The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ng breaks glass ceiling

Male- dominated sports leagues embrace change at a glacial pace, but theMiamiMa­rlins change story.

- ByCandaceB­uckner

On Chicago’s South Side, about 4 miles fromthe ballpark where Kim Ng launched her historic career, her cheerleade­rs worried. At the University of Chicago, they hadwatched her rise from MVP of the Maroons’ softball team to White Sox intern to assistant general manager of the New York Yankees before she turned 30, amassing an army of supporters along the way. It was only a matter of time, they thought, until she’d be running a teamof her own.

Ng certainly thought so. She started in baseball the same year, 1990, that ElaineWedd­ington Steward became the first woman named assistant general manager of amajor league team. At that time, the game seemed to be changing.

“Someday I hope to be a GM,” Ng said in 1998. “I didn’t realize it was quite possible until recently. But I think the possibilit­y is out there.”

The years passed, though, and so did the fruitless interviews for general manager positions. The Los Angeles Dodgers in 2005. The Seattle Mariners in 2008. The San Diego Padres in 2009. The Los Angeles Angels in 2011. And the Padres, again, in 2014. Each time, Ng didn’t get the job.

She built a reputation as one of the most- qualified candidates, overcoming sexism and racism along the way. But the top rungs of baseball — like the top rungs of other pro leagues — remained a boys club. In 2011, after nine years as an assistant GM with the Dodgers, Ng left for a job in the league office. And even though she kept interviewi­ng, it seemed as though Ng’s narrative would end up similar to so many other women who cracked the glass ceiling but couldn’t bust through it.

“Itwas kind of like: ‘ Dang! She should’ve been the first ( female) GMin Major League Baseball!’” said Rosalie Res ch, the University of Chicago’ s interim director of athletics who was an adviser during Ng’s college days, in an interview. “It was like: ‘ OK is she going in a path that’s not going to let that happen? ... Has this passed her by?’ ”

Benton leading charge for women

Now, that fear has turned to a wave of elation. Ng, 52, was introduced as the Marlins’ general manager this month. Ng described it as extraordin­ary. Others called it long overdue.

“We all just knew that’s what she was driven to, to go to the top inthe baseball department,” said Grace Guerrero Zwit, the senior director of minor league operations for the White Sox. “I thought it would happen sooner rather than this late.”

Ng ( pronounced Ang) has long shown a passion for the game, and for winning, her former coaches and colleagues say. After growing up playing stickball in Queens, sleeping

undera poster of the 1978World Champion Yankees, Ng led her overachiev­ing Ridgewood High softball team to the NewJersey state finals.

“She was the only one who cried and was upset that we should have won,” former Ridgewood softball coach Debbie Paul said. “She loved baseball.”

At the University of Chicago, Ng captained her softball team as a sure- handed shortstop, but she was bent on leading the charge forwomen in other ways. During her senior year, she served as president of the university’ s women’ s athletic associatio­n and wrote are search paper on Title IX, highlighti­ng the low numbers in which women held leadership roles in sports.

In 1990, after graduation, she beat out roughly 30 candidates to get her first job, with the White Sox. Dan Evans, then the team’s assistant general manager, hired her for an internship that should have been four or five months of learning the art of salary arbitratio­n and working on offseason projects. When spring training arrived,

the gig should have been over. By then, however, Evans had already promoted Ng to a fulltime position.

“I just always thought she was going to be that glass ceiling- breaker,” Evans said.

Doubt and disdain from baseball men

Ng became a kind of a utility player for the White Sox front office. She attended arbitratio­n hearings with the club’s resident baseball lifer, a man named Jack Gould who kept an unlit cigar in his mouth and possessed no filter when it came to speaking his mind.

“I would be a little intimidate­d by that ,” White S ox Senior Executive Vice President Howard Pizer said. “But I don’t think she was.”

During games, she charted pitches and worked the radar gun. When the draft approached, Zwit had to do the menial but necessary job of alphabetiz­ing stacks of 500 draft cards. Ng raised her hand to help.

“There was some garbage work that needed to be done,

just like bottom- of- the- totem pole type stuff and she was ‘ Give it to me. I’ll do it,’” Zwit said. “Nothing was ever beneath her. Nothing.”

Any meeting Evans had — with executives, agents, players — Ng followed. So did the doubt and disdain from baseball men. Honey, can you get me coffee? they asked her. They pulled Evans aside and asked him: What is she doing here?

In 2003, when Ng was an assistant general manager with the Dodgers and attending the annual GM meetings, she was having a drink with colleagues when New York Mets special assistant Bill Singer questioned where she was from ( she was born in Indianapol­is) and mocked her Chinese heritage.

“I just love that the shallow people who just decided that theywere going to inject racism and inject gender- centric comments, I just knowthat they’re retching a little bit today,” Evans said about Ng’s hire. “I knew the challenges that she had throughout her career: the harassment, the stigma, the glass ceiling. It’s all gone now.

She is the general manager of the MiamiMarli­ns and she just happens to be a woman and she just happens to be Asian American. And that’s a great day for our game.”

Looking very much like topdecisio­n- maker

Yet, it’s a day some could not envision. Not because of Ng’s abilities but because of the glacial pace at which the male- dominated sports leagues embrace change.

“Baseball is so traditiona­l and change doesn’t come quickly, although it is changing,” said Steward, now a vice president and senior club counsel for the Boston Red Sox. “This is major. It really is.”

After leaving the Dodgers in 2011, Ng went to MLB headquarte­rs as senior vice president of baseball operations, a role inwhich she worked with all 30 teams and oversaw the internatio­nal branch. Though she was the highest- ranking woman in baseball, Ng never stopped chasing a GM job. Her name continued to pop up on short lists. In 2018, the Mets, Giants and Orioles had openings, and Joe Torre, her boss at the league office, called several teams to vouch for her. Still, Ng couldn’t land a GM position — a process that left her feeling “defeated and deflated.” Then this month, the Marlins called.

Ahead of her introducti­on, with more than 100 media members on the Zoom call, Ng posed for portraits inside an empty Marlins Park. While standing on home plate, Ng crossed her hands and wore the faintest of grins. She looked very much like the organizati­on’s top decision- maker. And exactly how her most ardent allies have always envisioned her.

“I have chills about this,” Steward said. “I always thought this could happen. I have to say though, it’s been a while, and when it finally did happen, I just felt all kinds of emotions.”

 ?? NUCCIO DINUZZO/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE 2018 ?? Over two decades, Kim Ng built a reputation as one of themost- qualified candidates, overcoming sexism and racism along theway. But the top rungs of baseball — like the top rungs of other pro leagues— remained a boys club. But she kept interviewi­ng.
NUCCIO DINUZZO/ CHICAGO TRIBUNE 2018 Over two decades, Kim Ng built a reputation as one of themost- qualified candidates, overcoming sexism and racism along theway. But the top rungs of baseball — like the top rungs of other pro leagues— remained a boys club. But she kept interviewi­ng.
 ?? JOSEPH GUZY/ MIAMI MARLINS VIA AP ?? KimNg posed for portraits earlier thismonth insideMarl­ins Park before being introduced as the newMiami Marlins general manager, breaking the glass ceiling.
JOSEPH GUZY/ MIAMI MARLINS VIA AP KimNg posed for portraits earlier thismonth insideMarl­ins Park before being introduced as the newMiami Marlins general manager, breaking the glass ceiling.

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