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  In the News  
 

Monday, June 2
Soft side of Bustos gives kids chance of living their dreams
Tue March 25, 2008
 
By Blake Jackson
Staff Writer (newsok.com)
Crystl Bustos' first home run was still climbing when it struck the inside of the left field foul pole.

Had the inanimate outfielder not intervened, the second-inning blast could've traveled 280 feet — or more. The crowd rose and the players froze, to watch Team USA's biggest bomber round the bases.

"She plays this game hard,” said coach Mike Candrea, after his team routed Oklahoma State 7-0 Monday night at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium. "She's so competitive. She's going to leave a legacy on the field.”

For her part, Bustos is more concerned about the legacy she leaves off it.

Turns out this pitcher's nightmare — this ball-killer, this monster — has a softer side.

"A lot of kids aren't playing sports because they can't afford it in this economy,” said Bustos, who cracked another homer, 270 feet, in the third inning. "I want to get a hold of whoever I can to help out.”

Last November, Bustos and her father, George, inaugurated Bustos Elite, a non-profit organization based in Valencia, Calif., focused on bringing professional sports training to inner-city youth.

So far, the organization's main focus is softball — several members of Team USA have volunteered to assist at the camp — but Bustos hopes to add soccer and baseball in the near future.

"Because of (Team USA's) position, there are a lot of options for us,” she said. "I've talked to a few U.S. women's soccer players. I also know a lot of Major League baseball players that want to help out with that part.”

Bustos was moved to create the organization while reminiscing about her late uncle, Jesse Rios.

When Bustos was young, her parents couldn't afford the steep entry fees for training camps, so Rios would drive an hour from his home in Culver City to Valencia to impress upon his niece the techniques that have made her one of the most prolific sluggers in softball history.

"Of all the kids in the family, I was the one he picked,” Bustos said. "He never wanted anything but to see me succeed.”

Her uncle's commitment to her still informs Bustos, as she irons out the financial logistics of her organization.

"There's no one really going out and grabbing these kids like that,” she said. "No one's telling them, ‘You can play. You don't have to have money, you can play.' We've lost a lot of kids with skill because their parents can't pay for it.

"I don't want these kids to get lost.”

Right now, Bustos Elite operates out of Line Drive, an indoor training camp in Valencia. There are 11 indoor cages, five instructional cages and dozens of major and minor league players to give instruction.

Still, the demand from the inner city is beginning to outweigh the supply.

"We've got kids from all parts of L.A. who want to get into it,” Bustos said. "We've got kids from San Diego that want to be a part of it. We're trying not to turn anyone away, but it's a challenge.”

If there's anything Bustos knows how to handle, it's a challenge.

She's done it time and time again on softball's biggest stage. Against countless adversaries — throwing heat, change-ups and curves. She did it twice against OSU on Monday night.

That's what pitchers' nightmares do.

"She gives back as much or more than anyone I've ever seen,” Candrea said. "She's constantly giving back. It doesn't surprise me that she'd like to do even more.

"She definitely has a soft side.”

It just doesn't meet the ball very often.




Bustos a big influence on Valley softball players

This story appeared in the Antelope Valley Press on Monday, August 27, 2007.

By STEVEN NIX
Valley Press Staff Writer


Crystl Bustos continues to have a tremendous effect on the softball community in the Antelope Valley.

Her ASA travel team, SoCal 3D, a 12-and under squad, just had an open tryout on August 25 at Marie Kerr Park.

Bustos, who is a two-time Olympian and powerhouse hitter for the Olympic team has a great influence young softball players in the Valley.

The Antelope Valley, as well as Southern California in general, has been a hot bed of softball talent for years, and with the added help of Bustos, that talent is sure to blossom.

A resident in the wide open spaces of Acton, Bustos has seen first hand the amount of solid players that have played here and maybe gone unnoticed.

The 18U SoCal 3D team is host to some of the premier softball players in the Valley such as, Candice Miller, Shannon Bailey, Alyssa Smith, Adrianna Perez and Kristin Ware, who is now a pitcher at Mount Olive College in North Carolina.

Playing for a team coached by an Olympian will help some of the girls who have the talent, to be recruited by higher level colleges in the future.

Bailey, Miller and Smith who all have the talent to play for strong softball programs, will be playing for Antelope Valley College this season which has been a solid softball program for the past few years, in an attempt to been seen.

The team has played in tournaments all over California, as well as the country. They also took a trip to play in Canada where they got to meet the USA national team.

Among Bustos's long list of achievements are two gold medals in 2000 and 2004, as well as being a member of the National Fastpitch League.

Most recently she also helped the USA softball team to a KFC World Cup of Softball championship, and its Eighth Pan-American Championship in 2007.

"She's tough sometimes, but she definitely knows the game," Smith said of Bustos. "It's an amazing experience to be able to play for her."



   
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