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Radigonda said he has also started talking to other countries about the possibility of creating a world softball tour, which he believes may be marketable to sponsors seeking exposure in other countries and potentially attractive to television.
The bottom line, though, is that the sport is most viable on an international level if it is part of the Olympics.
"You can't underscore enough how important that Olympic platform is because people understand that," Radigonda said. "The softball fans, they'll find us. I don't care if we're playing at 2 in the morning, they're going to figure out where we're at and they'll watch the game.
"What you need to have, though, is that Olympic program. It brings it just to the next level."
At this point, there's no telling when -- or even if -- the sport will get back in. It was initially added in 1996, and the U.S. won the first three gold medals before losing to Japan in the 2008 gold-medal game.
The next possibility would be in 2020, the first Olympics that would be organized after the end of current IOC president Jacques Rogge's term runs out in 2013.
"I don't think that there's any way we're going to get back in until the IOC and international leadership changes, but that's going to change eventually," Miller said. "When we get a new IOC president who might be more favorable to softball, I think we have an opportunity then."
In the meantime, softball players are left to decide whether softball is a sacrifice they can make. Some are able to make a living playing in professional leagues in the U.S., including the four-team National Pro Fastpitch and the touring Pro Fastpitch X-treme, and in Japan. That's not the case with Team USA.
"It's not about the money," said Megan Langenfeld, who won the NCAA title with UCLA last month. "Being a female athlete, that's part of it. You could almost go across every sport. The women don't get paid as much as men do. So, it's definitely about the sport and your love for the game.
"You can't play this sport without having a love for it."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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