Advertisement

One-Two Punch

Pitchers Jess Ferri and Rachel Brown provide the depth the Crimson hopes to ride to an Ivy crown

Ferri Tale
Meredith H. Keffer

Rookie softball pitcher Jess Ferri will look to match the fantastic run that her mentor, sophomore Rachel Brown, enjoyed in her first season. Ferri and Brown bring tremendous talent to the Crimson's rotation, making the squad a formidable Ivy League opponent.

It’s nighttime, and the lights are on at a sports complex in Huntington Beach, Calif. Players jog onto the field and split off to their respective positions, with one heading towards the center of the diamond. It’s Jessica Ferri’s turn to pitch against the Corona Angels, a team she’s played against many nights during her time with the Valley Breeze 18U Gold travel team.

But tonight is different. Ferri knows that there is a set of eyes in the crowd intent on seeing her best throw. After all, it is recruiting season, and she has something that Harvard needs: a strong arm.

“I remember my junior games were very important,” Ferri reminisces. “One of my big games that contributed to me getting here was at an exposure tournament. I remember I pitched really well, and [a scout] was there. She was looking for performance, attitude, and skill level, and I guess I stood out.”

A junior at the time, Ferri was being recruited by a plethora of schools, but one stood above the rest. With her strong academics and desire to go to school in the Northeast, Harvard seemed to be the perfect choice.

But for the Crimson, Ferri was just one piece of the puzzle. Harvard was already in the process of enhancing its pitching rotation, having recruited another Californian pitcher the year before. A lot was resting on this recruit’s shoulders, and now-sophomore Rachel Brown delivered.

Advertisement

“Last year, I considered everything almost a pleasant surprise, because I had no expectations going into my first season,” Brown remarks. “This year, however, I have high expectations not only for myself, but also for the team. We’ve been training really hard, and I think especially after a disappointing loss to Dartmouth last year, we don’t want to lose a single game in Ivies this year.”

If this goal is to come to fruition, Ferri will have to live up to the standard of Brown’s Ivy League Rookie of the Year campaign. Brown posted 211 strikeouts on the season—a Harvard single-season record—and ranked ninth in the nation with 9.8 strikeouts per game. She was also named to the All-Ivy First Team after finishing the season with a 16-7 record, and, due to injuries in the pitching rotation, Brown was forced several times in the season to follow up complete-game starts with multi-inning saves—a burden that she didn’t mind.

“Pitching is a natural motion, and I got a little bit sore, but it was nothing,” Brown remembers. “There were no serious injuries, so I got lucky. I think it’s easy to get tired, but with softball pitching, you can pitch one game and then the next day go another whole game again, because it’s tired, but not sore.”

The prospect of hurling complete games doesn’t intimidate Ferri, either. She is used to the grind of a travel softball season—including days when the team would play six games.

“I wouldn’t be pitching all of them, but either way I had that experience,” she explains. “In travel ball, [the games] would be all against different teams, but now in the Ivy League we will play four games in a weekend. But it’s all the same team, so we will have to find ways to reinvent ourselves. Batters find ways to know what you throw and we have to find a way to throw them off.”

“I never had this intense of a workload, this intense of a competition,” she continues. “So I think that’s going to be an adjustment.”

Without having played a single game in college, the freshman still seems to know the way the system works and what to expect. All this could be attributed to Brown’s mentoring. From the start of the academic year, Crimson coach Jenny Allard paired the two pitchers to be buddies, a system to make the rookie feel included on the team and to ease her into life at Harvard. The two clicked right away.

“We went to ABP and had early breakfast and just talked about classes and other things other than softball,” Ferri says. “We get along very well. When I came in I was very intimidated, because she was incredible last year, and it’s warming and reassuring to see that she’s such a kind person.”

It’s not only these early morning Au Bon Pain meetings that helped the two get to know each other. Ferri also joined the sorority Kappa Kappa Gamma, where she was again paired with Brown to foster their budding friendship.

“There’s a big Kappa contingency on the softball team, so Jess is actually my little sister,” Brown laughs. “[Senior Dana Roberts] is my big sister, so it’s kind of a pitching dynasty. So it’s fun. We like hanging out together outside of the sport.”

Tags

Recommended Articles

Advertisement