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List of college softball career coaching wins leaders

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of college softball career coaching wins leaders. It is limited to coaches with at least 1,000 career wins as a head coach.[1] This list includes games won at the NCAA levels. It does not include games won at the junior college level. Coaches with 1,000 wins at the NCAA Division I level are designated with peach shading.

All-time leaders

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As of the end of the 2024 NCAA softball season, Carol Hutchins of Michigan is the all-time NCAA wins leader with 1,707 wins.

Patty Gasso of Oklahoma has the highest winning percentage of all active or inactive Division I coaches with at least 1,000 wins, currently with a .811 percentage through the 2024 season.

College softball coaches with 1,000 wins

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Key

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* Active coach in 2025
Inducted into the National Fastpitch Coaches Association Hall of Fame
1,000 wins with an NCAA Division I program (or historic equivalent)[n 1]

Coaches

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Unless otherwise noted, statistics are correct through the end of the 2024 NCAA softball season. The list below corrects an error in the NCAA rankings, moving Rhonda Revelle from 29th to 31st."Softball Coaching Records Entering 2025" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved February 6, 2025.
Rank Name Years Wins Losses Ties Pct Teams
1 Carol Hutchins 39 1,709 552 5 .756 Ferris State (1982), Michigan (1985–2022)
2 Mike Candrea 34 1,674 436 2 .793 Arizona (1986-2003, 2005-2007, 2009–2021)
3* Patty Gasso 30 1,514 352 2 .811 Oklahoma (1995–present)
4 Margie Wright 33 1,457 542 3 .729 Illinois State (1980–1985), Fresno State (1986–2012)
5 Ralph Weekly 34 1,450 481 2 .751 Pacific Lutheran (1986–1994), Chattanooga (1995–1998, 2001), Tennessee (2002–2021)
6* Lori Meyer † 40 1,410 749 3 .653 Minnesota State (1985–present)
7 Donna Papa 40 1,368 820 5 .625 Susquehanna (1984–1985), North Carolina (1986–2023)
8 Diane Ninemire 33 1,359 687 1 .664 California (1988–2020)
9* Jo Evans 39 1,346 763 2 .638 Colorado State (1986–1989), Utah (1990–1996), Texas A&M (1997–2022), UC Santa Barbara (2023–present)
10 Gary Bryce † 40 1,340 793 8 .628 Wayne State (MI) (1982–2021)
11 Eugene Lenti 37 1,329 670 6 .664 DePaul (1980–1987, 1990–2018)
12* Karen Weekly 28 1,308 437 2 .749 Chattanooga (1997–2001), Tennessee (2002–present)
13* Patrick Murphy 27 1,304 394 4 .767 Northwest Missouri State (1995); Alabama (1999–present)
14 Yvette Girouard 31 1,285 421 1 .753 Louisiana–Lafayette (1981–2000), LSU (2001–2011)
15 Margo F. Jonker 40 1,269 811 7 .610 Central Michigan (1980–2019)
16* Les Stuedeman † 29 1,268 431 1 .746 Alabama-Huntsville (1996–present)
17* George Wares † 40 1,265 450 3 .737 Central (IA) (1985–present)
18 Chris Bellotto † 36 1,252 562 1 .690 Florida Southern (1985–2020)
19 Gayle Blevins 33 1,245 588 5 .679 Indiana (1980–1987), Iowa (1988–2010)
20 Jan Hutchinson † 33 1,215 288 2 .808 Bloomsburg (1978–2010)
21* Steve Warner 31 1,195 475 2 .715 West Virginia Wesleyan (1993–present)
22 JoAnne Graf 25 1,186 425 6 .735 Florida State (1984–2008)
23 Elaine Sortino 34 1,185 508 6 .699 UMass (1980–2013)
