
Kayla Grantham is about to avoid the tag to score Northern's first run and the only one it needed in a 3-0 victory over O'Connell in a showdown of the nation's top two teams.
Photo by Israel Carunungan

Kayla Grantham slides in safely giving her team a 1-0 lead.
Photo by Israel Carunungan
Saturday's Clash of the Softball Titans went to
Northern (Owings, Md.), which blanked
Bishop O'Connell (Arlington, Va.) 3-0 in the biggest national showdown of the season.
Ranked No. 1 in the MaxPreps Xcellent 25, Northern raised its record to 15-0 and its winning streak to 68 games. It also was the third consecutive victory over Virginia power Bishop O'Connell, ranked No. 2 in the country and which had a 35-game win streak snapped.

Winning pitcher Jessica Cummings
had 16 strikeouts.
Photo by Israel Carunungan
O'Connell's last loss was to Northern in 2012. It dropped to 19-1. Northern coach Rob Radford told MaxPreps, "That was a big-time win. O'Connell is a very good team. We played well. We've got to get ready for the (state) playoffs. No. 1 or 2 in the country is just icing on the cake, but it (a national championship) would be very special."
He added, "It takes a little bit of pressure off. Our kids will be a little more relaxed."
Standing tall for the winning Patriots was 5-foot-10 junior
Jessica Cummings, who pitched a dominant one-hitter with 16 strikeouts and one walk while raising her record to 14-0. A line-drive single to right field in the sixth inning by
Shannon Murphy deprived Cummings of a no-hitter.
"She was phenomenal," Radford said. "The key to her success was that she got ahead early (in the ball-strike count) and she was in charge. She's thrown a couple of perfect games and a bunch of no-hitters, but in terms of quality competition she had her best stuff today."
O'Connell coach Tommy Orndorff also was impressed with Cummings, who has committed to Penn State University. Cummings has struck out 209 in 91 innings and allowed just — get this — 10 hits. She has a 0.00 ERA.
Northern hasn't allowed a run all season and outscored opponents by a remarkable 120-0 count.

O'Connell pitcher Tori Finucane
allowed just three hits and struck
out 11.
Photo by Israel Carunungan
"Jessica looked great today," Orndorff said. "She looked better than last year. She threw very, very well."
His own pitcher, senior
Tori Finucane, struck out 11, yielded just three hits and one walk. The University of Missouri signee - similar to Cummings - was her state's Gatorade Player of the Year in 2012 and was a MaxPreps All-American.
Northern scored an unearned run off Finucane in the fourth inning, then clinched the big victory in the bottom of the sixth inning on a two-run single to right field by
Kristina Lozupone.
Orndorff called it "a big game, big crowd. Today they were the best team that we've played."
Asked about the national rivalry his Knights have formed with Northern, Orndorff laughed, "To have a rivalry we've got to win one of these."
His team came into the game averaging more than 10 runs per game while outscoring its opponent 239-8.

Sophomore Sarah Bennett had one
of Northern's three hits.
Photo by Israel Carunungan
O'Connell is hitting .384 as a team and has blasted 25 home runs, including seven along with a team-high 39 RBI from senior catcher
Jillian Ferraro. Finucane is now hitting a team best .564. Five of her teammates are hitting better than .400.:
Shannon Murphy (.490),
Amanda Ehlers (.424), Ferero (.452),
Olivia Giaquinto (.404) and
Erin Sweeney (.403).
None of that caused Cummings to flinch. She walked just one to go along with 16 strikeouts.
Other hits for Northern came from senior
Erin Adams and sophomore
Sarah Bennett. Adams,
Julie Keleti and
Kayla Grantham all scored runs.
On the season, freshman
Kassidy Cross is the leading hitter at .483 followed by Adams (.473) and
Kierstie Schaefer (.350), who leads the team with 20 RBI.
Beyond superior pitching and timely hitting, Northern has made just one error all season. That combination might explain while the team is No. 1 in the nation.

The nation's top two teams congratulate each other on a well-played, crisp game.
Photo by Israel Carunungan