Dr. Charlie Beach

Dr. Charlie Beach

Title: Head Coach
State: New Hampshire
Phone: 603-358-2820
Email: cbeach@keene.edu
Hometown: Rochester, NH
College: University of New Hampshire

Dr. Charlie Beach hopes to mark his 27th season as head coach of the Keene State softball program with a Little East Championship and a return to the NCAA tournament.

Ranked among the top Division III coaches in victories (618-376-7, .616 pct.), Beach is returning to the dugout after their third consecutive ECAC Division III New England Championship.  "We have been the bridesmaids of the NCAA Tournament for the last three years," said Beach. "Our goals are the same every year, win the Little East Championship and get to the NCAA's."

The Owls, who always play a very competitive schedule, even filled their spring break trip with a tough group of opponents to do everything they can to make sure they impress the NCAA selection committee. "We made the schedule tough because with my roster I can do that," said Beach. "This is the toughest Florida trip we have ever seen and even though I truly believe we can win the title, I have seen softballs take weird bounces. I'm just doing everything to ensure that we reach our goals."

In 2009, Beach incorporated 10 new players, including nine freshmen, into the program, directed a young Owl team to a 30-14 (10-4 LEC) record. Improving as the season went on KSC not only advanced to the final-round of the LEC tournament, but completed its season by capturing the ECAC Division III New England Championship.   

Winning is nothing new for the long-time Keene State coach. Beach has led the Owls to 10 Division III post-season appearances, capturing four LEC titles (1999, 2000, 2003, and 2005) and earning five NCAA berths (1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, and 2007). Last season’s KSC won its first Division III ECAC crown.  

A new season has brought new challenges for Coach Beach. Fortunately, he never met a challenge he didn't like. The Rochester, N.H., native took over the KSC softball program in 1986 and, starting almost from scratch, made the Owls contenders in the competitive New England Collegiate Conference and a legitimate regional power. The Owls have had 17 seasons with more than 20 wins in the last 21 years, reaching the 30-win milestone in 1999, 2005, and 2009. They captured ECAC championships in 1990 and 1993, and they won their first NECC championship and made their first NCAA regional tournament appearance in 1994.

Since guiding Keene State through the transition into Division III and the Little East Conference in 1998, Beach has kept the Owls on the rise. After leading KSC to a pair of ECAC tournament berths, Beach directed the team to back-to-back LEC titles and NCAA berths in 1999 and 2000 that included a 33-win season in 2000. The Owls made a return trip to the NCAAs in 2003, when they captured the championship as a fifth seed, and again in 2005, when they posted a program-record 34 victories and advanced to the finals of the New England region. In 2007, KSC went 28-9 and earned an at-large berth to the national tournament.

Beach has produced 39 All-LEC players, including current assistant Meghan McLoughlin, two-time Pitcher of the Year ('04 and '05), and Jenna Patnode, the 2009 Player of the Year and recipient of the National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) 2009 Golden Shoe Award for leading Division III in stolen bases.

He credits the many fine Owls who have played on his team for his coaching achievements at Keene State. Beach becames just the 17th coach in Division III to reach the 600 win mark.  "It's a great accomplishment," said Beach.  "I know a lot of coaches haven't done this so I feel privileged to join the crowd that have."

A member of the Keene State physical education faculty, Beach served as the head coach of the KSC ski program, leading the men's and women's teams to NCAA Eastern Division II titles in 1982 and 1984, respectively. He led the Keene city summer softball league team to the Women's Major Modified championship in 1989 and led his "Beach Bunch" to the national tournament in 1996. He is a former physical conditioning consultant for the Chicago White Sox and has coached a variety of sports, including football, baseball, and track and field. Beach, a former standout track and football athlete at Spaulding High School, was inducted into the Rochester (N.H.) Sports Hall of Fame in 1998. He graduated from the University of New Hampshire in 1967 and earned a Ph.D. in physical education from Michigan State University in 1978.