A Star On and Off the Softball Field
This article appears in the Fall 2025 issue of the Dominican University Magazine.
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Emma Woodhouse’s talents in the classroom and on the pitcher’s mound earned her a host of accolades over her college career—cementing her status as a true Dominican Star.
When she wasn’t leading DU softball as captain and earning national recognition as a powerhouse pitcher, she was scoring big in academics, achieving a 4.0 GPA as a chemistry and neuroscience major.
All this ultimately led to Woodhouse receiving the 2025 Dorothy Reiner Mulroy Award, the university’s highest honor given to a graduating senior who has demonstrated outstanding academic ability and leadership.
“What sets Emma apart is her leadership,” said Softball Head Coach Cristina Lukas in her nomination of Woodhouse for the Mulroy. “She always leads by example, but is also a vocal leader for our team. She is the biggest mentor and cheerleader for our younger pitchers and does everything she can to bring out the greatness in them.”
That greatness is evident in her 55 wins as a starting pitcher (ranking her 11th of all-time in the Northern Athletics Collegiate Conference), 337 career strikeouts and the team’s impressive 39-8 season in 2024.
Woodhouse also helped the Stars capture two NACC regular-season titles, win the 2024 NACC Tournament and advance to the 2024 NCAA Division III Softball Championships.
Lukas called Woodhouse “the winningest pitcher in DU history.” For Woodhouse, it’s Dominican that has helped make her achievements possible.
“Dominican has instilled in me a drive for excellence in all I do,” she said. “Whether that is in the classroom or on the softball field, I strive to be the best version of myself.”
This has, of course, not gone unnoticed. Her extensive recognition also includes being named the NACC Pitcher of the Year for 2025, Dominican’s 2025 Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year, a four-time NACC Scholar-Athlete, and a recipient of the NACC’s Faculty Athletics Representatives (FAR) Award for athletic contribution, academic performance and service.
This past summer, she was awarded the G. Steven Larson NACC Student-Athlete of the Year for women’s sports.
Dr. Gerald Gulley, professor of physics, praised Woodhouse for her work ethic as a student, peer mentor, chemistry tutor and undergraduate teaching assistant.
“She serves as an inspiration to current and future students, showing that there are so many ways in which to serve,” he noted.
Woodhouse also credits Dominican for this.
“Dominican has helped build my work ethic and confidence in the professional setting,” she said. “I also formed many invaluable relationships at Dominican that will help aid my future endeavors and have shown me the importance of building connections with not just faculty members but my peers as well.”
With aspirations of medical school, Woodhouse, a native of Sacramento, California, is a volunteer EMT with Rock Medicine, a provider of emergency services at large entertainment venues on the West Coast.
“I hope to take everything I’ve learned through my college experience into medical school as I continue to use my education to serve others,” she told the NACC.