Montreal Gazette

Olympian Finch breaking another gender barrier

Pitcher set to be first female manager in pro baseball history

- NICK MARTIN

Former Olympic great Jennie Finch’s name has been etched in the softball history books for nearly two decades; now, she will make her mark on America’s national pastime.

With the help of a promotion from an independen­t team, Finch is set to become the first female manager in profession­al baseball history.

Finch will serve as a guest manager for the Bridgeport Bluefish when they host the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs this weekend in Connecticu­t. The move was announced by the Bluefish in March and will add to the slow but steady progress being made by the various leagues to create a more inclusive hiring process.

“We are really excited to have Jennie come out and manage the team,” said Bluefish general manager Jamie Toole in the release. “She is an incredible athlete and a wonderful person, and we hope our fans will enjoy seeing her in a Bluefish uniform for the day.”

Finch’s name remains in the sports world due to her stellar career as a softball pitcher for the Arizona Wildcats, with whom she captured the 2001 national title, and the U.S. Olympic team.

She went on to capture a gold medal with the United States in 2004 and a silver at the Beijing Games in 2008 — the American team’s gold medal game 3-1 loss to Japan marked the end of the program’s 22-game win streak and the end of the sport’s existence within the quadrennia­l event. Following the 2008 competitio­n, Finch was one of softball’s most vocal advocates, though the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee axed the sport from the Olympics in 2005.

Even though softball still remains absent from the Games, Finch’s managerial duties prove both her staying power in the U.S. and the fact that both baseball teams and fans are becoming more open to gender diversity, a rare trait given the current male-dominated environmen­t of the sport.

Her role with the Bluefish is a temporary one, but has the potential to have a resounding effect given the number of other efforts being made around the nation and in other mediums to help push the movement to the majors.

Finch’s pro baseball coaching career comes just over a week after Fox released promos for the upcoming show Pitch, which will depict a fictional version of the first female MLB player.

Outside the world of television, Justine Siegal’s name is among the first to be mentioned when it comes to breaking baseball’s gender barrier. In addition to being the founder of Baseball for All, a non-profit focused on correcting the gender inequity issues at the youth level of the sport, Siegal is also the first female coach of any kind in profession­al baseball, with her stint as the first-base coach of the Brockton Rox in 2009.

 ?? DUANE PROKOP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Jennie Finch will serve as guest manager of the independen­t Bridgeport Bluefish this weekend in Connecticu­t.
DUANE PROKOP/GETTY IMAGES FILES Jennie Finch will serve as guest manager of the independen­t Bridgeport Bluefish this weekend in Connecticu­t.

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