SportsTravel

Posted On: May 13, 2015 By : Staff

Softball Winds Up
For All Ages

The U.S. national women’s team is one of the highest ranked in the world. Sara Nevins pitched for the U.S. team at the 2014 World Championships in Haarlem, Netherlands, where the team finished second. Photo Courtesy of Ye Pingfan/Xinhua/ZUMA Wire
The U.S. national women’s team is one of the highest ranked in the world. Sara Nevins pitched for the
U.S. team at the 2014 World Championships in Haarlem, Netherlands, where the team finished second. Photo Courtesy of Ye Pingfan/Xinhua/ZUMA Wire

By Greg Mellen

As it awaits a potential return to the Olympics, softball continues to attract participants interested in the sport from the youngest ages to active senior leagues. While baseball claims to be America’s game—despite its reputed English roots—it is softball that is American through and through, invented in 19th-century Chicago. The 2013 Sports & Fitness Industry Association’s participation survey counted about 10 million American participants playing softball, 2.6 million in fastpitch and 7.4 million in slow-pitch, ranking behind basketball, baseball and outdoor soccer, respectively, in team-sport participation.

Craig Cress, executive director of the Amateur Softball Association and USA Softball, likes to say that softball is for people ages 8 to 80. (Some organizations have even added 85-and-older tournaments to their offerings.) Yet while participation numbers are encouraging, softball has been off the Olympic program since it last appeared in 2008. Leaders in the sport are not giving up on its return, though.

To read the rest of this story in the digital edition of SportsTravel, please click here.

Posted in: SportsTravel Archives


Copyright © 2024 by Northstar Travel Media LLC. All Rights Reserved. 301 Route 17 N, Suite 1150, Rutherford, NJ 07070 USA | Telephone: (201) 902-2000