Lisa Huntington
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Barry Faulkner
With world conflict providing an underlying urgency to her daily
routine, West Point junior Lisa Huntington wasn’t about to stress out
over an early-season hitting slump.
So, even when her participation on the Black Knights’ successful
softball team wasn’t as statistically rewarding as it could have
been, the Newport Harbor High product always viewed her time on the
diamond as a coveted escape.
“Softball is a relief here,” said Huntington, who has been giving
opposing pitchers little relief during a late-season surge that
continued through Monday.
In an 11-game stretch that began April 17, the three-year starting
first baseman has 12 hits in 34 at-bats, with three home runs, nine
RBIs and six runs. Having hit safely in all but one of those games,
Huntington has lifted her season average to .248. Her four home runs
are tied for second on the team and she now has 13 RBIs, after
averaging 22.5 her first two campaigns.
“Every since Spring Break, I’ve been hitting the ball hard,” said
Huntington, whose confidence sustained her when the hits weren’t
coming early on.
“The first couple weeks, I wasn’t even hitting the ball hard,” she
said by phone from West Point, where the Black Knights have won 18 of
20 to improve to 25-18, 15-5 in the Patriot League. Army has clinched
the No. 2 seed in the conference tournament they host, beginning
Saturday. “But I didn’t change anything. Once I started hitting the
ball hard, I knew I would relax and everything would fall into place,
which it has.”
Huntington’s recent hot streak, including three homers in a four
games against Lafayette, helped her earn Patriot League Player of the
Week recognition, it was announced Monday.
With Huntington, whose 23 RBIs last season led the team, back in a
groove, Army is primed for another Patriot League tournament title
and its second trip to the NCAA tournament since Huntington arrived.
“We won the [league] tournament my freshman year and went on to
win the first NCAA game in the program’s history,” Huntington said.
“This year, I think we have a good shot to win the [league]
tournament. This is the strongest team I’ve played on here.”
Huntington said softball has given her strength to survive the
demands of West Point.
“Softball ranks right at the top of my experience here,” she said.
Huntington said she had never considered attending a military
academy until she received a recruiting letter the fall of her senior
year at Newport Harbor. Her commitment to West Point took on a
different tone soon after she arrived as a freshman, with the events
of Sept. 11, 2001.
The environmental engineering major -- with a 3.0 grade-point
average -- said she waffled before signing her postgraduate service
commitment in August. But she is glad she gave at least five years to
the Army, after graduation, and she looks forward to attending flight
school this summer.
“I think I’ve matured a lot since I came here and I have a much
different perspective,” she said. “I know I’ll be in Iraq in two
years. Ever since the war started, I think everyone here takes their
training a little more seriously. We all know we’re going to war.”
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