Dakota Kennedy prepared for this moment her entire life โ well, at least since she started playing softball around age 7.
First it was soccer, then baseball, but once she found softball, it stuck. Mike Candrea Field at Hillenbrand Stadium is exactly where she is supposed to be.
Once she moved into the starting lineup in left field, she never looked back in this, her rookie season as a Wildcat.
No adjustments to collegiate softball, no feeling overwhelmed playing for Arizona, which has been one of the elite programs in the country.
โI think itโs just knowing who I am and knowing Iโm here for a reason; I belong,โ Kennedy said. โAlso, my teammates just having my back. They believe in me, the coaches believing in me, my family, all my supporters believing in me. Just knowing I can be here.
โIf there was any weight on my shoulders, it just takes it all off. Because Iโm so comfortable playing the game I love.โ
Her teammates are relying on Kennedy to bring that quiet confidence, along with her loud bat, when No. 8 seed Arizona faces No. 9 seed ASU in the play-in game of the inaugural Pac-12 Tournament at 6 p.m. Wednesday at Hillenbrand. The winner of that game will play No. 1 seed UCLA at 4 p.m. Thursday.
Coming to Arizona from Sacramento, California, Kennedy was ranked No. 4 in the nation by Extra Inning Softball and the No. 1 center fielder. She has proved to be one of the top freshmen in the country.
Kennedy, who has started 47 of 51 games this season, has a slash line of .357/.451/.636. She is tied for 11th in the Pac-12 with 10 home runs โ her most recent a three-run blast in Sundayโs 9-4 win over Cal. She has 50 hits โ including a couple of grand slams, two triples, five doubles โ and driven in 35 runs.
โThe sky is the limit, I think everyone can see that,โ Arizona coach Caitlin Lowe said. โSheโs truly done nothing but get better every single day, and I know people see her at bat, but defensively too. Sheโs been able to throw some people out. She knows the game. Sheโs smart. Sheโs always soaking up information.
โAnd itโs kind of funny, sheโs one of those people youโre not sure what sheโs taking in. But at the end of the day, she comes back and sheโs like, โOh, yeah, sat on that changeup to the opposite field.โ (Itโs) great sheโs learning that her freshman year.โ
Kennedy takes pride in working on hitting, whether itโs talking to teammates Allie Skaggs and fellow freshman Olivia DiNardo, spending hours with her coaches or even on her own to prefect her swing and her approach for each at-bat. Kennedy especially likes that she is a dual-threat at the plate โ she can throw down a perfectly placed bunt or hit away โ and it keeps the defense off-balance.
Her approach, whether she is hitting or fielding โ she has only one error this season โ is the same: โFfocus on the task at hand when youโre doing it.โ
โWhen Iโm in the field, Iโm not worried about anything else. Iโm worried about being the best in my position,โ Kennedy said. โWhen Iโm up to bat, whether Iโm bunting or Iโm hitting, Iโm focusing on just that. If Iโm bunting, Iโm focusing on how I want to get the ball down. Iโm not worried about how Iโm going to hit the ball next, Iโm focused exactly on that. Or, if Iโm hitting, then Iโm just focusing on where I want the ball to go. Itโs being in the moment, being where your feet are.โ
This all comes naturally to Kennedy. Her parents, Erik and Marvina, instilled the work ethic, comfort level and confidence in her abilities in her and her three sisters.
โWe all played sports, and (my parents) told us, โYou can be the best at anything you do. Just put your mind to it.โ Theyโve always supported us โฆ they weโre just always there for whatever we needed,โ Dakota Kennedy said.
This is also where she got her athleticism. Her first coach was her dad, who pitched at Grambling State โ her connection to baseball. Marvina was a former basketball player at UTEP.
Her dad even put turf in the backyard so that Dakota and her younger sister, Micah, now 14, could play right outside their house. Micah Kennedy is a pitcher.
โShe actually throws decently hard, so sometimes Iโm afraid to catch her,โ Dakota Kennedy said. โI throw with her a lot. She also is a hitter, so we hit together. โฆ I do give her tips on hitting. Itโs a little difficult sometimes because I hit left-handed, she hits right-handed, but I can help her with mechanics. Tweak little things.โ
As she prepares for her first Pac-12 Tournament, Kennedy is excited to compete with her teammates and excited for at least one more game in front of the Arizona fans this season.
โI wasnโt sure how it was with me being a freshman โ they donโt know who I am โ but my first step out, the way they cheered, I was like, โOh my gosh.โ I did not expect this at all,โ Kennedy said.
โItโs just been amazing all year. The love they have for us is just out of this world. ... And the kids, theyโre so amazing. (They say), โI love you. Youโre my favorite player.โ And Iโm like, โYou are so amazing. You can do this. You can be here.โ โ