Achievement Award
- Alabama remains college softball's top team
- Georgia's Hesson named Collegiate Player of the Week
- 2011 Canadian Slo-Pitch Border Battle roster announced
Kentucky’s Yocke named USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Week
OKLAHOMA CITY — The Amateur Softball Association (ASA) of America announced today that
Kentucky’s Megan Yocke (Sunnyvale, Calif.) has been named the USA Softball
Collegiate Player of the Week for the Week of March 7-13. Yocke hit at a .556
clip in leading the Wildcats to a pair of upsets of then-No. 8 Tennessee, the first
time Kentucky has taken a series from Tennessee since 2000.
With UK trailing 4-1 going into the bottom of the seventh inning of final game of the series, Yocke came through for the Wildcats to help break the series tie. With two runners aboard and two outs, Yocke smacked a three-run home run to tie the score at four apiece and force extra innings. UK would win the game 5-4 to win the series with UT for the first time in over 10 years.
Yocke reached
base four times in that final contest as she added a pair of walks to her two
hits. She was intentionally walked in the bottom of the 10th inning to load the
bases and set the stage for sophomore Kara Dill’s walk-off single to win the
game.
“Getting this award is amazing. As a player you always strive for honors like
this, but you never really think it’s possible when you play in the SEC and
play among all of those great players. This is an incredible honor not only for
me, but for the Kentucky program,” said Yocke. “It’s proof that this program is
taking strides forward. Beating Tennessee in a series for the first time since
2000 is just another step towards what we’re hoping to accomplish.”
For the series, Yocke batted a team-high .556 and twice had multiple-hit games.
Her fifth home run of the year proved to be the difference maker in the series.
With the three-run homer, Yocke charted her 102nd career RBI to become just the
ninth player in program history to chart 100 or more career RBI. She also
totaled more than 30 putouts to become just the third player in school allure
to tally 1,000 career put outs.
“Obviously, this is an incredible honor for our program to have an athlete be
recognized by ESPN and USA Softball,” said Kentucky Head Coach Rachel Lawson.
“Yocke had a great series against Tennessee, but she’s really been tremendous
for us all four years. I’m just glad that she was able to show her talent in
front of the entire country.”
This is the first-time honor for Yocke and second for the University of
Kentucky as current Kentucky assistant coach and member of the USA Softball
National Team Program Molly Johnson earned the honor in 2009.
About ASA
The Amateur Softball Association, founded in 1933, is the National Governing
Body of softball in the United States and a member of the United States Olympic
Committee. The ASA has become one of the nation’s largest sports organizations
and now sanctions competition in every state through a network of 76 local
associations. The ASA has grown from a few hundred teams in the early days to
over 210,000 teams today, representing a membership of more than three million.
For more information on the ASA, visit http://www.asasoftball.com/.
About USA Softball
USA Softball is the brand created, operated and owned by the ASA that links the
USA Men’s, Women’s, Junior Boys’ and Junior Girls’ National Team programs
together. USA Softball is responsible for training, equipping and promoting
these four National Teams to compete in international and domestic
competitions. The USA Softball Women’s National Team is one of the only two
women’s sports involved in the Olympic movement to capture three consecutive
gold medals at the Olympic Games since 1996. The U.S. women have also won nine
World Championship titles including the last seven consecutive as well as
claimed four World Cup of Softball titles. For more information about USA
Softball, please visit http://www.usasoftball.com/.

















