University of Georgia Athletics
Seniors All Have Their Moments
May 23, 2016 | Softball
By John Frierson
        UGAAA Staff Writer
        
        Sunday was one more day at the park for the Georgia softball team, one last day at the park        for the seniors.
        
        About 20 minutes before the No. 16-seeded Bulldogs hosted Oklahoma State in the NCAA Athens        Regional Championship at Jack Turner Stadium -- the first of two games, as it turned out --        two Bulldogs were playing catch in the outfield. Nothing unusual about that, right?
        
        It was seniors Alex Hugo        and Samantha        LaZear, and they were throwing a football. And really throwing it. For a good        chunk of their lives they've been zipping softballs around the field, but these pregame        passes were 35-yard tight spirals that the 2015 version of Peyton Manning would have        envied.
        
        Hugo said she was given the football for Senior Day and the throws have become a regular        pregame thing ever since.
        
        "We just mess around and kind of get our mind off of things, pressure-wise," Hugo said        after the Bulldogs (43-18) clinched a spot in a Super Regional with a 6-0 win over the        Cowgirls in the deciding game Sunday. "I don't like sitting (in the dugout) when we're        waiting, so I like getting out there and throwing the football and running around a little        bit."
        
        There are six seniors on Georgia's roster and all of them, whether a starter or a Dog        coming in off the bench, contributed Sunday. There's no better sendoff for a senior than        making plays in your final home games.
        
        "I can't say enough about our seniors on our team," coach Lu        Harris-Champer said. "We love them and I can't believe that's the last game we're going        to have on that field with them. They've been amazing for our program and they're        absolutely irreplaceable."
        
        In the top of the first inning of game one, with Georgia batting first as the visiting        team, Hugo brought in a run with a sacrifice fly, helping the Dogs take a 2-0 lead.
        
        In addition, Tina        Iosefa, the Dogs' leading slugger this season who went on to set a new Georgia and SEC        single-season record with 86 runs batted in, drew a walk, which wasn't new or interesting.        But her stealing second base a few moments later sure was.
        
        "I'm just going out there and having fun with my team," she said.
        
        It was Iosefa's first steal of the season, on her second attempt. In fact, it was her first        steal since May 18, 2014, when as a sophomore swiped a base in a 9-1 win over N.C. State in        an NCAA Regional game in Athens. She also hit a home run in that game, just as she did in        Sunday's deciding game.
        
        Iosefa hit her 23rd homer of the season in game two, after the Cowgirls had rallied from        the 2-0 hole to beat Georgia 5-3. Oklahoma State's win forced a winner-take-all game, which        the Bulldogs dominated, winning 6-0. And Iosefa was just one of the seniors making that        happen.
        
        In the bottom of the first inning of game two, with freshman Alyssa        DiCarlo on third, Iosefa belted a homer just inside the left-field foul pole, giving        Georgia a 2-0 lead. It turned out to be more than enough.
        
        Senior pitcher Chelsea        Wilkinson was in the circle for game two, and made the most of her final Turner Stadium        start. She allowed only four hits and struck out nine for her 25th win of the season. But        it wasn't always easy.
        
        In the second the Cowgirls got two on with nobody out -- a threatening situation. Wilkinson        responded by striking out the next three batters. Threat removed.
        
        "I just kept telling myself, `bear down,'" Wilkinson said, while Harris-Champer praised        Wilkinson for her "grit."
        
        It was still 2-0 entering the bottom of the fifth inning, when Georgia put the game away        for good -- and all with two outs.
        
        Senior Kaylee        Puailoa came in to pinch hit and drew a walk. Next up was LaZear, who singled to center        field. That's two on with two out for junior Sydni        Emanuel, who singled, loading the bases for her sister, Cortni, a sophomore. Cortni and        the Dogs got a little lucky when a sharply-hit ball bounced off the shortstop's leg,        allowing Puailoa and LaZear to score.
        
        "It was a great day," LaZear said. "Chelsea was pitcher her heart out and we just wanted to        add some insurance runs."
        
        DiCarlo kept the fun going with an RBI single and Iosefa capped off the inning, and her        home hitting career, with an RBI double. In the sixth inning, senior catcher Katie        Browne doubled to right field in her final Turner at-bat. And the senior sendoff wasn't        complete.
        
        In the top of the seventh, with Georgia three outs from advancing, Wilkinson gave up a        leadoff single. And then struck out the next three batters to end the game.
        
        Hugo, LaZear and the rest of the seniors get to keep playing ball and keep chasing a        championship. Georgia plays at top-ranked Florida in the Super Regional on Thursday. And        yes, the football will be coming along.
        
        John Frierson is the staff writer for the UGA Athletic Association and curator of the        ITA Men's Tennis Hall of Fame. You can find his work at: Frierson Files. He's also on        Twitter: @FriersonFiles and @ITAHallofFame.

