In Japan, they call Chelsea Baker "the Knuckleball Princess"
and even once offered her a $50,000 annual contract. But in Plant City,
Fla., she's just another member of the Durant High baseball team.
Baker, who rose to prominence
upon throwing a pair of perfect games in Little League four years ago,
is now a junior right-handed pitcher starting for the Cougars in
Florida's competitive Class 7A. Needless to say, she's the only girl on
Durant's 10-3 baseball team. But that's not the only reason she stands
out.
The 5-foot-2, 120-pound Baker
throws mostly knuckleballs, a pitch she learned from two of the best to
ever throw it. First, 1979 Major League Baseball All-Star Joe Niekro
taught her as a youth and later 2009 MLB All-Star Tim Wakefield helped her perfect it, according to the Plant City Times & Observer.
Baker has started this season
2-0 on the mound with a 0.78 ERA and three strikeouts against only one
walk in her first nine innings. The only starting pitcher on the roster
to have recorded a win without registering a loss through the first six
weeks, she has allowed just seven hits in three appearances.
“When I was little, all my
dreams were to be on the USA team and high school baseball, and people
always told me, ‘You’ll never play varsity baseball, you’re not strong
enough, you don’t have the guts to do it,’" she told The Tampa Tribune
upon recording the first win of her high school career, "so coming out
here today and taking the win was an awesome feeling. It was like, "I
got you.'"
In 2010, Baker appeared
on ESPN's "E:60", the MLB Network's "This Week in Baseball" and ABC's
"Good Morning America" during her fourth consecutive perfect youth
baseball season. Four years later, she still hasn't lost.
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