ASU softball sweeps Kentucky, advances to Women's College World Series
For most programs, getting to Oklahoma City symbolizes a lofty goal, not the annual expectation.
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For most programs, getting to Oklahoma City symbolizes a lofty goal, not the annual expectation.
Many athletes have setbacks or obstacles blocking their path to success. Fewer have overcome the adversity. Even less return better than before and become the best player in his or her respective league. For ASU sophomore catcher Amber Freeman, it was a long road to where she is now, the Pac-12 Player of the Year, after being told she would never play softball again because of injuries. “When I was 11, playing a tournament in Fresno, Calif., I remember stepping on first base wrong and complaining to my dad that my leg was bothering me,” Freeman wrote in her ESPNW blog. “We went to countless doctors, and no one could figure out what was wrong with me. Finally, after getting a sixth opinion, one figured it out. The top of my femur had slipped out of my hip socket. I had been playing that way for about a year. “Apparently it was common in children, but the doctor made it clear I would never be able to play the game I loved again. I had surgery, and to this day, I have a 3-inch titanium screw in my left hip. The doctor’s words have stuck with me, but I have used that as motivation each and every day to get back on the field.” Years after the surgery, Freeman excelled on the field instantly in high school. During her freshman year, she verbally committed to ASU over UCLA. Freeman said she grew up rooting for the Bruins, her hometown team and one of the nation's premier softball programs. Freeman said she committed to ASU because she fell in love with the program and the campus. In her sophomore season of high school, however, Freeman endured another setback. She tore her ACL and meniscus in her left knee. “It was a freak accident,” Freeman wrote. “All I was doing was running the bases when I felt a huge pop in my left knee.” The ACL tear is considered one of the most gruesome injuries in sports. Athletes vary in recovery times, and some are never the same after the injury. “I called (ASU) coach (Clint Myers) and told him that I’d hurt myself,” Freeman said. “He’s like, ‘ACLs are very common injures.’ He wasn’t worried about it, and I still had three years before I got here.” Freeman said the daily rehabilitation was difficult. It consumed part of her life. “It was really tough for me,” Freeman said. “It’s only supposed to be six months, but it took me eight months to get back on the field. I was really nervous about re-hurting myself again. It took me a few extra months to be comfortable enough to be able to play.” As a catcher, having to squat throughout a game puts additional pressure on the knees. Freeman said she still gets sore and added she wears a hidden knee brace to guard against future injury. Freeman came back from the ACL injury better than she was before. In her junior and senior seasons at Mater Dei High School, she hit .481 with 19 home runs in 135 at-bats, according to maxpreps.com. In her true freshman season at ASU, Freeman continued to hit, sporting a .349 batting average and 12 home runs. ASU finished third at the Women’s College World Series, and Freeman was named to Women’s College World Series All-Tournament team with a .500 batting average. Freeman re-tore her meniscus in her left knee last fall, missing the latter part of fall ball. Freeman said the injury occurred near the end of the fall, and she had enough repetitions in the fall to prepare her for this year. Now, the Sun Devils are vying for another national championship, and Freeman has blossomed into ASU's best hitter in her sophomore season. After a 3-0 record in regional play, ASU advanced to Super Regionals, and the team will face No. 12 seed Kentucky for a berth in the Women’s College World Series. On May 15, she was named the Pac-12 Player of the Year. Through Sunday, Freeman was hitting .382 with 18 homers and 61 RBI, and she hit home runs in each of ASU’s first two postseason games. “I knew I was always capable of (being) Player of the Year, but I never thought it would be this soon, my sophomore year,” Freeman said. To this day, Freeman uses the doctor’s words as motivation on the field. “I would not have been able to get through all of this without the unconditional support and love from my family,” Freeman wrote. “Each day I feel blessed to be able to play the sport I love, because I will never forget when the doctor told me I would never play again.” Reach the reporter at justin.janssen@asu.edu or follow him on Twitter @JJanssen11
Entering the postseason, many believed junior pitchers Dallas Escobedo and Mackenzie Popescue would alternate starts.
As illustrious of a career junior pitcher Dallas Escobedo has enjoyed with the ASU softball program, she may be pitching her best softball right now.
