2024 Girls Baseball Elite Development Invitational
Baseball Wilson

FEATURE: Kalin Badgley Excels in Baseball While Defying Gender Norms

Photo via Jared Blais/MLB Photos.

For as long as she can remember, Kalin Badgley has always been fascinated by baseball.

Her recollection stretches all the way back to being a six-year-old girl playing co-ed tee-ball—one of just a few girls in her very first organized league. An old, low-res picture captures it best: Athletics shirt on, trophy in hand, and chocolate frosting edged around a wide grin.

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Badgley during her first season of tee-ball with the A’s.

“We had just won,” she recalls. “There’s a big smile on my face, and it was just the fact that I was able to put on a jersey with the same big name as the MLB team on TV. That was pretty cool. That was when I knew that baseball was my sport.”

A decade later, the 17-year-old was recently on the field at Game 2 of the MLB World Series in Toronto, where she was recognized as one of the MLB Youth Academy Players of the Year. Badgley is now gearing up to become the first girl to ever play varsity baseball at Wilson, but perhaps her biggest accomplishment was daring to challenge the boundaries of what most still consider a boys’ sport.

Her father, Jamie, would know about that challenge best. While signing his daughter up for various baseball leagues, he was often met with dismay from fellow parents at the idea of her playing alongside their little boys. Whether out of negative intent or just curiosity, the same question always arose: Why doesn’t she just play softball?

“She gets asked that question frequently in various forms, but I think the real answer is that Kalin is simply just a baseball player,” Jamie said. “She never had a desire to play softball. Her passion was always playing baseball.”

Luckily, Badgley says she was embraced by all of her youth baseball leagues. Originally from Berkeley, her family moved back to her dad’s hometown of Long Beach in 2016, where she started playing in Long Beach Little League as a third grader. After four years there, she went on to make a Heartwell PONY team, where she played from 2021–22, developing primarily as a southpaw pitcher and first baseman.

“It was great that I ended up here in such a great baseball community,” she said. “[Youth baseball] wasn’t as big in the Bay Area, but coming down here in Long Beach I definitely felt welcomed with open arms.”

As for her father, Jamie was often met with the occasional strange look from a parent, but aside from that, he was pleasantly surprised by the reactions.

“I’ve heard bad stories from people, but I’m happy to say that it wasn’t that,” he said. “They were all very open to having girls play in the leagues. The coaches were very open and the players embraced her.”

But soon enough, reality started to settle in for Badgley. The physical disparities between her and the boys around her became more apparent, and as their height and strength grew, so did the stigma around her continuing to play baseball. Growing alongside all of that, though, was the chip on her shoulder to work even harder.

“If I’m not going to be as tall as a guy, then I’m going to work harder than him,” she said. “I’m going to do a little bit extra—maybe that’s even just cleaning up the field after practice. If he doesn’t do that, then I’ll do it. Maybe I can get a little bump ahead of him even though I might not have the inches over him.”

When it was time to try out for freshman baseball at Wilson, Badgley was nervous about how her new coaches might react. For Wilson head coach Andy Hall, there isn’t much he hasn’t seen in 25 years of coaching at the school—he’s coached first-round MLB Draft picks as well as CIF-SS and national championship teams. But a girl making his team was certainly a first.

“When she came to camp before her ninth grade year, I was very impressed by her skill,” Hall remembers. “Baseball is a sport where you either have the skill or you don’t. If you do, it’s about having the work ethic behind it to develop the skills, and she certainly has a tremendous work ethic.”

Badgley’s nerves were quickly calmed, and she easily grew comfortable during her freshman year at Wilson.

“Luckily, I was alongside every guy that I had played with growing up in Little League,” she said. “They all knew me and everyone was super supportive, so that definitely helped. And fortunately, the coaches at Wilson were super open to having me on the team.”

In February of 2023, during Badgley’s freshman year, she decided to try out for the Elite Development Invitational, a prestigious camp held by MLB Develops that invites 64 of the top girls’ baseball players across the nation. Badgley ended up making the camp that year, but more importantly, she developed a relationship with the staff at the MLB Youth Academy in Compton.

That’s where she’s continued to train throughout high school, and it’s where she discovered a place filled with girls who shared her passion for baseball. It’s also where doors began to open for her, including being named one of the MLB Youth Academy Players of the Year and receiving a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be honored on the field at Game 2 of the World Series in Toronto.

“It’s amazing that I got introduced to the real world of women’s baseball at a small little camp in Compton, and two years later I ended up being honored at the World Series,” she said. “It was really just amazing to see how much representation I finally got, but more importantly all women in baseball.”

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Photo by Matt Paige. Badgley throws a pitch from the mound during one of her junior varsity games at Wilson last year.

Badgley is now preparing for her first season on the varsity team at Wilson this spring after spending a couple of years on frosh/soph and junior varsity. She joins a Bruin squad fresh off its first Moore League title since 2017, with a larger roster than in recent years. Still, Badgley’s mindset remains the same.

“She knows her strengths and weaknesses as a player and she’s worked hard to develop those so she can be valuable to our team,” Hall said. “She realizes that her role might be limited, and I’ve even told her a few times that the softball team would love her. She tells me that it’s just not where her heart is. She loves baseball.”

As women’s sports continue to grow rapidly across the country, new opportunities are emerging for women every year. Trailblazers like Mo’ne Davis, who made history at the 2014 Little League World Series, helped spark a national conversation about girls in baseball and opened the door for developments like the new Women’s Professional Baseball League launching in 2026.

With those opportunities have come new role models for young girls. Take one of Badgley’s favorite female baseball players, Kelsie Whitmore, who was recently drafted first overall by San Francisco in the new pro league. Badgley recalls a recent Instagram post from Whitmore showing little girls wearing her jersey for Halloween—something almost unimaginable just a year ago.

“I found that so inspiring,” Badgley said. “I think that’s such a big thing with all the opportunities for women to showcase their talent in baseball. Now there’s little girls and even little boys that can wear a woman’s baseball jersey instead of just the big A’s jersey that I was wearing as a kid.”

Badgley is keeping an open mind about playing professionally someday, whether that means making the USA Women’s National Team or the new league launching next year. But whether baseball remains in her future or not, it’s safe to say that Badgley has done her part for those who come after her.

“There’s women who have been there since the beginning of women’s baseball and the rise of women’s sports in general. There’s women who have been playing and fighting for women’s baseball for 20 years now, and it’s just amazing that I’m able to be a part of it now. This is so much bigger than me.”

Eli Aquino
Eli Aquino began working with The562 as part of its inaugural intern class in 2021 and continued throughout high school as a freelancer. He joined The562’s staff in 2024 and was later promoted to Editorial Associate & Staff Writer. He is currently entering his second year at Long Beach State.