Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Goal still alive as Pitt points to final series

ACC tournament still a possibilit­y for softball team

- By Abby Schnable Abby Schnable: aschnable@post-gazette.com and @AbbySchnab­le on X

During a meeting last fall, Pitt softball coach Jenny Allard listed the team’s record for the last five years on the white board. She had both the conference record and the entire season’s record. Not a singleone was a winning record.

She asked the team what they wanted to do. What do theywant to rally around?

The idea of “flip Pitt” was born that day. There are signs with the slogan all over the softball office. But that’s not going to happen in a single season.

“We talk about that notion of kind of flipping Pitt from being a team that last year wasn’tin it at the last weekend to being in it and fighting for something,” Allard said. “The real goal is we want to make the [ACC] tournament, and weneed to believe we can.”

It would be the first time since 2018 — also the last time Pitt softball had a winning record.

And with just one weekend series left in the regular season — a three-game set at N.C. State beginning Friday — the Panthers’final weekend of the season matters. The Panthers entered Saturday 11th with a 6-15 record. Only the top 10 teams in the league make the tournament, but Pitt is within range of Louisville (6-12), Syracuse (7-13) and Notre Dame (8-13). N.C. State is the worst teamin the ACC.

Allard can’t say what she expected of her first season, but she knew what the team neededto do to reach its goal.

“In order for us to make the tournament, in order for us this year to have success, they had to overachiev­e,” Allard said. “They had to outwork their experience. They had to outwork their talent coming in. They had to grow and they had to get better. We had to really train them and really teachthem.”

Pitt had 11 returners and 11 newcomers, but all of them werefairly inexperien­ced.

The Panthers’ most used pitcher, Olivia Stefanoni, threw just 22⅔ innings at Akron last season; she’s at 95 inningsthi­s season.

Infielder Ana Hernandez had only started in 20 games in her first two years, splitting time between second base, third base and shortstop. But when Shelby Frazier went out with an injury, suddenly Hernandez was the starting shortstop.

You can continue down the list.

A handful of the returners bring experience. The team’s best hitter, Kat Rodriguez, has a .343 average in 48 games, 45 starts, all at second base as a redshirt junior. Kylie Griggs has played in 123 games during her career. But neither hasbeen on a winning team.

“We had to learn what it takes to win,” Griggs said. “I feel like with every team, it takes a little something different. We’re learning we can’t take any game lightly and have to really push through andbe gritty.”

It didn’t help that Pitt opened conference play against Virginia Tech and Florida State, which sat third and first in the ACC, respective­ly, as of Friday. But Allard took the time to refocus the squad. The end result wasn’t thegoal.

“Thesegames­needtomake us better,” Allard said. “We need to figure out how to fight, how to battle, how to stay the course, how to not get down onourselve­s.”

They went 0-6 against the Hokiesand Seminoles, largely due to the pitching, which made Allard realize she had to lookat the game differentl­y. In most sports, defense drives the offense. Allard encouraged her team to try to separateth­e two.

Sure, a good batting performanc­e would help the confidence when it came to fielding and vice versa. But when one was going badly, the Panthers couldn’t let that dictate the other.

The pivotal point of the season came in a series at Boston College in early April. Eagles pitcher Abby Dunning was known for her fast pitch and had yet to give up any home runs. That is until Amanda “Tuta”Ramirez came to bat in the fourth inning of of the series opener and hit a two-run home run. Griggs followed with her own homer, and Dunning was taken out of the game.

It gave the team some confidence, and that translated to Stefanoni, who ended up pitchinga shutout.

“It’s been crazy,” Stefanoni said. “I knew I had more to give to this game coming from last year and not throwing a lot. I always believed in myself, and having your coaches believe in you was huge. They really pushed me in a directiont­o be successful.”

Pitt won its first conference series that weekend and with it had hope that they could make the ACC tournament. The Panthers went 1-2 against North Carolina, giving them theirfourt­h win.

It was on the returning players’ minds that last season, seven wins would’ve gotten them in. The number changes year to year, but that numberwas in reach.

Before a series with Syracuse, Allard reiterated the team’s goal to be in the mix for a tournament spot in the last weekend. Pitt had just two series left and wanted to win as manygames as possible. They split the first two games against the Orange. The third game will probably forever be ingrained in the players’ memories.

Senior day at Vartabedia­n Field is always exciting. This one even more so because withone more win, Pitt would equal its conference win total from2023.

Griggs, the leadoff hitter, grounded out. Rodriguez hit a single, and the next four playersmad­e jaws drop.

CamiCompso­n homered to center field, bringing her and Rodriguez in for two runs. The home runs weren’t done. By the end of the first inning, Desirae Martinez, Rachael Fuerst and Hernandez all hit the ball out of the park. Pitt won,7-5.

“We didn’t go in there thinking we were going to hit a bunch of home runs,” Griggs said. “We just focused one at-bat at a time. It wasn’t one person. It was like the whole team really came together instead of a little spark hereand there.”

Unfortunat­ely for the Panthers, their fate doesn’t just rest in their hands. Three wins against N.C. State would definitely help their ACC tournament chances. But a Syracuse upset of Virginia Tech knocked Pitt out of 10th, setting up the scenario for theirtrip to Raleigh, N.C.

Stefanoni said they’re focused on controllin­g themselves. Are they hoping the teams ahead of them lose? Absolutely. No matter what happens this weekend, though, this season has still been a step in the right direction for theprogram.

“Seeing them respond to their success, when they are proud of themselves, that’s what it’s about for me,” Allard said. “It’s about their growth. Forme,it’salwaysabo­utthat.”

 ?? ?? Jenny Allard First-year Pitt softball coach
Jenny Allard First-year Pitt softball coach

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