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Adams Shoulders a Heavy Memory

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Going back to the Women’s College World Series in Oklahoma City means Julie Adams can relive one of the greatest moments of her life--and one of the scariest.

They are moments that the UCLA senior softball player remembers with joy and pain, sometimes at the same time. When she steps onto the field Thursday at Don Porter Hall Of Fame Stadium, the scene where a shoulder dislocation led to another surgery, it is no wonder that she’ll do it with a little trepidation.

“It’s really surreal in my mind,” said the Bruins’ third baseman, who will lead the defending national champions into a first-round game against Alabama. “It’s kind of ironic because I got real hot in the regionals last year.

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“Now I got hot at this regional and . . . it is in the back of your mind.”

A year ago, she separated her left shoulder sliding headfirst into second base in UCLA’s opening-round CWS game against DePaul. Forty-eight hours later, she was back at third base. Two days after that, she scored the winning run in the Bruins’ 3-2 title-clinching victory over Washington.

She hit .565 throughout the NCAA playoffs and was named outstanding player of the World Series.

UCLA Coach Sue Enquist said she can remember that entire period as if it was yesterday.

“She was up all night because the treatment had to be done for 24 hours,” Enquist said of Adams and her dislocated shoulder. “To be honest, I didn’t think she’d be able to play.”

That didn’t cross Adams’ mind.

“The doctor there told me that I was done for the rest of the series,” she said. “Of course, that answer wasn’t acceptable for me.”

Hers was a heroic effort--but not without cost. She underwent her second reconstructive surgery on that shoulder that same week.

The first surgery had resulted in Adams redshirting the 1998 season. The second was necessary because she has a future in the sport, first as a member of the Akron Racers of the Women’s Pro Softball League this year and a potential member of the 2004 U.S. Olympic team.

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“If I was never going to play softball ever again, the reconstructive surgery was something I could do without,” Adams said. “I’m an athlete and my career is far from over.”

Adams went through an arduous rehabilitation. The initial timetable to return to the field was December.

In November, she felt some lingering discomfort that wouldn’t go away. In an examination, Adams learned that a needle had been left in her shoulder during the June operation.

Dr. Neal ElAttrache of the Kerlan-Jobe Orthopedic Clinic performed another surgery, delicately extracting the needle that rested in her socket without going through the muscle that enables a person to lift his or her arm over the head.

“If they’d had to reconstruct again, I would have had to miss the year,” Adams said. “When I went in for the third time in November, they did what I call an obstacle course repair. They went around the whole bowl.”

Options had been laid out beforehand. If everything went right, returning at the start of the season was possible. If they had to cut through the muscle, the best Adams could hope for would be return in May for the World Series--if the Bruins went that far.

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There was also the possibility of a second medical redshirt but Adams says the chances of the NCAA granting it would have been slim.

The surgery was a success but Adams was still scarred emotionally.

“Mentally, it took me a while [to come back],” Adams recalled. “Knowing that I’d gone through reconstructive surgery and did everything I was supposed to do, by the book and even more, and it’s like I’m told everything you’ve just done, just throw that out the door.

“I just took some time away from the field. Mentally, I was a mess.”

Senior catcher Julie Marshall saw what Adams was going through.

“Oh, it was really draining for her emotionally,” Marshall said. “I was there at those times when she had to go under the knife. She was riding a roller coaster and I was riding it myself sometimes.

“But there was no doubt in my mind that she was going to come back. I’m so proud of her because she could have just said, ‘That’s it.’ She’s traveled a tough road.”

Adams made it back in February and has played in all but six of the team’s 55 games. A first-team All-American last year, her comeback hasn’t always been triumphant.

Adams’ numbers--.295 batting average, six home runs, 30 runs batted in--are well off her 1999 totals of .379, 16 homers and 61 RBIs.

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Enquist said that doesn’t matter and that she had to make sure Adams knew it didn’t matter.

“She’s a player who thought she was a leader because she got it done on the field,” the coach said. “But she’s done so many things right in this program and she’s been an example of what a student-athlete should be at UCLA.”

Adams is coming off a six-for-11, eight-RBI performance in the NCAA regional at UCLA last weekend. She went four for four with three RBIs in a 6-1 semifinal-round win over Florida State.

Adams said she doesn’t try to do anything special when the games become more important.

“It’s not like I’m trying to take my game to another level because you should always play at that level,” she said. “I’m four to six months behind everyone else and now I’m catching up. I’m not complaining about getting hot at this time, that’s for sure.”

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

Julie Adams Profile

UCLA softball player Julie Adams:

* Position: Third base.

* Class: Senior.

* This season: Hitting .295 with six home runs and 30 runs batted in. All-Pacific 10 honorable mention.

* Last season: Hit .379 with 16 home runs and 61 RBIs. Selected first-team All-American, first-team All-Pac-10.

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* Other facts: Graduated from Cypress High in 1995. Has undergone three operations on her left shoulder during her UCLA career.

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