USA Women reach the title game

July 1st, 2010

Stanford grads Mendoza, Haber, Lappin each record a hit for the Americans



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The United States’ women’s softball national team turned two hits, a walk and an error into three runs in the bottom of the first inning, all it would need as it turned out, in beating Japan, 4-0, in the semifinals of the ISF World Championships in Caracas, Venezuela on Thursday.

Stanford grads Jessica Mendoza and Alissa Haber were right in the middle of the rally, with Mendoza drawing a walk and Haber adding a single. Both players scored in the inning.

Cardinal grad Lauren Lappin led off the fifth with a double and eventually scored on Mendoza’s single.

Stanford junior Ashley Hansen came on as a defensive replacement late in the game.

Cat Osterman did the rest, throwing a one-hitter with two walks and 12 strikeouts.

“It was a team effort,” Osterman said. “The offense came through early and I had to be at the top of my game because Japan is a great game.”

China and Canada were scheduled to play a later semifinal, with that winner facing Japan on Friday in the double elimination tournament.

“We’ve played every team that’s left so we’ll be ready,” Osterman said. “Everybody who came before us made the championship game and we know that’s what is expected of us.”

The U.S. plays the survivor on Friday for the World Championship.

“We’re ready for anybody,” American shortstop Natasha Watley said. “I hope we come out and put everything together.”

Argentina’s Agustina Godoy among the best in the world

July 1st, 2010

From our friend in Argentina, Martin Jorge:
(Google Translation)


(Agustina Godoy, Argentina’s All World shortstop)

Although the Argentina was eliminated from playoff XII ISF World Softball Championships, Caracas 2010, the national news for softball are not over. Today, the tournament organizers reported averages of attack and defense of the round robin, with the presence in both categories shortstop Agustina Godoy.

On the defensive side of the Paraná was declared Best Short Stop Tournament, with a fielding average of 1000, along with the U.S. Natasha Watley, but had more opportunities Agustina fielding, which was above the American shortstop. This places it within the ideal defensive team in the tournament.

However, the tremendous Godoy tournament does not end there, because offensively was the best batter in Argentina, with an average of 450 for the tournament, which placed it in 11th place overall competition in the company of best batters in the world. Agustina logged nine hits in 20 turns, rounded off a dream performance.

Finally, the ISF reported the final standings of the tournament to date, and Argentina was in the position fourteen, what is the highest position in its history in World Championships (with the exception that in the two previous participations Argentina’s game system was different, and the number of participating teams was greater than at present)

En Espanol:

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Women’s ISF World Championships Down to 6 teams

July 1st, 2010

Dutch & Taipei Eliminated; Final Six Move to Second-Last Day
7/1/2010

Six Teams Remain:
Venezuela v. China
Canada v. Australia
Japan v. USA


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CARACAS, VENEZUELA — The International Softball Federation’s XII Women’s World Championship being played here hit the playoff stage today with three of the four games being decided by a combined total of just four runs and one of them having needed an extra inning.

The results today set things up for tomorrow’s second-last day and also eliminated two teams, adding to the eight that didn’t make it to the playoffs.

Coming off of a perfect round robin performance (7-0 won-lost record), Japan continued their winning ways with a 2-0 victory over Venezuela, who had gone 6-1.

USA (7-0) exploded offensively in a victory over Canada (6-1 in round robin play), 16-1.

Fourth-seeded China (4-3) from Pool B eliminated the number three seed from Pool A, Chinese Taipei (5-2), with an eight-inning 1-0 victory.

And Pool B 3-seed Australia (5-2) eliminated Pool A 4-seed (4-3) the Netherlands, 3-2.

Tomorrow (all times local to Caracas) Venezuela will play China at 1pm with the loser going home. Canada will take on Australia at 3pm in another game that will see the losing team eliminated. Japan and USA will go head-to-head at 5pm with the winner going directly to Friday’s gold medal game (the loser will go to Friday’s “bronze medal game”). Thursday at 7pm the Venezuela-China winner will face the Canada-Australia winner.

Japan’s victory today came courtesy of a two-run fourth inning against losing pitcher Mariangee Bogado, who threw a complete game but struck out only one batter while walking three and hitting two batters. One of the walks and both hit batsmen came in that fourth inning.

Winning pitcher Mika Someya went the distance for Japan, striking out eight and allowing just three hits.

Next up came the Canada-U.S. game that got out of hand quickly.

