USA TODAY US Edition

13 years later, agony repeats

US loses to Japan again for softball gold medal

- Jeff Metcalfe

TOKYO – U.S. softball waited 13 years for a chance to avenge its loss to Japan in the last Olympic softball gold medal game.

Instead, Japan won again in the sport’s return to the Summer Olympics for the first time since 2008 on its home soil, prevailing 2-0 Tuesday at Yokohama Baseball Stadium.

“Sometimes it’s just not your day,” said U.S. pitcher Cat Osterman. “Unfortunat­e, it’s not been our day twice now. If you told me this was the ending and I had to redo it, I would do it all over again because this team has heart, has fight.”

Japan lost 2-1 to the U.S. in the finale of round-robin play Monday but won the game that counted, handing the

Americans their first loss this Olympics.

Japan’s winning pitcher was 39year-old Yukiko Ueno, also the victor in a 3-1 gold medal win over the U.S. in 2008. She worked six innings, allowing just two hits.

Japan got on the board first in the fourth against Ally Carda, the second U.S. pitcher.

Yamato Fujita lined a leadoff single to center, advanced on a sacrifice and ground out and scored when Mana Atsumi dove into first base to barely beat a throw from Ali Aguilar.

In the fifth, Japan scored again with two outs. Yu Yamamoto singled to center. Monica Abbott replaced Carda and, after a wild pitch advancing Yamamoto, gave up an RBI single to right by Fujita for an important Japanese insurance run.

Ueno worked five-plus innings, exiting after a leadoff single in the sixth by Michelle Moultrie. She reentered to pitch the seventh.

Both teams had chances to score early against the same pitchers from 2008, Osterman (U.S.) and Ueno.

Janie Reed tripled to right-center with one out in the U.S. first but was thrown out trying to score on a strikeout/wild pitch.

In the Japan second, Yuka Ichiguchi sent a shot to deep right field that Moultrie pulled down at the fence to prevent a two-run homer. Moultrie originally was in the lineup as designated player then shifted to right when play began.

“The biggest thing is you’re not going to win every game,” Osterman said. “You’re not going to win every pitch. You’re not going to win every at-bat. You have to figure out how you’re going to bounce back with it or how you’re just gonna move forward with it.

“Obviously, it’s a heartbreak that we’re coming home not with the gold, but at the same time you look at it, you have the silver medal. How many people would give for that?”

 ?? KAREEM ELGAZZAR/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Team USA utility player Allyson Carda, right, hands pitcher Monica Abbott the ball and talks during a pitching change in the fifth inning in the gold medal game.
KAREEM ELGAZZAR/USA TODAY SPORTS Team USA utility player Allyson Carda, right, hands pitcher Monica Abbott the ball and talks during a pitching change in the fifth inning in the gold medal game.

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