Favorite: ASU (45-10, 16-8 Pac-12), RPI: 11
After weeks of jockeying for position and months practicing on the field, the path to Oklahoma City became clearer for the ASU softball team, which earned the No. 5 national seed in the postseason.
Coming into the season’s final weekend, the No. 5 ASU softball team needed to close the regular season on a high note.
In the last weekend of the regular season, the No. 5 ASU softball team will get a taste of postseason softball.
After blowing eight and four run leads to rival UA, the ASU softball team could have come out with a defeatist attitude.
When rivals square off, emotions often run high.
Sophomore catcher Amber Freeman has taken her talents to the web.
Coming off a series loss to Utah, the No. 5 ASU softball team needed to get back on track.
At the beginning of my freshman year in the ASU Walter Cronkite School of Journalism, I never thought I would have so many opportunities my freshman year. I’ve interviewed athletes, gone to countless basketball and softball games and, of course, written this blog. I never expected to obtain a position at the State Press, much less a position where I got to write about my passion in sports.
Junior outfielder Alix Johnson runs through the bag in a game against North Dakota on March 1. Johnson's home run in the first inning helped ASU to a 10-2 win over Cal on April 26. (Photo by Dominic Valente)
After Friday's offensive performance, it would be hard for the ASU softball team to duplicate its success.
Following a series loss to unranked Utah, the No. 5 ASU softball team needed a performance like this.
The ASU softball team hadn’t lost a series all year. So facing the Utah Utes, who only had one conference series win in one and half years, shouldn’t have been a problem. However, games aren’t played on paper, and ASU lost the series. The No. 5 Sun Devils (39-7, 10-5 Pac-12) look to counter the surprising series loss with a home showdown against No. 10 Cal (35-9, 9-6 Pac-12). “This team has to distinguish themselves what kind of legacy and identity they want to have,” coach Clint Myers said. “We’ve had it happen in the past, and we’ve bounced back really well.” Early in the season, the Cal series was thought to decide the Pac-12 conference championship. Now both teams are on the outside looking in with three weeks remaining in the regular season. Cal and ASU were picked to finish 1-2 in the conference before the season began. It will be difficult for either to catch Oregon (38-6, 13-2 Pac-12). ASU dropped from No. 2 in the polls last week to No. 5 this week following the losses at Utah. Cal began the season at No. 3 in the country. Cal senior pitcher Jolene Henderson could miss the series with an injury she suffered on Sunday against Oregon State. “Moments after throwing the ball to first base, Henderson grimaced and collapsed to the ground holding her left leg,” Sean Wagner-McGough of The Daily Californian wrote. Henderson means everything for the Golden Bears. She appeared in 40 of Cal’s 44 games on the mound, starting 33 of them and has 13 shutouts. Henderson also leads the conference in ERA with 1.21. “She’s a great pitcher,” Myers said. “Pitchers are huge for any program. I’m hoping that she’s OK. She’s a great competitor, good for the game of softball. I’m guessing that just knowing her that she’s going to be in the circle, unless somebody took her leg off.” Cal’s other pitchers don’t have nearly the experience or the success of Henderson this season. Henderson is one of the national leaders with 249.2 innings pitched this season. The rest of the team has thrown 52.1 innings with a 2.94 ERA. “Whether she pitches or doesn’t pitch, we have to bring our ‘A' game,” Myers said. “That’s the most important thing, coming to play regardless of who’s in the circle.” Senior second baseman Sam Parlich echoed Myers’s thoughts, especially considering the pitchers ASU lost to last week. “She’s a big part of the program, but they have other pitchers who are capable of beating us,” Parlich said.Notes - All three games in the series will be aired on television. The first game, on Friday, airs on ESPNU at 7 p.m. Saturday’s game is on Pac-12 network at 7 p.m., while the series finale airs at 3 p.m. Sunday on the same station. - Cal is the only Pac-12 program that Myers has a losing record against with a 10-11 mark. Reach the reporter at justin.janssen@asu.edu or follow him on Twitter @JJannsen11
It wasn’t always easy for Sam Parlich.
ASU senior second baseman Sam Parlich was called for the final out in the first and second games of the series against Utah. She didn’t want to do the same in the finale.
The No. 2 ASU softball team expected a relatively easy series against Utah.
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