With 10 future Division I softball players and eight others likely to have collegiate futures, the biggest obstacle facing Norco softball coach Richard Robinson is Mother Nature.
"The team is looking good just anxious to play," said Robinson, beginning his 20th year with the California powerhouse. "Every day we are scheduled to play it's rained."
The wet weather might be the only thing that slows the Cougars, who have a goal to repeat as California's Southern Section champions. Norco opens the 2019 season ranked No. 1 in the MaxPreps preseason Top 50 softball rankings.
2019 MaxPreps Top 50 preseason high school softball rankings
The Cougars won the CIF Southern Section D-I title a year after entering the 2017 D-I title game 33-0 and ranked No. 1 in MaxPreps, only to lose on the final day of the season.
It's well known that California's Southern Section is regarded as the toughest of any district in the country.
Robinson's resume supports that: a 455-129 won-loss record, five Section titles and 10 league titles. And more than 100 players who have gone on to play collegiately.
Whether this turns into his best team ever or not remains to be seen. So far, Mother Nature is winning.
But as Robinson puts it, "We again have a good mix of speed and power offensively. We also have strong pitching and defense."
When the 2019 MaxPreps Preseason All-American Softball team is announced next week, Norco will have three players represented — catcher
Kinzie Hansen (signed with Oklahoma), senior infielder
Paige Smith (Mississippi) and junior pitcher
Sarah Willis (Washington pledge).
Three other starters —
Raegan Cheyne (Mississippi),
Katelyn Olson (Fullerton),
Allison Beecher (Colorado State) — also return. Add newcomers
Kyleigh Sand (DePaul) and
Abby Dayton and the Cougars get the early season nod as No. 1.
Hansen, a right-handed catcher, hit .596 with 31 hits, 35 RBIs, four home runs last year. She had a .992 fielding percentage and hit safely in 23-of-25 games. Hansen was named California's Southern Section D1 Player of the Year and has three MaxPreps' All-American honors (Freshman, Junior, At-Large).
Willis was a MaxPreps Sophomore All-American in 2018 when she was 25-3 with a 1.26 ERA and 188 strikeouts pitching against an arsenal of Orange County sluggers. She also batted .436 with 21 RBIs.
During the postseason, no one was hotter than Smith, who led the Cougars in clutch hits, driving in 41 with seven home runs.
Needless to say there is plenty of depth on a team full of future collegiate players. On a team that batted .379 against Southern California pitching, 11 players return. And sophomore pitcher
Stevie Hansen (no relation to Kenzie) was 4-0 and averaged better than a strikeout per inning. She allowed just 12 base hits.

Norco won the CIF Southern Section Division I title last year and opens 2019 as the No. 1 team in the MaxPreps Top 50 softball rankings.
File photo by Ming Chung Lin
2. Marist (Chicago), 31-4When asked what her team strengths was, coach Colleen Biebel said "our strength will be our lineup."
She probably couldn't be more accurate with a team that features as many as a dozen future college players and a pair of MaxPreps Underclass All-Americans in
Lexi Voss (Michigan) and
Angela Zedak (Northwestern).
Voss had monster season in 2018: 70 RBIs, 76 hits, 19 homers, 16 doubles and a .644 batting average. She notched a base hit in all but one game and finished the season on a 30-game hit streak. She either scored or drove in a run in all but one game.
Recovering from an injury, Zedak did it at the plate and in the circle when she hit .505, with 18 homers, drove in 47, while slugging .957 with 14 two-out, run-scoring doubles. She was also 15-1 with a 1.59 ERA as Marist went 32-4 on the season.
The Redhawks are loaded with future collegians suiting up — senior catcher
Cassie Lindmark (Kentucky), sophomore pitcher
Abby Dunning (Dartmouth pledge), junior outfielder
Brianna Brown (Penn), senior
Jess Balich (Iowa State), senior
Kelly Walinski (Northern Illinois), junior
Gabby Altobelli (Wisconsin), sophomore shortstop
Easton Lotus (Louisville ), senior corner
Madison Garofalo (Wisconsin Platteville)."
