Hall of Fame
The only student-athlete from Towson to be named first team Academic All-America twice, Kathy Mohr Dolan '91/'93 was inducted into the Towson Hall of Fame in 2001.
She was a four-year starter for the Tiger softball team as a pitcher and an outfielder. An All-East Coast Conference outfielder as a sophomore, she ranks among Towson’s careering hitting and pitching leaders. With a .332 career batting average, she graduated as the fourth-leading hitter in Towson softball history. In addition, she had a 1.63 career earned run average, the third-best mark in school history at the time of her graduation.
A native of Bel Air, Md., who graduated from C. Milton Wright High School, she had a 21-11 career pitching record. Appearing in 36 games with 32 starts, she threw 28 complete games in her career. In 1990, she pitched a no-hitter against LaSalle and had a one-hit shutout against Hofstra.
As a junior in 1990, she led the Tigers with an 11-4 pitching record and a 2.06 E.R.A. She also had an outstanding offensive season in 1990, batting .371 with 13 runs batted in. Kathy Mohr Dolan was the sixth-leading hitter in the ECC and finished 43rd in the nation.
In her four seasons as a member of the Tiger softball team, she helped Towson post a 71-49 record. As a sophomore in 1989, she batted .347 with 17 runs batted in. She helped Towson to a second place finish in the 1989 ECC Tournament.
Honored as the ECC Player of the Week in April, 1990, she was named as the East Coast Conference Scholar-Athlete for Softball in 1991.
As a senior, she batted .342 and was the fifth-leading hitter in the ECC. She also ranked among the leading pitchers in the conference. While posting a 10-7 record, she had a 1.18 E.R.A., second in the ECC. With 103 career base hits, she ranked third on the Tigers’ all-time list at the time of her graduation.
Mohr Dolan was named as a first team Academic All-American at designated player in 1990 and 1991. A 1991 Towson graduate with degree in speech pathology and audiology, she also earned her master’s degree in audiology from Towson in 1993.
She worked as an audiologist in Baltimore County Public Schools for several years and served as an off-campus supervisor for Towson University audiology students. She has conducted pitching clinics for middle school and high school softball players.
A long-time resident of Bel Air, Md., she has also served as an individual pitching instructor while coaching and umpiring in Hartford County for the Parks and Recreation Department.
She has also played in two national tournaments for Class 'A' and 'B' women's fastpitch softball.
She and her older sister, Kerrin Mohr O’Neill, are both members of the Towson Hall of Fame.