Born in
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Blades graduated from
Belaire High School in Baton Rouge in 1996. Blades began her career with the Colonels and earned the 1997
Southland Newcomer of The Year Award. She continued her excellent play to earn both Player and Pitcher of The Year in 1998. Her combined
ERA (career best), strikeouts, wins,
shutouts and
innings pitched stats led the league, which earned her a pitching
Triple Crown At the close of 1998, Blades two-year career placed her in the top-10 for school records in
batting average (.320), shutouts and ERA; her 613 strikeouts set the record. Beginning in the 1999 season, Blades transferred to Southern Mississippi as a junior to continue working with her relocated head coach Lu Harris. She was honored with First Team
All-American honors. She threw three
no-hitters and a
perfect game and proceeded to strike out 497 batters, setting a new
NCAA season record, eclipsing
Michele Granger's previous mark of 484, set in 1993. Her wins, ERA, innings and shutouts set new school records. The wins were the fourth best total ever in the
NCAA as she led the nation that year. Blades led the Golden Eagles to an appearance at the 1999
Women's College World Series. It was a first for the school program and especially notable because it was their reactivation after 7 years of hiatus. As a senior in 2000, Blades would earn All-
USA, USA Pitcher of The Year, USA MVP and a First Team
All-American citation. She also picked up the
Honda Sports Award for softball in 2000 as the best collegiate player that year. Blades threw 4 no-hitters and two perfect games and would win 52 in her final season, setting the
NCAA Division I single season and Senior Class records. Her ERA,
WHIP, innings pitched and shutouts also reset school, conference records and were career best (excluding ERA), and also placed Blades in the top-5 for inning and shutout records in an
NCAA season. Along with USA conference pitching Triple Crown, her career best strikeout ratio of 11.6 led the nation. On March 1, 2000, Blades struck out 18 batters in a 7-inning, 7-1 win against the
Samford Bulldogs, her career-high for a regulation game. The performance tied her with the
NCAA fourth best (third at the time) regulation game record holders. Beginning on April 15 and lasting until May 7, Blades pitched a career best 80 consecutive scoreless innings, a school and conference record and ranked top-10 for the NCAA. In one of the games on May 6 against the
USF Bulls, she broke
Michele Granger's previous
NCAA Division I career strikeout record of 1,640 by reaching 1,643. During the NCAA Tournament to reach that year's
Women's College World Series, Blades would notch her career, school and conference record best 21 strikeouts against the
LSU Tigers in a 1-0, 13-inning loss on May 20, 2000 The game total was also the tournament record that held until 2004. At the WCWS, Blades twirled her second season
perfect game on May 25. It was the fourth perfect game ever pitched at the World Series. Blades fanned 11 of the No. 2 seeded, 2000
NCAA batting champs, the
Arizona Wildcats, on opening day to also break the
NCAA season wins record. Southern Mississippi would end the season with a third-place finish at the series and ranked 4th nationally under the command of Blades, who was selected to the WCWS All-Tournament Team. She finished the season with a total of 663 strikeouts, becoming the first pitcher to break 500 and 600 strikeouts in a season. That mark brought her career total to 1,773, a record that would stand until February 25, 2006 when
Texas Longhorns pitcher
Cat Osterman passed the mark against the
University of Nevada-Las Vegas. The eagle owns the school career records in just two seasons for wins (95), strikeouts (1,160), ERA (0.93), shutouts (50) and innings pitched (717.2). Blades also owned the conference
USA career strikeouts crown and now ranks second all-time, while her wins, ERA and innings are all top-5 for a career. For both schools, Blades is ranked second in wins, 5th in strikeouts, 4th in innings pitched and 8th for shutouts, while being tied 5th in perfect games for an
NCAA career. ==Playing career==