Lodi News-Sentinel

Japan beats U.S. softball in gold medal game

- Ben Bolch

YOKOHAMA, Japan — For the U.S. softball team, one long excruciati­ng wait will be followed by another.

Thirteen years after falling to Japan in the gold medal game at the Beijing Olympics, the U.S. endured another frustratin­g finish here against its chief rival ahead of an uncertain future for its sport.

Yukiko Ueno, the gutsy Japanese ace who outdueled Cat Osterman in 2008, did so again Tuesday night at Yokohama Baseball Stadium, pitching six strong innings during a 2-0 victory in the gold medal game at the Tokyo Olympics.

Japan’s offense continuall­y pressured previously dominant U.S. pitching, and the country’s second consecutiv­e gold medal seemed like destiny after a wild double play to end the sixth inning kept the U.S. scoreless.

With a runner on second base and one out, U.S. slugger Amanda Chidester ripped a line drive toward third baseman Yu Yamamoto. The ball ricocheted off Yamamoto’s forearm and into the glove of shortstop Mana Atsumi, who then doubled off the runner at second base.

Japan then went back to its ace. After giving up a leadoff single in the sixth inning and departing the game, Ueno returned to start the seventh and retired the side in order after former UCLA star Delaney Spaulding popped out to catcher Haruka Agatsuma to end the game.

The U.S. players huddled in their dugout in a giant scrum of bodies, arms around one another, before turning to wave to their counterpar­ts in congratula­tions.

Meanwhile, overcome by the emotion of the moment, Ueno wept after having held the U.S. to

two hits while striking out five and walking two.

There had been smiles and high-fives among the Americans prior the game’s first pitch. Before she turned and walked into the pitcher’s circle, Osterman playfully bumped hips with third baseman Kelsey Stewart. Everybody seemed loose.

The vibe would quickly turn tense.

In her final Olympic appearance as player, Osterman couldn’t complete one clean inning. Japan stranded a runner in scoring position in the first and second innings before Atsumi drew a walk on a full count leading off the third.

That prompted U.S. coach Ken Eriksen to replace Osterman with Ally Carda, the former UCLA star who has dominated Japan in internatio­nal competitio­n and held it to one unearned run in 5 1/3 innings on Monday.

 ?? ROBERT GAUTHIER/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Team Japan celebrate a 2-0 win over the USA Women's Softball team for the Gold Medal in Yokohama, Japan on Tuesday.
ROBERT GAUTHIER/LOS ANGELES TIMES Team Japan celebrate a 2-0 win over the USA Women's Softball team for the Gold Medal in Yokohama, Japan on Tuesday.

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