- July
- USA Softball women go 2-0 on day one of Canada Cup
- USA Softball wins 8-1 over Venezuela at Canada Cup
- Men's Fast Pitch Team wins sixth straight at Worlds
- Team USA secures No. 2 spot in pool at Men's Worlds
- Team USA loses 6-4 to Canada at World Men's Championship
- USA Men run rule Venezuela at Worlds in Saskatoon
- Men's Fast Pitch National Team finishes fourth at Worlds
- USA Softball to compete at Japan Cup and Pan Am qualifier
- Women out hit at Japan Cup but still run-rule Australia
- National Coaching School set for Nov. 20-22 in NorCal
- USA tops Colombia 11-0 in first game of Pan Am Qualifier
- Offense Powers USA Softball Team to 10-0 Win
- USA Softball Extends Record to 5-0 with 7-0 win over Australia
- USA Softball Plays Past Midnight for 7th win of Canada Cup
- USA Softball Pulls From Behind to Beat Canada 3-2
- USA Opens Medal Play with 10-0 Win Over California team
- USA Women Tested in Seven Inning Win Over Aussies
- Abbott records one-hitter; USA in Championship Game
- USA stuns Canada in bottom of seventh with 3-2 win
- Men's National Fast Pitch Team aiming for World gold
- USA Women’s National Team opens up season with Canada Cup
- KFC World Cup of Softball brings premier players to OKC
- Finch, Leles lead Team USA to opening World Cup win
- USA, Canada slow pitch win exhibition games of Border Battle
- USA Softball pounds out 12 runs in shutout over Italy
- USA Men's Slow Pitch run-rules two in Border Battle prep
- Men's Fast Pitch Team starts Worlds with a loss
- USA men win slow pitch Border Battle 30-23 over Canada
- Fast pitch men bounce back with Worlds win
- USA deafeats Japan, Canada at KFC World Cup of Softball
- USA to face Australia in KFC World Cup of Softball Final
- Men's Fast Pitch Team shuts out Japan at Worlds
- Men's Fast Pitch defeats Philippines 9-4 at Worlds
- KFC World Cup Gold Medal goes to undefeated Team USA
- Botswana falls to USA men 2-1 at World Championships
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. – Katie Burkhart (San Luis Obispo, Calif.) earned her first win in the Red, White and Blue as USA Softball shutout Italy 12-0 in five innings tonight at the KFC World Cup of Softball in Oklahoma City. Jenae Leles (Sacramento, Calif.) continued her offensive prowess at the World Cup going 2-for-2 with two runs scored and three RBI.
Burkhartearned the start in the circle, making her first appearance at
ASA Hall of Fame Stadium since winning the 2008 NCAA WCWS. She hit the lead off
batter, Veronica Fontana, but two strikeouts and a fielder’s choice later,
Fontana would be stranded on second.
The U.S. jumped out to a 6-0 lead in the first off of four hits, capitalizing
on two Italy errors. The team went through the batting order with the speed of
the lineup showing through with a combined five stolen bases. Natasha Watley
(Irvine, Calif.)led off the inning and was 1-for-1 with a walk and two
stolen bases in the first inning. Also highlighting the inning was a two-run
homerun by Jennie Finch (La Mirada, Calif.) who blasted a shot over left field
to score.
Alissa Haber (Newark, Calif.) who singled up the middle, advanced to second on
the throw. After making a big impact todayplaying first base with a
two-run home run, Finch is looking forward to another competitive dayon
Saturday.
“We’re looking forward to a good day. We’re not looking past Canada early in
the morning. They’ve been giving us a good game,” said Finch. “They gave us
quite a few games in Canada that have been really close so we’re looking
forward to a tough competition at noon and then we’re looking forward to the
rematch (with Japan).”
Burkhart allowed a single in the second but a strikeout and a groundout again
left an Italian runner stranded.USA tacked on two more runs in the second
off an RBI single by Andrea Duran (Selma, Calif.) and a bunt single by Chelsea
Bramlett (Cordova, Tenn.).
Leles repeated her performance from Thursday eveningwith a shot over the
center field fence for a three-run homerun. Lelesnow leads the USA
teamfor the summer with three home runs.Scoring on the long
ballfrom Leleswas Ashley Charters (Beaverton, Ore.) who walked and
Kaitlin Cochran (Yorba Linda, Calif.) who singled. The other run came during
Leles at bat when Lauren Lappin (Anaheim, Calif.) advanced home on a wild
pitch.
“Wearing this uniform, a lot comes with it, and I just wanted to do my part and
contribute. I think there's a little added pressure, but I think I'm a little
more comfortable now playing with my teammates and my coaches,” said Leles. “I
have been breathing and being a little more confident at the plate, knowing
that I can do it. I think I found my job a little bit.”
