Jennie Finch quotes:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
  • Try not to get lost in comparing yourself to others. Discover your gifts and let them shine!

  • I blame and credit my brothers for my competitive fire within me. Growing up, I lost at everything! My brothers are quite a bit older - 10 years and 5 years - so it was a challenge, but I have some of the most amazing memories with my big brothers.

  • Growing up, I looked up to major league baseball players, and now these young women have amazing, incredible women all across the board, from swimming to gymnastics to softball to basketball. It is incredible how far women have come and women in sports have come.

  • I just feel like it gets harder and harder every year with Ace getting older and time away from my husband and even family events such as birthdays and friends' weddings and things that I've always just missed out on because of softball.

  • My husband, after two weeks of dating, asked me, if our relationship were to work out, would I be OK with our first boy being named Ace.

  • A miracle is really the only way to describe motherhood and giving birth. It's unbelievable how God has made us women and babies to endure and be able to do so much. A miracle, indeed. Such an incredible blessing.

  • Dad was the pitching coach, while Mom was the emotional supporter. Her unconditional love was great, and she wanted what was best for me.

  • There is nothing better than to make it to the College World Series. All of the extra reps in the weight room, all of the early morning practices, and all the hard work spent the entire year makes it worth it.

  • Growing up, I looked up to major league baseball players, and now these young women have amazing, incredible women all across the board, from swimming to gymnastics to softball to basketball.

  • I can't tell you how much I respect all the single parents out there doing it all solo.

  • I loved being on the field playing and teaching softball. I didn't like the fact that a camp had my name on it and I didn't know the logistics of what was going on. I wanted to make sure I was involved in a camp that did things right.

  • Being fit and being in the best shape that I can be helps me be the best mom as well.

  • I was honored to wear 'Arizona' across my chest. I am extremely blessed to have my education completely paid for and take part in the great tradition of Wildcat softball. To have my jersey number retired was the ultimate compliment.

  • I love to run. I was challenged to run the New York marathon four months after having my youngest son, and since running isn't a big part of softball, the thought of a marathon was a stretch for me.

  • I try to squeeze in a workout whenever I can, even if it's doing squats with my 7-month-old in the kitchen or jumping on the trampoline with my 5-year-old.

  • Softball has given me so much in life. It's taught me the kind of person I want to be, and given me a sweet sisterhood. It even led me to my husband.

  • College softball each year reaches new levels of interest.

  • Growing up, I watched softball and U.S.A .softball, and that was my goal of being able to represent my country and wear the red, white, and blue out there, and I think it is one of the highest honors to be able to go out there and compete for your country, and it was something so very special, and it was everything I dreamt of and more.

  • When I was a kid, I dreamed of using a bat with my own name on it.

  • When you train six to seven hours a day to be the best in your sport, you don't want that to be overlooked. I don't train for my looks.

  • I'm playing first base and pitching and hitting. I feel like I'm almost better than I've ever been. It's like, 'You're going to walk away like this?'

  • And my dad drilled it in my head, you know, 'If you want it bad enough, and you're willing to make the sacrifices, you can do it. But first you have to believe in yourself.

  • We're [Avocado League] trying to just urge people to add avocado into their diet. It's healthy and full of vitamins and minerals.

  • College was the greatest four years of my life.

  • I love being outside with my boys, playing tag or trying to keep up with them.

  • I'm a role model for lots of young girls.

  • I've faced more than 35 major leaguers, and only two have ever made contact against me.

  • I'd love to have four or five kids.

  • It's all about balance and, I think, being in the moment.

  • I'm pretty adaptable and can adjust to any environment.

  • I had the vision of creating my own camp to make sure I was teaching the campers what I wanted. Plus I picked other players that were good on the field and off so we could be great role models for these girls to look up to. I hope to inspire others and encourage them to go after their dreams.

  • Try not to get lost in comparing yourself to others. Discover your gifts and let them shine! Softball is amazing that way as a sport. Everyone on the field has a slightly different ability that makes them perfect for their position.

  • Got any pitches? I got five pitches-rise-ball, curveball, screwball, drop-ball and changeup.

  • My family vacations were softball tournaments.

  • When I was growing up, softball had stereotypes along with other female sports. But society is definitely changing since the WNBA and WUSA. Muscles on female athletes are OK now. Young girls can look up to beautiful, athletic, fit women.

  • I didn't really get into boys until my junior year of high school, when I had my first boyfriend. But for the most part I was always playing sports, so I was too busy for them!

  • I mean, I love winning, but losing is a much more intense feeling.

  • I still think there are some pitches in this pitching arm, so I will continue playing with USA Softball, but knowing that this could be the last time a softball player stands on the Olympic podium and has the opportunity of experiencing this - it was emotional.

  • I had female role models to look up to starting in middle school, athletes like Julie Foudy and Mia Hamm who made me realize that there was room in the world of sports for women. They ignited my dream of becoming an Olympic athlete.

  • How's motherhood? It is absolutely wonderful. Oh, my gosh. It's truly indescribable and amazing.

  • The best compliment I've gotten was being compared to Randy Johnson. We're both hard-throwing.

  • Looking back, I've learned the most from the bad coaches, really, how not to act, how not to coach, how not to treat people. So I always say no matter what situations you're faced with, how bad it is, you can always walk away and learn. You can always rise above it.

