Stacey McManus

Stacey McManus (born April 1989 in Sydney) is an Australian softball player. She is a shortstop and second baseman, plays club softball and has represented New South Wales in national competitions. She is a member of Australia women's national softball team and competed at the Canadian Open Fastpitch International Series and the World Cup of Softball. She is trying to earn a spot on the team that will compete at the 2012 ISF XIII Women's World Championships.

Stacey McManus
McManus in March 2012 during a photoshoot
Personal information
NationalityAustralia
BornApril 1989
Sydney
Sport
CountryAustralia
SportSoftball
Event(s)Women's team

Personal

Stacey McManus was born in April 1989 in Sydney, New South Wales.[1][2] Both of her parents played softball.[3] She has 2 sisters. One of them. Brooke McManus, plays for New Zealand women's national softball team.[4] In 2011, her sister was playing for the New South Wales team.[3] She attended Endeavour Sports High School.[5]

Softball

McManus plays shortstop and second base.[3] She started playing softball when she was four years old.[3] In 2004, she was named to the New South Wales U16 team.[6] In 2005, she represented Endeavour Sports High School in the NSW CHS girls baseball knockout final. While she hit a home run, her team lost 7-2 and finished second in the competition.[5] She made her first New South Wales open representative team when she was sixteen years old.[3] In 2006, she played for the New South Wales side that won the Australian All Schools Softball Championship.[7] In 2009, she has a scholarship with and played for the Australian Institute of Sport team.[8]

National team

McManus is a member of Australia's women national softball team.[4] In March 2009, she participated in a Brisbane based training camp.[8] In July 2011, she accompanied the team on a tour of North America, the only national team player from her part of New South Wales selected for the team. During the tour, she represented Australia at the Canadian Open Fastpitch International Series and the World Cup of Softball.[3] In January 2012, she played against her sister and New Zealand in a three game test series that Australia won every game of.[4] She is a member of the 2012 Australia women's national softball team and is trying to earn a spot on the team that will compete at the 2012 ISF XIII Women's World Championships.[2]

Recognition

In January 2012, McManus and her sister were named 2012 monthly Leader-Tynan Honda Sportstar of the Year.[4]

gollark: This is also probably wrong. There are perfectly good reasons to spend more than the median family on some category, especially if the categories are particularly granular.
gollark: Oh, and lots of things (particularly computing equipment) are usable for fun *and* work purposes.
gollark: As another example, I spend a nontrivial amount of money on removing small and cheap-to-fix inconveniences from my life (for example, finally getting a mouse as it's nicer than my laptop's trackpad in some ways, getting lots of spare USB cables so I don't have to deal with moving them around, buying pens in boxes of 50-100 so that I can just give them away). Obviously I don't *have* to do that, but I would be inconvenienced and somewhat less productive if I didn't.
gollark: Recreational stuff is somewhat necessary in that you probably need to do fun things to maintain a good mental state, which you need to do things.
gollark: You can't really distinguish them nicely.

References

  1. "AIS Softball — Stacey McManus". Bruce, Australian Capital Territory: Australian Institute of Sport. Retrieved 8 March 2012.
  2. "Australian Open Women's Squad 2012". Australia: Softball Australia. 24 February 2012. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
  3. Forrest, Brad (2 July 2011). "Region hopes go with McManus". St. George and Sutherland Shire Leader. New South Wales, Australia. 2212077. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  4. Carayannis, Michael. "January Sportstar winners declared — Local News — Sport — General — St George & Sutherland Shire Leader". Theleader.com.au. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
  5. MATP (27 September 2005). "Kempsey gets home in final". Daily Telegraph. Sydney, Australia. p. 35. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  6. Riccio, David (28 September 2004). "Power play — Last minute heroics in under 12 softball — Georges River on the ball in grand final". Daily Telegraph. Sydney, Australia. p. 33. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  7. MATP (16 May 2006). "NSW top of the class". Daily Telegraph. Sydney, Australia. p. 63. Retrieved 13 March 2012.
  8. Grimaux, Andre (27 February 2009). "Weaver out on high note". The Northern Times. Brisbane. p. 64. TNT_T-20090227-1-064-931013. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
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