Cat Osterman's final scene on softball's world stage

OLYMPIC SOFTBALL

Because softball will not be an Olympic sport in London, the American left-handed pitcher will carry on as an assistant coach at DePaul and in a fledgling pro league.

BEIJING -- Imagine if Carl Lewis had been told, at age 25, to limit his running to chasing buses when he was late for work. Or LeBron James, when he turns 25, being forced to play rec league basketball.

How much would we have missed? How much would they have missed?

This is not so much a hypothetical issue as it is reality for U.S. softball pitcher Cat Osterman, who is perhaps the best left-hander in the world. With the medal round of the Beijing Olympics set to begin Wednesday and the unbeaten U.S. taking on second-seeded Japan (6-1), Osterman will have her sport's biggest stage pulled out from under her in just two days.

Softball is not on the calendar for the 2012 Olympics in London, and unless the International Olympic Committee has a change of heart, there's no guarantee softball or baseball will ever return. But while baseball players have the major leagues, Osterman, four months past her 25th birthday, is left with the World Cup, the Pan American Games and the Rockford Thunder of the National Pro Fastpitch League -- not exactly staples on ESPN.

"It's frustrating because, yeah, I'm at a point when my career is not anywhere near the end," said Osterman, a gold medalist in Athens who helped her team into the semifinals here by going 3-0, striking out 24 in 14 innings. "It's frustrating because we, as a team, have worked so hard to see softball grow. To be a recognized sport. And to be on TV a lot.

"Why were we trying to make these strides if it's not going to be recognized by everybody?"

The timing couldn't be worse for Osterman. With Lisa Fernandez, the leader of the last three Olympic champion teams, failing to make the team for Beijing and pitcher Jennie Finch, the face of this summer's squad, turning 31 by London, Osterman appeared poised to follow them into a role of leadership -- and later, into the broadcast booth.

She certainly has the qualifications. A two-time Pan American Games winner and a two-time World Cup champion, Osterman is 32-1 with six runs given up in international competition since 2003, averaging two strikeouts per inning.

Not bad for someone whose first Olympic dreams growing up in Texas were of soccer and basketball. Yet it's ironic, said national team Coach Mike Candrea, that the U.S. success -- behind Osterman and players such as Finch, 2-0 with 11 scoreless innings, and outfielder Jessica Mendoza (hitting .421 here with four home runs) -- has spurred softball's popularity but also has helped push softball off the Games' schedule because of U.S. dominance.

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