"We have a great mix of power and speed," said Biebel.
The Redhawks graduated two seniors in 2018 and return 14 players who combined to hit 70 homers and bat .469 as a team. Walinski, Zedak and Voss combined for 50 of those round-trippers.
3. Hamilton (Chandler, Ariz.), 35-2Favored to win the 2018 state 6A title, the Huskies lost on the season's final day. They will attack their goal to win it all with mix of seniors, juniors, sophomores and another outstanding freshman.
"We will be strong at key positions, like pitching and catching, which is the foundation of what should be a very good defense," said longtime coach Rocky Parra. "Our lineup will be strong from 1-9 and deeper than that. We hope to keep the pace of our 35-2 record of last year."
All six Hamilton seniors have signed to play in college next year. Leading the way is senior MaxPreps All-American
Macy Simmons, a catcher and a member of the USA junior national team. The Arizona signee batted .547 with 16 homers last year.
Other senior signees include Georgetown signee
Lorena Vasquez-Inzunza (.500 average, nine homers),
Danielle Cole (Concordia signee), versatile Washington signee
Adhya Tandon (.400 average), George Fox University signee
Tierney Zubchevich (.389 average).
Sophomore pitcher
Loganne Stepp was a MaxPreps Freshmen All American who went 11-0 with an 0.52 ERA and 114 strikeouts in 67 innings.
Junior third baseman
Teagan Dobson, who batted .500 a year ago, also plays on the Australian 19U National team.
4. Oakleaf (Orange Park, Fla.), 30-3Some teams rebuild when six seniors graduated to the collegiate level. Oakleaf just reloads.
"We had some young depth last year who will get their chance to shine this year," said coach Christian Thompson. "I anticipate a tough year schedule wise, but I think we are primed to have a great season."
Oakleaf lost 1-0 in the state 8A title game, but return the state's 8A Pitcher of the Year in Central Florida signee
Madi Davis (18-2, 1.06 ERA). Jacksonville signee
Cambria Arturo (9-1, 0.87 ERA), Florida commit
Katie Kistler (.485 average, 24 steals, 14 doubles), Florida signee
Baylee Goddard (14 doubles, 16 steals, .346 average), UNC commit
Kaylee Lambrecht (.339 average, 26 RBIs, 29 runs, 17 stolen bases) all return as well.
Adding to the reloaded lineup is transfer
Jaeda McFarland, a speedy outfielder who has committed to Louisiana Tech. She batted over .500 last season and led Lansing (KS) in every offensive category. Thompson calls her "lightning fast and an immediate impact player."
5. Keller (Texas), 31-3-1MaxPreps All-American pitcher
Dylann Kaderka returns after going 24-2 in 2018 and 54-7 over the last two years. This year, she gets to share the load as talented
Ashley Breeding has arrived to give Keller one of state's best one-two pitching combination.
Add another MaxPreps Sophomore All-American
Alexa Langeliers, who hit .522 as a freshman, and combine that youthful trio with LSU pledge
Hayden Brown (.508 average), Texas Tech pledge
Riley Love (.436 average) and senior outfielder
Amanda DeSario, who has signed with Texas Tech and Keller, the large school runner-up, is the Lone Star State's best. DeSario batted .506 a year ago and was a MaxPreps Freshman All-American in 2016.
6. Huntington Beach (Calif.), 21-8 The Oilers lost 6-5 to Norco in the Southern California D-I quarterfinals. Guess what goal their goal is for 2019?
Coach Jeff Forsberg and his team might just have a shot as he said his team strengths are "Experience, pitching, speed and chemistry."
Led by Washington signee and USA Junior Olympic team member
Jadelyn Allchin, the Oilers also return pitcher
Grace Uribe (Texas A&M pledge),
Devyn Greer (NC State pledge),
Shelbi Ortiz (Utah),
Ameryn Humble (Drexel),
Laren Cox (Vanguard),
Valerie Rudd (Abilene Christian),
Reanna Rudd (North Dakota St),
Kelly Ryono (Illinois),
Megan Ryono (Columbia) and
Katelyn Mangrello (UC-Santa Barbara).
