While at Louisiana Yvette Girouard became the eighth-winningest active NCAA Division I softball coach, she amassed 758 wins in 20 seasons at the University of Louisiana. When the University of Louisiana decided to start a softball program, Girouard was square one. For the last 22 years the Ragin’ Cajuns have been a perennial powerhouse.
When a visionary with Louisiana hired Yvette Girouard in October of 1980, she was given $3,000 to run the team. Due to having no home field to call their own Louisiana’s Lady Cajuns played in five different city parks. The odds were long on succeeding. That was her only losing season.
In her second year, she had one scholarship, and a makeshift field was constructed. The rest is history, . . .
By year 10, Louisiana was ranked seventh in the country, Stefni Lotief (Louisiana’s current coach) was a first-team All-American, and Yvette was the national coach of the year.
Yvette has always credited the University of Louisiana as having great traditions. “There are things in place there that money can’t buy—like the love of a town for its softball program”.
While at UL she produced 28 All-Americans and 13 Academic All-Americans. Yvette attributed this success to teaching self-discipline. She once said it is “the number-one trait I look for in all individuals, because good time management is extremely necessary when you’re an athlete at the Division I level.”
While at Lafayette, attendance at home games was considered phenomenal by softball standards, averaging 800 spectators a game. Yvette attributed this fan support with the team’s involvement in the community. “We would read in the elementary schools. We participated in Special Olympics. We gave free clinics. After a hurricane, we volunteered our services to clean up people’s yards. We were just very visible, and of course I was a product of that community, so they embraced us.”