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Alicia Hansen the latest to carry Syracuse’s offense in 2-0 win over Colgate

Jordan Phelps | Staff Photographer

Syracuse's Alicia Hansen, pictured in 2017, knocked in both of Syracuse's runs to beat Colgate on Wednesday.

On Monday, Sammy Fernandez’s three hits and three runs powered the Orange in its 4-2 victory over Cornell.

Two days prior, Rachel Burkhardt’s last-gasp heroics saved Syracuse against North Carolina, as the senior’s walk-off solo-shot was the sole run in a 1-0 win.

Both Alexa Romero and AnnaMarie Gatti allowed three hits or fewer in shutout performances when SU swept North Carolina State two weekends ago.

Recently, it has taken stellar individual performances to drag the Orange to victory. That trend continued on Wednesday, as Alicia Hansen powered both RBI as Syracuse (30-19, 9-12 Atlantic Coast) downed Colgate (11-29, 6-9 Patriot), 2-0, on a gloomy night at Skytop Softball Stadium as SU closed out its regular season. Game two of the doubleheader was cancelled after three-and-a-half innings due to rain.

“Softball’s one of those things where you just can’t dictate who’s gonna have the opportunity when the game is on the line,” head coach Mike Bosch said. “We need to have (batters) one through nine having that mindset that it’s going to be their opportunity, their time to get it done.”



The victory marked 10 of 11 for Syracuse, which will head to Atlanta, Georgia, in the coming days for the ACC tournament, which begins on May 9. While SU has garnered success from individual standout games of late, it knows it will take a collective, balanced effort to prosper in the postseason.

On Wednesday, Syracuse followed suit to another one of its recent trends: scoring early. In three of its last five contests prior to Wednesday, the Orange scored at least two runs in the first inning en route to victory. Hansen was the provider of such runs against Colgate, as the junior helped build a lead in the first two innings that SU never gave up.

To open the bottom of the first, Fernandez tripled down the right field line to give the home team its 21st triple of the season, the joint-second best clip in Division I. Hansen, the next batter, blooped a single to left field, which dropped well short of Colgate left fielder Olivia LaQua. Fernandez scored from third with ease, giving SU an early one-run advantage.

“It’s a lot easier to know you’re going into something with the lead and you have breathing room,” Gatti said. “The bats were alive, they were kind of silent after that. But that gives me a lot of breathing room because we know they’re there for the day.”

Just as she did in her two starts versus North Carolina State, Gatti was dominant once Syracuse jumped out to an early lead. The senior pitched her third consecutive complete game at home, a mark she failed to reach in any of her first 17 starts of the season. After allowing a double to Meghan Romero in the top of the first, Gatti retired 16-straight hitters over a 5 1/3 inning span.

The Orange’s sent six batters to the plate in the first and did the same in the second inning. Neli Casares-Maher, who returned after missing the last 13 games, walked to open the inning. Colgate pitcher Kyle Griswold proceeded to walk SU’s next two batters, Michala Maciolek and Fernandez, before Hansen stepped up with the bases loaded.

The junior hit a high pop-up to center field, where it was caught by Colgate’s Mia Guevarra a couple of feet from the warning track. Guevarra opted not to fling the ball home, allowing Casares-Maher to trot in peacefully from third for Syracuse’s second run in as many innings.

“We’re a team that can rely on every person to do their job,” Hansen said. “We can just work on little things. That means just base hits, advancing runners. Everyone can contribute to that.”

As the final four-and-a-half innings progressed, zero after zero appeared on the scoreboard. Neither team had a runner advance past second base, as Gatti, Griswold and Colgate relief pitcher Jessica Hay tamed the opposing side. The ball rarely reached the outfield as each pitcher consistently forced ground balls that both sets of infielders dealt with routinely.

Although SU’s current production on offense has led to wins, Bosch believes that is not the formula for success in its potential matchup against any of the ACC’s top teams. It will need contributions from more than just one or two players, including the bottom half of the lineup, something Bosch emphasized.

“You’ve seen various people in the lineup do that,” Bosch said about SU’s recent reliance on individual performances. “You get to the 7-8-9 hitters in the order in the bottom of the seventh, we’re gonna need those people to win it. We can’t turn the lineup over and get to Sammy, Alicia or Bryce.”





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