31 March 2025
Caitlin Eynon: The world-class talent chasing baseball greatness & inspiring the next generation
feature story by Eliza Wood ahead of the 2025 Australian Women’s Championships
If you are a young baseball player in need of a role model, someone to look up to, to inspire you, then look no further than Western Australian baseballer Caitlin Eynon.
She is the epitome of the existing opportunities for female baseballers in Australia – and she’s only 21 years old.
Despite pressure to pursue softball in her early years, nothing could draw her away from the game she’s loved since she was seven.
Driven by this passion for baseball, Eynon always knew she would challenge the status quo.
“[Even] from back then I sort of wanted to be the person, or the one person to push those boundaries,” she asserts.
And push she has, if her resume is anything to impress you by.
She made her senior women’s national championship debut at the age of 13. To date she has played in three Australian Baseball League Women’s Showcases for the Adelaide Giants (below) and spent time abroad training in Japan.

In 2023, Eynon represented Australia at the World Cup.
She also won gold with team WA at the Australian Women’s Championships, where she was hit .481 in the tournament and unleashed a three-hit, three-run performance in the gold medal match.
Additionally, coming as no surprise, she historically has some of the best numbers in the WA state league.
In 2023-24 she recorded a season with numbers so unfathomable they feel like a typo: 21-for-23 with a homer, 15 RBI and 25 RBI in just nine games.
Eynon played predominantly with the men in 2024-25 in the State League Reserves, Western Australia’s Division II equivalent, chalking up a solid .380 on-base-percentage in 16 games while chucking 7.2 innings on the mound with five strikeouts and four earned runs.
A total athlete, it’s clear Eynon possesses a calibre that can’t be overstated – positional versatility.
Not only is she an elite shortstop – the most demanding position to master, but she is also on record for being one of the hardest throwing female pitchers in Australia, clocking 74mph.
“They go very hand in hand,” she says. “As a pitcher you’re constantly checking in with your shortstop, as a shortstop you’re constantly checking in with your pitcher for plays.”
Eynon shares an equal love for both positions, something she’ll have to do for Western Australia in April’s national championships.
“I enjoy the freedom of being able to use my feet [at shortstop], it requires a lot of athleticism which is something I’m constantly working towards… as the pitcher you set the tone of the game, you’re in control of the speed of the game and everything that’s happening around you,” she says.

Jason ‘Pops’ Pospishil, head coach of the Emeralds, attests to Eynon’s ability.
“She is a Top 3 short stop in the world right now,” says Pospishil. “Her combination of arm strength, foot speed and bat to ball skills puts her in the upper echelon of world class players.”
With an unrivalled skill set, Eynon is eyeing off her dreams and checking them off one by one.
She started with time in Japan, perhaps the world’s most devout baseball national. Eynon jumped at the opportunity to train there in October 2023.
Even with the language barrier, Eynon couldn’t speak more highly of her experience and the learnings she took away.
“I could barely communicate with them, they could barely communicate with me, but when we were playing baseball it really did bring us together, we were speaking a language through baseball,” she says.
“They had a very big attention to detail,” she continues. “Their dedication and drive to being the best athletes they can be was just awesome. They play with so much respect for the game and for each other as well… I gained a whole new appreciation for baseball.”
Returning home with a clear focus and more determination than ever, Eynon has barely scratched the surface with where she’s dreaming of taking her career.
Fast-forward to October 2024, which brought a game changing announcement to the world of women’s baseball.
The unveiling of the Women’s Pro Baseball League (WPBL) in America.
Looking to re-write history by offering women baseballers worldwide, the opportunity to showcase their talent on the stage they deserve.
Co-founded by baseball pioneer Justine Siegal, the WPBL is set to commence in 2026 running from May-August.
Scouting camps/trials and a league draft are in the works for 2025.
Featuring six teams, the WPBL will consist of a regular season, playoffs and championship.
This bombshell dropping sparked Eynon’s interest straight away, prompting a quick application from WA’s star baseballer.
“That’s what my goals are based around now, that and the World Cup next year,” she states. “Just being able to put all your time and energy into baseball, not having to worry about anything else, except for playing baseball – that’s most of our goals really.”
“No doubtedly she is one who could play in the newly created WPBL,” says Pospishil. “It would be so beneficial to our program to see as many players from Australia have the opportunity to play in the league.”
Alongside the WPBL, Eynon’s number one priority always lies with representing her country on the world stage.
The Emeralds will begin their World Cup campaign in 2026 with the finals to take place in 2027.
“My number one priority will be the Emeralds. Making sure I can do everything I can to bring success to that team next year when we go to our group stage,” she says.
Eynon is always focussed on the task at hand. Her motivator? Achieving success.
“The most impressive asset [she has] is that all she cares about is winning. She doesn’t get caught up in worrying about anything else that does not have an impact on winning,” says Pospishil. “Culturally, in a national team environment, we need to get to a space where all of our athletes care about the things that have an impact on winning and nothing else.”
Staying healthy and continuing to get stronger are other key areas Eynon will keep going after, as she strives to reach new heights and maximise her potential.
Away from the physical parts of the game and her personal career, an aspect of great importance to her is progressing in her leadership skills.
“I really tried in the last 6-12 months growing into more of a leadership role,” she says. “I definitely want to try and develop that over the next couple of years and make myself someone that the younger girls can look up to and be the best role model I can be for them.”
Speaking from her own experience, if she could offer one piece of advice to the next generation of aspiring baseballers, that encapsulates all that she believes it would be…
To play with confidence.

This is such an underrated yet instrumental piece of advice, that any young athlete would relish in knowing and applying to their own game.
Just from talking with Caitlin, it doesn’t take long to realise that she is undoubtedly a leader and role model in the making – if she isn’t already considered one.
Even though the pathways and opportunities to excel as a female playing baseball in Australia, aren’t so clear cut and perfectly laid out, they most definitely do exist.
And Caitlin Eynon is a grand slam example of it.
MORE STORIES BY ELIZA WOOD
- Team-first, dream-driven: Molly Paddison is focused and raising the bar
- A Newbie’s Guide to Women’s Baseball: Six Takeaways from a chat with Amy McCann

The Australian Women’s Championships begins in April. Head to www.baseball.com.au/women for stories, tournament information and podcast links


























