Yvette Healy headshot 2017

Yvette Healy

The Healy File
Education
DePaul, 1999
Family
Husband, Shawn; daughters, Grace & Maeve
Coaching Experience
Overall Record: 579-482-2
Head Coach, Wisconsin (2010-present) 448-310-1 (15)
Head Coach, Loyola University (Ill.) (2004-2010) 131-172-1
Assistant Coach, DePaul University (2002-2004)
Championships
Big Ten Tournament: 2013
Horizon League: 2007
Awards
Horizon League Coach of the Year: 2007
DePaul head coach Eugene Lenti:
"Yvette Healy is the perfect fit for Wisconsin. She has everything you're looking for in a head coach with her leadership skills as well as her experience. She's a talented offensive coach, who loves to be aggressive, executing hit and runs, squeezes, etc. She's also a great recruiter and family-oriented person who understands what it takes to be a successful student athlete, being that she was an All-American herself."
Arkansas head coach Mike Larabee
"Yvette is a coach that I have always had great respect for. Her teams are always very well coached, disciplined and know how to play the game with energy and passion. She will do an outstanding job in turning around the Wisconsin softball program."

Yvette Healy enters her 16th season at the helm of the program with the highest winning percentage of any UW coach in the program’s 30-year history with a .591 (448-310-1) winning percentage.

Last season, 2025, Wisconsin flipped the script from a season ago finishing 33-21 (11-11), compared the 21-31 (8-15) record the prior season. On March 28, the Badgers had already matched the amount of wins from 2024 with a series sweep over the Iowa Hawkeyes. A trio of Badgers earned All-Big Ten under Healy, Hilary Blomberg, Danielle Lucy, and just the third All-American in program history in freshman Kendra Lewis. 

In 2023, Wisconsin finished with fifth place finish and Big Ten Tournament appearance and a 27-20 overall, 12-10 (B1G) record. The Badgers went on a nine-game winning streak before falling to No. 9 Texas, 5-1. In the Bevo Classic, however, Wisconsin upset No. 13 Alabama, 7-6. UW would score five runs in the fourth and fifth innings, but none bigger than a two-run sixth to take the lead and secure an upset over the Tide. Katie Keller got into scoring position with a one-out double to left center, and then Kayla Konwent two-run home run over All-American Montana Fouts. The win over Alabama marked just the second win over the Crimson Tide.

The Badgers would go on to see two earn All-Big Ten First Team, Maddie Schwartz and Katie Keller. The two would also go on to earn NFCA All-Region honors, with the addition to Kayla Konwent being added to that list. Konwent continued her offensive prowess into her Graduate year as she earned All-American (third team) honors for the second time in her career.

Of the nine times that Wisconsin has made to NCAA postseason, Healy has led the softball program to six NCAA appearances. In 2022, the Badgers finished eighth in the Big Ten, but awarded an at-large bid to the Gainesville Regional. In Florida, the Badgers dropped its opening game against Georgia Tech, 2-1, but fought off two elimination games against Canisius, 3-0 and Georgia Tech, 7-6 before falling to No. 14 Florida in the Gainesville Regional Final.  
The Badgers combined for a 32-32 over the course of 2021 and 2020. Wisconsin competed in 24 games before the COVID pandemic canceled the remaining of the season. In 2021, the Big Ten decided to play Big Ten games only where the Badgers tallied 18 wins, including a series win over Nebraska.

Healy’s best season so far has come in 2019 where the Badgers put up 43 wins, the second-most in program history, including wins over No. 17 NC State, No. 9 Texas, and No. 15 Arizona State. The Badgers would wrap the Big Ten Season in fifth place at 15-8. Wisconsin would go on to win its first two games in the Big Ten Tournament with wins over Iowa and Ohio State before falling to top-seeded Michigan in the semifinals.

With three top-25 victories and a strong finish in the Big Ten, the Badgers earned a trip to the NCAA Regionals in Norman, Okla. and pitted against the No. 1 overall seed, Oklahoma. Healy would lead her team with a win-or-go-home comeback victory over the Sooners. Oklahoma took an early 1-0 lead in the first, but it was in the sixth inning when the Badgers played small ball, squeezing in two runs and defeat Oklahoma, 2-0. The Badgers have only taken down a top-ranked opponent one other time in school history and ended OU’s 41-game win streak to cap off one of the most historic seasons in school history. 2021 saw Big Ten Player of the Year, Kayla Konwent, two First Team All-B1G Selections in Taylor Johnson and Konwent, the second-most wins in program history, and the fastest team to 30 wins.

With a 35-17 record in 2017, Wisconsin reached the NCAA Tournament and playing for the regional championship for the third time in five years. The Badgers started the season with seven-straight wins, the best start in program history, and went on to record a program-best 13-game road win streak from Feb. 25 to March 25, 2017. Healy secured her fifth season with 30-or-more wins with the Badgers, the most of any UW softball coach. The team topped the record books in RBI (250) and walks (212) while ranking in the top-10 for several categories.

