Senior Ace Adding to Whiteford Legacy

By Doug Donnelly
Special for MHSAA.com

May 17, 2019

OTTAWA LAKE – You could call Lindsey Walker a 10th-year senior for the Ottawa Lake Whiteford softball team.

Walker is one of seven seniors on a 20-3 Bobcats softball team that has climbed to No. 2 in the coaches association Division 4 rankings and is a win away from clinching its second Tri-County Conference title in three years.

The pitching ace began learning the finer points of fast-pitch softball from veteran Whiteford coach Kris Hubbard when she was in the second grade.

“I would come in the mornings for pitching lessons,” Walker said. “I’d show up before school, we’d go in the high school gym while she was coaching JV girls basketball. She’d walk back and forth and teach me how to pitch at the same time.

“She taught me the basics, how to warm up and some of the mechanics of pitching. It was all new to me then.”

With Hubbard’s help, Walker has blossomed into a star in the circle for the Bobcats. She’s already holds Whiteford career records for games pitched, decisions, innings-pitched and wins (82) and she’s within a couple starts of setting the Bobcats’ record for strikeouts. She’s also an outstanding hitter and has made a remarkable impact on Whiteford’s hitting record book, too. She is the Bobcats’ all-time leader in at bats, hits, doubles, RBI and home runs.

“She’s going to have a lot of records,” Hubbard said of the 5-foot-10 Walker. “She’s a good player.”

Besides pitching mornings for Coach Hubbard, Walker began playing travel softball at a young age. When she was still in elementary school, Hubbard invited her to be a manager for the varsity. It’s a time-tested method for Hubbard, who has coached the Bobcats for all 41 years of its softball existence. She brings on multiple managers to begin training them for the varsity squad at a young age. By the time they reach the varsity as a player, they are engrossed in the program, knowing the ins and outs of how things are done the Bobcat way.

Walker has been solid all four of her seasons in the circle, but there was a time when she considered giving up pitching.

“I was in the fifth grade, and I was about to give up pitching,” Walker said. “I couldn’t throw a strike. Everything was crazy. She just told me to keep going and that I would get my location, and my accuracy was going to come with time. She pushed me.”

Walker batted .429 as a freshman and hit .371 as a sophomore when Whiteford reached the Division 4 championship game. She hit .513 last year with eight home runs and 14 doubles. The Bobcats made it to the Quarterfinals. Although she won 15 games as a freshman pitcher, it was her sophomore year in which she showed her dominance – winning a school-record 29 times.

Walker recently committed to play in college at Ave Marie University in Florida. She wasn’t sure she wanted to pitch in college until just before this softball season began and she realized if she didn’t, this would be her final season of the sport.

“I just don’t want it to end,” she said. “I realize how much I would miss it.”

This season the Bobcats have steadily climbed up the state rankings as the senior-laden team looks to embark on yet another tournament run under Hubbard. The Whiteford coach already has announced this year will be her final one as the Bobcats’ head coach. She has more than 855 wins and three MHSAA Finals championships with six title game appearances during her career.

Senior Karsyn Berns-Moore leads the team with a .561 average and has six triples. Baylee Baldwin is hitting .455 with 36 runs scored, and Milly Iott is hitting .434 with 10 doubles and 27 RBI. Pinch-runner deluxe Anna VanBrandt has scored 35 times, one off the team lead, despite having just eight at-bats.

“You can do so much with speed,” Hubbard said.

In the circle, Walker is 15-3 with a 1.62 ERA and 116 strikeouts in 95 innings pitched. She’s also hitting .434 with six home runs and 36 RBI. Other seniors on the team include Madison Durden, Jessica Link and Katie Lipp. All seven seniors on the club’s roster are four-year regulars.

Hubbard credits the deep crew of assistant coaches for helping the Bobcats this season. That includes former Whiteford baseball coach Matt VanBrandt and his wife, Audra VanBrandt, a former Temperance-Bedford softball coach; ex-Whiteford volleyball coach Sandy Clark and the newest member of the Whiteford coaching staff, John Morningstar. Morningstar coached Monroe St. Mary Catholic Central to three straight Division 3 championships from 2015-2017 and became an assistant at Whiteford this year.