Allchin has hit over .400 in her high school career, with an OPS over 1.200 each of the last two seasons. She also earned All-Southern California honors multiple times. As a junior, she had 21 extra-base hits in 28 games, included double-digit doubles.
Forsberg says newcomers
Jaylene Duarte and
Anna Carreon will make an immediate impact.
7. Foothill (Pleasanton, Calif.), 24-4After allowing just 40 runs in 27 games, Foothill lost 2-0 in the North Coast Section D-I finals.
The sting may still be there, but eight starter players are aiming for a different outcome in 2019.
Heading the list is MaxPreps Underclass All-American pitcher
Nicole May (Oklahoma pledge) and seniors
Hope Alley (Pittsburgh) and
Ellen Ebbers (Morgan State), and juniors
Courtney Beaudin and
Hailey Hayes (Boise State pledge).
May earned her postseason honors going 21-2 with an 0.68 ERA, struck out 209 in 128 innings and walked 24. She also batted .404. May was also a MaxPreps' All-American as a freshman when she led Foothill to the CIF North Coast Section DI championship. She struck out 293 and finished with a 0.84 ERA. She was selected by the All-Bay Area News Group to its first team All-Star team.
Coach Matt Sweeney said the team strengths "are our eight returning starters, who are great workers and very competitive. They are extremely battle tested over the past three seasons."
8. Los Alamitos (Calif.), 24-3Year in and year out, the Griffins play as tough a schedule as any team in the country and 2019 will be no different. But optimism is — once again — extremely high with four senior college signees —
Ali Belarde (Utah),
Samantha Denehy (UC-Santa Barbara),
Erin Mendoza (Oregon State) and pitcher
Sarah Ladd (Michigan State).
The left-handed Ladd went 18-2 with a 1.20 ERA to help Los Alamitos earn a share of the Sunset League title.
Other key returnees are
Tyler Denhart,
Emma Sellers,
Jamie Sellers and
Sophia Nugent (.412 average 31 RBIs, no errors). Nugent, Ladd and Belarde earned MaxPreps postseason honors.
And if that contingent isn't enough, the Griffins have a plethora of newcomers to give them added pitching and speed on the bases.
9. Lakewood Ranch (Bradenton, Fla.), 24-5The Mustangs lost 1-0 to Oakleaf in state semifinals a year ago, but return a roster full of future collegiate players looking for a showdown repeat.
Lakewood Ranch is led by Florida commit first baseman
Avery Goelz (.541 average, 31 RBIs, 19 extra base hits), Connecticut commit
Payton Kinney (0.81 ERA, .358 average), North Carolina pledge
Brooklyn Lucero (.442 batting, 5-1 record), East Carolina commit
Taylor Woodring (.381 average, 30 RBIs) and senior
Maddie Koczersut (.409 average, 37 runs).
Add senior
Kayla Howald (Campbell signee) who played little in 2018 due to injury, but still struck out 38 in 24 innings, and Oakleaf will hear footsteps.
10. Orange Lutheran (Orange, Calif.), 26-5It's very likely No. 10 could be too low for the Lancers.
They return all nine starters from last year's 26-win team, led by MaxPreps All-American
Ciara Briggs (LSU signee) and Ohio State-bound
Mariah Rodriguez — both four-year starters.
Briggs is a multiple-time MaxPreps All-American and she hit .490 with 12 doubles, four triples, 30 RBIs, 10 steals and eight home runs. She was the Michelle Carew Classic Tournament Most Valuable Player. Rodriguez hit .422 with 37 RBIs.
The Lancers also return their top two pitchers from last year's squad —
Mia Bagatorian (Dartmouth) and
Taryn Lennon (BYU), who combined to go 26-5.
Other college signees of commitments are
Jaeden Barajas (Utah Valley),
Brenna Begin (Arizona State),
Victoria Fragoso (Kentucky),
Tayler Holcroft (Nevada-Reno),
Miranda Stoddard (Kentucky),
Sarah Taylor (Mercer) and
Paloma Usquiano (Arkansas). Stoddard and Begin are transfers who will make an immediate impact.
