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Almost everything about the softball team that took the field representing the United States in the Pan American Games was unfamiliar, from a new coach and new players to the part it plays in the sport’s newly tenuous position in the international picture. So it’s hardly the same old story that the end result looked decidedly familiar.
Playing with a roster composed almost entirely of active or recent collegians and almost completely devoid of experience in major international tournaments, the United States earned gold in the Pan American Games by winning all nine games it played. The success marks the seventh Pan American gold medal in a row for the United States in softball and the eighth in nine tries at the biennial event.
Of course, it’s only fitting that a team that began the year and the tournament facing questions as to its ability to live up to its uniforms needed a last bit of adversity to find an answer.
Operating in a new financial reality after softball’s elimination from the Olympic program, Team USA parted company after winning the World Cup of Softball in July, reconvening in Texas only a few days before the trip to Guadalajara. A handful of exhibitions against Texas A&M and the University of Houston provided easy wins but didn’t necessarily clear the cobwebs of a long layoff.
“We played OK in those games,” Team USA coach Ken Eriksen said. “Even though we won the three games pretty easily, I didn’t feel like we were all there together. … I still wasn’t comfortable as a coach knowing we were going to be able to hit on all cylinders.”
After a 10-0 win against Venezuela to open the tournament itself, the United States played doubleheaders each of the next two days. The team swept all four of those games against the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Cuba and Puerto Rico, allowing just one run in the process, but it still wasn’t, in the coach’s words, playing “dominant” softball.
And in the span of half an inning against Canada the following day, all the skepticism about sending a young, inexperienced team to represent American softball seemed to come to fruition.
Canada defeated essentially the same team three months earlier in pool play in the World Cup of Softball, but the one and only loss for the United States against its northern neighbor in the Olympics, World Championships or Pan American Games occurred in 1983, before any of the current roster was born. Another loss seemed entirely possible when the Canadians took a 5-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning behind the likes of Melanie Mathews, Jen Yee and Jenn Salling, three players with impressive credentials and considerably more experience in the environment than most of their opponents.
But after the United States loaded the bases in the top of the second, Michelle Moultrie singled home a run to get them on the board and chase Canadian starter Ashley Lanz. An illegal pitch and two walks brought home two more runs and chased reliever Sarah Phillips. Now facing Jenna Caira, the pitcher who beat them in July, Team USA tied the score with runs on a single and a wild pitch. Three more runs in the next inning set them on course for a 12-5 win. It wasn’t an elimination game, but it was a statement performance.
There was another close call against Cuba on the next-to-last day of play, but by the time they run-ruled Canada 11-1 in four innings in the gold-medal game, any questions had been answered.
“To tell you the truth, the rest of the tournament, it was already done,” Eriksen said of the aftermath of the comeback. “By the time we hit the third inning against Canada, they were smoking, they were gelling. They achieved something of significance as a unit, coming back five runs against a very, very good Canadian team. And when they did that, I thought their confidence level went way up. I don’t think they thought they could be beat by anybody, and it showed the rest of the tournament.”
That the United States has a new softball star also showed. Of the 67 runs the United States scored, Moultrie either scored or drove in 19 of them, including one of each in the pivotal inning against Canada.
For years, leadoff hitter Natasha Watley gave the United States an offensive asset almost as difficult for opponents to duplicate as pitchers like Cat Osterman and Monica Abbott were in the circle. In baseball terms, it was like Team USA writing Rickey Henderson’s name on the lineup card while the rest of the world made do with Coco Crisp. Watley made the softball diamond look small, the fences too close and the bases too close together. Moultrie emerged as the same kind of player on the college level last season for the University of Florida, sharing Most Outstanding Player honors in the Women’s College World Series despite playing for the losing side in the championship series, and began to transfer those skills to the international game this summer.
“With Natasha Watley in the leadoff spot you always had an opportunity to be up 1-0 after the first batter, not just the first inning,” Eriksen said. “Michelle Moultrie brings that same type of threat right away. Michelle Moultrie, like Natasha Watley, can drop a bunt to get on base, she can slap a ball in the hole to get on base and she can hit it over the fence for home runs. She’s a triple-threat type kid. She’s clutch, clutch in the RBI positions. The more she gets comfortable wearing red, white and blue, I see the sky as the limit for her.”
The youth movement for Team USA was not a voluntary or preferred shift, but it did allow players already on a path to stardom, like Moultrie, to accelerate that journey. It doesn’t stop there. Whether a decade of stardom awaits, players like Christi Orgeron and Keilani Ricketts, who struck out 22 batters in 16.1 innings and got the clinching win, made the most of their opportunity. In another era, i.e. a couple of years ago, Lauren Gibson would still be several years away from even making a national team cut, let alone starting in a gold-medal game. Now a junior at the University of Tennessee and one of the youngest players on a team with no lack of competition for that honor, Gibson battled injuries through the summer months and totaled just eight at-bats and two singles in the World Cup. But after a hot start toward the bottom of the order in Guadalajara, she found herself batting third in the comeback game against Canada and finished the tournament hitting .500 with eight RBIs. Click here to continue reading.
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