Making My Pitch

A Woman's Baseball Odyssey

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Pub Date Apr 01 2017 | Archive Date Mar 20 2017

Description

Making My Pitch tells the story of Ila Jane Borders, who despite formidable obstacles became a Little League prodigy, MVP of her otherwise all-male middle school and high school teams, the first woman awarded a baseball scholarship, and the first to pitch and win a complete men’s collegiate game. After Mike Veeck signed Borders in May 1997 to pitch for his St. Paul Saints of the independent Northern League, she accomplished what no woman had done since the Negro Leagues era: play men’s professional baseball. Borders played four professional seasons and in 1998 became the first woman in the modern era to win a professional ball game.


Borders had to find ways to fit in with her teammates, reassure their wives and girlfriends, work with the media, and fend off groupies. But these weren’t the toughest challenges. She had a troubled family life, a difficult adolescence as she struggled with her sexual orientation, and an emotionally fraught college experience as a closeted gay athlete at a Christian university. 


Making My Pitch shows what it’s like to be the only woman on the team bus, in the clubhouse, and on the field. Raw, open, and funny at times, her story encompasses the loneliness of a groundbreaking pioneer who experienced grave personal loss. Borders ultimately relates how she achieved self-acceptance and created a life as a firefighter and paramedic and as a coach and goodwill ambassador for the game of baseball.
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Making My Pitch tells the story of Ila Jane Borders, who despite formidable obstacles became a Little League prodigy, MVP of her otherwise all-male middle school and high school teams, the first...

Advance Praise

“At last! The moving story of Ila Borders, as told to the gifted author and researcher Jean Ardell, will make readers wonder how much longer the baseball establishment can afford to disregard the skilled women players who should long ago have been recruited for the Minors and the Majors.”—Dorothy Seymour Mills, baseball historian and author of Drawing Card: A Baseball Novel

 

“As a girl, Ila Borders had a dream. That dream became a desire, and that desire blossomed into a crusade: she would play baseball. Not softball. Baseball. She would throw the hard stuff past brawny male sluggers. Jean Hastings Ardell tells the story of this twilight figure coming out of the shadows to join a not always receptive mainstream. You may laugh. You may shed a tear. But surely you will applaud.”—Arnold Hano, author of A Day in the Bleachers


“Ila Borders pitched her way through the special hell reserved for women who play baseball in America and has returned with enough inside baseball knowledge to please the most passionate fan. . . . [Making My Pitch is] a riveting, deeply personal story and a compelling addition to the fast-growing literature on American women in baseball.”—Jennifer Ring, author of A Game of Their Own: Voices of Contemporary Women in Baseball   


“This book is a walk through baseball history as Ila brings the reader with her on her journey from Little League to independent ball and beyond. Ila’s story is not a typical baseball story, and everyone needs to read this book.”—Leslie Heaphy, associate professor of history at Kent State University at Stark and coeditor of The Encyclopedia of Women and Baseball 


“This book is a must-read for understanding what it’s like to be a baseball first. Ila’s courage to keep going forward against all odds is both inspiring and meaningful.”—Justine Siegal, founder of Baseball For All

 

“The best baseball books are about more than the game. In this evocative memoir, lefthander Ila Borders recounts her struggles in the male world of professional baseball.”—George Gmelch, author of Playing with Tigers: A Minor League Chronicle of the Sixties

 

“Ila Borders is a role model. As the father of two daughters, both of whom have played, watched, and read about sports for as long as they have been able to do so, I have long awaited her memoir.”—Steve Gietschier, associate professor of history at Lindenwood University

“At last! The moving story of Ila Borders, as told to the gifted author and researcher Jean Ardell, will make readers wonder how much longer the baseball establishment can afford to disregard the...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780803285309
PRICE $26.95 (USD)
PAGES 264

Average rating from 8 members


Featured Reviews

Wonderful memoir of a woman's journey in the world of baseball. Especially interesting if you are a fan of the sport. Also details her struggles growing up with a dysfunctional family, coming to terms with being gay, and life's tragedies. Great tale of determination and perseverance!

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This book was amazing. As an avid sports fan, especially of baseball, I loved reading about Ila's experiences. Ila described her games so fantastically, I felt like I was listening to the games on the radio. I was so emotionally invested in her journey and I rooted for her every moment I was reading.
As a female sports fan, I've experienced the sexism that is in men dominated sports and I can't imagine everything Ila has gone through. I've never met Ila, and I doubt I ever will, but I'm incredibly proud of her and everything she's accomplished. She didn't let the sexism stop her and she's extremely inspiring.
Making My Pitch is an insightful look into baseball and what it takes to be a pitcher. It showcases how unnecessarily difficult it is for women to break into the sport, even when they have the skill and talent to be one of the best.
I definitely recommend this book to any sports fan, especially young women. Ila tells it like it is and will show you a new perspective on baseball. She's inspiring and brave and I'll always remember her story.

