Crisis Support
Trevor Project: 1-866-488-7386
Trans Lifeline: 877-565-8860
Crisis Text Line: Text START to 678-678
Culture Them

The Women’s Pro Baseball League Is Here — And It’s Even Gayer Than the WNBA

This week, the Women’s Pro Baseball League revealed the official details of its first four teams: the Boston Hunters, the Los Angeles Queens, the New York Heights, and the San Francisco Firebells.Founded in 2024, the league had announced the first four host cities last October, but began rolling out names, logos, and jersey designs on July 8. In addition, each team is named after an important figure in women’s history from their respective cities — including the cigar-smoking, pants-wearing firefighter Lillie Hitchock Coit, a.k.a. “Firebell Lil,” who sometimes dressed as a man to gamble at men’s-only stores.While Coit serves as the namesake for the San Francisco team, Boston’s club is named in honor of Harriot Hunt, a trailblazing female physician who was the first woman to apply to Harvard Medical School in 1847, nearly a century before the school admitted its first female students. The New York Heights draws its name from civil rights activist Dorothy Height, who received a Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1994 honoring her decades of advocacy, and the Los Angeles Queens pay tribute to baseball player Lizzie Murphy, known as the “Queen of the Diamond,” who played in women’s leagues — and even competed against men —in the early 20th century.The league also rolled out designs for jerseys and fan replica jerseys on social media, and while I hate to pick favorites, I have to say that the osprey on the Boston Hunters kit is particularly fetching. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Women’s Pro Baseball League (@wpbl_official)As you might expect from a professional women’s sports league — given the queerness of the WNBA — the WPBL is also remarkably gay. According to our sapphic social media detective friends at Autostraddle, the inaugural WPBL roster has at least 18 out LGBTQ+ players, with representation on every team. That’s nearly a third of the entire league, which closely compares to the WNBA, where roughly a quarter of p

This is a summary from Them. Read the complete article on their website.

Read Full Article on Them
Opens in a new tab. QueerLine is not responsible for third-party content.

Them

This article was automatically aggregated from Them, a trusted LGBTQ+ news outlet. QueerLine curates headlines from verified sources to keep the community informed.

Back to News Full Article
Stay Connected

Community news, new resources, and LGBTQ+ updates. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.