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Monday, June 17
The Indiana Daily Student

sports

Living the dream

Garrett Lawton

While bleeding green as a student at Michigan State, Stacey Phillips was certain she would become a head softball coach in the Big Ten someday. \nPhillips told her head coach Jacquie Joseph, who still manages the Spartans today, she would also be giving steal signs and calling suicide squeezes for a living one day.\n“I want to coach, Coach,” Phillips said, recalling the exact conversation she had with Joseph at Michigan State. “Yep, that’s what I want to do.” \nPhillips’ statement, which Joseph thought was comical at the time, became reality when IU named her the head coach of the Hoosiers softball program in 2006. \nAt Michigan State, Phillips excelled in many fronts of the game. A four-year letter recipient in East Lansing, Phillips was an offensive machine and still holds several records at her alma mater.\n“It’s funny because any of my records that still stand are probably going to be broken in the next five years,” Phillips said. “I just don’t want anybody to break it when we play them.”\nDespite hanging up her Spartan jersey in 2000, Phillips wasn’t ready to leave the game for good. \nThe then-recent graduate, who holds a bachelor’s degree in audiology speech sciences, started her coaching career as an assistant with the University of Detriot-Mercy. Around the same time, she was drafted professionally. \nPhillips was the No. 1 pick for the San Antonio Armadillos of the National Pro Fastpitch League. \nEven though San Antonio drafted her, the team failed to form and the Akron Racers redrafted Phillips the following year, but she never played. \n“I was drafted a bunch of times professionally, but never played,” said Phillips. “But I like picking the brains of some of these Hall of Fame coaches who were drafted as well.”\nTwo years later, Phillips became the head coach of the Hoosiers.\n“Coach Phillips’ enthusiasm and passion for the game of softball serves as a source of strength for our program,” said Chris Reynolds, IU’s senior associate athletic director, in an e-mail. “She is a tireless worker and genuinely cares about helping our student-athletes reach their full potential on and off the field.”\nPhillips said recruiting will flourish thanks to the IU Varsity Club’s plan to build a new $6 million stadium for the softball squad.\n“We are going to secure the talent that matches that $6 million stadium,” Phillips said. “In particular, the kids who are in our program now are worth $6 million plus.”\nPhillips said she loves being a part of IU softball because her players are always looking to improve their play on the field. \n“Our players are great kids,” Phillips said. “They had made a commitment and continue to remain loyal to this program.”\nAs for the upcoming season, Phillips said her team is ready for challenges ahead due to its mix of experience and youth.\nThe Hoosiers return senior catcher Tory Yamaguchi and senior infielder Jennilee Huddleston – the two top batters from last season. \n“Tory and Jennilee are both great leaders for this ball club,” Phillips said. “They both represent pictures of toughness and have a lot of passion for \nthe sport.”\nAfter hitting .335 at the plate last season, Huddleston has high hopes for the team this year.\n“We’ve had a good and productive off-season and are feeling very confident in where we are headed this season,” Huddleston said in an e-mail. “There’s no doubt in my mind that this will be a successful season for us.”\nAnd when the time comes on April 20, Phillips will stand in the opposite dugout of her former coach Joseph, ready to bleed red instead of her \nformer green. \n“I might still have some green blood in me, but now I’m all about the crimson,” \nPhillips said.

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