OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. --- A segment about the Amateur Softball Associations (ASA) Hooters Championship Series, which crowned five national champions last month, is currently featured on the show Softball 360. Softball 360 is carried into 70 million homes throughout the year, highlighting all of the hot topics in the softball world from coast to coast. A new episode of Softball 360 will come out every two weeks and if you ever miss it at home, you can always catch some of the video clips online at www.softball360.com.
Softball 360 has been airing the Hooters segment since late October. It airs again Nov. 4 at 6:30 p.m. on Fox Sports Pittsburgh and at 7:30 on MAV TV; Nov. 5 at 4 p.m. and 10 on MAV TV; Nov. 6 at 10:30 a.m. on MASN; Nov. 8 at 4:30 p.m. on ICTV; Nov. 11 at 7:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. on MAV TV; and Nov. 12 at 2 p.m. on Comcast Sports and at 4 and 10 on MAV TV. All times are Eastern.
Check your local listings for more air dates and future ASA segments on ASA Umpires, the National Softball Hall of Stadium and Museum, the ASA GOLD 18-Under and much more!
The Hooters segment features interviews with Hooters players and coaches as well as footage from several games. From Oct. 2-4, Hooters slow pitch action was played simultaneously on all four fields at the ASA Hall of Fame Complex in Oklahoma City, Okla.
Taking home first place trophies were Tharaldson Enterprises (Mens B), West Coast Dynasty (Mens C), Virginia Select (Mens D), Low Bobs (Womens C) and PDX Softball (Womens D). In addition to the Hooters games, the Mens A and Womens Open were also played, crowning Long Haul Trucking (Mens A) and Enough Said (Womens Open) as champions.
For more information on Hooters, visit www.asasoftball.com/tournaments/hooterschampionships.asp.
About ASA
The Amateur Softball Association, founded in 1933, is the National Governing Body of softball in the United States and a member of the United States Olympic Committee. The ASA has become one of the nation's largest sports organizations and now sanctions competition in every state through a network of 83 local associations. The ASA has grown from a few hundred teams in the early days to over 210,000 teams today, representing a membership of more than three million. For more information on the ASA, visit www.asasoftball.com.
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