The Americans sent nine batters to the plate in the first inning alone, scoring four runs, as Canada went through three pitchers.

Jenna Caira got the start but was pulled in favor of Ashley Lanz, who promptly left the game after getting hit on her pitching hand with a batted ball. Tina Andreana came in to go the rest of the way, but the game lasted just five innings under the ISF’s run-ahead rule.

The teams played a scoreless second inning before Team USA put up four more runs in the top of the third, this time sending ten batters to the plate.

Canada responded with their only run of the game in the bottom half of the inning, but then the red, white, and blue blew the game wide open. After a single tally in the top of the fourth, the reigning ISF women’s world champions scored seven times in the top of the fifth, including a three-run home run by Jennie Finch, her third home run of the tournament.

After that it was just a matter of winning pitcher Monica Abbott setting the Canadians down, 1, 2, 3 in the bottom of the inning to close things out.

Abbott finished with five strikeouts and no walks. Designated player Katie Cochran went 3-for-4 with a single, double, and triple.

China and Chinese Taipei went through regulation (seven innings) scoreless before Jia Guo hit a one out single to center field to score Yuan Wang in the eighth inning of a game that at times had very light rain.

Chinese Taipei had just four hits while the winners doubled that total. Each team used two pitchers with Li Qi and Lan Wang striking out four and walking no Taipei batters.

In the nightcap, Australia scored all three of its runs in their first at-bat and Justine Smethurst turned in a complete-game, seven strikeout performance to stay alive in the world championship chase. The Aussies were the bronze medalists at the last edition of this event (2006).

Tracey Mosley led the way offensively, going 2-for-3 at the plate.

Lindsey Meadows took the loss for the Netherlands, pitching all six innings. Her team got both of their runs in the top of the third inning but couldn’t overcome Smethurst and the Australia defense.

For more information contact: Bruce Wawrzyniak at Brucew (at) isfsoftball.org

Click logo for Women’s ISF World Championships Website

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USA v. Japan in Women’s ISF World

July 1st, 2010

Team USA set to play Japan at 4:30 CT today at the Women’s World Championship in Caracas, Venezuela.

Softball travels lead to success for Crouch

July 1st, 2010


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By JOHN SAHLY – jsahly@daily-chronicle.com


Tom Crouch, of DeKalb, is the starting shortstop for a world class fastpitch softball team in Appleton, Wis. (Photo by Beck Diefenbach – bdiefenbach@daily-chronicle.com)

Tom Crouch has traveled thousands of miles to reach where he is in men’s fastpitch softball.

It has brought the DeKalb resident to such places as Haiti, Mexico, Florida and southern California.

It also took him to the Dominican Republic. Known for its rich tradition of turning out talented Major League Baseball players, the country also provides a key number of pitchers and hitters to the international men’s fastpitch softball scene.

It’s where Crouch found himself years ago, working to improve his performance at the plate in fastpitch.

“The competition level was fantastic,” Crouch said. “The pitching wasn’t as good as it is in some of the other countries, but the hitters and defenders are great. Guys are very smooth defensively.

“Now I compete against some of those guys up here at the major level.”

Crouch is one of the most celebrated men’s fastpitch softball hitters in the country, earning last year’s North American Fastpitch Association MVP award as a member of the Bar of Appleton (Wis.) team. This year, Appleton has been as ranked as high as No. 9 in North America by the International Softball Congress.

Crouch, who is the assistant executive director/principal of the Kishwaukee Education Consortium, again has played a big role in that, with a batting average around .340.

The Appleton shortstop spent time after college in independent baseball leagues in Canada and a little bit in Florida when he first thought seriously about playing men’s fastpitch.

His dad had played and enjoyed it and Crouch decided to try it out playing 23-and-under ball.

He always knew fastpitch was a different game from baseball, but it was then he found out exactly how wide that gap really was.

The circle is only 43 feet from the plate. Pitchers throw fastballs that top out around 85-86 mph, which isn’t that bad until batters realize that because of the shorter distance than baseball, that fastball translates to about a 105 mph pitch from a mound.

“The transition from baseball to fastpitch is much more difficult than the other way because the ball moves up,” Crouch said. “There’s the riseball. In baseball everything is coming down and in fastpitch softball, most of the stuff is going up.”

Crouch knew he had to work at it if he wanted to break through the top level of fastpitch. Since winter cancels any opportunity of doing it close to home, he had to travel.