With a 12-0 lead in the third, the team maintained it through five with the
game being called due to the run-ahead rule. Stacey Nelson (Los Alamitos,
Calif.) threw the final two innings, allowing no hits or runs with one
strikeout.
Burkhartworked three complete innings with four strikeouts and one hit.
Also in KFC World Cup Action:
Australia 6, Netherlands 1
Kylie Cronk and Stacey Porter paved the way for Australia’s 6-1 win over
the Netherlands on the second day of the KFC World Cup of Softball presented by
Six Flags at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Okla. Porter and Parry
each contributed two RBIs to improve Australia’s record to 2-0.
Netherlands (1-2) took the lead in the second inning. Chantal Versluis doubled to right center, bringing in Areke Spel for an unearned 1-0 advantage. Spel reached earlier in the inning on a fielding error by the Aussie third baseman Clare Warwick and advanced to second on a Virginie Anneveld sacrifice bunt.
Bowering hit a solo homer to tie it up for the Aussies in the bottom of the second. In the third, Warwick, who singled earlier in the inning, stole home to give Australia their first lead of the game. The Aussies extended it to a 6-1 game with a four-run performance in the bottom of the sixth off Cronk and Porter two-RBI doubles.
Canada 3, Australia 2
Canada (1-0) topped Australia (2-1) 3-2 at the KFC World Cup of Softball presented by Six Flags at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Okla., despite struggles from starting pitcher Danielle Lawrie, USA Softball’s 2009 Collegiate Player of the Year.
Canada scored two unearned runs in the first inning but the Australians responded with two runs of their own in the fourth. Australia’s designated player Danielle Stewart hit a two-run homer to left field, chasing Lawrie, who threw three and 1/3 innings for the Canadians. Lawrie struck out four of 14 batters she faced, allowing one hit.
Second baseman Jennifer Yee homered to right center in the top of the fifth to put Canada back in control of the game. Her offensive prowess was backed up by Jennifer Caira on the mound. In her three and 2/3 innings, she struck out four of 13 batters, allowing two hits and no runs.
Canada improved to 1-0 with the win. On Thursday, the Canadians were playing the Italians but the game was postponed until Saturday at 9 a.m., with Italy leading 3-0 in the bottom of the first, because of an approaching thunderstorm. The Aussies dropped to 2-1 at the World Cup.
Italy
0, Japan 7
Six Japanese players contributed RBIs on Friday night at the World Cup of
Softball presented by Six Flags, giving Japan (1-1) a 7-0 win over Italy (0-3)
at the ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, Okla.
Haruna Sakamoto gave Japan the 1-0 lead in the bottom of the second inning with a single to shortstop that brought-in Maki Tanigawa, who led-off the inning with a triple to right field. A fielding error on Italy’s right fielder later in the inning allowed Sakamoto to score an unearned run, putting Japan up 2-0.
The
game concluded in the fifth when Shizuyo Hamamoto hit a two-RBI single to right
field, giving the team the seven run advantage needed for a run-rule victory.
Hamamoto’s single plated Yukiko Fujisaki, who signed up the middle, and
Tanigawa, who singled through the right side.
Tomorrow is a big day for USA Softball as they will take on Canada at noon in a
pink out to bring awareness of breast cancerresearch. The team will be
outfitted in pink with the uniforms later being auctioned off to support breast
cancer awareness. The team will then take on Japan at 7:00 p.m. in the first
game since the2008Olympic Gold Medal game where Japan
defeatedthe USA totake home Gold. Also on Saturday
theinaugural Border Battle between the USA Men’s National slow pitch
teamand the Canada National slow pitch team.
About ASA
The Amateur Softball Association, founded in 1933, is the National Governing
Body of softball in the United States and a member of the United States Olympic
Committee. The ASA has become one of the nation’s largest sports organizations
and now sanctions competition in every state through a network of 83 local
associations. The ASA has grown from a few hundred teams in the early days to
over 210,000 teams today, representing a membership of more than three million.
For more information on the ASA, visit http://www.asasoftball.com/.
About USA Softball
USA
Softball is the brand created, operated and owned by the ASA that links the USA
Men’s, Women’s, Junior Boys’ and Junior Girls’ National Team programs together.
USA Softball is responsible for training, equipping and promoting these four
National Teams to compete in international and domestic competitions. The USA
Softball Women’s National Team is one of the only two women’s sports involved
in the Olympic movement to capture three consecutive gold medals at the Olympic
Games since 1996. The U.S. women have also won eight World Championship titles
including the last six consecutive as well as claimed two World Cup of Softball
titles. For more information about USA Softball, please visit http://www.usasoftball.com/.