24* Bob Coolen 37 1,171 811 1 .591 Bentley (1985–1989), Hawaii (1992–present)
25 Lu Harris-Champer 25 1,168 432 1 .730 Nicholls State (1996–1997); Southern Miss (1999–2000); Georgia (2001–2021)
26 Vickee Kazee-Hollifield † 33 1,167 423 1 .734 Carson–Newman (1986–2018)
27 Melinda Fischer 39 1,165 872 4 .572 Eastern Illinois (1979–1980), Illinois State (1986–2022)
28 Frank Cheek † 25 1,147 363 2 .759 Humboldt State (1989–2013)
29 Bob Brock 34 1,134 776 1 .594 Baylor (1980–1981), Texas A&M (1982–1996), Sam Houston (2002–2018)
30* Judy Lawes 37 1,132 645 2 .637 Kutztown (1988–present)
31* Rhonda Revelle 32 1,127 665 0 .629 Nebraska Wesleyan (1987), Nebraska (1993-present)
32 Kathy Welter 32 1,126 573 7 .662 Oklahoma Baptist (1980–1982), Texas Tech (1983–1985), Cal State Bakersfield (1986–2011)
33* Ken Eriksen 27 1,117 583 1 .657 South Florida (1997–present)
34* Tim Walton 22 1,103 302 0 .785 Wichita State (2003-2005), Florida (2006–present)
35* Chris Hawkins 30 1,097 454 1 .707 USC Upstate (1995-present)
36* Mike Davenport 24 1,094 280 0 .796 North Georgia (2001–present)
37* John Tschida † 30 1,079 243 1 .816 Saint Mary's University of Minnesota (1995–2000), St. Thomas (MN) (2001–2021), Saint Mary's University of Minnesota (2022–present)
38 Donna Fields † 27 1,071 501 0 .681 St. Mary's University (TX) (1998–2024)
39 Joyce Compton † 28 1,066 563 3 .654 Missouri 1983–1986; South Carolina (1987–2010)
40* Glenn Moore 28 1,053 508 0 .675 William Carey (1996), LSU (1998–2000), Baylor (2001–present)
41 Sandy Montgomery 30 1,051 540 2 .660 SIU Edwardsville (1989–2018)
42 Jay Miller 32 1,043 726 0 .590 Purdue (1980–1981), Oklahoma City (1985–1987), Missouri (1988–2002), Mississippi State (2003–2011), Hofstra (2019–2021)
43 Rick Bertagnolli † 33 1,041 403 0 .721 USC Upstate (1992–93), Pennsylvania Western University, California (1994–2024)
44* Jana McGinnis 31 1,038 607 0 .631 Jacksonville State (1994–present)
45 George DiMatteo 31 1,032 539 6 .656 Lewis (1984–2014)
46* Mike Smith 24 1,026 417 0 .711 Biola (1999-2002), UC Riverside (2003), McNeese (2012-14), Ole Miss (2015-19), California Baptist (2004-11, 2022-present)
47* Shena Hollar 27 1,023 409 2 .714 Newberry (1998-99), Lenoir-Rhyne (2000-present)
48* Denny Griffin 36 1,016 415 0 .710 Alma (1989-present)
49 Linda Kalafatis 32 1,014 670 2 .602 California (PA) (1989–93), Akron (1994–96), Ohio State 1997–2012), Charleston (2014–2021)
50 Sandy Jerstad 27 1,011 359 2 .738 Augustana (SD) (1977–2003)
51* Megan Bryant 37 1,010 843 9 .545 Stetson (1986-87), Drake (1989-99), Stony Brook (2001-24)
52 Joan Joyce 28 1,004 664 1 .602 Florida Atlantic (1995–2022)
53 Tami Cyr 26 1,003 504 1 .665 Centenary (LA) (1987–1991), West Florida (1992–2014)
54 Michelle Frew 27 1,002 410 1 .709 Rollins (1995-2021), Charleston (2023-24)

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ The list includes coaches with 1,000 wins regardless of division. Coaches with 1,000 wins at an NCAA Division I school (or historic equivalents) are designated with the referenced peach shading. The referenced shading has also been used for coaches with historic programs that were among the elite programs of their era.

References

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  1. ^ "Softball Coaching Records Entering 2025" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved February 6, 2025.