His dedication put him all over the map, traveling to faraway places just to work on his game. He gained a new appreciation for other cultures and improved his swing.

“I played 10-15 games a winter to get myself where I could compete at that level,” Crouch said.

He reached that level at age 24 and has excelled ever since. Now 37, Crouch appears to be at the top of his game in his second season with Appleton after three previous years in Green Bay.

Changing teams is a common occurrence in men’s fastpitch, and Crouch said what team players end up on depends on the relationships they build.

It also helps that his position at the Kishwaukee Education Consortium allows him to participate in one of his passions. With Fridays off in the summer, he can leave for a weekend tournament with plenty of time to get ready.

“The season’s over just before school starts,” he said. “It works out just perfect for me.”

And Crouch can keep playing a sport he’s grown to love and worked long hours over several years and in several countries working on and improving.

“I’m competing at the highest level in the world for the sport and playing against different players from 20 different countries,” Crouch said. “The opportunity to do that and face world-class competition all the time against world-class athletes is something I really appreciate being able to do.”

This Week in Fastball from Dennis Dosman

July 1st, 2010

Another great issue of “This Week in Fastball” from our friend in Ontario Canada, Dennis Dosman. This one might be my favorite issue yet. See especially his discussion of the top teams in the ISC rankings, Jarvis, NY Gremlins and Kitchener. (scroll down, after the jump)

Happy Canada Day to everyone…and “Maz”….Happy Fourth!!!!

The big news is the results of the Legends of Fastball Classic at Peter Hallman this past weekend…..

Great to see good friends back at the Ball Yard watching some great fastball

The later date, the ten team format, the addition of the Junior Future of Fastball Division, all made for a very entertaining weekend…busy but entertaining…and fun….

The ISC rankings may take a bit of a rejigging in the next poll, but the fact remains that a lot of great teams were at Peter Hallman Ball Yard for a classic Legends of Fastball Classic.

Everyone at the park knew that the Kitchener Hallman RiverShark Twins were a great team, two ISC World titles the past two years, an Ontario OASA picked up at Hillside in Waterloo last year, and Canadian title won down the road in St Thomas, a couple of nice additions to the roster over the winter,

Everyone at the park wanted to see just how good this Jarvis team was going to be. A solid club last year, good run at the Canadian Senior Men’s last year in St Thomas and then the partnership announced a few weeks ago with Doc Simmon’s Broken Bow Travelers, Would those spiffy uniforms that Doc’s teams are famous for be filled with mojo or would it be talent but no drive

And everyone at the ball park knew that New York Gremlins looked great, they had a lot of quality, including hard hitting local favorite “Red” Levy, Paul Koert, Bill Hillhouse, Frank DeGroat, Landy Rodriguez….a solid team …

Eveyone at the ball park knew that Midland Explorers were going to be building a good club to challenge for the ISC World Championship being held in their ball park in Michigan with a few top quality signings…including KW favorite Craig Crawford.

And everyone at the ball park was wondering who in the world is the Chicago/NewYork Dominicana? Where did they come from…..lots of big names, but is there “any chemistry” Was the Midland tournament win a couple of weeks ago real?

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Happy Canada Day

July 1st, 2010

Happy Canada Day to all of our Canadian friends!

Alissa Haber Breaks RBI Record – now at 19

June 30th, 2010

Click here for USA Women’s Twitter

More on Haber and the USA Women’s team after the jump.
(from the USA Softball website)

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USA Over Canada in playoff round

June 30th, 2010

Thanks to Bob Henning for this info:

Playoffs underway…………………..

USA 16 – Canada 1 (5 innings)

Eight Now Headed for Playoffs at Women’s ISF World Championships

June 30th, 2010


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CARACAS, VENEZUELA — Eights are definitely wild at this point of the International Softball Federation’s XII Women’s World Championship being played here.

The final eight round robin games played today helped determine the order of finish for the eight teams that have advanced to the playoffs while eight teams are now finished playing. Eight games will take place over the next two days, setting up the two biggest ones on Friday (July 2), when the gold, silver, and bronze medalists will all be crowned.

And what a grand finish to round robin play it was.

Yaicey Sojo smacked a 1-2 pitch over the left field fence with two outs and two runners on in the bottom of the seventh inning to give Venezuela a 5-2 win over China. In the bottom of the first inning Sojo had hit a solo home run that just stayed fair down the left field line.

