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Father-daughter relationship builds softball star By Sam Newlon S T A F F
Bethaney Keen first stepped onto the field at 4-years-old and moved on to play professional softball in middle school. SPECIAL TO THE ORACLE
W R I T E R
He’s been by her side from the start. From playing T-ball to being named to the All-American Athletic Conference All-Rookie team after her freshman season last year, USF Softball’s Bethaney Keen’s father has played an integral piece in her success on the field, both as a coach and as a mentor. Bethaney’s first on-the-field experience with her father came when she was playing T-ball at 4-years-old, with her father, James Keen, as the coach. “She was the only girl on my team,” James said. “Truly, she was my best player. She’d throw the ball to first base, and the other kids couldn’t catch it.” Now at USF, Bethaney is doing what her T-ball teammates couldn’t — catching balls as the team’s everyday first baseman. Before she was hitting walkoff homeruns, as she did in USF’s 2017 season opener, Bethaney was surrounded by baseball. Her two uncles played Triple-A, while her older brother was a pitcher, which made for many days and nights at the ballpark. She was coached by her father throughout recreational softball, all the way until she started playing travel softball with the Tampa Mustangs in eighth grade. “My dad was always my coach,” Bethaney said. “My dad saw the potential in me when he pushed me. We would get into arguments all the time.” The arguments usually came
in the form of bickering when she and her dad were putting in extra practice on their own time, according to Bethaney. The two would get frustrated, one would storm off the field while the other stayed, then they would reconvene and get back to work after a cooling-off period. “We’d just bicker when I didn’t want to be there,” Bethaney said. “He’d say he was going to leave, and I’d realize I did actually want to be there. I would just stay on the field until he came back to soft-toss to me.” When asked about his perspective of the story, her father laughed. “Would we butt heads? Oh lord yes,” James said. “You get upset with your daughter, and you say ‘to heck with it’ and pick up the balls. She’d stay out there, and she knew I wouldn’t leave, and I even knew I wouldn’t leave. Then we’d get over it, and it’d be all good.” While softball was number one, James also said Bethaney wanted to be involved in several sports as she was grew up, including football, baseball and taekwondo. “She wanted to play all kinds of sports, but taekwondo she was really good at,” James said. “She was doing good with that when she got into weapons, nunchucks and all that. She’s competitive.” James described his daughter as a gamer and as someone who refused to back down from a challenge. When Bethaney shifted from playing recreational softball to
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