Oregon State Softball Camps
Head Coach Kirk Walker
Kirk
Walker
enters his 14th year as head coach of the Oregon State softball program, a
program that has made a monumental turnaround under his direction.
Walker reigns as
Oregon State's
all-time
winningest softball coach with a 462-347-3 career record. He earned his 400th
career coaching victory on March 25, 2006 when Oregon State rallied for a 2-1
8-inning win against BYU in the Beavers'
home opener.
The Beavers have
routinely beaten nationally-ranked teams and have shown improvement every season
since Walker's
arrival. His teams
have finished with 25-plus wins in the last 10 seasons and have won 40-plus
games eight times.
The 2007 season was
no exception. Walker led the Beavers to another 40-plus win season, finishing
41-23, coaching two players to All-American status in Brianne McGowan and
Cambria Miranda. The team was a steady force in the top 25, making its ninth
straight trip to the NCAA postseason, falling to No. 10 Michigan in the regional
title game.
Turning Oregon State
into a perennial national contender, Walker led the Beavers to their first ever
appearance in the NCAA Women's
College World
Series during the 2006 campaign.
One of
the best teams in Oregon State history, Walker's
2006 squad reeled
off a school record 28-game winning streak (the longest for any team in the
nation on the season), catapulted to a program-best #5 national ranking, and won
both the NCAA Regional and Super Regional to earn a WCWS berth. Oregon State
faced a pair of Pacific-10 Conference opponents (eventual national champion
Arizona and Arizona State) in the World Series before finishing the year with a
43-16 record.
Walker earned his
second Pacific-10 Conference Coach of the Year award after leading the 2005
Beavers to their first-ever Pac-10 title and the automatic berth to the NCAA
Regional Tournament. The Pac-10 championship was the first regular season title
for any women's sports program in Oregon State history. OSU compiled a 43-16
record and was ranked as high as #6 nationally in a year that saw the Beavers
win the season series against five conference opponents (Arizona, Arizona State,
Califoria, Oregon, Washington). The team won 22 consecutive games in the middle
of the season and earned a second-straight appearance in the NCAA Regional
Tournament championship game before falling to DePaul University.
Walker's 2004
youthful squad came within a few innings of earning Oregon State's inaugural
berth in the College World Series. The Beavers finished the year with a 44-28
record, falling to No. 6 ranked Michigan in the NCAA Regional Championship
game.
In 2003, Walker led
the Beavers to a 36-31 overall record and fifth consecutive trip to the NCAA
Regional Tournament. In the process, the Beavers knocked off 12 Top 25 opponents
and reached the Regional Championship game for the first time since 2000.
Walker guided the
2002 Beavers to a 40-25 overall record and 7-14 mark in Pacific-10 Conference
action. Oregon State made its fourth consecutive appearance in the NCAA Regional
Tournament and won 40-plus games for the fourth straight year.
In 2001, Walker led
the Beavers to a 44-24-1 overall record and 10-10 finish in Pac-10 action. OSU
reached the NCAA Tournament for the third straight year.
During the 2000
campaign Walker guided the Beavers to a 40-21-1 record and their second straight
appearance in the NCAA tournament.
Oregon State
finished one game shy, for the second consecutive season, of making its
inaugural trip to the NCAA Women's
College World
Series. Oregon State ended the 2000 campaign ranked 12th in the final NFCA/USA
Today Top 25 poll.
Walker guided Oregon
State to its first appearance in the NCAA Tournament in 1999, when the team
finished with a school-record 47 wins and had its first winning season since
1984. OSU also posted a school-record 14 Pacific-10 victories and finished
fourth in the league standings
–
at the time, the
highest for any Beaver squad in the history of the conference.
In addition to
setting the school record for wins, the Beavers set nearly 20 other
single-season team and individual records as well in 1999.
Oregon State
finished one game shy of making its first appearance at the 1999
Women's
College World
Series and was ranked 10th in the final NFCA/USA Today Top 25 poll for
OSU's
highest
season-ending ranking since joining the Pac-10. OSU was ranked as high as eighth
during the regular season.
For his
team
’
s success, Walker
was named the 1999 Pacific-10 Co-Coach of the Year and the Beaver coaching staff
also was named the Speedline Pacific Region Co-Coaching Staff of the Year.
Walker was honored as Oregon State
’
s Coach of the Year
in 1999 as well.
His 1998 Beavers
posted a record of 27-28
–
and up until 1999
that was the closest OSU had come to a winning season since 1984. OSU also
captured a then-school-record eight Pac-10 victories in 1998. The 1997 team won
29 games, the third most in OSU softball history at the time.
The pitching
staff
’
s earned run average
has dropped by nearly 70 percent over a six-year span. In 1995, the pitchers
combined for a 5.35 ERA, a far cry from the 1.59 ERA that the 1999 squad put
together. In addition, the 2005 Beavers set a school record with a .976 team
fielding percentage, notching nearly a 35-point improvement from his first
season. OSU
’
s team batting
average also improved 41 points between his first and third seasons.
Gaining recognition
for his involvement and success in coaching, Walker was named one of 12 coaches
to form the USA Softball National Team Coaches Pool through the 2004 Olympic
Games in Athens, Greece. Walker served as assistant coach for the USA Elite Team
during the summers of 2002, 2003 and 2004 while serving as an assistant coach
for the USA Red National team at various tournaments during the summer of 2001.
Walker came to
Oregon State after spending 11 seasons at national powerhouse UCLA as a manager
and assistant coach. During his time in Westwood, the Bruins won six NCAA titles
and made 10 appearances in the College World Series. The Bruins recorded an
impressive 111-17 (.867) record and won five Pac-10 titles during his stint. As
the head pitching instructor, Walker produced several All-Americans, including
Lisa Fernandez and Dee Dee Weiman.
Walker is also very
involved in the offseason by working at many camps and coaching in the Amateur
Softball Association. He has served as the head coach of the California
Commotion team, which has won the women
’
s major fastpitch
national title four consecutive years.
Walker has one
daughter, Ava. He is a native of Woodland Hills, Calif., and earned a
bachelor's
degree in
kinesiology from UCLA in 1988.
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