Perlick was one of the original 60 players in the league, and her team, the
Racine Belles, won the first AAGPBL Championship Title in 1943, defeating the
Kenosha Comets three games to none. She also became the first left fielder to be included in the All-Star Team, a distinction that she repeated in 1947 and 1948. In an eight-season career, Perlick was a .240 hitter in a pitching-dominated league. In her rookie season, she batted a career-best .268, which was the league's 12th highest average among regular players. She collected 481
stolen bases in her career, but perhaps her best quality was her timely
hitting in clutch situations. Usually, she led the Belles in
runs batted in, driving in a career-high 63 runs in 1944 to set a Racine season-record, leading the Belles again in 1945 (41), 1948 (51), 1949 (41) and 1950 (59). She averaged 49 RBI in each of her eight seasons, and her 392 career RBI ranks her sixth in the All-Time list. In 1946, Perlick hit .230 with a career-high 88 stolen bases and belted four
home runs as
cleanup hitter, helping the Belles to clinch their second Championship Title. But at the end of 1950 the Belles lacked the financial resources to keep the club playing in
Racine, Wisconsin. Before the 1951 season, when the team moved to
Battle Creek, Michigan, Perlick, along with original Belles
Eleanor Dapkus,
Maddy English,
Sophie Kurys and
Joanne Winter, were disappointed and decided not to make the move. During eight years, the Belles were a close-knit team, always like a family away from home. Perlick and teammates thought that all would be different, like a new team, maybe a new manager and, especially, a new location. Perlick returned to Chicago and played fast-pitch softball for two years with the Admiral Music Maids of the
National Girls Baseball League. ==Milestone==