The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Abbott 1-hitter lifts US over Canada for 2-0 softball start

- By Ronald Blum

FUKUSHIMA, JAPAN >> Six outs from her second Olympic no-hitter, Monica Abbott was clinging to a onerun lead when she walked Canada’s Jen Gilbert leading off the sixth inning, and pinch-hitter Sara Groenewege­n lined a 0-2 pitch to the right-center field gap.

Center fielder Haylie McCleney picked up the ball at the wall and fired to Ali

Aguilar. The second baseman made a perfect onehop throw to catcher Aubree Munro, who moved up the third-base line and swiped a tag on sliding pinch-runner Joey Lye for the out.

“It’s fun to be on the mound to watch that,” Abbott said after her one-hitter led the United States over Canada 1-0 on Thursday in the first of three onerun softball games. “I don’t want to give up a hit like that, but, man oh man, it took a lot of confidence in me on our defense.”

Amanda Chidester hit an RBI single in the fifth off loser Jenna Caira that scored McCleney, who went 3 for 3 with a walk and has reached base seven times in two games.

Trying to regain the gold medal it lost to Japan in the 2008 final, the U.S. improved to 2-0. After a day off for the opening ceremony in Tokyo, the tournament shifts to Yokohama on Saturday.

Abbott, 6-foot-3 and slim, has a Randy Johnsonlik­e reach that reduces her release point from the 43foot rubber to about 37 feet from the plate. Pitching a week before her 36th birthday, she struck out nine, walked three and needed 102 pitches in the Americans’ second consecutiv­e one-hitter.

Cat Osterman, at age 38 the Americans’ senior player, struck out nine over six innings and Abbott struck out the side in the seventh to finish Wednesday’s

opening 2-0 win over Italy.

“Once you start thinking about it, it always ends up being broken up,” Abbott saidof the no-hit bid. “So as soon as it popped into my head, I was like, no — no, no, no, no, no, don’t think about it.”

Lye didn’t regret the green light.

“I felt good rounding third,” she said. “We live to play another day.”

Munro made sure not to obstruct the runner.

“The turf makes it pretty easy,” Munro said.

U.S. coach Ken Eriksen got goosebumps.

“That was the first drill that we did in 2011 and what we do every single year on the first day of practice,” he said. “That can win gold medals.”

Groenewege­n took third on the throw, but Abbott stranded pinch-runner Janet Leung when Victoria Heyward flied out and, after an intentiona­l walk, Kelsey Harshman struck out.

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