Following that hit for the 1-0 lead, the home team didn’t record another hit until the bottom of the sixth inning, with that too coming off the bat of the 23-year old outfielder, meaning that (in four at-bats) she finished with all three of her team’s hits.

China tied the score at one in the top of the third inning when Lifang Zhang singled to left field to drive in Min Xu who had stolen second then third base on consecutive pitches.

The visitors took a 2-1 lead in the top of the sixth on a Jia Guo sacrifice fly that scored Yuan Wang but pitcher Mariangee Bogado held China at bay, scattering five hits for a complete-game victory.

Lu Wei pitched the first two-and-two-thirds innings for China before being relieved by Lan Wang, who took the loss.

Other drama today included a Great Britain-Argentina game that took two extra innings to decide.

The teams were scoreless after regulation (seven innings) and the score stayed that way after eight.

Argentina got on the board in the top of the ninth when Agustina Godoy’s ground ball in the infield was mishandled by second baseplayer Sarah Jones, preventing her from getting a throw home, which allowed a run to score while Godoy was thrown out at first.

But in the bottom of the ninth Caley Roberts singled to shallow left field to score Naomi Jones. With Argentina pitcher Carla Villalva not paying attention, Jones ended up at second base. That set the stage for Kristi Yoshizawa, who lined a 1-1 pitch to right field to bring home the winning run.

Stacie Townsend again started in the circle for Great Britain and picked up the win by going the full nine innings, allowing just one hit. Villalva took the loss, having relieved starter Virginia Sciuto, who was pitching in the women’s world championship at the age of just 17 years old.

Chinese Taipei and Cuba came dangerously close to a similar extra innings affair. The two teams were scoreless after six innings when Taipei finally got on the board in the top of the seventh inning with what would prove to be the game’s only run despite the fact that they banged out nine hits.

Pitcher Chung Hui Lin went the distance to pick up the win. Anislei Lopez Gutierrez went two-and-two-thirds innings for Cuba with Yusmeri Pacheco Ysalgue handling the rest of the pitching duties.

The day had begun with Japan solidifying their perfect round robin record via a 10-0 triumph over South Africa. Eri Yamada went 3-for-3 at the plate and Satoko Mabuchi and Maki Tanigawa each hit a home run as the winners totaled eleven hits in a game shortened (four innings) by the ISF run-ahead rule.

Japan scored at least one run in each inning and pitchers Emi Segawa and Emi Matsuoka combined on a three-hitter and five strikeouts.

Meanwhile, Australia was blanking Botswana by the same score. Seven different players had at least one hit in what was also a four-inning game. The winners got big second (five runs) and fourth (four) innings. Pitchers Kaia Parnaby and Karina Cannon combined on a two strikeout, no walks, two-hitter while Botswana used three different pitchers.

Keeping pace with Japan, Team USA also finished round robin play unbeaten thanks to a 9-0 decision over the Czech Republic today. The five-inning game saw winning pitcher Eileen Canney hold the Czechs to just two hits while striking out seven and issuing no walks. Nine different USA players had one hit each including Andrea Duran and Jennie Finch, who both homered.

New Zealand won their first game of the tournament and their last game of the event by winning 3-0 today over the Dominican Republic. The White Sox took the victory despite the two teams having just four hits each. Two of New Zealand’s hits were doubles, however. All of the scoring came in the top of the first inning and pitchers Megan Farrel and Michal Tangaroa combined for seven strikeouts while losing pitcher Melissa Penna tossed a complete game, striking out three and walking just one.

This evening Canada solidified the second seed in Pool A by defeating the Netherlands, 6-1. Despite a fifth inning Solange Starrenburg home run off of winning pitcher Ashley Lanz, the Dutch didn’t have their hitting shoes on tonight, registering just two other hits the whole game.

Three different Netherlands pitchers couldn’t shut down the Canadians, who got a home run of their own, off the bat of Sheena Lawrick. Her team was up 6-0 when the game was only two innings old.

The playoffs begin tomorrow with the following games (times local to Caracas):

1 pm Japan vs. Venezuela
3 pm USA vs. Canada
5 pm Chinese Taipei vs. China
7 pm Australia vs. Netherlands

For more information contact: Bruce Wawrzyniak at BruceW (at) isfsoftball.org

Click logo for Women’s ISF World Championships Website

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