Smith making KC 'home sweet home'
Meredith Smith
Dan Stroud
Issue date: 1/22/07 Section: Sports
- Page 1 of 2 next >
|
"I love Kansas City," said Smith. "It's amazing to me that the program [softball] hasn't grown more in a city of so much opportunity."
That said, the coach also reluctantly admitted all of the 18-hour days she's put in since her arrival at UMKC in September 2006 haven't afforded her much time to see the sights. The team still has to tell her where the good restaurants are located, she said.
As a four-year letter winner in volleyball, basketball and softball at West High School in Knoxville, Tenn., Smith might have had expectations the University of Tennessee-Knoxville (UT) would be where she would continue her career. But the coach at UT made it known that local talent was not welcome.
Smith, though receiving offers from smaller Division I schools, said she looked for a school that would allow her to continue playing both softball and volleyball. The freshman deduced early on at Centre College, a NCAA Division III school located in Danville, Ky., that softball would take her farthest.
She excelled on the diamond and even set a Division III record by hitting five doubles in the same game. Smith also claimed all-conference honors in the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference.
Though Smith enjoyed early success at Centre College, the opportunity to test herself at the NCAA Division I level continued to intrigue her. In 2001, a transfer to East Tennessee State preceded her return home to UT, the school she grew up cheering on.
Moving to Tennessee initially as a walk-on, Smith soon after began building a career that had the potential to feed her love for softball indefinitely. She worked as a manager on the staff of the new head coaches, Ralph and Karen Weekly.
While Smith served under them, the two head coaches - a rarity in college athletics - returned the softball program to prominence, culminating in a College World Series appearance for the Volunteers in 2006.
"The Weeklys were the most beneficial part of my learning [at Tennessee]," said Smith. "One had detailed schedules, and the other one was a fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants type person. But the knowledge was so much richer learning under two head coaches. I was able to watch and work for two people, many times with differing views and get to see the end result of these discussions."
Spring Break

Be the first to comment on this story