Week 2 Winner: Donya Mooney
Sole possession of the District 7-5A softball lead looked to be slipping away from
Mansfield Timberview (Arlington) in Friday's showdown with Mansfield High.
Trailing
3-1 going into the bottom of the sixth, Timberview coach Donya Mooney
saw a rare sign of doubt from freshman star pitcher
Mariah Denson
coming back to the dugout. Touched for six hits — including four for
extra bases — through six innings, a frustrated Denson found herself in
the unusual position of trailing.

Donya Mooney, Mansfield Timberview
Courtesy photo
Mooney asked Denson to turn around and look at her teammates.
"They
have your back,'' Mooney said to Denson, who was the leadoff hitter in
the sixth. "Now, go up there and get on base, because
Ashley Timmons is about to hit a home run and tie the game.''
The
coach was prophetic. Denson singled, Timmons, a junior catcher and
cleanup hitter, launched a game-tying home run. Timberview went on to
send 16 batters to the plate and score 12 runs for a 13-3 victory at
Timberview‘s softball park. Mansfield never recorded the third out in
the sixth inning. The 10-run mercy rule was invoked after a two-run
single by
Gabby Littles.
"That
was crazy,'' said Mooney, selected as the Dallas Coach of the Week
presented by Capital One Bank. "It was one of the most exciting games
I've been involved in.''
Timberview (17-4-1, 10-0), winner of 12
straight, increased its district lead to two games over Mansfield
(19-5-1, 8-2), its closest pursuer.
"I was thinking home run if I got an inside pitch,'' said Timmons, who upped her home run total to four.
Mansfield has only four games remaining to make up the deficit after being swept by Timberview in the season series.
The win was Timberview's 12th in a row and Denson improved to 14-2 with eight strikeouts, despite not having her best stuff.
"The
defining moment this season for Mariah Denson came in a tournament game
against Bryan,'' Mooney said. "They have a good team and their best
player hit a couple of home runs off her. But she came back to strike
out the side after the second one and, even though we lost the game, it
was a confidence-builder for Mariah and her teammates.''
The
coach said she never had any doubt about going almost exclusively with a
freshman pitcher. "She's played a lot of ball against some of the best
players in the nation in her age division, traveling to places like Las
Vegas and California,'' Mooney said. "My concern was if she could come
off the injury to her back.''
Denson spent several months
leading up to the season in a back brace to help her recover from a
stress fracture that worsened over time into a fractured vertebra. The
brace appears to have done its job.
Mooney, in her fifth season
at Timberview, said this group of players is special not only for its
skill, but also for the way they get along.
Before coming to
Timberview, Mooney made previous coaching stops at Bowie (Arlington) and
Chapel Hill (Tyler). She is a native of Haltom City, and played all the
school sports. But no softball.
Her high school days pre-dated
softball becoming a University Interscholastic League sport. Mooney had
to be satisfied with playing in summer softball leagues. Her position
was shortstop.
She continued her athletic career at Southern Arkansas University.
On Mooney's watch, Timberview has risen to No. 9 in the
Dallas Morning News' Class 5A area ranking.
At
Timberview Mooney teaches health and also instructs physical education
for special needs partners. One of her special needs students often
throws out the first pitch at Timberview home softball games.
Mooney said she could sense something special about this year's team.
"You'll
get a group of players like this every once in a while,'' Mooney said.
"We're well-rounded in most areas of the game, but we try to do more
than teach softball. We want them to learn things that will help them in
life. That's why this group volunteers to work in the community.''