1985 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament

1985 NCAA Division I
Softball Tournament
Teams 16
WCWS Site Seymour Smith Park
Omaha, NE
Champions UCLA (3rd NCAA (4th overall) WCWS title)
Runner-Up Nebraska (3rd WCWS Appearance)
Winning coach Sharron Backus (3rd NCAA (4th overall) WCWS title)
NCAA Softball Tournaments
«1984  1986»

The 1985 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament was the fourth annual tournament to determine the national champion of NCAA women's collegiate softball. Held during May 1985, sixteen Division I college softball teams contested the championship. The tournament featured eight regionals of two teams with the winner of each region (a total of 8 teams) advancing to the 1985 Women's College World Series at Seymour Smith Park in Omaha, Nebraska. The event held from May 22 through May 26 marked the conclusion of the 1985 NCAA Division I softball season. UCLA won the championship by defeating Nebraska 2–1 in the final game. Nebraska's appearance was later vacated due to NCAA infractions.[1][2]

Regionals

West Regional
Cal State Fullerton 5 5
Central Michigan 0 0
  • Cal State Fullerton qualifies for WCWS, 2–0

Mideast Regional
Northwestern 3 6
Indiana 2 0
  • Northwestern qualifies for WCWS, 2–0

South Regional
Louisiana Tech 0 5 1
Texas A&M 3 0 0
  • Louisiana Tech qualifies for WCWS, 2–1

Central Regional
Utah 1 38 28
Arizona State 28 2 1
  • Utah qualifies for WCWS, 2–1

Midwest Regional
Nebraska 1 6 2
Kansas 49 1 0
  • Nebraska qualifies for WCWS, 2–1
  • Nebraska's wins vacated

Northeast Regional
Adelphi 2 2
Penn State 0 0
  • Adelphi qualifies for WCWS, 2–0

Northwest Regional
Cal Poly Pomona 4 1
Fresno State 0 0
  • Cal Poly Pomona qualifies for WCWS, 2–0

At-large Regional
UCLA 1 3 2
Pacific 3 0 0
  • UCLA qualifies for WCWS, 2–1

Women's College World Series

Participants

Game results

Bracket

  First Round     Second Round     Third Round
                           
  Winner's Bracket
   Cal State Fullerton 18  
   Adelphi 0    
       Cal State Fullerton 2  
       UCLA 0    
   Utah 0          
   UCLA 1        
       Cal State Fullerton 1
       Nebraska 5
   Northwestern 3        
   Cal Poly Pomona 6          
       Cal Poly Pomona 0    
       Nebraska 2  
   Louisiana Tech 0    
   Nebraska 6  
  Loser's Bracket
   Adelphi 1  
   Utah 0      Cal Poly Pomona 18
     Adelphi 0
   Northwestern 18  
   Louisiana Tech 0      UCLA 1
     Northwestern 0
  Semifinals     Finals     if needed
                           
  Re-ordered Semi-finals
   Nebraska 0        Nebraska 1
   UCLA 3            UCLA 29
       UCLA 1    
       Cal State Fullerton 0  
   Cal State Fullerton 28    
   Cal Poly Pomona 1  

Game log

Date Game Winning team Score Losing team Notes
May 22 Game 1 Cal State Fullerton 1–08 Adelphi
Game 2 UCLA 1–0 Utah
May 23 Game 3 Cal Poly Pomona 6–3 Northwestern
Game 4 Nebraska 6–0 Louisiana Tech
May 24 Game 5 Adelphi 1–0 Utah Utah eliminated
Game 6 Northwestern 1–08 Louisiana Tech Louisiana Tech eliminated
Game 7 Cal State Fullerton 2–0 UCLA
Game 8 Nebraska 2–0 Cal Poly Pomona
May 25 Game 9 UCLA 1–0 Northwestern Northwestern eliminated
Game 10 Cal Poly Pomona 1–08 Adelphi Adelphi eliminated
Game 11 Nebraska 5–1 Cal State Fullerton
Game 12 Cal State Fullerton 2–18 Cal Poly Pomona Cal Poly Pomona eliminated
Game 13 UCLA 3–0 Nebraska
May 26 Game 14 UCLA 1–0 Cal State Fullerton Cal State Fullerton eliminated
Game 15 UCLA 2–19 Nebraska UCLA wins WCWS

All-Tournament Team

The following players were named to the All-Tournament Team[3]

Pos Name School
P Debbie Doom UCLA
Tracy Compton UCLA
Lori Sippel Nebraska
C Lisa Busby Nebraska
1B Ginger Cannon Nebraska
2B Lori Richins Nebraska
3B Jo Ann Ferrieri Cal State Fullerton
SS Leslie Rover UCLA
OF Stacy Sunny Nebraska
Regina Dooley Adelphi
Alison Stowell Cal Poly Pomona
U Chris Olivie UCLA

See also

References

  1. 2014 WCWS Records: 1980s Brackets/Rosters/Stats (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  2. 2014 WCWS Records: WCWS All-Time Results (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved February 28, 2015.
  3. 2014 WCWS Records: All-Time Tournament Records and Results (PDF). NCAA. p. 2. Retrieved February 13, 2015.
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