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Softball Heroine Sports Olympic Gold

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Had there been more media coverage of softball in the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Sheila Cornell would have been as recognizable a name as Kerri Strug or Amy van Dyken.

But, certainly, Cornell’s efforts were no less heroic, leading Team USA to a gold medal in the sport’s first Olympic Games.

Cornell, a power-hitting first baseman who grew up in Woodland Hills and graduated from Taft High in 1980, led Team USA with a .393 (11 for 28) batting average and nine runs batted in.

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Her two-run home run against China in a 3-2 victory put the U.S. in the medal round. Against China in the next game, Cornell’s bases-loaded single in the bottom of the 10th inning of a scoreless game thrust Team USA into the gold-medal game.

Cornell was a three-sport, eight-time varsity letter winner at Taft while the Toreadors were runners-up to Granada Hills High twice in the City Section championship.

Her talent landed her a scholarship at UCLA, where she helped lead the Bruins to national titles in 1982 and ’84. Cornell, a physical therapist, graduated from UCLA with a bachelor’s degree and has a master’s degree from USC.

Via softball, Cornell, a 10-time Amateur Softball Assn. All-American, has seen the world, traveling to Argentina, Australia, the Netherlands, Cuba and Venezuela.

At 34, Cornell was the second-oldest member of the Olympic team. But age isn’t keeping her from a quest to compete in the Sydney games in 2000.

Training and a contract with Easton, which produces her personalized signature bat, keep Cornell quite busy.

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She married on New Year’s Eve and resides in Diamond Bar with her husband, Joel Douty, and his three teenagers.

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