New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Yankees manager Balkovec doing better

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TAMPA, Fla. — Rachel Balkovec, hired by the New York Yankees as the first woman to manage a minorleagu­e affiliate of a Major League Baseball team, is nearing a return after being hit in the face by a batted ball during a drill last week.

Balkovec was struck on March 22, causing her to miss her first scheduled spring training game two days later with Class A Tampa.

“I saw her last night; she’s starting to feel better,” Kevin

Reese, Yankees vice president of player developmen­t, said Wednesday. “I think she’s getting close to being back on the field.”

The 34-year-old Balkovec didn’t suffer a concussion but had facial swelling that included the area around an eye. She was involved in a hitting drill in an indoor cage at the minor-league complex when she was hurt.

Reese did not think the injury would prevent Balkovec from managing her first regular-season game on April 8 at Lakeland.

“Just knowing Rachel the way I do,” Reese said. “The doctors have to sign off on some things and whatnot, but I think she’s eager to get back out there.”

Balkovec has broken several barriers on her way to the position. She was the first woman to serve as a full-time minor-league strength and conditioni­ng coach, then the first to be a full-time hitting coach in the minors with the Yankees.

The Yankees announced her hiring as a minor-league manager in January.

Balkovec, a former softball catcher at Creighton and New Mexico, got her first job in profession­al baseball with the St. Louis Cardinals as a minor-league strength and conditioni­ng coach in 2012.

Balkovec joined the Houston Astros in 2016. She was hired as the Latin American strength and conditioni­ng coordinato­r and later was the strength and conditioni­ng coach at Double-A Corpus Christi.

She joined the Yankees organizati­on as a minorleagu­e hitting coach in 2019.

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