18 November 2025
Why Allie Bebbere dropped everything for a chance at the Big Leagues
feature story by Jena Osman
Allie Bebbere has accomplished a lot in her baseball career. She’s won gold with Victoria, represented Australia at a World Cup, and collected multiple Golden Arm Awards.
Most athletes would be satisfied.
Allie Bebbere isn’t most athletes.
At 31 years old, she’s taken a leap of faith for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Allie left her life in Victoria behind to chase a dream that’s never existed before: a professional contract in the United States.
This week, on Friday, the first ever Women’s Professional Baseball League (WPBL) draft will take place.
From over 600 triallists, only 150 women made the draft pool. Approximately one hundred will be selected across four teams – San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York and Boston.
Allie is one of only nine Australians anxiously waiting to hear her name. She joins Ticara Geldenuis (NSW), Claire O’Sullivan (NSW), Elodie O’Sullivan (NSW / WA), Maddison Erwin (ACT / NSW), Molly Paddison (QLD), Leah Cornish (WA), Caitlin Eynon (WA) and Chloe Atkinson (WA) as the Aussies on the draft list.
Allie recalls first hearing of the league’s establishment and initially feeling a wave of disbelief.
“It was a bewilderment… and trying to wrap my head around the possibility,” she said.
For someone with a long, settled and accomplished career, the move might look like a gamble, but Allie only sees potential.
Why leave comfort for something unknown? Her answer is simple: hunger.
The decision
The WPBL allowed players to trial via video submission or in person. With the encouragement of past Australian greats, including longtime friend and Australian coach Sam Hamilton, Allie chose the hard road: a flight to Washington, D.C., to stand on the mound in front of the scouts.
“There were no guarantees that she would get through day one,” Sam said. “She could have flown all the way over there and been cut after one day. Thankfully she was there the whole duration of the time… she took a massive chance.”
To put herself in the best position, Allie pushed her training to new heights. She competed in both men’s and women’s baseball, increased activity at the gym, focused on recovery and did some coaching on the side.

“She’s a competitive beast, she eats baseballs for breakfast,” Sam joked.
How much dose Allie love baseball? She got married on a baseball field and returns each anniversary to take a photo.
“I was definitely going, I was trialling, I was doing whatever I needed to do to try and be considered,” Allie said.
Allie’s biggest challenge wasn’t commitment; it was logistics.
“It wasn’t really a matter of deciding whether or not to go, it was more of figuring out how to make it happen… my husband [Daniel] and I took the approach of ‘we’ll make it work’,” Allie said.
Sacrificing work and sorting finances wasn’t easy, but Daniel helped to push her over the line.
“I told her, ‘You’re going to kick yourself if you don’t go. Give it a shot, see what happens, and we’ll go from there’,” he said.
Allie is no stranger to putting life on hold for baseball.
“Even before the WPBL, for World Cups we’ve continued to put family plans on hold for this,” she said.
As the trials quickly approached, the unknown created plenty of anxiety for both Allie and Daniel.
Despite the chaos, Daniel couldn’t hide his admiration.
“There was no security of anything… but for me it was great,” he said. “She’s getting opportunities that I never had, and I’m just happy that we’re in a position where she can pursue them.”

Above: Daniel and Allie on their wedding day at Fitzroy Baseball Club
THE LEAP
From pitching at her local club at Doncaster to hitting inside Nationals Park, a Major League stadium, Allie has literally and figuratively taken a massive jump – not just for herself but for all the women before her and those still to come.
“She’s doing this not just for herself; she’s doing it for the people that came before her that didn’t have the same opportunity, and she’s also doing it for those girls that are 14–15 and need a role model,” Sam said. “You can’t be what you can’t see.”
There is no professional baseball league for women in Australia – or anywhere outside of Japan. In the United States, softball has been the diamond sport of choice for female athletes.
The establishment, support and success of the WPBL could critical for the sustainability of girls in baseball.
“Until this moment that was never any girl’s dream, and now it is,” Sam said.

Above: Sam Hamilton fist bumping Allie at the 2023 Women’s Baseball World Cup
It won’t be without its challenges for the Aussie athletes.
“The gap between female baseball in Australia and what the league will look like, I think it’ll be massive. The names they have are some of the most elite female baseballers from around the world,” Sam said.
Some names Allie will mix with are among baseball royalty – Ayami Sato and Mo’ne Davis. Sato is widely regarded as the greatest women’s baseball pitcher of her generation and a multi-time World Cup MVP for Japan. Davis is a U.S. sports phenomenon who made global headlines as the first girl to star on the mound at the Little League World Series.
The Trial
Trials are second nature to Allie – familiar faces and predictable drills. She’s done hundreds in Victoria, but Washington was a whole new experience.
“I wasn’t surrounded by people I knew…these were girls that I’ve never met, never seen play, so it was scary,” she admitted.
Sixteen thousand kilometres from home without her support system, Allie was forced to rely solely on her preparation and mental game.

Above: Allie Bebbere (right) with Queenslander Molly Paddison at the in person trials at Nationals Park.
“I didn’t know what I was going to be asked to do, but I knew I had to be prepared to do everything.”
But the moment she stepped onto the field, all nerves settled.
“Once I was on field and I was playing baseball, I was playing baseball. It didn’t matter who I was playing with, where I was playing, I know how to do that,” she said.
Allie prides herself on her mental resilience.
Her mental strength has been a defining piece of her career, a trait her husband knows well.
“No one’s allowed to tell Allie that she can’t do anything,” Daniel laughed.
“The odds were stacked against her. She just stuck it out and kept on grinding,” Daniel said.
He was hesitant to talk about draft day. He laughed as he explained he’s aimed to avoid all bad energy to have no interference with the result.
To Daniel, hearing his wife’s name called on draft day would mean everything.
“All of the nights where we’d miss each other… barely any time to see each other, it would all be worth it,” he said.
The legacy
Being selected is no guarantee. What if the draft doesn’t go her way?
Allie’s fire will only be fuelled.
“It would drive her into another gear,” Sam said. “As soon as she puts her mind towards something, she really works her arse off to do it.”
No matter the outcome, Allie’s influence is undeniable.
She is paving the path for young girls across the nation and allowing them to stamp their place in the sport.
As Sam Hamilton summed up:
“Her age doesn’t recognise her game. Game recognises game.”



















