The Washington Senators, founded in 1999, is the only
15U, 16U and 18U fast pitch softball tournament program in the Nation's Capital
and has represented the city locally, regionally and nationally at the 2002, 2003,
2006 and 2008 Pony National Softball Championships as
2005 and 2007 World Series against teams from around the nation and Canada. The
Senators teams also qualified for the 2005 and 2006 Winter World Championship in
Orlando, FL and the 2007 and 2008 ASA National Championship tournaments.
In only 10+ years of operation the team has gone from
an inexperienced group of 8-10 year old girls practicing in the shadow of the US
Capitol to establishing a nationally recognized softball program representing the
Nation's Capital successfully in national tournaments and area league play. The
Senators have finished in the top 20 USSSA or PONY national rankings seven times,
twice finishing in the final four and has high as second in a USSSA National Championship.
In 2004 the 14U team was ranked 1st nationally in USSSA tournament play and was
the top seed at the 2004 World Series. In 2006 the 15U team ranked at the top of
USSSA 15U and 16U "A" teams nationally by a wide margin. In 2007 the Senators 16U
team finished in the top 20 (17th) of the PONY National Championship field of more
than one hundred teams. In 2007 the 18u team finished in the Top 10 (9th) of the
ASA A Eastern Nationals and the 14U team competed in the USSSA World Series in Orlando,
FL. In 2008 the 18U Senators earned a berth to the PONY National Championship in
Ohio while the 15U team earned a berth to the ASA Eastern National Championship
in Sterling, VA.
The Senators organization is active in the DC coalition
to bring more baseball and softball facilities and opportunities to DC's children
and young adults. In 2007 the organization established a college scholarship program
to assist former Senators players active on the college softball circuit. The Senators
are registered with PONY, NSA, ASA, and USSSA for national tournament play and travel
much of the year playing national tournament competition at the 14U, 15U, 16U and
18U age level divisions. More than two dozen former players are now competing at
the D1-D3 level of college softball.