11. Forney (Forney, Texas), 35-6The reigning state 5A champion Jackrabbits enter season with 27-game winning streak. Leading the way are Kansas pledge
Savanna DesRochers, who as a sophomore was 28-4 with a 1.02 ERA while hitting .584 with 12 home runs and 56 RBIs.
Texas A&M pledge
Trinity Cannon has Player of Year caliber talent after hitting 22 home runs and 87 RBIs in her first two years of high school. Last season, she hit .567 and scored 50 runs.
12. Chino Hills (Chino Hills, Calif.), 30-5A ton of experience returns in
Kendall Mangel (27-3),
Brooke Johnson (.430, 11 homers, 30 RBIs),
Kayla Chavez (.348 average, four homers, 26 RBIs),
Mykenzie Hanna (.360, five homers, 25 RBIs) and
Makena Brocki (.385, 20 steals).
College signees and commits include Mangel (Maryland pledge), Johnson (DePaul signee), Brock (San Diego State commit), Estrada (Arkansas pledge) and Barnes (St. Francis-NY signee).
Newcomers
Maddie Barnes,
Mia Escujuri,
Tatum Johnson and
Kiki Estrada are ready for prime time.
13. O'Connor (Phoenix), 30-5-1The big loss was four-year all-stater Grace Lyons (now starting for Oklahoma), but the returners have what it takes to win a state title, starting with
Kaylee Erickson (BYU signee),
Rylee Holtorf (Washington commit), and pitchers
Danielle Wilson and
Maddy Youngblood.
14. Gahr (Cerritos, Calif.), 24-6Jazmine Hill (Arizona signee),
Gisele Tapia (Duke) and
Shasiel Fregoso (Louisiana Lafayette) give Gahr a lot to work with.
15. The Woodlands (Texas), 24-8-1Seven starters return from last year's 24-win team including seniors
Abby Jones (signed with Tulsa), Skylar Stockton and Tennessee commit
Amanda Curran (11-2, 1.29 ERA, 11 homers). There's plenty more talent with super sophomore
Kayla Falterman (29 steals, .472 average, 34 runs) and junior
Skylar Sirdashney (.389 average, four homers, 29 RBIs).
16. Fort Myers (Fla.), 28-3The Green Wave returns six starters, including South Florida signee
Vivian Ponn (15 homers, .538 average, 46 RBI), Dartmouth-Bound
Maria Angelino (.319 average, 26 runs), Furman signee
Riley Ludlam (.449 average, 28 RBIs), Lipscomb signee
Meghan Kline (.430, 30 runs, 31 RBI) and Tampa-bound
Avery Perkins (.395).
Add juniors
Ryley Topliff (.429 average, eight homers),
Allama Consolazio (.456 average) and sophomore
Riley Sanders (19 steals, .438 average) and the Green Wave will challenge in every inning. Ponn (6-1, 1.70 ERA) is expected to be the pitching ace.
17. Cienega (Vail, Ariz.), 29-6Shooting for a third-straight 5A title, the Bobcats have a lot talented to make it three straight and four out of five.

Blaise Biringer, Cienega
File photo by Kevin Finch
18. Atascocita (Humble, Texas), 35-7Defending 6A champs return six everyday players from title team.
19. Bonney Lake (Wash.), 26-2The defending state 3A champs open on a 14-game win streak are led by MaxPreps All-American pitcher
Brooke Nelson and six other returning starters.
Nelson, who has signed with Washington, put up big numbers in 2018 with a 21-2 mark with a 0.51 ERA and 289 strikeouts in 138 innings. She fired five no-hitters, including two perfect games, and recorded 30 strikeouts in a row over two games. Nelson batted .654 with 17 home runs, 46 runs scored, 51 RBIs and a 1.457 slugging percentage.
20. Jackson (Mill Creek, Wash.), 25-1Defending 4A champs are loaded and are heavy favorites to repeat with
Iyanla (Ice) Pennington in circle. She batted .507, homered eight times and was 22-1 with a .0.35 ERA. She averaged more than two strikeouts per inning and pitched 15 shutouts, including three in four games at the state tournament. But the Timberwolves aren't a one-dimensional team with five other starters returning.
