Dear Last Inning,
Written by: Francesca Sikora
Edited by: Joshua Hicks
My dad forced me to go. I played in-house
league growing up and it was all about the post-game snacks. One night we got a
call, a travel team was short players and asked me to fill in. My dad answered
for me, “yes she’ll be there”. I was annoyed. Playing in the games I did pretty
well and when they invited me back to continue with them for the summer I was
not interested, but my dad was persistent, and now I was playing travel
softball.
I was the worst one on the team. As an
unathletic 13-year-old, I was moved up to a 16u team. It was my first year of
travel ball and trying to develop into a teenager while competing with girls
way older than me tore me apart. I used to excel while playing with girls my
age, I was tall, strong confident. And now I’m the bottom of the barrel
fighting to fit in. I couldn’t throw as hard, hit as hard, run as fast. I never
wanted to go to practice, it seemed like a useless event that would only make
me feel worse about myself. Quitting was never an option in my dad's eyes.
I made the junior varsity team during my freshman
year. This was devastating because I wanted to be on varsity so bad. One Thursday afternoon I received a text from the
head varsity coach. “Hey Frankie, you’re going to suit up with varsity today. I
put a uniform in the locker room for you #11”. As a freshman who was so
defeated before, the excitement came over me and I thought I could cry.
Finally, I felt like they understood my talent and that I could produce when
given the chance. I sprinted to the locker room after class and put on the
maroon varsity uniform. The pants were too tight and I couldn’t wear my sliding
shorts, but as a chubby freshman, I was too embarrassed to tell the coach. I
never wore sliding shorts again. At the varsity game, I got to pinch hit. My
first varsity high school hit was a double, left-center gap, which became my
favorite hitting spot on a field. From that day on, I got to play and practice
with the varsity. Even though I didn’t play much, I wore those maroon jerseys and
tight pants with pride.
Towards the end of the season, something
didn’t feel right. I started getting a pain in my lower back that I could no
longer ignore. I continued to play softball over
the summer although it just worsened. At the time, I was also a cheerleader and
the pain was becoming unbearable. This continued until I was missing too much
school and couldn’t do daily activities. My L5 S1 disks had herniated into the
nerve line creating so much irritation that my foot was going numb. That was
it, I needed surgery, and would miss my sophomore season of softball.
This dug at me hard. Finally, I was on varsity
and eager to take on a larger role when my back wasn’t there to support me. Now
I had to explain to my coach how I’m going to miss an entire season because of
a back injury, at 16 years old. I was angry. It wasn’t fair that my back gave
out. Why couldn’t I be healthy and play with everyone else? Can’t I just ice it
and do more therapy? It was no use. I had surgery on March 21st, 2014.
Before my surgery, they had to talk to me about
how playing softball again was not a guarantee. Lifting heavy weights would be
almost impossible to do without injuring my back and that I need to brace
myself if the surgery is not a success. I was so young to be having it and no
happy story outcome was promised. The waiting and uncertainty killed me. My
nerves were constant and my fate was in limbo.
After the surgery, they stated everything went
well but I still need to take it slow. My dad bought me the brand new 2014
Easton Mako bat. As I was so excited to see it, my heart was broken thinking I
would never be able to use it in a game. They told me it would be 6 months of
physical therapy before putting my cleats back on. I figured what’s the point
in trying again.
“You can always quit but you can’t always get
back into it”. This was the advice my dad gave me when I was not considering
playing in college. I didn't want to listen. He kept pushing me to go to batting
practices and work with me outside, I complained all the time. He knew I could
be better, I’d cry that he was too hard on me. Softball became the enemy and I
didn’t want to play anymore. It wasn’t fun, I wasn’t any good, and there was no
future for me and the sport.
My junior year started and I was back in the
game, more just going through the motions. For travel ball, I got back behind
the plate catching. Everyone looked to me as a leader on the team and I was
hooked again. College coaches began talking to me and my dad. They loved my
size, standing 5’8 with muscle and some speed. Also, I was loud, I never stopped
talking during games. I would get a rush every time a coach reached out to me
or I went on a college visit. The attention was nice but I was still unsure.
Again my dad was persistent.
After looking at about 15 colleges and meeting
with their coaches, I had one school left. This school was located down south
and was the last on our list, we had been to 5 other schools that weekend. I
was tired of asking the questions and pretending to be interested in the team
and schools values and what they look for. I wanted to cancel the last visit,
looking the school up online did not please me; it was in the middle of
nowhere, in a town I’ve never heard of, at a school no one knows. Again, my dad
forced me to go on my last visit. I arrived on campus and fell in love. This
school was Illinois college, and playing softball there was the best decision
of my life. I signed on February 3rd, 2016 (my birthday).
My senior year of high school we won the state
championship for 3A. For my senior year, I got to DH (just hit). After all of
this struggle and ups and downs, I didn’t give up. And to this day I hold 2
IHSA state records; most hits in a game and most doubles in a game.
Like high school, the beginning of college
softball was a rough start for me. I continued to DH my freshman year but could
not field. I struggled with my emotions and nerves. My dad would give me
benedryll before softball games because my anxiety would be so high I would
physically shake during games. Even though I didn’t care about the sport at the
time, I always wanted to be the best and try the hardest. By my junior year, I
got in medication for my anxiety and emotions and was able to find peace and
calm down.
I missed the backhand. In the elimination game
at the conference tournament of my last season, I was playing 3rd. My coach had
pulled me in so I was close for a bunt. The batter ripped on right down the
line and I missed it. We were in the bottom of the 8th tied 0-0. I watched the
ball zip past me as it made its way down the left field line. I felt like I was
going to throw up, I was going to lose us the last game of our season. It was
my fault. All of my hard work and numerous comebacks flashed before my eyes.
All of it led up to this moment, my last play ever in a game being an error. An
error that led us to lose the game. They scored on the next play and ended up
winning and I will never forget that moment.
Softball has never been my friend, it was
always my enemy. I wanted nothing to do with it, but sticking with it is the best
thing I ever did. The sport gave me more amazing people than I ever expected as
well as made me the person I am today. The game of failure tore me down more
times than it raised me up and I am thankful. I have formed into a leader,
friend, teammate, and now coach working to teach others to find the silver
lining in between the white lines. At the end of the day, no one will remember
your batting average, awards, or plays. They are going to remember your
character if you were a friend, a leader, a good teammate. They are going to
remember how you changed their lives.
Sometimes it takes a step back to reflect.
Realize all of those who have supported you along the way. I thank every coach
I have ever had for what they have taught me. They made me not only the player
I am today but a determined young lady. I thank every teammate I’ve ever had.
All of the support and reassurance and never-ending confidence in me. They are
truly your biggest support system on and off the field and will become your
life long friends. Lastly, my friends and family. Thank you for always being
there for me and not killing me when I would throw a fit. If it was taking me
to play with dogs after a bad practice or buying me a coffee even though I
played bad, I appreciate everything. My mom has always been the biggest
mediator between me and my dad and helped me feel better and she never gave up
on me. Lastly, thank you to my dad. He was one stubborn fucker and pushed me
each and every day, physically and mentally. Whether it was making me watch
games to learn, scheduling extra practices, or making me lift weights when I
tore my hamstring because you know, “your arms are fine”. I would have never
made it through without my number one dude.
Thank you to softball and allowing me to embed
#33 in my soul.
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