* When the two (now ''much'' older) sisters reunite at the end of the film.
* When the girls are running to catch the train, Dottie helped Kit on first before getting on.
* Realizing that Shirley Baker can't read, fellow Peach Helen Haley gently helps her find her name and welcomes her to the team.
** It's worth mentioning how exactly this scene plays out; all the teams have been formed and are sitting together while Shirley stands, lost and distraught in front of the list. The coach, assuming that she's on the cut list, berates her and tells her to leave. After Helen Haley helps her find her name, realizing the situation, the coach doesn't berate her or brush her off. He smiles and warmly tells her to go join her team.
** Similarly, Mae's efforts to help her learn to read. Sure, she uses trashy romance novels as teaching aides, but what's important is that Shirley is learning.
* Bob showing up at the team house and surprising Dottie. She's just so ''happy!''
-->'''Bob''': Hiya, cutie.
* The middle-aged Stillwell showing up at the Baseball Hall of Fame in place of his mother Evelyn, who died a few years before. Bonus points for how he's now respectful and polite, a complete 180 from the hellion he was during the main story.
--> '''Stillwell:''' When I heard about this, I felt like I owed it to her to be here. She always said it was the best time she ever had.
* Jimmy shoving away the tactless courier who was going to withhold the notice of Betty's husband's death in the war due to not knowing who to give it to and personally giving the message himself. The courier did say that they should send somebody personal. Why not the coach that the girls had come to care about and vice versa?
** Then, when Betty understandably breaks down, he doesn't hesitate to wrap his arms around her and hug her close. Asshole or not, Jimmy Dugan's going to make sure he does everything he can for his girls.
* During the final World Series Game, Miss Cuthbert can be seen whooping and cheering in the dugout. There's something very endearing watching this prim and proper lady be so thrilled for the girls she's been looking after.
* Kit has felt her whole life that she's always in Dottie's shadow and that nobody notices her. Then she hits the home run that wins the AAGPBL World Series and the entire stadium is shouting her name.
* Ernie genuinely trying to let Kit down easy when he initially turns her down for tryouts. His reassuring pat on her arm pays off when he realizes how strong she is and he does a 180, inviting her to come to the tryouts.
** Later:
--->'''Kit:''' Hey, Dottie? thanks for gettin' me into the league.\\
'''Dottie:''' You got ''yourself'' into the league. I just got you on the train.
* When Ernie refuses to take Marla because she isn't pretty, Kit and Dottie instantly drop their bags and refuse to accompany him. Good for them, sticking up for a girl they don't even know.
** Even better, Kit and Dottie don't even ''glance'' at one another in the moment. They're of such the same mind for keeping Marla that they simultaneously signal their refusal... and their gazes don't waver once from death glaring at Ernie over the issue.
** And her dad's plea, explaining to Ernie that he didn't have a wife to help raise Marla and make her ladylike, so he raised her like a boy, as being a man is the only thing he has ever known. The dad finishes by pleading to Ernie that Marla shouldn't have to be punished for her father's ignorance.
** Really, Marla's whole relationship with her dad. He has some of the boys at the school help show her ambidexterousness (with some of them groaning when her dad tells her to change to lefthand) and smiling pridefully as he encourages her on each hit (and instantly forgiving her when she send a ball out the window). When Ernie walks away without a word when he sees she's not attractive, rather than getting angry, her father immediately wraps his arms around her and comforts her before begging Ernie to give her a chance. When Marla is with him at the station, she tries to give excuses why she should stay, including that she won't know anyone and her dad might need her to take care of him. But her dad won't hear it, saying that nothing will ever happen in the town and she has to go out there. The pair exchange their love and a final embrace and her dad even mimes hitting a baseball as the train leaves the station to cheer her.
** Later, though we see little of it, Marla's relationship with Nelson. He's immediately smitten with her when they meet in the club and she serenades him, they keep in touch through letters and finally get married. Marla looks so happy as they're driving off for their honeymoon and the rest of the team all look thrilled for her.
--->'''Marla:''' I'm singin' to Nelson! (''to Nelson'') Ain't I, baby?\\
'''Nelson:''' (''dreamily'') You sure are.
* At one point, Dottie sees a black woman return a ball to the team with a killer throw and the woman gives Dottie a pleasant smile. Shows that the Peaches' inspiration was spreading.
* The woman on the radio show shown at the beginning, lambasting the league as an assault on femininity? She's shown at the end cheering the girls on with Walter Harvey in a blink-and-you'll-miss-it moment.
* Mr. Harvey, originally ready to shut down the team once World War 2 ended, agrees to give the team to Lowenstein, who believed the women had done so much.
** And later, Lowenstein is the one given the honor of cutting the ribbon at the Baseball Hall of Fame, as he had been the one who kept the Women's League going all those years. All the women give their agreement and support to this action.
* In the present day, Helen stands tall and declares that she is now a doctor, making her a trailblazer in more than one way.
* Mae shrieking in excitement when Marla gets a letter from Nelson. Later in the movie, ALL of the girls serve as her bridesmaids when they marry.