The Woman Who Struck Out “The Babe”

, , , , ,

Couldn’t happen, you say? Well, it did. Here’s the story.


Jackie Mitchell meets the Babe and Lou Gehrig (photo courtesy National Baseball Hall of Fame)

Jackie Mitchell did it on April 2, 1931. Mitchell was playing for the Chattanooga Lookouts, and the team was playing an exhibition game against the New York Yankees. It meant Mitchell would face Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig.

The game was possible because the Yanks had just finished Spring Training in Florida, and the team was winding its way up North to begin the 1931 season.

Mitchell, only 17 years old at the time, was nervous but ready to pitch. She didn’t start the game (the Lookout’s ace pitcher did, but flamed out in the first inning), and that’s when Mitchell was called into the game.

Nobody expected how things would turn out. Indeed, observers were stunned.

Mitchell not only struck out the Babe, but Gehrig went down swinging, too. There was some debate back then (never proven) that Ruth and Gehrig let her whiff them on purpose. For her part, Mitchell maintained they were legitimate at-bats.

What’s even more amazing is that both batters went down after Mitchell hurled seven–that’s right–seven pitches! She then walked Tony Lazzeri, the next batter in the Yankees’ lineup, and that was the end of her day on the mound.

MLB Commissioner Landis then voided her contract, claiming baseball was “too strenuous” for a woman.

(Date in the first video is in error; it was 1931, not ’32.)

About Matthew Paris

I grew up an avid Houston sports fan. After graduating from Texas Tech University in Theater and English Literature I worked as a marketing rep and coach for I9 Sports, coaching baseball, flag football, soccer, and basketball. I’m currently with Austin Sports Academy as a marketing coordinator, baseball and football coach, and coordinator of middle school and high school open play nights. I’ve written three short films for Looknow Productions and have also written articles on film marketing, producing, and directing. I really enjoy writing about sports and being an active contributor to The Sports Column.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CAPTCHA