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Baseball, like many other sports and occupations, is called “a man’s world.” However, one woman was determined to make a career in baseball. Ila Borders had the drive to do so within her from her Little League playing days. Her story, both inside and outside the sport, is captured in this inspiring memoir, co-written with Jean Hastings Ardell.

While Borders was not the first woman to play in men’s professional baseball, she accomplished many firsts: the first woman to be the winning pitcher in a men’s professional game in the modern era when she got her first win for the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks in 1998, the first woman to receive a baseball college scholarship, and the first woman to start and win a collegiate men’s baseball game.

Even with all of these accomplishments, and despite her constant drive to succeed in baseball until her retirement in 2000, Borders tells her story of constant worry. She is conflicted about her sexual orientation, as she is attracted to women but was fearful of coming out because of her status on men’s baseball teams. Whether it was because of anxiety about the reaction from her teammate’s wives or girlfriends, her fear that she would be a distraction to the team (especially true when she played for professional teams) or her difficulties with dating in general, her story about her struggles with this part of her personal life make for engaging reading. Between her courage on the baseball field, her courage when she finally came out, and the success that came to her after baseball with her career as a paramedic and firefighter, her story is truly inspiring.

Her descriptions of the game are those that only someone who has played and understands the intricacies of the sport can communicate. Whether she was talking about the way she changed the speed of her pitches to keep batters off-guard or the shenanigans that would take place in the bullpen during the games, readers who love baseball will love being taken inside the game and the players.

While the baseball scenes are well-written, this is a memoir that is even better during the sections describing the author’s life outside the sport. While some may believe sports figures do not make good role models, Ila Borders is one that does. Her story should be read by anyone interested in baseball or just a feel-good story in which it is proven that one can overcome many obstacles to live a happy and productive life.

I wish to thank University of Nebraska Press for providing a copy of the book through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

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Ila Jane Borders memoir of her pursuit of a professional baseball career is timely and enlightening. While I’ve certainly been aware of the barriers to women in many professional fields, I was astounded at the persistence of the criticism, and outright vitriol, Borders faced simply for playing baseball. It’s even more astounding to me that these attitudes and actions persisted through the ‘90s and that some of the cruelest taunts and actions were directed at her from adults (many of them parents) while she was still a child. Again, all because she was a pitcher, a good one, on a team and in a league where every other player was a boy.

Of course, the flip side, particularly when she reached college level baseball, was the adulation and media sensation surrounding her as the first modern female playing at that level of the game. This memoir is much more than a rehashing of the taunts and adulation surrounding Borders’ baseball career, I wouldn’t even say it’s much the focus of the book, but it is what made one of the deepest impressions on this reader.
Like many Americans, I have more than a passing knowledge of the sport of baseball. I played that, and softball, in my younger days on youth leagues and intramural teams in college. Even so, I learned A LOT about the sport in Borders’ book, a great deal more about the strategy of pitching to any individual batter and the strategy of pitching over the course of a game and a season. Borders’ father had been an accomplished ball player himself and continued playing in adult leagues. He had a strong sense of how to develop a young person, in this case his daughter, as a pitcher over the course of her childhood. That meant he had a good sense of physical conditioning and of teaching pitches that were age appropriate for a developing body. He developed his daughter in the game with an eye to the future and a long career, not just for the season. Clearly that was critical to her baseball success.

Her father was less than perfect, though, as a parent or coach, certainly as a husband, and the story also weaves in Borders’ home life as a child and her emergence into adulthood. This, of course, is one of the interesting and troubling aspects of professionals in any sport. Just as Borders was finding her way as a person, she was in the spotlight for exceptional athletic ability, the possibility that she would become a “first” in professional baseball, being called on to exhibit a level of maturity not normally expected of someone still in their teens.

Through it all, and again not the focus of the book, Borders was grappling with her sexual identity. She understood fairly early on that her physical attraction to women would not be accepted in the sport. It also ran afoul of the values of the many faith based school institutions where she received her education. The absolute isolation of her experience is palpable, all the more so because I think the reader of the memoir sees it even more clearly than Borders herself.

I personally appreciate how Borders maintains her spiritual faith, her trust in God’s higher power, throughout her life and in each of her struggles, whether on or off the diamond. Her story is honest about her perception of her experiences and the feelings that came with them. It’s a life and as such cannot be categorized as any one type of story: the pro ball player’s story, the women in a man’s world story, the coming-out story, the allowing Christ in your life story. Borders’ memoir is all of these to a certain degree and in the end, her story will leave you with the satisfied feeling that humans, any of us, can achieve and endure much more than we think we can.

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A brilliant insight into the life of a woman attempting to break into men's baseball.
If you are good enough and determined anything is possible.

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