21. Spain Park (Hoover, Ala.), 41-11The Jaguars reached the state finals last year and did so without a senior. This season they have five —
Maddie Majors (Auburn),
Bailey Bowers (Alabama-Birmingham),
Kate Campbell,
Caroline Wooley and
Caroline Kendrick (Hofstra). All were major offensive contributors. And Campbell teamed with sophomore ace
Annabelle Widra for 38 wins. Widra also batted .468.
22. Bentonville (Bentonville, Ark.), 31-3Cailey Cochran (1.28E RA, 23-2) is back for her senior year with a goal of repeating as state champions.
She has an impressive supporting cast led by seniors
Jenna Wildeman (.582 average, 64 hits, 52 runs, 46 steals),
Morgan Nelson (.485 average, 39 RBIs), and
Megan Crownover (31 RBIs). Pencil in sophomores
McKenzie Vaughan (12 homers, 49 RBIs, .462 average) and
Riley Hayes (.552 average, 29 runs) and the Tigers are heavy favorites to repeat. Cochran, Wildeman and Crownover have signed with Central Arkansas.
23. Champion (Warren, Ohio), 31-0The Golden Flashes are back-to-back state D3 champions that enter the season on a 39-game win streak. They committed just 14 errors a year ago and strikeout less than three times per game. With stellar junior pitchers
Allison Smith and
Sophie Howell returning, keep a close eye on that win streak. They combined to strike out 344 in 189 innings and twirled 19 shutouts as sophomores. Smith also had 15 homers and 55 RBIs.
24. Center Grove (Greenwood, Ind.), 30-2Senior pitcher
Abby Herbst (21-1, 0.56 ERA and team-high .583 average) returns, as do six other players who homered on a team that batted .401. Center Grove committed 17 errors last season and struck out an average of only twice a game. Herbst has signed with Wisconsin and
Piper Belden has signed with Indianapolis.
25. Keystone (La Grange, Ohio), 34-0The Wildcats will have one of the best pitcher-catcher combinations anywhere with hurler
Sydney Campbell (Oakland signee) and
Autumn Acord (Kent State signee). Campbell was 29-0 with a 0.20 ERA and 19 shutouts last season and Acord batted .649 with 63 hits, 51 RBIs and 48 runs.
Senior outfielder
Shelby Fortune (Akron) and junior outfielder
Marlie McNulty (Pitt commit) are also future college players. This team has depth, speed and pitching and has won 44 of its last 45. Keystone enters 2019 with a 34-game winning streak.
26. Hoover (Clendenin, W. Va.), 33-0The 2018 Huskies hit .407 as a team, scored 273 runs and allowed 25. The team ERA was 0.58 and pitchers
Delani Buckner and
Presley McGee combined to strike out 338 batters as sophomores.
27. Pinnacle (Phoenix), 31-6Morgan Smith (12-3, 3.53 ERA, 13 homers, .489 average) will take center stage in the circle as the defending state champions go after a repeat.
28. Shawnee Heights (Tecumseh, Kan.), 25-0Returnees include all-state players
Paige Petefish,
Abbey Fischer,
Aniya Holt and
Jaycee Ginter as the back-to-back state champs begin the year with a 50-game winning streak.
Three-time all-American and five-time all-state pitcher
Aspen Wesley is back for senior year as the Rockets has won 39 straight and 67 of the last 70. She allowed five earned runs and struck out 319 in 143 innings a year ago in winning all 23 of her starts. Senior standouts
Tori Henderson (.452 average, 36 RBIs) and
Rivers Gray also return (.491 average, 42 RBIs). Freshman
Tenly Grisham batted .453, stole 27 bases and scored 50 times as a varsity eighth-grader.
30.Oshkosh North (Oshkosh, WI), 27-2All-American
Syd Supple (Northwestern) wants to forget a first-round playoff loss and has strong supporting cast in quest for state title.
