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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, March 17, 2006

Everything's perfect for UH

Wahine softball photo gallery

By Stephen Tsai
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawai'i's Justine Smethurst struck out six and only one ball reached the outfield in a 6-0 victory over Longwood.

JOAQUIN SIOPACK | The Honolulu Advertiser

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BANK OF HAWAI'I INVITATIONAL TOURNAMENT

WHAT: College women's softball tournament

WHEN: Today through Sunday

WHERE: Rainbow Wahine Softball Stadium

ADMISSION: Free

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University of Hawai'i softball pitcher Justine Smethurst found the perfect way to help Bob Coolen earn his 600th career coaching victory.

Smethurst, a freshman right-hander from Australia, pitched a perfect game to defeat Longwood of Virginia, 6-0, in last night's opening round of the Bank of Hawai'i Invitational at Rainbow Wahine Stadium.

Of the 21 batters Smethurst faced, only Ryan Washington managed to hit a ball past the infield, a soft flyout to right.

She struck out six, and went to a three-ball count three times.

"Jus was throwing really hard," catcher Kristi Yoshizawa said. "I think one of the things is they couldn't catch up to her speed."

Smethurst said: "That could have been a factor. A lot of the hits (10 of 15) were on the right side of the diamond."

In last night's late game, Hawai'i beat San Diego State, 1-0.

Smethurst said she can't recall precisely when she pitched a perfect game previously. "Probably back home sometime, when I was little, maybe," she said.

First baseman Tyleen Tausaga's run-scoring double sparked a four-run fourth. Center fielder Kaulana Gould added a two-run single in the fifth. That was more than enough support.

"This was an important game," Smethurst said. "I knew (Coolen) was going for his 600th. I felt privileged to be asked to pitch."

Coolen said he always experiences anxiousness before each game. This time, he admitted, "I did have a few more butterflies than normal. I think I was anticipating getting it out of the way, so we could move on. I can't believe it was a perfect game pitched by Jus."

Softball tradition calls for teammates and coaches not to say bo-peep when a pitcher is working on a no-hitter. As the game progressed, Coolen became more anxious about Smethurst's performance than his own milestone.

"I remember that perfect game I threw when I was just out of high school," Coolen said. "Nobody would talk to me . Nobody would go near me. I remember the feeling vividly. I remember the ballpark and everything. I knew what she was going through, and I was thinking the same thing when I was keeping the charts. I was pretty anxious for her."

Coolen's record is 600-435-1, including 528-342-1 at UH. He previously coached at Bentley.

"I would say 600 is a lot," Coolen said. "It's something. It means I've been doing this for a while, and hopefully I can keep it going, and they'll want to keep playing for me at the university, and the university will want me. There's not a lot of stability in our sport. You need to perform. I realize that. It's how I recruit. It's how the kids play, and it's how they go to school and get good grades. All of those variables I have to think about.

"Take all of those victories and add up all of the games I haven't won, and that's a lot of butterflies. But that's OK. It keeps me going. It keeps me young. It keeps me on the field."

Reach Stephen Tsai at stsai@honoluluadvertiser.com.