Orientation Edition 2008 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 35 SOFTBALL From Page 32 both teams to break the 1-1 tie in the 10th, it was freshman Samantha Findlay who.finally sealed the deal. Stepping up to the plate with runners on first and second and two outs, Findlay took a 1-1 fastball from UCLA pitcher Anjelica Seldon deep over the leftfield wall. A swarm of elated teammates met her at the plate as she, along with Tiffany Haas and Alessandra Giampaolo, scored to give Michigan a 4-1 lead. "I tried to keep my head down on the ball because I had been pulling it out earlier," Findlay said. "I kept my head in and then looked up and saw it go out." It was also Findlay who gave Michigan (65-7) the opportunity to play for the title in extra innings. With the bases loaded and no one out in the sixth inning, Findlay roped a single into right field. That run was the lone run the Wolver- ines could muster in the inning, as Seldon and the Bruins pulled off a Houdini-like escape. Following Findlay was senior Nicole Motycka, who hit a line drive right down the third-base line. The ball found the mitt of UCLA third baseman Andrea Duran, who then doubled up Giam- paolo, who broke from third base early. Seldon then got junior Grace Leutele to strike out looking with a pitch that caught the outside corner of the plate. "I think that stopping the bleed- ing that inning - that we did today and hadn't done yesterday - gave our team a lot of confidence," Bru- in's first baseman Lisa Dodd said. UCLA (40-20) had already estab- lished momentum and looked to be in control of the game after jumping ahead in the second inning. With the bases empty and two outs, Dodd, UCLA's No. 8 hitter, took a 0-1 pitch from Michigan starter junior Jennie Ritter over the leftfield fence. After Michigan tied the game, the best chance for UCLA to seal its third consecutive national cham- pionship came in the ninth inning. Kristen Dedmon blooped a leadoff double, and subsequently moved to third base on a Krista Colburn bunt. Ritter then walked Dodd on four straight pitches. Ritter rebounded by getting Ashley Herrera to pop out. Duran - who was 2-for-3 on the night coming to the plate - was intentionally walked. Ritter escaped the inning after Tara Henry hit a sharp grounder to Leutele, who threw it to an outstretched Findlay to secure the third out. Ritter improved her season record to 38-4. She allowed four hits and five walks, striking out four in the process. Findlay's three hits and four RBI's on the night propelled her to Most Outstanding Player honors for the series. She ended the tourna- ment with a .409 batting average, with nine hits and eight RBIs - both tops for the series. Findlay, Ritter, senior Jessica Merchant and junior Stephanie Bercaw were named to the All-Tournament team. ."It's just a great team and I couldn't have asked for a better team to play for," Findlay said. "I would take this team over any indi- vidual awards, because this team has meant the world to me." The final out was recorded in the bottom of the 10th when Ritter got Dedmon to pop the ball up. Mer- chant and Leutele both went for the ball, but Merchant came away with it. The dugout cleared and mobbed Ritter in the middle of the field - except for Merchant, who ran over and tackled Findlay. The win gave Michigan its first ever national championship in soft- ball, and was only the second for a women's program. It is the 52nd overall championship by a Michigan varsity program. Michigan's victory also marks the first time ateam east of the Mississippi River has won a national championship in softball. Samantha Findlay earned Most Outstanding Player honors at the 2005 WCWS.