Logo of Wisconsin All Stars Girls Baseball featuring a large "B" on a red background with baseball stitching, outlined by a blue circle with the text "Wisconsin All Stars Girls Baseball" and stars.

SPONSOR

We are focused on girls exclusive supplemental training and competitive opportunities. Our aim is to reduce the financial burden to encourage girls to continue playing sports, whether their primary sport is baseball, softball, or other sports. All funds go towards uniforms, providing affordable community-based clinics and events, and covering fees to participate in Local, Regional, and National Games and Tournaments. We appreciate your support in helping to keep girls playing the game they LOVE!

Three young girls in baseball uniforms stand on a pitcher's mound holding baseballs. They wear caps and gloves, with uniforms representing Phillies, Giants, and Rays.

#1 Fan Sponsors

$50 - Keeps a girl in the game

Benefits include:

Team Newsletter recognition

Team Newsletter

Rookie Sponsors

$150 - Trains 2 women coaches

Benefits include:

#1 Fan Benefits

A signed baseball & thank you letter

A baseball on grass with a girl in the distance playing baseball on a field.

'A' Sponsors

$500 - Provides 1 team with uniforms

Benefits include:

Rookie Benefits

1 x social media recognition post

'AA' Sponsors

$1,000 - Supports training clinics and tournament fees

Benefits include:

Rookie Benefits

2 x social media recognition posts

Logo on all event media

'AAA' Sponsors

$2,500 - Gets 1 Team to Nationals

Benefits include:

Rookie Benefits

3 x social media recognition posts

Logo on all event media

Logo on 1 team jersey for a year

Girls in Baseball

Girls and women have been part of the game of baseball since the 1860s. In the 1940s, the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League was founded in the Midwest. 1973 marks a shift in attitudes towards girls and women playing baseball, when Little League lost their case in the Supreme Court to ban Maria Pepe and girls like her.

Girls have 1.3 million fewer opportunities to play high school sports than boys have. Despite this disparity, there are a growing number of opportunities in baseball for women. There are all-girl youth baseball teams, 6 women’s college teams and a USA Nationals Women’s team. There are women playing, coaching and umpiring professional and college baseball. In the summer of 2026, six teams will begin their first season in the Women’s Pro Baseball League.

Despite the benefits of actively participating in sports, only 1 in 3 girls between the ages of 6-12 participate in sports on a regular basis. By the time they reach their teens, 40% of girls are not actively participating in sports. Despite a long history in baseball, many girls are told to stop playing and switch to another sport, simply because of their gender. Baseball For All was founded by Justine Siegal after being told that baseball is for boys, and softball is for girls.

Opportunities to Play

Secret in the Spotlight

After the 1974 Supreme Court ruling, Little League formed an alternative softball division for girls. Since then, softball has grown in popularity among girls and is commonly believed to be “baseball” for girls. In November 2009, however, the NCAA ruled that baseball and softball are two different sports. As such, a school having a softball team is not a legal reason why a girl could be denied an opportunity to play baseball.

Some girls love softball. Some girls love baseball. Some girls love both.

We support each girl’s decision to play the sport SHE loves!

Baseball female catcher in gear catching a baseball during a game, with an umpire behind her on a field.