31. Byrnes (Duncan, S.C.), 30-4With
Kasey Widmyer (SC-Upstate) in the circle, the Rebels can beat anyone. She as 22-0 with a 0.40 ERA and opponents batted .122 against her.
32. South Granville (Creedmoor, N.C.), 27-0Seven starters return from team that ran the table in 2018 and one of those is sophomore pitcher
Brooke Bowling, who was 24-0 with a 1.78 ERA.
33. Klein Collins (Spring, Texas), 35-6Three All-Staters —
Mia Cantu (Louisiana-Lafayette),
Kenedy Hines (Texas-Arlington) and
Katy Schaefer (Houston Baptist) — return. They combined to drive in 100 runs and bat almost .500. Hines was also 14-0 with a 1.46 ERA.
Andrea Lyon (Gardner Webb) returns after going 27-2 with a 0.77 ERA and 286 strikeouts in 172 innings. She also homered 13 times. Other big sticks returning are
Hannah Goodwin (Clemson) and
Shelby Davies.
35. Salpointe Catholic (Tucson, Ariz.), 32-4-1Alyssa Aguilar (14-3, 1.27 ERA, strikeout per inning) returns for defending 4A champs along with five players who batted over .400 a year ago.

Alyssa Aguilar, Salpointe Catholic
File photo by Mark Jones
36. Dripping Springs (Texas), 25-9Future collegians
Logan Hulon (Houston),
Camille Corona (Texas),
Ryann Campbell,
Bailey Hudgeons (Texas Lutheran) and
Kyndall Womack give the Tigers experience and versatility for a deep postseason run.
37. Ironwood Ridge (Tucson, Ariz.), 27-10Seven players who hit over .300 a year ago return.
38. Ashley Ridge (Summerville, S.C.), 23-3The State 5A runner-up Swamp Foxes return seven starters, including senior pitcher
Katie Freeman (Charleston).
39. Chaminade (West Hills, Calif.), 21-7Tessa Magnanimo (Wisconsin) makes the Eagles contenders on a daily basis.
40. Severna Park (Md.), 27-2-1The Falcons got the 4A title a year ago and with nine returnees — including pitcher
Kylie Dingess and Gatorade winner
Campbell Kline — a repeat is not a long shot.
41. Hurricane (W. Va.), 25-3MaxPreps Sophomore All-American
Harley Vannater led the Redskins to the state 3A title (their fourth in five seasons). Vannater went 21-3 with a 1.19 ERA, 200 strikeouts and four no-hitters.
42. Pembroke Pines Charter (Pembroke Pines, Fla.), 26-5Seven starters return from title-winning 7A team.
43. South Caldwell (Hudson, N.C.), 29-4Sophomores
Ciara Hanson,
Jasmine Hall and
Reagan Weisner return along with pitchers
Jenna Pittman and
Anna King.
44. Rock Island (Ill.), 32-5All-state pitcher
Ashley Peters (Purdue signee) wants another state-title finish.
45. Sheridan (Ark.), 30-3The Yellowjackets won their final 22 games and the 6A state title and return their three top pitchers.
46. Fairhope (Fairhope, Ala.), 45-7The Pirates won the 2018 7A title with an eighth-grader in the circle. Well,
Alea Johnson is back for four more years.
47. Huntingtown (Md.), 23-1The Hurricanes have won 25 of their last 26.
48. Masuk (Monroe, Conn.), 26-0Five future collegians — led by pitcher
Madison Procyk — put Masuk atop the state preseason list.
49. Sun Prairie (Sun Prairie, Wis.), 30-0Maddie Gardner (Wisconsin pledge) returns for her junior season. She was unbeaten as a sophomore.
50. Marist (Eugene, Ore.), 25-4MaxPreps All-Americans
Ariel Carlson (Oregon signee) and
Abby Doerr highlight a team with nine starters returning.

South Caldwell (N.C.) returns sophomores Ciara Hanson, Jasmine Hall and Reagan Weisner along with pitchers Jenna Pittman and Anna King.
File photo by Carin Goodall-Gosnell