Softball will kick off the Tokyo 2020 Olympics with a special opening game in Fukushima, Japan.
LAUSANNE, Switzerland -- Today marks
exactly six months to the special opening of the Tokyo 2020 Games, with
softball in Fukushima’s Azuma Baseball Stadium kick-starting the official
Olympic programme of more than 300 medal events.
In the 1950s the American Softball
Association (ASA) President Nick Barack was well aware that softball was
growing outside the United States and Canada. This is why he had the vision of
an "International Softball Federation which will be the representative
body of nations in the Olympic and Pan American competition."
Barack was the first President of
the International Softball Federation (ISF). He was an interim President that
could do very limited action. The ISF elected the first President in February
1965 in Melbourne. Bill Kethan took over for Barack. He didn't like travelling,
so he relied for international relations on his young Secretary-General and
Treasurer Don Porter.
Porter reached out for the first
time to the International Olympic Committee in 1965. The feedback he received
from IOC Secretariat was not really promising: "the tendency is to reduce
than augment the programme".
During the 1968 Olympics, IOC
President Avery Brundage told Porter that "the process was going to be
very long". He gave him some advice: "You've got to be patient."
Patient Don Porter and softball proved to be. The sport was voted into the programme of the Summer Olympics on 13 June 1991: it had taken the ISF and the sport of softball 19 years, 6 months, 13 days of campaigning. The date is now celebrated annually as World Softball Day.
Part of the softball world considered the presence of men's baseball and women's softball on the programme of the 1996 Atlanta Olympics a detriment to men's softball. Nonetheless, the event was a success. The 32 games were sold out and softball ranked 15th (out of 37 events) with 120,000 spectators. A total of 160 media representatives witnessed a controversial gold medal game. USA shortstop Dot Richardson hit a tie-breaking home run that was protested by China's manager Li Minkuan as a foul ball. Australia beat Japan in the third-place game and claimed bronze.
The success of the Atlanta Games
helped softball maintain a spot on the Sydney 2000 Programme. The games played
at the Blacktown Olympic Center attracted over 200,000 fans. USA earned another
gold medal thanks to stellar pitching by Lisa Fernandez and Michele Smith. They
defeated Japan in the final. Australia earned another bronze medal.
USA dominated the Athens 2004 Games. The two-time defending champions won seven straight games in group play without allowing a run, shut out Australia in the semifinal and outscored them, 5-1, in the gold medal game. Japan finished third.
Softball was voted out of the
Olympic Programme on 7 July 2005. The IOC vote on softball actually resulted in
a 52-52 tie.
Heroics by pitcher Yukiko Ueno, who pitched 28 innings in two days to beat both Australia and the USA, helped Japan earn a historic gold medal. Australia celebrated bronze for the third time.
Softball was voted in the programme
of the 2020 Olympics on Monday, 28 September 2015, during IOC Session 129 in
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The result came after the ISF and the International
Baseball Federation (IBAF) had merged into the World Baseball Softball Confederation
(WBSC).
Back in the early 1980s another attempt to merge into the International Confederation of Amateur Baseball and Softball had failed when the IOC Programme Commission had voted baseball in and turned down softball.