University of Massachusets Athletics

Help Vote Danielle Henderson To NCAA 25th Anniversary Softball Team
March 15, 2006 | Softball
March 15, 2006
The 25th Anniversary of NCAA Women's Championships will be celebrated throughout the 2005-06 championship season. Division I Women's Softball began in 1981 and will be celebrating its 25th Anniversary at the 2006 championship. To commemorate this milestone a 25th Anniversary Team consisting of 10 student athletes and 1 coach (coaches are denoted by an asterisk "*") will be named with your help.
A member of the gold medal-winning 2000 U.S. Olympic softball team and 2001 WPSL Gold team, Henderson was inducted into the New England Women's Sports Hall of Fame in 2004.
Henderson, one of the most dominant strikeout pitchers in NCAA history, rewrote the UMass record book in her four seasons on the mound. A three-time All-America selection, Henderson was a four-time All-Atlantic 10 selection and a four-time A-10 Tournament Most Outstanding Player. Henderson capped her brilliant UMass career in 1999 by winning the Honda Award, given annually to the nation's top softball player. During the summer of that year, Henderson competed as part of the U.S. National Team that captured the gold medal at the Pan American Games and the Canada Cup.
The holder of 25 school records, Henderson finished her career second all-time on the NCAA's strikeout list with 1,343 in her four-year career. The nation's leader in strikeouts per seven innings in both 1998 and 1999, Henderson completed her career with two of the top 10 strikeout seasons, with 465 K's in 1999, which ranks fourth, and 430 strikeouts in 1998, which ranks sixth. In 1999, Henderson set a new NCAA record for consecutive scoreless innings, stretching out 105 scoreless frames from March 16-May 2. She also reeled off a 26-game win streak (Feb. 27-May 21), which ranks as the seventh-best streak in NCAA history. In her four-year career, she posted a 108-35 record in 161 appearances (964 innings), a 0.70 ERA, 72 shutouts, 135 complete games, and threw an astounding 14 no-hitters and three perfect games. She ranks in the top 20 in NCAA history in strikeouts, games, innings, starts, complete games, victories, strikeout ratio and shutouts. In 2001, Henderson was recognized for her accomplishments by becoming the first player in UMass softball history to have her jersey retired.