The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Female GM a milestone for baseball

-

In a year of empty stadiums, Kim Ng’s ascent gives Americans something to celebrate.

Baseball is a game of milestones. Babe Ruth’s 714 career home runs, and Hank Aaron eclipsing Ruth with 755 round-trippers. Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier in 1947. Cal Ripken Jr.’s 2,632 consecutiv­e games.

And of course we have to mention the Chicago Cubs ending their 108-year World Series championsh­ip drought in 2016.

Now another big one: The Miami Marlins named Kim Ng as their general manager, the first woman hired as a major league GM. She is also the first Asian-American GM.

It’s a milestone not just for baseball. Ng is the first woman hired as a general manager in any major men’s profession­al sport in North America. A glass ceiling that has endured for generation­s finally comes down.

In a year of empty stadiums, truncated seasons and COVID-19 injured lists, Ng’s ascent gives Americans something to celebrate.

It also raises a question. Why did it take so long for team owners in major men’s profession­al sports to realize that top executive posts should be gender-blind?

After graduating from the University of Chicago, where she played softball, Ng worked in the Chicago White Sox front office for six years, including a stint as assistant director of baseball operations.

Later, she worked as an assistant general manager for the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers and was Major League Baseball’s senior vice president of baseball operations before heading to Miami.

Other women have taken on larger roles in baseball in recent years. The Yankees, Cubs and San Francisco Giants have female assistant coaches. Eve

Rosenbaum is the Baltimore Orioles’ director of baseball developmen­t. Jean Afterman is a New York Yankees assistant general manager, and Raquel Ferreira is an executive vice president and assistant general manager with the Boston Red Sox.

In a statement tweeted by the Yankees, Afterman sums it up well: “Her hiring demonstrat­es what I have long said, that to be a GM in Major League Baseball, you need intelligen­ce, vision and experience. These qualities of leadership, which Kim possesses in abundance, are gender-blind.”

GMs need to be skilled talent finders. They must love to compete and hate to lose.

They need to show a keen sense for money management in a world of salary caps and multimilli­on dollar contracts.

And they must show the vision it takes to chart a course to a championsh­ip.

Finding someone who checks all those boxes is all about a person’s skill set, not gender.

Inequities in how women are treated in sports still abound. The U.S. women’s national soccer team has won Olympic gold four times but has yet to win its fight for equal pay. The American women’s national hockey team in 2017 had to threaten to boycott to get better pay, which today amounts to about $71,000 annually for each player. Women get the gold, but men get the money.

Here’s hoping Ng’s achievemen­t is not just a milestone, but a steppingst­one to a time when top leadership jobs in profession­al sports are attained solely on, as Afterman says, “intelligen­ce, vision and experience.” The glass ceiling has been an ugly barrier in American society for far too long. Thank goodness that Ng and the Marlins just smashed a line drive through it.

Finding someone who checks all those boxes is all about a person’s skill set, not gender.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States