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SB 2015

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Syracuse Softball @CuseSB · 4h 4 hours ago
We couldn't be more excited to have two great options at catcher! Here's the @DOsports story. http://www.dailyorange.com/2015/01/dewes-wambold-expect-to-take-over-catching-duties-after-lundstrom-transfer/…


Dewes, Wambold expect to take over catching duties for SU after Lundstrom transfer
012915_S_SB_LoganReidsma_APE.jpg

Logan Reidsma | Asst. Photo Editor
Alyssa Dewes and Julie Wambold expect to take over the catching duties after the transfer of Nicole Lundstrom (pictured) to Providence.
By Liam SullivanStaff Writer
15 hours ago

Leigh Ross expected Nicole Lundstrom to be her catcher for four years.
But when she transferred to Providence in the offseason, Ross, the SU head coach was faced with the task of replacing arguably her best offensive weapon.
This year, she’ll do that by turning to a two-catcher rotation of sophomore Alyssa Dewes and senior Julie Wambold. They’ll take over responsibilities behind the plate and fill the void offensively.
“As a coach you never know what’s going to come up,” Ross said “… and so I’m asking the two of them to play important roles for us.”
Lundstrom was the Orange’s starting catcher in her freshman season, ranking first on the team in at-bats (154), second in runs batted in (32), third in runs scored (29) and fourth in batting average (.312). Ross said the team would miss her bat, but also said that Dewes and Wambold are more than capable of filling the void.
Dewes and Wambold hit .307 and .309, respectively last season, however, neither played an inning at catcher. While replicating Lundstrom’s power will be hard to do, both players were regulars in the SU lineup last season. Their offensive contributions were enough for Ross to expect them both to be in the lineup no matter who is behind the plate.
Ross said the starting catcher would be determined game-by-game and would see how it played out from there. Dewes and Wambold both believe the change in position is only making them work harder.
“We push each other to do better,” Dewes said. “Watching her work and get after it in practice only makes me want to do the same. I don’t think we’re competing with each other.”
Defensively, the transition for both players hasn’t been as tough as it would be teaching the position to someone for the first time. Dewes and Wambold both played catcher in high school so there is a level of familiarity.
Dewes was a catcher throughout her childhood and high school and even was originally recruited to play catcher. Ross described Wambold as an “all-around athlete” who also caught a little bit in high school.
She receives “quietly and smoothly” behind the plate, Ross said, having great hands and a quick release. Those physical tools match well with the experience and confidence she brings to the table as a senior. Dewes, though a sophomore, has the stronger arm.
“Having two great catchers is going to be great this year. They each do something different really well behind the plate and in the way they handle pitchers,” pitcher Lindsay Larkin said. “Every pitcher is comfortable with both of them calling a game.”
The catchers have been working on lots of drills to improve on blocking loose balls, framing pitches and picking runners off base.
The most improvement Ross has seen has come from live bullpen sessions where Dewes and Wambold have been developing chemistry with the team’s pitchers. She is encouraged by what she’s seen, despite the fact that neither has caught in a game for SU before.
“It’s like riding a bike,” Wambold said. “It doesn’t take much to get back in the swing of things. Just lots of reps.”
 
http://dailyorange.com/2015/02/fern...ting-shortstop-role-as-freshman-for-syracuse/

Fernandez prepares to fill starting shortstop role as freshman for Syracuse
By Liam SullivanStaff Writer
8 hours ago

When Leigh Ross first went to recruit her first shortstop after joining the Syracuse program, Morgan Nandin was a high school sophomore that had all the tools she was looking for. Nandin fielded well, made the correct reads and could throw and field at every angle.

Nandin, now a student coach, started every single game of her career, totaling 227 starts to become SU’s all-time leader in games started. She also owns the all-time record with 476 assists and 36 double plays turned.

When Ross first saw Sammy Fernandez a couple years ago, she was reminded of her first star shortstop.

“You don’t find those types of players like that very often,” Ross said. “… It’s pretty rare to see them, especially as freshman players coming in.”

As Fernandez begins her freshman campaign this weekend for the Orange during five games in the Total Sports Control Invitational, Ross expects her to enjoy success right away just as Nandin did. Fernandez will be an “everyday middle infielder,” switching from second base and shortstop depending on whether last year’s second baseman, Julie Wambold, is catching on a given day.

The freshman started all five years she was on varsity at Carmel High School in New York. She was named to the New York All-State team from eighth grade to senior year, made the NYS All-Section First Team in her junior and senior years and led Carmel softball team to its first-ever section championship in 2013.

Ross said that there hasn’t been a noticeable adjustment to D-I softball for Fernandez because being a middle infielder comes so naturally to her. Nandin agrees, saying that Fernandez could have played with the team as early as her sophomore year of high school.

“The way the coaches and older players believe in me has made the transition a lot easier,”
Fernandez said. “I can tell I belong.”

Describing the way Fernandez takes ground balls as “fluid” and “smooth,” Ross said that she sees shades of Nandin when Fernandez makes plays in practice that the typical freshman wouldn’t be able to make.

“It’s refreshing as a coach to get out there and not have to teach the fundamentals,” Nandin said.

In spite of her natural abilities, Fernandez said that she’s been working a lot with Nandin, who coaches the middle infield. They’ve worked on her progressions when approaching different ground balls, tennis ball drills and Fungo drills to improve her hands, as well timed double-play drills to emphasize the importance of speed when trying to get two outs on balls up the middle.

While most of the drills are things she has seen before either in high school or with her travel team, Fernandez’s work with spinning up the middle to get to ground balls or drills with balls hit on a short hop have been new.

“She probably won’t have any problem with (the transition),” Nandin said. “She’s just a player, a competitor. Once she steps on that field for the regular season, she’s going to have that adrenaline going through her and she’ll be fine.”
 

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