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Softball
 

  Diane Ninemire
Diane Ninemire

Player Profile
Position:
Head Coach

Experience:
21st Season at Cal

Record Entering 2006:
889-430

Since her first year in the dugout in 1988, Diane Ninemire has continually taken the Bears to new heights as one of the winningest and most successful softball programs in the nation. From 1999-2005, Cal made seven straight trips to the College World Series. With a national championship, nine Women's College World Series trips, and 20 straight NCAA Regional appearances to her credit, it is no wonder that Cal enters every season as a national contender.

Entering the 2008 campaign, Ninemire is 11 victories away from No. 900 (the most of any coach in the history of Cal athletics).

Since the 1999 season, California is an impressive 446-178 (.714), with five 50-win seasons. Over the last four seasons, Ninemire's squad has posted a 187-74 (.711) mark.

During Ninemire's tenure at Cal, 34 All-America, 80 all-region, and 134 all-conference certificates have been issued to Golden Bear athletes. Two of Ninemire's former players - Michele Granger and Gillian Boxx - were four-time All-Americans and helped the United States win a Gold Medal as members of the 1996 Olympic Team in Atlanta.

History was made in 2002 when Ninemire helped direct Cal to its first NCAA Championship at the WCWS with a 6-0 win over the Arizona Wildcats, the first women's title in Cal athletic program history. The 2002 team set a school record for wins (56), while Jocelyn Forest claimed the tournament's Most Outstanding Player honor, and Ninemire was chosen as the NFCA National Coach of the Year. Cal became the first Pac-10 team other than UCLA and Arizona to win the softball national title. Forest went undefeated in Cal's postseason run and completed the WCWS with a 4-0 record, 0.50 earned run average and 33 strikeouts in 28.0 innings.

Ninemire has enjoyed plenty of other memorable moments along her career path. In 2005, Cal won a share of the Pac-10 title (a first for a Ninemire squad), and advanced to its seventh consecutive WCWS. The 2004 version of the Bears were one of Ninemire's most successful and most decorated groups, as four All-Americans and eight All-Pac-10 selections helped drive Cal to its third consecutive WCWS championship game appearance. In 2001, Cal began the season 32-0 before finishing fifth at the WCWS. Under Ninemire, Cal has also finished third (1999), fifth (1992, 1996) and seventh (2000) at the WCWS.

Despite an up-and-down 2007 campaign, Ninemire's Golden Bears finished the season with 34 wins and a 22nd consecutive berth in the NCAA postseason (the longest active postseason streak in the Pac-10 and second-longest in the nation). According to the National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA), Cal boasted the fourth-hardest strength of schedule in the nation's No. 1-rated conference. With a squad that featured seven freshmen, the Bears posted eight wins against top 25 teams.

Prior to becoming head coach, Ninemire served as an assistant for five years at Cal under Donna Terry. Together, the tandem led the Bears to three appearances in the NCAA Tournament, a third-place finish at the 1986 WCWS and the inaugural Pac-10 championship in 1987.

In 2004, Ninemire's winning reputation was recognized internationally when she was named as an assistant coach to the inaugural Greek Olympic softball team. At home, Ninemire is a past member of the NCAA Pacific Region Advisory Committee and a former chair of the All-American Selection Committee.

Ninemire began her collegiate playing career at Midland Lutheran College (Fremont, Neb.), leading the team to a state championship as a freshman. After one season, she transferred to Nebraska-Omaha, where she played on both the softball and basketball teams for three years. A shortstop and left fielder, Ninemire helped UNO to the 1978 championship and three appearances in the College World Series.

Ninemire graduated from UNO in 1980 and completed her master's degree in physical education at Texas Woman's University in 1987. She began her coaching career at TWU in 1980 as Terry's assistant before heading west to assist Terry and the Golden Bear program in 1983.