Career
Listed at 5" 3", 135 pounds, she batted and threw right handed. Muriel Coben was one of the 57 players born in Canada to join the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League in its twelve years history. Coben has been considered by researchers as the greatest softball pitcher of her era in Saskatchewan history.
She led her teams to numerous regional, provincial and national championships in Canada in a career that lasted 18 years.
Born in Gelert, Ontario, Coben was raised on a farm in Tessier, Saskatchewan. She later played from 1938 to 1942 in Saskatoon for the Pats team, where she aroused the attention of an AAGPBL scout who signed her a contract to play in the new league during the opening 1943 season.
Coben tried to make the adjustment to the AAGPBL"s rules of play, but returned home after one year of struggling. Unfortunately, she suffered one of the worst pitching performances of the year, after posting a combined 4-16 record with the South Bend Blue Sox and Rockford Peaches, while leading the league for the most earned runs allowed (102).
She returned to the Saskatoon Pats in 1944, pitching for them two years before joining the Saskatoon Grey Cab Rambler from 1946 through 1950.
In 1950 she moved to Edmonton, where she joined the Mortons ball club and aided them in winning the Canadian championship over a very strong Toronto squad in 1952. She then returned to Saskatoon, and again starred with the Ramblers until her playing days were over in 1953. Besides McKee and Coben, the team included Sylvia Fedoruk and Donna (Paton) Belding.
The quartet would be inducted into the Saskatoon Sports Hall of Fame in 1987.
Coben also earned individual inductions to multiple Hall of Fames: Saskatchewan Sports (athlete, 1979), Saskatoon Sports (softball, 1986), Saskatchewan Baseball (1991), and Canadian Baseball (1998). In 1988 she received further recognition when she joined a group of Canadian ballplayers at Women in Baseball, a permanent display based at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in Cooperstown, New York, which was unveiled to honor the entire All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, though the acknowledgment came much later after her death in 1979, in Saskatoon, at the age of 58.
Pitching
Batting
Fielding.