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Curious City

Is women’s pro softball here to stay?

Curious City

WBEZ Chicago

Investigation, Chicago, Radio, Arts, Society & Culture, Public, Education, Curious, City

4.6661 Ratings

🗓️ 24 July 2025

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

What is it about softball? “What is it not about softball?” replies Megan Faramio, a star pitcher for the Talons in the all-new Athletes Unlimited Softball League, or AUSL. “I can literally talk about softball for days.” The AUSL is about to wrap up its first season with a three-game playoff series in Alabama between Faraimo’s Talons and the Bandits, a team name that Chicago softball fans know well. The Chicago Bandits were based mainly in Rosemont and played in the National Pro Fastpitch league from 2005 to 2019 until the league disbanded during the COVID-19 pandemic. The AUSL said it was “re-introducing” the Bandits brand “to make new history.” AUSL league commissioner Kim Ng acknowledged that pro women’s softball leagues in the U.S. have a “spotty” history, but she says this league will be different. In this inaugural “barnstorming season,” AUSL teams like the Talons and Bandits are not yet attached to specific cities, so The Stadium in Rosemont has hosted every team in the small league for many of the regular season’s games. Next year, the AUSL plans to attach six teams to six to-be-determined cities, and Ng says Rosemont is on the short-list. “Absolutely, you have to consider somewhere that has a Jennie Finch Way,” Ng said, a reference to the team’s legendary former player and the street named after her where Rosemont’s pro softball field is located. In our last episode, we looked back at Chicago’s first professional women’s softball league from the 1940s and ‘50s — one that featured business-sponsored teams like Parichy’s Bloomer Girls or Brach’s Kandy Kids. That softball league rivaled the pro women’s baseball league featured in the 1992 movie “A League of Their Own.” Today, we’re exploring this new chapter in professional women’s softball history. What’s going to give the AUSL staying power? And what’s all the hype about? We asked Talons star Megan Faraimo, Commissioner Ng, and — at a sellout crowd on a hot day in Rosemont — the fans.

Transcript

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0:00.0

What's up Chicago? I'm Erin Allen and this is Curious City.

0:05.0

This is shortstop, number 17, Snyder Wallace.

0:09.0

What you're hearing is the sound of softball.

0:13.0

Professional softball.

0:17.0

And it's a game happening close to home right next to O'Hare Airport, as you can probably hear.

0:23.6

It's from earlier this month, part of an inaugural season of the Athletes Unlimited Softball League, or AUSL.

0:32.6

We came out here to Rosemont because we wanted to see how things were going for this nascent national

0:38.3

women's softball league playing right in our backyard.

0:42.3

In our last episode, we focused on the local history of women's softball and baseball leagues,

0:48.3

two in particular from back in the 1940s and 50s.

0:51.3

You might already know about the Rockford Peaches from the film A League of Their Own.

0:55.4

Let's play hard. Let's play smart. Use your head.

0:58.3

I said lump three feet above our ass, right, Jimmy?

1:02.4

In addition to that very real baseball league, we had pro softball around here back in those days, too.

1:09.2

Chicago had a pro league with teams like the bloomer girls who played in Forest Park

1:13.1

and the Match Corporation Queens who played in Englewood.

1:16.8

Both of those leagues disbanded in the 1950s.

1:19.7

And in the decades since, women's pro softball and baseball leagues, well, things haven't been so sustainable.

1:26.2

So football actually has a little bit spotty track record of professional softball.

1:32.3

It's one that is inconsistent.

1:36.0

This is the commissioner of the AUSL, Kim Ang.

1:38.7

We're going to talk with her more later in the episode.

...

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