Another League of Their
Own
By Paul Hallorin Monday, June 30, 2003 Another
League Of Their Own
Christina
Burrill could not stand it.
She could not
just sit there watched her league, the New England Women's Baseball
League slowly wither away like a flower in autumn.
In a final
effort to save her sport and past time, she sent an email to Nick
Lopardo of the North Shore Spirit of the Northeast Independent
League.
Her plea: to
have a meeting to discuss the possibility of the Spirit sponsoring a
women's team this year.
Within 48 hours,
she received a call from Al Melanson, part owner of the spirit. A
meeting time and place was set.
Three women,
Burrill, Megan Zuckerman and Emily Christy went in with three
proposals.
"One that was a
fantasy (their own league), one that would make us happy (a
traveling team) and one we would settle for (use of Fraser Field
once)," Christy said. "We pretty much walked out of there with the
ultimate."
Lopardo blew
them away when he said he would sponsor a league with four teams
playing 12 games each.
It is a
full-blown league, including playoffs, with an All-Star team - the
Lady Spirit - that will be selected to play in several tournaments
throughout the U.S. and Canada.
For the ladies
involved, the fruits of the past years' struggles have finally been
reaped.
The women, who
basically just want a place to play the national pastime, feel this
is Heaven on Earth.
"It still makes
me giddy thinking about it," said Robin Wallace, an Alabama native
who is in law school at the University of Alabama.
She and many of
the other players are working for the Spirit at Fraser
Field.
"It will be very
pleasing to me to see kids at the railing getting autographs from
young women," Melanson, the Spirit owner said. "There's no reason
why we should have a men's professional team and not women's
baseball. This is good for the Spirit, good for the city and good
for the North Shore. A lot of it had to do with the women I met
with. They are very serious about baseball and they want to make
this something special."
Lopardo is doing
something few have done, and he will be appreciated for years to
come.
The players in
the league represent 11 states and Canada. They also come from all
walks of life, including: lawyer, EMT, policewomen, ESPN staffer,
computer engineers, graphic designers, teachers and
coaches.
After paying
their own way the last two years and wondering if they would even
have a league to play in this year, the NEWBL players are on top of
the world.
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