All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
SP/RP
2,382
Helen’s 2,382 innings pitched divided by her games pitched (313), shows Nicol averaged 7.6 innings pitched per outing.
2,382
313
during her 8 years in the AAGPBL, Helen appeared in an incredible 313 games.
313
1,076
in the AAGPBL Helen accumulated 1,076 in her average 7+ innings per appearance.
1,076
163
during his career Helen won 163 as a starting pitcher, losing 118.
163
During her career, Helen Nicol Fox set multiple AAGPBL records. She is the all-time league leader in games pitched (313), wins (163), consecutive wins (13 in 1943), losses (118), innings pitched (2,382), earned runs allowed (499), hits allowed (1,579), strikeouts (1,076).
Never much of an offensive threat, Helen had a career batting average of .154.
Her career ERA was 1.89 and she was even sharper in the postseason, with a 1.83 ERA and 13-7 record.
Helen Nicol began her career with the Kenosha Comets in the league's first season, 1943.
In addition to rattling off those 13 wins in a row, she led the league in wins (31-8), strikeouts (220), complete games (33), ERA (1.81), innings pitched (348) and shutouts (8, tied with Olive Little for the most).
In the Scholarship Series, though, she lost two games to Mary Nesbitt of the Racine Belles and Kenosha fell. Nicol had a 4.50 post-season ERA that year.
Nicol's record fell to 17-11 in 1944 but she again had the best ERA in the league, at 0.93. Her ERA was 1.09 in the Scholarship Series, but she was just 2-3, losing three of four matchups with Connie Wisniewski.
Even when Kenosha finished in last last place with a record of 41-69 in 1945, Helen (now married and using the name Fox) managed to put up a record of 24-19 starting for the komets.
She was finished fourth overall in ERA (1.34) and wins (24) and second in strikeouts (220, trailing only Dorothy Wiltse) and innings (357, trailing Connie Wisniewski).
With Kenosha again doing horribly (42-70) in 1946, Fox fell under .500 for the first time, with a 15-17 ledger.
She fell to 10th in ERA (2.09), tied for fourth in batters fanned (137) and missed the top 10 in victories.
With pitching deliveries switching from underhand to side-arm, many AAGPBL pitching greats faded away.
Fox slipped in 1947 to 6-16, 2.62 and split the year between Kenosha and the Rockford Peaches, but in 1948 she bounced back with Rockford and made the transition effectively to overhand throwing.
Helen went 17-13 with a 2.61 ERA. Fox won all four playoff games she pitched, including the finale in the championship against the Fort Wayne Daisies, when she beat Maxine Kline, 4-2.
She then reasserted herself as one of the top AAGPBL pitchers in 1949 at age 29 with a 13-8 season and a 0.98 ERA.
Only teammate Lois Florreich had a lower ERA and Helen tied for fourth in the league with seven shutouts. Fox was 2-0 in the playoffs and Rockford won their second straight championship.
The 1950 season saw Fox continue to shine with Rockford, as she had a 1.98 ERA. Her record was a disappointing 14-12 on a first-place Peaches team.
She was fifth in the league in ERA, her fifth top-five finish in eight seasons. In the playoffs, she went 4-1, including a win over Fort Wayne in the crucial Game Seven.
In 1951, Fox won 18 games, lost 7 and had a 2.57 ERA. She tied for second in the league in victories, two behind leader Rose Gacioch, was third in complete games (23) and fourth in innings (214).
She won her first two playoff games, but with the championship within reach, she lost game four of the finals 6-3 to the South Bend Blue Soxand Rockford failed in their bid for a fourth title in a row. She wrapped up her dazzling career at age 32 with a 8-7, 2.50 year in 1952 and didn't appear in the postseason that time.
In 1944, Annabelle Lee (the aunt of Bill Lee) pitched the first perfect game in the history of the AAGPBL.
Doris "Sammye" Sams was an outfielder and pitcher in the AAGPBL. She made her debut as a pitcher with the expansion Muskegon Lassies in 1946.
Sophie Kurys, nicknamed "Tina Cobb" or "The Flint Flash", was an outstanding player for the Racine Belles of the AAGPBL, playing 9 seasons in the league from 1943-1952.
Mary Nesbitt was a star in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League as both a pitcher and at first base.
Joltin’ Jo Joanne Weaver was one of the greatest hitters in the history of the AAGPBL.
Betty Foss hit .342 in five seasons for the Fort Wayne Daisies; her career average is second in AAGPBL history to her sister Joanne.
In 1949, Lois Florreich became Rockford's ace and she put up a great 22-7, 0.67 season. She set the AAGPBL all-time record for lowest ERA.
Connie Wisniewski holds the AAGPBL record for best winning percentage (.690) by a pitcher. She began her career with the expansion Milwaukee Chicks in 1944.
Anna May Hutchison played for the Racine Belles and is the AAGPBL all-times league leader in appearances playing from 1944-1949. She helped lead the belles to a championship in 1946.
Dorothy Schroeder had the longest career in the AAGPBL. The only player to appear in all 12 years the league existed.
Marshall struggled at the plate in 1947. She went 51-for-362 for a .141 average, striking out 79 times to set an all-time single-season record.
Briggs joined the AAGPBL when she was 18, playing through 1954. She played for with the Rockford Peaches, the Chicago Colleens, the South Bend Blue Sox, the Peoria Redwings, and the Daisies.