Jane Jacobs
Jane Jeanette Jacobs Badini was born on June 16, 1924 in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio to Charles and Virginia Jacobs. She was one of five children and preferred playing ball outside with her brothers Charles. Johnny and her twin James than dolls with her sister Mary. She began playing in organized softball leagues before beginning to play baseball in her early teens. P.K. Wrigley (then owner of the Chicago Cubs) and Branch Rickey had come to Cleveland in 1943 scouting for talented athletes to play in the newly formed All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. Jane was playing for a local team and her manager told them he knew a young woman, who was better than anyone they had already.
Jacobs went to Chicago to try out, they wanted her, but she didn't sign until the following season for $50 a week and was assigned to the Racine Bells as a right handed pitcher. In her first season she pitched 230 innings with a 9-16 record in 31 games with a 2.82 ERA, she followed that with a 6-9 season with a 2.88 ERA in a 125 IP in 21 games.
Due to a plethora of pitching talent she was loaned to the Peoria Redwings for the 1946 season. Under new rules pitchers were required to gradually transition from underhand to slight sidearm delivery. With a lot of work she managed to make the switch, she went 6-12 with a 2.14 ERA (team leading and career best) in 23 games with 164 IP, but got very poor run support.
She returned to Racine in 1947 and the league changed the pitching regulations again to a full side arm. She struggled but just as she started to get the hang of it she was ordered by her manager Leo Murphy to throw at a batter's head, she refused and he benched her for a bit. When she returned to pitching he put her in the pen, she was angry but tried to make the best of it. She ended up being very effective. Though her nickname had always been "Jake" she was soon being called Fireman" a spin off of Johnny Murphy (a New York Yankees reliever know as 'Fireman') and proudly noted the name on her baseball cards. She finished the season 2-6 with a 3.30 ERA in just 13 games and 71 IP, but it would be her final season. She decided to leave the game when the league decided to switch to overhand pitching starting in 1948, she feared it would ruin her arm.
She finished her career at the age of 22 with a 24–43 record, a 2.65 ERA, 1.31 WHIP and 52 Ks in 88 games, she also pitched a one-hit, complete game-shutout. She batted a career .204 with 9 RBI and one home run.
According to her AAGPBL bio she once had aspirations of becoming a reporter, but opened and ran a dry cleaning business for 40 years. She loved bowling, horseback riding and basketball. She didn't marry until 1973 when she was 49 years old. She was inducted into the "Women in Baseball" AAGPBL Permanent Display wing at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y in 1988, she did not attend. Her husband Mario Badini passed away in 1989, they never had children and she never remarried. She was inducted into the Akron Hall of Fame in 1994, a month later on her 70th birthday, Jane was diagnosed with cervical and ovarian cancer but survived the surgery and follow up treatments. After recuperating, she began a ceramics business as much of her life savings was now gone due to her illness.
She was also sought out for appearances and speaking engagements after the HOF induction and she embraced it. In 2009, she traveled to Cooperstown with her niece's family to visit the A. Bartlett Giamatti Research Center to read her baseball career file and see the baseball wing for the first time. She even aided some researchers in identifying unknown players in team photos.
According to an article written in 2010, a journalist claimed that Jane kept hidden throughout her pitching career and to most outside of family that she was blind in one eye. Was unable to find any other reports of this and in the same piece many of Jacobs stats and other details don't match her bio profile from the AAGPBL archives. The writer claimed to have first met Jane in 1997.
She passed away following hospice care on September 13, 2015 in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio she was 91. Along with her twin brother James and husband Mario, she was preceded in death by parents as well as her other brothers Charles and Johnny. She is survived by her sister Mary, nieces Jeannie and Amanda and their families. She is interred at Oakwood Cemetery in Fremont, OH.