  • There's nothing better than working up a good sweat.

  • When I lose, I take it very personally.

  • A macho attitude is totally to my advantage. Guys try to hit it 400 feet out of the park, but in softball you have to use a short, quick swing. Big, huge swings equal big, huge strikeouts.

  • The main thing is to win. You just try to keep your tunnel vision on to get the team the win.

  • I really like Dontrelle Willis' pitch; he's animated on the mound and is fun to watch - he gets into the game emotionally.

  • From what I hear, it's a normal thing to feel guilty as a mother, especially when trying to fill the needs of a newborn along with maintaining what you had with your first child.

  • When I was 12, I had a coach tell me I would never be a championship pitcher. That devastated me. I was crushed.

  • Although it is disappointing that softball was not reinstated into the Olympics, we are going to continue to keep growing the sport.

  • It is one thing to play for your university. It is another to play for your country.

  • It's so empowering to see yourself as a machine.

  • You can't always control the circumstances - only how you react to those circumstances; you can always control your attitude and your effort.

  • Never limit yourself, never be satisfied, and smile-it's free!

  • It's a game of failure [softball]. Everybody would play, that was easy and everyone's not playing because it is so tough. But it's a matter of keep plugging away, keep working hard, believing in yourself and it is a team sport and there is nothing better than being out there, having a ball in your hand, playing the game that you love and ultimately that's what it comes down is having fun and enjoying it.

  • To some Softball is a game; to others it's Life.

  • My goal is to never lose. That may not be realistic, but I'm going to try.

  • Whatever I am doing at that moment, I want to make the most of it.

  • I think that when young players really see their game rise next level, it's when practices are like competition and there's no separation there. Of course, there are adrenaline and the butterflies; you don't have that so much in practice. You want to fake yourself out and try to get them there because you want to be as close to that game mentality as you can when you step on that field every single day whether it's practice or in your backyard or down the street with your dad.

  • You're not going to get off the couch and be at some amazing fast pace or burn crazy amounts of calories, but you have to start somewhere Eventually, you'll get there.

  • I may be wearing makeup, but I can throw a fastball by you at the same time.

  • I don't want to be just a face. I want to go out there and prove something on the field.

  • As a believer, I know that Jesus Christ has a plan and it's not going to be my plan. It's not always succeeding and looking back it's amazing looking back to see how God works in mysterious ways, not always good ways, rough ways but those rough times, those rough patches, and those swamps and all those things that I went through are looking back, were such an incredible life lessons for me not only to shape and build me as an athlete but most importantly, my character as a person.

  • You have been doing something that has brought you success, and you are in the playoffs because you have been doing some thing right.

  • Playing USA Softball has been more to me than I ever imagined possible.

  • I try to not be too hard on myself regarding my diet. I've always been a workout-to-eat kind of a girl. I like to eat, to say the least.

  • My life has been centered around sports. It is where I have met my closest friends and shaped the values that have made me a successful athlete, student and role model for young people.

  • The whole sexiness thing-I don't know if I'm comfortable with that. But it has helped the sport grow. I think it changes how people see women's athletics.

  • Throwing a ball is not natural, whether it's overhand or underhand.

  • I do my job on the mound and then do what I can at the plate, always working on helping the team anyway I can.

  • The attention I get has been great. It has opened so many doors for me. It's nice that people are accepting beautiful women as athletes. It's encouraging to girls that muscles don't mean you can't be beautiful.

  • Seeing women on television was very important to me. It opened my eyes to the possibilities of women's sports. It showed me what I could do and who I could be.

  • This whole career has been way more than I ever even imagined or dreamed.

  • Right now in my career, it's like I'm having more fun than I've ever had, so it's kind of like, 'Man, I can't stop now.'

  • I realize the differences between my children and use what works for each of them individually.

  • You don't take a class; you're thrown into motherhood and learn from experience.

  • I've face more than 35 major leaguers, and only two have ever made contact against me.

  • For softball, we need the Olympics. For young girls dreaming of that Olympic dream, that's where it's at, and that's where it all started in '96 for our sport.

  • It is incredible how far women have come and women in sports have come.

  • I get has been great. It has opened so many doors for me.

  • I could have never dreamed what an amazing ride this has been.

  • I'm living a dream. I hope in 10 years people will know me as a gold medalist.

  • My parents were born and raised in Iowa and my two brothers were born in Iowa before my family moved to California where I was born so I still really feel like I have those Midwestern roots.

  • Have unconditional love to your children no matter what happens. Give them time even in the midst of this busy life - be one on one with them.

  • Our sports [softball] is a game of failure already so my dad always says to parents who he is a pitching coach and he's been my pitching coach since I was 11 years old is if they can be the best kid on the team, let them experience that and then obviously the challenge has to come later on but you don't get that opportunity very often and confidence is such a huge part of this game and in life in general.

  • To keep children healty, it's important to keep them active. Of course you can control what goes into their mouths, but it's also about putting the active back into family activity. Go outside with them, live in the moment and encourage them. That'll help you find fulfillment in your life as well.

  • When I'm in the game [softball], it's not so much mechanics. It's more of just trusting my teammates, trusting myself, trusting my preparation that we've put in to get there. When you're in the game, it's go-mode. There's going to be times when you're tweaking things but when you're in that game mode, you just want to think about that one next pitch.

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share