Clarisa Crowell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ConferenceBig Ten
Record158–136 (.537)
Clarisa Crowell
Current position
TitleHead coach
TeamPenn State
ConferenceBig Ten
Record158–136 (.537)
Biographical details
Alma materVirginia Tech
Playing career
1999–2002Virginia Tech
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
2002–2003Virginia Tech (Vol. asst.)
2004–2005Ohio (asst.)
2006Syracuse (asst.)
2007–2012Oklahoma State (asst.)
2013–2020Miami
2021–presentPenn State
Head coaching record
Overall367–318 (.536)
TournamentsNCAA: 1–2 (.333)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Awards
  • Mid-American Conference Coach of the Year (2019)

Clarisa Crowell is an American former softball player and current head coach at Penn State. She previously served as the head coach at Miami.

Crowell played college softball for Virginia Tech from 1999 to 2002. As a freshman, she posted a 25–8 record with a 1.05 earned run average (ERA), 209 strikeouts and three no-hitters, and was named to the Atlantic 10 All-Conference Team. As a sophomore, she posted a 20–8 record, with a 1.48 ERA, and hit .296 with nine home runs. Following the season she was named to the Virginia all-state team as a pitcher and an outfielder, becoming the first player in state history to make the team at two different positions in the same year. She finished her career with a 65–25 record, with a 1.39 ERA and 475 strikeouts. She also batted .289 for her career, with 16 home runs and 35 doubles.[1]

She finished her career ranked first in winning percentage (.722) and second in career ERA (1.36), strikeouts (362), wins (65), starts (87), innings pitched (614), appearances (106), complete games (62), and shutouts (26). She ranked fourth on the Hokies' career games played list (243) and finished her career with 200 hits, 293 total bases, and 104 runs scored.[2] On November 7, 2013, she was inducted into the Virginia Tech Sports Hall of Fame, becoming the second softball player inducted into the Hall of Fame following Michelle Meadows in 2010.[3]

Coaching career

Head coaching record

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI