Ila Jane Borders (born February 18, 1975) is an American former left-handed
pitcher
In baseball, the pitcher is the player who throws ("Pitch (baseball), pitches") the Baseball (ball), baseball from the pitcher's mound toward the catcher to begin each play, with the goal of out (baseball), retiring a batter (baseball), batter, ...
in college and independent
professional baseball player. As a female pitcher in men's leagues, Borders achieved numerous baseball milestones at the college and professional levels, including being the first female pitcher to start and win a men's professional baseball game. In four seasons from 1997 to 2000, she appeared in 52 games and posted a
record of 2–4 and 6.75
earned run average while recording 36
strikeouts.
Biography
Borders played for
Southern California College in the 1994–1996 seasons and
Whittier College in the 1997 season. In 1995 she was the first woman to start as a pitcher in a men's collegiate baseball game.
She was also the first woman to receive a baseball scholarship to play men's collegiate baseball and the first woman to earn a win in men's collegiate baseball. Borders was the first woman to play for The Canadian Collegiate Premier Wooden Bat League for the
Swift Current Indians in the summer of 1995.
Borders became one of the first female pitchers in integrated men's professional baseball (women such as
Toni Stone had played in the
Negro leagues) when in 1997 she was signed by
Mike Veeck of the
St. Paul Saints of the
independent Northern League, playing in her first regular season game on May 31, 1997 against the
Sioux Falls Canaries. In that debut, she hit the first batter she faced,
balked, and gave up three earned runs without recording an out. Her next appearance was much improved; in the one inning she pitched, she walked one but then struck out the side. One month into the regular season, she was traded to the
Duluth–Superior Dukes. She pitched from the bullpen for both teams, seeing limited use. Her 1997 season totals were a 7.53
ERA, 15 appearances, 14 innings, allowing 24 hits and 9 walks while striking out 11 and with no decisions.
[(1997-09-18]
"Borders Blazes A Female Trail"
''New York Times'' retrieved 2007-05-22
She returned to the Dukes for the 1998 season, pitching from the bullpen at first. On Thursday, July 7, 1998, she was made a starting pitcher, making her the first female pitcher to start a men's professional baseball game.
[(1998-07-10]
''New York Times'' retrieved 2007-05-22 The game was an 8–3 home loss to the Sioux Falls Canaries. Her line score on that night was 5 innings pitched, 3 runs allowed (all earned), 5 hits, 2 walks, and 2 strikeouts. She was credited with the loss. She made further starts, and on July 24, 1998, she became one of the first female pitchers to record a win in pro men's baseball in a 3–1 home victory against the Sioux Falls Canaries. A baseball from the game and the line-up cards were donated to the
National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in
Cooperstown, New York by home plate umpire Steve Wammer.
[ Alta Weiss was credited with a 7-6 win while pitching for the Vermilion Independents in 1907. See Mamie Johnson accumulated a 33-8 Win–loss record while playing in the 1953–1955 seasons with the Indianapolis Clowns.] That night she went 6 innings, giving up just 3 hits, walking 2, and striking out 2. This was the start of a streak of 12 scoreless innings that stretched into her next no-decision start vs. the
Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks. Following that start, she suffered a severe bout of food poisoning that caused her to miss time, and most of the rest of her outings that season were poor. The Northern League regular season ended the first weekend in September. Her 1998 season totals were as follows: 1–4 record, 44 innings, 8.66 ERA, 65 hits, 14 walks, 14 strikeouts.
Returning to the Dukes in 1999, a new manager returned Borders to bullpen duty. They did not see eye-to-eye on her role or pitching style. In three outings for this manager, Borders had a 30.86 ERA (0–0 record, 2.3 innings, 10 hits, 4 walks, 1 strikeout). She requested a trade at this point and was sent to the
Madison Black Wolf. Here she posted the best numbers of her career with a 1–0 record, 1.67 ERA, 15 games, 32.3 innings, 33 hits, 10 walks, and 8 strikeouts.
In 2000, Borders moved on to the
Western Baseball League, where she played for the
Zion Pioneerzz. Halfway into that season, disappointed with her performance so far that year (8.31 ERA, 5 games, 8 innings, 17 hits, 2 walks, 2 strikeouts) and with her inability in the preceding offseason to get a look from any clubs affiliated with the major leagues, she retired from baseball.
(The
Duluth–Superior Dukes have moved to
Kansas City, Kansas and become the
Kansas City T-Bones. The
Madison Black Wolf have moved to
Lincoln, Nebraska
Lincoln is the List of capitals in the United States, capital city of the U.S. state of Nebraska. The city covers and had a population of 291,082 as of the 2020 census. It is the state's List of cities in Nebraska, second-most populous city a ...
to become the
Lincoln Saltdogs, and the
St. Paul Saints have since left the Northern League, were in the American Association for several years, and in 2021 has become the
Minnesota Twins AAA Affiliate team.)
Celebrity appearances
On May 14, 2004, Borders appeared on ''
The Howard Stern Show'' with comedian
Artie Lange during a radio show stunt in Las Vegas. Borders appeared in the ''
Sports Illustrated
''Sports Illustrated'' (''SI'') is an American sports magazine first published in August 1954. Founded by Stuart Scheftel, it was the first magazine with a circulation of over one million to win the National Magazine Award for General Excellen ...
'' magazine published on March 7, 1994, and again in ''Sports Illustrated for Kids''. Borders also made appearances on popular syndicated shows such as ''
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno'', ''
Today'' with
Joe Garagiola and ''
Good Morning America''.
Annie Leibovitz and
Susan Sontag
Susan Lee Sontag (; January 16, 1933 – December 28, 2004) was an American writer, critic, and public intellectual. She mostly wrote essays, but also published novels; she published her first major work, the essay "Notes on "Camp", Notes on 'Ca ...
have Borders featured in their 1999 book ''Women''.
Playing style
Borders' style was that of a
control pitcher. She attempted to throw breaking pitches and low fastballs to let the hitters get themselves out on ground balls. With enough regular action to stay sharp, such as in her good streaks in 1998 and 1999 when she was a regular starter, she could be very effective in doing this. Without that, such as when she was used irregularly from the bullpen, her control would waver, and her fastballs in the 79–83 mph range were knocked all around or out of the park. She could, when asked, throw a little over 80 mph, but when she did so the ball's trajectory flattened and became easier to hit. Her best pitch was a
screwball. She also threw a
curveball, which would break from 10 o'clock to 4 o'clock as it crossed the plate.
Post-retirement
Borders worked in the
Long Beach Fire Department for one and a half years before moving to
Gilbert, Arizona in 2008. She was a
firefighter and emergency medical technician in the
Gilbert Fire Department,
before becoming a firefighter-paramedic for the
Cornelius Fire Department in
Cornelius, Oregon.
As of 2017, she lives in
Beaverton, Oregon.
In 2017, her biography,
Making My Pitch: A Woman's Baseball Odyssey', which she wrote with Jean Ardell, was published.
Awards
Borders was elected to the
Baseball Reliquary's
Shrine of the Eternals for her unique contributions to the game of baseball in 2003.
Borders' collegiate and professional baseball gear is on display at the
National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.
See also
* Dr.
Alta Weiss – pitched for the Vermilion Independents then the Weiss All-Stars starting in 1907
*
Jackie Mitchell – pitched for the
Chattanooga Lookouts briefly in 1931, then later with the
House of David
*
Mamie Johnson – pitched for the
Indianapolis Clowns in the 1953–1955 seasons
*
Eri Yoshida – pitched for the Kobe 9 Cruise of the
Kansai Independent Baseball League in the 2009 season and the
Chico Outlaws in the independent US
Golden Baseball League in the 2010 season.
*
Women in baseball
References
External links
Baseball Reliquary - The Shrine of the Eternals - 2003 ''New York Times'', February 26, 1994.
Ila Jane Borders Website1999 Duluth-Superior Dukes Roster1999 Madison Black Wolf Roster
{{DEFAULTSORT:Borders, Ila
1975 births
Living people
Sportspeople from La Mirada, California
People from Cornelius, Oregon
Baseball players from Washington County, Oregon
Baseball players from Los Angeles County, California
American women baseball players
20th-century American firefighters
Baseball pitchers
Whittier College alumni
St. Paul Saints players
Duluth-Superior Dukes players
Madison Black Wolf players
Zion Pioneerzz players
21st-century American women
Vanguard University alumni
Women players in men's baseball