“It helps when you have so many former head coaches,” Hubbard said. “We are really hitting the ball this year.”

Hubbard said the seniors are still trying to get better.

“This whole senior class always wants to get better,” she said. “You usually don’t have that. Usually kids lose interest over the year. Even now, those seniors, when I send out a text saying what day I’m going to be at the school, my phone blows up. They know. They still want to get better. They’re not going through the motions. They are working on the batting tee or the catch net. They are driven, and they keep getting better. It’s nice.”

Walker said Hubbard never forgets to tell her players – and dugout full of managers – to have fun.

“She teaches you a lot about life and softball,” Walker said. “She lets you develop your own skills, but she pushes you. Some coaches just want to win. She always wants us to have fun first.”

Doug Donnelly has served as a sports and news reporter and city editor over 25 years, writing for the Daily Chief-Union in Upper Sandusky, Ohio from 1992-1995, the Monroe Evening News from 1995-2012 and the Adrian Daily Telegram since 2013. He's also written a book on high school basketball in Monroe County and compiles record books for various schools in southeast Michigan. E-mail him at [email protected] with story ideas for Jackson, Washtenaw, Hillsdale, Lenawee and Monroe counties.

PHOTOS: (Top) Ottawa Lake Whiteford’s Lindsey Walker unloads a pitch this season. (Middle) Walker, a four-year varsity senior, will attempt to lead the Bobcats to their second Division 4 Final in three years. (Photos by Cari Hayes.)

Title IX at 50: Macy Irelan's Story

By Geoff Kimmerly
MHSAA.com senior editor

July 19, 2022

Macy Irelan graduated from Owosso High School this spring having accomplished legendary feats on the softball diamond. And she grew up with an appreciation for that opportunity fostered by the achievements of three legendary women in her community.

Irelan played on Pauline “Denny” Hill Field, named after the pioneering Owosso three-sport coach who in 1947 played for the Muskegon Lassies of the All-American Girls’ Baseball League featured in the film “A League of Their Own.”  Irelan’s softball coach has been JoEllen (Maginity) Smith, a 1978 Owosso grad who went on to play at Grand Valley State and this spring completed her 39th season since taking over the softball program from Hill. She led the Trojans to the 2021 Division 2 championship – the school’s first MHSAA Finals team title in any sport. Irelan’s elementary school principal was Teresa (Vondrasek) Graham, a 1979 Owosso grad who went on to become an Oakland University Sports Hall of Famer for basketball and internationally-renowned judo champion.

Those women and their stories taught Irelan to be grateful for her opportunities, the value of working for what she wanted to accomplish and to never give up. Also a school record-setting swimmer, Irelan’s impact on Owosso athletics won’t be forgotten especially because of her work in the pitching circle. In addition to pitching the Trojans to that 2021 championship, Irelan has earned 11 entries in the MHSAA record book, most notably with her 1,157 strikeouts over just three seasons (with 2020 canceled due to COVID-19), the second-most in the state since the pitching distance was lengthened three feet in 2011. Irelan finished 31-7 this spring with a 1.43 ERA and 414 strikeouts in 229 2/3 innings in earning the Miss Softball Award for pitching. She also hit .551 with 21 doubles, eight home runs and 60 RBI. She’ll continue her career at Kent State University and will study special education.


"I’ve never had to worry about 'am I going to be able to play in a high school sport or will I be respected?' So I think it just means to me that I am proud that I have been taught by these wonderful women who were impacted by Title IX. … All of these women have impacted me in so many ways. 
"Although I didn’t have to personally fight my way through, it was gifted to me, it still means a lot that I have been able to be coached (by) these wonderful women and get a scholarship myself to play at the collegiate level.
"

Second Half's weekly Title IX Celebration posts are sponsored by Michigan Army National Guard.

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