Under her tutelage, Chloe Miller became the program’s first-ever NFCA All-American, the first USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year finalist, and the second-ever NFCA Player of the Week and NPF Draft pick (No. 11, Akron). In her senior year, Miller became the program’s all-time leader in career multi-RBI games (53), career RBI (181), career home runs (31), and runs (145), ranking second all-time with 215 career hits and 57 career multi-hit games.

Healy’s 2016 squad faced nine top-25 teams, securing a 5-3-1 record against its ranked foes. The Badgers batted in 244 runs in 2016, just three RBI shy of the all-time season record, while tallying the third-most runs (265) and walks (196) all-time. Senior Taylor-Paige Stewart single-handedly achieved four saves on the mound, tying the program’s team season record.

Wisconsin has had a total of 13 first-team All-Big Ten selections in program history with 11 of those coming in the Healy era. Kelsey Jenkins, who earned back-to-back first-team All-Big Ten accolades in 2015 and 2016, was the first freshman in UW history to collect the honor.

Healy has helped her players seen just as much success off the field as she has on the field. The Badgers have received a total of 111 Academic All-Big Ten recognitions in the last 14 seasons.
The 2016 senior class recorded 129 wins in four seasons, the third-most wins by any Wisconsin class, while the 2015 senior class went down as the second-winning class in school history with 135 victories. In the last six seasons, Wisconsin has had four 30-plus win seasons after only previously having five 30-plus win campaigns in 15 seasons.

In 2015, the Badgers clinched the highest season on-base percentage (.389) in school history and claimed the Wisconsin single-season walks record (176). The season also the season record for stolen bases shattered (118 stolen bases) along with setting the highest single-season batting average (.296).

Healy entered the 2015 season having led the team to its second consecutive NCAA Regional Championship. Healy directed the team to the NCAA tournament in back-to-back seasons, which had only been done once before by UW in 2001 and 2002 and only a total of three times in the history of the program.

At the end of the 2014 season, the Badgers finished in two final national polls for just the fourth time in the program’s 19-year history and the second consecutive year. UW came in at No. 24 in the ESPN.com/USA Softball Top 25 and received votes in the USA Today/NFCA Top 25 for the eighth time in the season. Wisconsin finished the 2014 season at No. 32 in the NCAA Softball Ratings Percentage Index (RPI), after facing nine of the 31 teams who posted a higher RPI ranking.

The 2014 season boasted the second-highest win total (36) in school history. The Badgers defeated six ranked opponents and tied with the 1997 team for the most top-25 wins in a season. UW won four NCAA tournament games over the last three seasons, having won one in the program’s first 19 years of existence. For just the second time in program history, the team achieved a pair of NCAA tournament wins matching their run in 2013.

The conclusion of the 2014 season marked the end of incredible careers for Cassandra Darrah, Mary Massei, Michelle Mueller and Stephanie Peace. Under Healy, the senior class went down in the history books as the most winningest class in UW history at 144-75.

The 2007 Horizon League Coach of the Year, Healy guided the Loyola (Ill.) Ramblers to a top-four conference finish in every season she was at the helm. She has coached four NFCA All-Mideast Region players over the last four seasons, and the team set the single-season school record for batting average (.292) in 2010. Healy’s team also set single-season Loyola records for stolen bases (116) and home runs (37) in 2009.

As Healy was winning coach of the year honors in the Horizon League in 2007, the team was capturing the conference title with a 14-5 record. Pitcher Amy Solava was also named the league’s pitcher of the year, just the third player in school history to earn the award.

Off the field, Healy was instrumental in the team’s community service participation. She was a part of numerous campaigns to give back, including the Strike Out Cancer Fundraiser for the Susan G. Komen Foundation.
Healy’s teams have also excelled in the classroom. The 2010 team was the recipient of the 2010 NCAA Academic Performance Program APR Award, while nine players in her time were named Academic All-District by ESPN the Magazine and 25 were chosen as Scholar Athletes by the National Fastpitch Coaches Association.

She took over as head coach at Loyola in July of 2004 after spending two seasons as an assistant at her alma mater, DePaul. While with the Blue Demons, Healy coached five All-Americans as the team won the Conference USA title in 2003 and 2004 to make the NCAA tournament.

A two time All-American and three-time Academic All-American as a player, Healy ranks second on the DePaul single-season chart with a .424 batting average and is the school’s all-time leader with 102 stolen bases. In her senior campaign in 1999, Healy led the Blue Demons to a school-record 54 victories, an NCAA Regional Championship and the College World Series as the team wrapped up the year ranked third in the nation. She earned All-Mideast Region honors on three occasions as well.

Prior to her collegiate coaching career, Healy worked for the Chicago Bulls and Chicago White Sox Academy as Director of Marketing. She also served as head softball coach at her alma mater Providence Catholic High School, where she was the salutatorian at her graduation in 1995.

Healy graduated cum laude and earned her bachelor’s degree in marketing and communications from DePaul in 1999 and her master’s in secondary education and English from DePaul in 2007. She and her husband Shawn have been married since 2006. They currently reside in Madison with their two daughters, Grace and Maeve.
 
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