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For softball's future: On leaving the Jan 12, 09:26AM ET | By Jessica Mendoza Since the International Olympic Committee voted to remove softball from the Olympic Games for 2012 and beyond, the sport has not been the same on the international level. However, here in the In my work as a college softball analyst for ESPN, I have seen this amazing game regularly outperform regular-season college baseball games in terms of television ratings. Softball is dearly loved in this country. But the big question remains: what happens to the 22-year-old softball player after she leaves college? Over the past two years, as president of the Women's Sports Foundation, I have heard Billie Jean King -- the foundation's founder and a huge mentor to me -- tell the history of women's tennis. The birth of the professional women's game began when King and eight other brave women (later dubbed "The Original Nine") left the Even before softball was eliminated from the Olympic program, Billie Jean used to tell me, "Jess, you need to get a successful professional league here in the As much as I want to see softball return to the Olympic Games, there is something this sport needs even more: an opportunity for women to play softball for a living. Not as a side job. Not just recreationally. Instead, they should be able to make a living playing the sport they love so dearly. Softball players shouldn't have to stop playing at age 22 because there are so few opportunities out there. And they shouldn't have to live abroad, like basketball players did in the pre-WNBA era, because only other countries' pro leagues are willing to pay them to play. I have seen more and more women in other sports (snowboarding, basketball, tennis, BMX and golf, to name a few) create opportunities to play for a living because of the professional opportunities they, and sponsors, have created. My dream now is to create these same professional opportunities for every young softball player out there. For the first time in the history of our sport, we have a professional softball league, called National Pro Fastpitch, which is here to stay. But to thrive, the NPF needs the help of biggest names in softball. Today is the day you can see the birth of the decision we have had to make. As players, we have tried to play with both the The reason this decision is so hard? There is nothing better than playing a sport you love with the three best letters, U-S-A, across your chest. I have been blessed to play with the national team for the last decade, through two Olympics, and it has provided me with the best softball memories of my life. I am hoping this is not a goodbye from the national team. I am hoping for a future in which our pro league and our national team can work together, and we will not have to choose between one or the other. But until that day comes, I ask those of you who support not only softball, but also the idea of a future where girls can grow up to play softball for a living, to educate others about the NPF. Then maybe one day girls will be able to answer the eternal question, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" with the response, "I want to be a softball player" -- and have it be a viable possibility. |