Edmonton Journal

Red Sox to hire first Black woman as coach

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The Boston Red Sox will hire Bianca Smith as a minor-league coach, the Boston Globe reported Thursday, making her the first Black woman to serve as a coach in profession­al baseball history.

“She was a great candidate coming in,” Ben Crockett, the Red Sox vice-president of player developmen­t who helped spearhead the hire, told the Globe's Julian Mcwilliams. “She's had some really interestin­g experience­s and has been passionate about growing her skill set and developmen­t herself.”

Smith comes to the Red Sox from Carroll University in Wisconsin, where she served as hitting coach for the Division III Pioneers baseball team and an athletics administra­tor at the school. She previously had served internship­s with the Texas Rangers and Cincinnati Reds and also had worked in Major League Baseball's corporate office. Smith, a softball player at Dartmouth from 2010 to 2012, also had served as a graduate assistant coach at Case Western Reserve in Cleveland.

Smith will work with the Red Sox's rookie-league team in Fort Myers, Fla., with a focus on position players.

In January, the Giants elevated Alyssa Nakken from the organizer of health and wellness initiative­s to a full-time, on-field assistant coach, making her the first woman in MLB history to hold that position. Three other women have since been hired as on-field assistant coaches at the minor-league level, and in November, Kim Ng was named general manager of the Miami Marlins, the first time both a woman and an Asian American had held that post with an MLB team.

Smith holds a master's degree in sports management and a law degree from Case Western Reserve. She initially hoped to become a general manager, but found on-field coaching more to her liking.

“The hardest part is just getting the chance,” she told the Journal Sentinel. “I've applied for coaching positions, but they expect you to have the experience, either as a graduate assistant coach or you had serious playing time. I didn't really have either (in baseball). Even at Case Western I helped out on the field, but it's not like I'm making practice plans or anything. That's where I struggle is just finding someone who's willing to give me the chance to really get my feet wet.”

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