Imagine that after writing with your right hand your entire
life, a professor says you need to write with your left hand for his or her
class. It would be a daunting, frustrating task, wouldn’t it?
That is the challenge that has faced junior Theresa Boruta
this season. The third baseman for Wisconsin’s softball team has batted from
the right side of the plate her entire life, but this season she was asked to
flip it around and start hitting lefty.
“She wasn’t making a lot of progress on the right side,
but she is really quick, which can be a big asset in softball,” head coach
Chandelle Schulte said of the decision to bat Boruta lefty. “I asked her
if she might want to try the left side, and she totally bought into it. She
said, ‘I will do whatever you need me to do.'”
The switch appears to have worked. After two seasons at UW,
Boruta had a career batting average of .193 and was struggling to consistently
get on base. This season, batting lefty, Boruta is second on the team with a
.266 batting average and is a fixture in the second spot of the batting order.
She is also currently on a career-high five-game hitting streak.
“It is not the easiest thing in the world, and the key
is to know what your job is,” Boruta said of switching to the left side.
“The key is to put it in play and run as fast as you can to first base,
because you are closer to first base from the left side of the plate.
Thankfully, I have been able to make contact and then let my speed get me on
base.”
After a slow start, Boruta has been steadily improving. Over
her last 10 games she is batting .303.
“I am really excited to see her next year,”
Schulte said. “She has only been doing this for four months, and look how
well she has done already. I think that she has improved more this year than
any other player on our team.”
To go along with a switch offensively, Boruta is the
Badgers’ starting third baseman, a position she had never played before this
season.
“She has always been a journeyman for us, playing a
little outfield, some second base, and she has even pitched for us
before,” Schulte said. “In the offseason we told her that we would
find a permanent home for her, so she could commit to getting better at that
position.”
In softball, third base is one of the most difficult
positions to play defensively. Good third basemen require strong arms to make
the throw from third to first, but they also need to be quick because much of
their time is spent covering bunts.
“I really like third base, but I have made some errors
because I had never played it before college,” Boruta said. “You need
to be quick because slappers are going to try and get it through that five-six
hole. I enjoy it a lot, because there are a lot of boom-boom plays where you just
need to react and not think.”
Along with her contributions on the field, Boruta is the
team’s most vocal player off the field.
“It has always been my personality, and I try to keep
people up and keep people motivated,” Boruta said. “They say that
laughter is contagious, and so I hope that people follow my lead because it is
the most important thing for everyone to have fun.”
“Theresa has matured tremendously in that leadership
role,” Schulte added. “She has always been boisterous, but now she
knows when to speak her mind. She has come of age, in the sense that she is not
just vocal for the sake of being vocal.”
It is very important to have a talkative, optimistic
teammate, especially when a team is having a down year. UW is only 2-10 in the
Big Ten, and Boruta views it as her job to keep the team smiling.
“It is extremely hard to have fun when you are
losing,” Boruta said. “Hopefully, when they see someone coming in
every day having a great time and working hard, the team will stay motivated.
If you keep that positive attitude, others will pick it up and stay positive
too.”