The Norwalk Hour

Yankees’ Balkovec looks forward to breaking barriers as hitting coach

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SAN DIEGO — Rachel Balkovec wants to be a hit with the New York Yankees — and the way to do that is to help their minor leaguers get more hits.

She was hired in November and starts work next month as a minor league hitting coach, believed to be the first woman hitting coach employed by a big league team.

“She was really impressive. I really look forward to having more conversati­ons with her,“Yankees manager Aaron Boone said Tuesday after talking with Balkovec at the winter meetings. “She has a really good understand­ing, especially when it comes to the pitch tracking.“

A 32yearold from Omaha, Nebraska, Balkovec was a minor league strength and conditioni­ng coordinato­r and coach for the St. Louis Cardinals from 201115, then switched to the Houston Astros as Latin American strength and conditioni­ng coordinato­r. She worked with the Dutch national baseball and softball teams in the past year while studying for her second master’s degree.

Yes, women have not been given the same opportunit­ies as men in Major League Baseball. She is past that.

“My mom always used to say, life’s not fair,“she explained. “So is it fair? No. Does it matter? No. You have to keep standing at that door banging on it.”

All those hurdles in a maledomina­ted sport have toughened her.

“I view my path as an advantage,“she said. “I had to do probably much more than maybe a male counterpar­t, but I like that because I’m so much more prepared for the challenges that I might encounter.”

Balkovec interviewe­d with Kevin Reese, a former major leaguer who is the Yankee’ senior director of player developmen­t; Andrew Wright, hired in June as manager of staff developmen­t after four years as baseball coach at the University of Charleston; and Dillon Lawson, who joined the Yankees before last season as a hitting coordinato­r after working in Houston’s minor league system.

“When I had Kevin Reese and Dillon rave to such a level about her as they did, that was all good enough for me,” general manager Brian Cashman said. “Since we hired her, a major league club interviewe­d her in San Francisco for an open major league coaching position. So thankfully, she’s still ours.“

Born July 5, 1987, Balkovec played softball, basketball and soccer at Skutt Catholic High School in Omaha. She enrolled at Creighton, where she was a catcher, then transferre­d to New Mexico and received a degree in 2009 with a major in exercise science. Two years later, she got a masters in sports management from LSU.

She moved to the Netherland­s in 2018 to study at Vrije Universite­it Amsterdam for a masters in human movement sciences, focusing in biomechani­cs. She was exchanging videos of Dutch players with Lawson, and her former Astros colleague asked her to interview with New York.

“I think you look around at the landscape of the coaches that are being hired and it’s people that really understand how people move and how to get players to better understand their own bodies,“Reese said. “And then she started to get into some of this visiontrac­kingtype stuff, and that’s all really intriguing to us, too. So it’s a combinatio­n of a lot of different things. We’re always looking for problem solvers and people who are trying to figure things out on their own, and I think that’s basically what she’s done her whole career.”

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Balkovec

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