How Sisters Give Back To the Community During Their Final Softball Season Together

Story by Michelle Matthews via al.com
From the time Carmyn Greenwood was big enough to hold a bat, she was hitting balls off the T all the way to the fence. Her 22-months-younger sister, Cassady, followed in her footsteps.
âOur dad always got us involved in sports,â says Cassady â including volleyball, soccer, basketball and softball at Oak Mountain High School in their native Birmingham. âSoftball was the one we stuck with.â
âThey made a name for themselves all the way through,â says their mother, Amy Greenwood of Sylacauga.
The sisters played together from the time Cassady was in eighth grade until Carmyn graduated and was recruited to play at Auburn University. Now theyâre reunited as players on the womenâs softball team at the University of Louisville.
Their father, Ryan Greenwood â who played baseball in college and worked as director of internet operations with âThe Rick & Bubba Showâ in Birmingham for 15 years before moving to Louisville to be closer to his daughters â has forged a new career through their passion for softball.
âAt one point, I said I wasnât going to coach,â he says, âbut then I started helping with youth leagues and moved into travel.â He ended up coaching softball for two decades and now works as the program director for Fusion Softball, a travel program in southern Indiana.
Heâs also head coach, with Carmyn as an assistant coach, of the Fusion 18U National Greenwood/Unruh team, which competes on a national level. With years of coaching on the national scene, and as the father of college-level softball players, he has the experience to be able to evaluate and identify potential collegiate players.
And through his side business, Frenzy Designs, he has helped his girls give back to the Louisville, Kentucky, community through sales of their merchandise with the Team Greenwood logo he designed.

Blessings in a Backpack Mission Ambassador Carmyn Greenwood is one of the best hitters in the ACC. She led the Cardinals in 2021 with a .430 batting average. (Photo courtesy Ryan Greenwood)
This is their final season to play together at Louisville â an unexpected three-year bonus after Carmyn transferred there following a shoulder injury at Auburn, where she started her college softball career. With the surgery, she had 11 anchors placed in her shoulder, her mom says, coming close to the 13 anchors former New Orleans quarterback Drew Brees had in his. After the COVID-19 pandemic shortened the season, she received an extra year of eligibility â giving her time to play on the Louisville team along with her sister Cassady, now a senior.
The sisters wanted to do something special for this last season. After the NCAA created the NIL policy for student-athletes last fall, they can now be compensated for using their name, image and likeness in marketing and promotional endeavors.
âTheyâre not big self-promoters,â says Ryan. âWe talked about it and thought, âWhat if the proceeds went to charity?ââ
They decided to donate the profits from sales of their merchandise â coffee mugs, short- and long-sleeved T-shirts, hoodies and even a onesie for babies â to Blessings in a Backpack, an organization theyâve worked with for a long time.
Each Friday during the school year, Blessings in a Backpack sends home a weekendâs worth of meals with area children who might not otherwise have anything to eat.
âWe both had love for Blessings in a Backpack,â says Carmyn. âWhen we would go there on Fridays, the kids were so appreciative and so excited to see us. We took it to heart. It was easy to decide on Blessings in a Backpack, which allows us to give back to the community.â
âPrior to COVID, I was doing it every Friday,â says Cassady, who would arrange her class schedule so she wouldnât miss her chance to work with the nonprofit. âYou start to get to know some of the kids.â
Their mom, Amy, says that both sisters are âsuper specialâ people. Cassady is a âfree spirit,â she says, who hugs everyone she meets, and Carmyn âwill grab your hand and make you pray before you eat.â
Though Ryan and Amy are divorced, the family remains tightly knit. âA divorced family can work out, but you have to have parents who work together,â Amy says.
Their older daughter, Caylor Sheppard (yes, they all grew up with the initials CG that are featured on Team Greenwood merchandise), lives with her husband in Gallatin, Tennessee. Their two young sons, one whoâs 4 and one whoâs 6 months old, have become unofficial mascots for the team.
âTheyâre so cute,â Carmyn says. âThe whole team loves them.â
Known as one of the best hitters in the ACC, having led the Cardinals in 2021 with a .430 batting average, Carmyn says her favorite part of playing softball is the camaraderie. âI enjoy getting to meet teammates every year and developing relationships and friendships for a lifetime,â she says.
The team âbecomes your family here,â says Cassady, who knew no one when she started at the University of Louisville. A catcher, she says she enjoys the competitive aspect of softball. âOn days when Iâm struggling, it gets me through the day,â she says. âI have passion for it.â
They live next door to each other in the same apartment complex and âhave to create separationâ when theyâre not playing together. âWhen it comes to softball, weâre each otherâs biggest fans,â says Cassady. âI see us as really good teammates to one another.â
Cassady, who led Louisville in 2020 with a .386 batting average and still has one year of eligibility because of COVID, will graduate this month with a degree in psychology. She and her âfoster failâ dog, a pit mix named Alma, will spend the summer in Birmingham, where she will work at the Cahaba Beach Dog Park. She plans to earn a masterâs in social work.
Carmyn already has a degree in business management. She has a job lined up working at Bush-Keller Sporting Goods, which is owned by the same family that owns the Fusion Softball organization where she coaches. âI like the way that family runs their companies,â she says.
Even though the whole family feels sad about it being the sistersâ last season on the same team, Ryan says Carmyn and Cassady are âfocused on being appreciative of so many opportunities,â he says. âThe places weâve gotten to go as a family, like Colorado and California â when you reflect on those, you start to understand itâs more about the journey. Weâre thankful.â