Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Legend in women’s baseball league

- By Richard Sandomir

Jean Faut, who pitched two perfect games in a remarkable career with the South Bend (Ind.) Blue Sox of the All-American Girls Profession­al Baseball League, died on Feb. 28 in Rock Hill, S.C. She was 98.

Her death, in a hospice, was confirmed by her son Kevin Winsch.

Ms. Faut (pronounced “fawt”) joined the league three years after it was introduced as a way to maintain public interest in baseball when many major league players had gone off to fight in World War II. The league was the subject of Penny Marshall’s acclaimed 1992 film, “A League of Their Own.”

Over eight seasons, the right-handed Ms. Faut won 140 games, second to Helen Nicol Fox’s 163 for the most in the league’s history, and posted a minuscule 1.23 earned run average, a league record.

She was named the league’s player of the year in 1951, when the Blue Sox were playoff champions, and in 1953, her final season. She won at least 20 games three times.

“There’s no question that she was the GOAT of the pitchers in the league,” Lois Youngen, a Blue Sox catcher, said in a phone interview. “All Jean had to do was throw her glove on the field — she could play anywhere.”

On July 21, 1951, Ms. Faut, who had already thrown two no- hitters, pitched her first perfect game — and the first in league history — against the Rockford (Ill.) Peaches. She struck out 11 and let only two balls reach the outfield.

“Jean Faut, a sturdy gal with a fastball that hops and a curve that breaks off like a country road,” The South Bend Tribune wrote, “pitched a perfect, no-hit, no-run game to subdue the Rockford Peaches, 2-0, at Playland Park Saturday night.”

Ms. Faut pitched her second perfect game two years later in Kalamazoo, Mich., against the Lassies. This time, she struck out eight batters in a game the Blue Sox won, 4-0.

“She put her fastball anywhere she wanted that day, and her curve was working very well,” recalled Ms. Youngen, who was her catcher that night. “And the next question you may ask is, How many times did she shake me off? I’m not sure she ever did.”

Jean Anna Faut was born on Jan. 17, 1925, in Red Hill, Pa., and grew up in nearby East Greenville. Her mother, Eva (Gebert) Faut, was a seamstress; her father, Robert, owned a bicycle repair shop.

A natural athlete, Jean played field hockey and basketball and ran track in high school. After graduating in 1942, she worked in a clothing factory, earning about $25 a week.

But she was playing baseball as well. As a teenager, she began shagging fly balls for the East Greenville Cubs, a semipro team that practiced on a field near her house. Players noticed that she had a strong arm and “had me throw batting practice sometimes,” she told Sports Illustrate­d in 2015. “Some of the players taught me the pitches I used in the league.”

A few years later, in 1946, a scout called her, asking if she would be interested in playing profession­ally. She hadn’t heard of the All American Girls Profession­al Baseball League, but she quickly agreed to the offer and took a train to Pascagoula, Miss., for a two-week tryout.

“We took over the barracks of a naval base, and we played every day,” she said in an oral history interview for Grand Valley State University in 2010. “We had a number on our back, and it was fun. … I was chosen by South Bend, and that’s the way I got into the league.”

She was signed by the Blue Sox as a third baseman but quickly emerged as a pitcher; in 12 games in 1946, she had a record of 8-3 and a 1.33 ERA, which she followed in 1947 with a 19-13 record and a 1.15 ERA. She played third base and the outfield when she wasn’t pitching.

She had her best season in 1952. She went 20-2 with a 0.93 ERA, and she won the decisive Game 5 in the season’s playoffs while also hitting two triples.

After her baseball career, Ms. Faut was the administra­tive secretary of a mosquito biology training program at the University of Notre Dame and then worked in research for Miles Laboratori­es.

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