What The Division 1 Softball Fall Season Is Like
The fall season at the Division 1 level of college softball is a time of learning and growing for all student-athletes. Early-morning workouts, long afternoons of practice, and classes in-between make for a packed schedule and many adjustments to one’s life after a summer without nearly as many responsibilities for many D1 softballers.
It can also be a time of significant soreness, as the body of a Division 1 softball player starts to come back into form in the fall and gets acclimated again—or perhaps for the first time—to the intensity of the grind of college athletics. With lifting and conditioning serving as big parts of the fall softball season, it can be a grueling time for many student-athletes.
It can also be a wonderful time of growth and development, however, not only on the physical side of the game regarding strength and conditioning, but also on the mental side of it. The fall season is often a time when mental toughness is honed and worked on in preparation for the demands of the spring season and the ultra-packed schedule it features.
The fall is also a time of finding one’s groove. With a new school year in full swing by the time fall ball rolls around, living by a routine can be a lifesaver for any student-athlete. One of the biggest lessons one can learn in the fall is how to balance a new course load along with one’s softball responsibilities. If softball student-athletes learn this lesson in the fall, it will undoubtedly help them in the spring when they are hard-pressed for time and often unable to find room in their schedules for much outside of school and softball.
Division 1 softball players also learn the flow of a new team in the fall, even if they are returners to the squad. Each fall, a new team emerges from the year before with the previous year’s seniors having graduated, transfers having been added to the roster, and first-years now getting their initial taste of college softball.
Most importantly—and perhaps the best part of the entire fall softball experience—are the games that are played. With Division 1 softball teams being permitted to play eight exhibition games during the fall season, student-athletes get a little taste of what the spring season will be like.
Essentially, the fall season at the Division 1 level—and also at the other levels of college softball—is a time to practice for the real thing that is to come in the spring. The stakes are much lower in the fall, so that provides an ample runway to fail and try again multiple times across all different parts of the college softball experience. With that understanding, work on your mind and body, find your balance in the classroom, get after it on the field to try to earn your spot for the spring, learn the identity of your team, enjoy the freedom that comes from playing in exhibition games where stats don’t matter, and ultimately, give it all the old college try.