YOKOHAMA, Japan -- The United States had just given up its first run and was two outs away from losing for the first time in the Olympic softball tournament.
Amanda Chidester stepped up to the plate with two runners on and slapped the ball into left field.
"In my head, I'm like: 'Score! Score two! Score two! Score two!'" she recalled. "When I got up and everyone was running out at me, I was like, We did it!"
Ally Carda and Haylie McCleney came across the plate on Chidester's eighth-inning single, giving the United States a pulsating 2-1 victory over Australia on Sunday and a likely rematch with defending champion Japan in Tuesday's gold-medal game.
Monica Abbott (2-0) struck out 13 and threw a three-hitter in a 126-pitch complete game, giving up an unearned run when Jade Wall walked on eight pitches with the bases loaded in the top of the eighth to force home the automatic runner.
With Carda on second as the automatic runner in the bottom half, leadoff hitter McCleney reached against Tarni Stepto (0-1) with an infield single on a 1-0 pitch. McCleney hit a two-hopper to shortstop Clare Warwick, who set her feet before throwing, allowing McCleney to get on base for the fourth time in the game. She is batting .727 (8-for-11) and has reached 13 times in 15 plate appearances.
Janie Reed, the wife of major league reliever Jake Reed, sacrificed for the fourth time in the tournament, putting runners at second and third.
"Give me a strike, and I'm going for it," Chidester recalled thinking to herself.
She swung at a pitch on the outer half of the plate and singled sharply past a diving Warwick. Wall picked up the ball two steps onto the outfield grass and heaved home, but first baseman Taylah Tsitsikronis cut off the throw as Carda and McCleney scored standing up.
Chidester slid into second, taking the extra base just in case a runner ahead of her was thrown out. When she popped up, she saw teammates running onto the field to celebrate.
"Wow! Incredible softball," Abbott said. "A lot of tense moments. But you live for these moments. You like to compete in these moments."
Abbott walked six batters, two of them intentionally. She has a 0.00 ERA and two saves and has allowed four hits in 17 innings with 28 strikeouts and nine walks. Abbott improved to 5-0 in her Olympic career.
After scoring just seven runs in four games, the U.S. (4-0) plays Japan on Monday in a matchup that likely will determine only which team bats last in the gold-medal game. No. 2 Japan (3-0) could clinch a berth in that game when it plays Canada (2-1) later Sunday.
"We've got Fire and Ice throwing for us right now, and they're throwing the ball really, really well," U.S. coach Ken Eriksen said, referring to his nicknames for Abbott and Cat Osterman.
Abbott escaped a bases-loaded jam in the sixth.
Australia went ahead in the eighth after automatic runner Belinda White took third on Leigh Godfrey's sacrifice. Stacey Porter was intentionally walked for the second time, Tsitsikronis walked, Chelsea Forkin took a called third strike and Wall fouled off a pair of 3-2 pitches before taking an inside pitch. Wall has driven in three of Australia's four runs in the tournament.
McCleney's first-inning triple was wasted as the U.S. went 0-for-6 with runners in scoring position before the eighth, dropping to 3-for-31 in the Olympics. The teams combined for eight hits, and through 10 games, the six countries in the tournament were batting .192 with a .555 OPS.
Abbott, who turns 36 on Wednesday, and the 38-year-old Osterman are the last remaining players from the team that lost to Japan 3-1 in the 2008 gold-medal game in Beijing.
"Hopefully," Eriksen said, "get back on an airplane to go across the Pacific undefeated."