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Women baseball general managers? The minor leagues are way ahead of the game

Portrait of Joe Strupp Joe Strupp
Asbury Park Press

Before there was Kim Ng -- the New Jersey native making history this season with the Miami Marlins as the first female Major League Baseball general manager -- there was Courtney Knichel, and Katie Beekman, and Laurie Schlender, and Christine Kavic, and, well you get the point.

While the MLB is beating its chest for its first woman GM this year, minor league baseball broke that glass ceiling years ago with those listed above, who have been running teams from Maryland to Nevada.

And the lower leagues have continued to lead the firsts for women ever since.

Just this year, the Red Sox hired the first woman of color, Bianca Smith, to serve as a minor league coach, while Sara Goodrum became the first woman to serve as a minor league hitting coordinator when the Milwaukee Brewers appointed her this season.

Nov 16, 2020; Miami, FL, USA;  Miami Marlins general manager Kim Ng poses for a photo at Marlins Park.  Mandatory Credit: Joseph Guzy/Miami Marlins Handout Photo via USA TODAY Sports ORIG FILE ID:  20201116_jla_so6_010.jpg

“When I started it was rare but like everything it is all changing,” said Knichel, who has been the general manager of the Southern Maryland BlueCrabs of the Atlantic League for six years. “It is all about equality so it is more prominent in the industry.”

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Courtney Knichel, general manager of the Southern Maryland BlueCrabs, is having her third child in September. But it hasn't stopped her from doing her job.

Knichel is also one of two minor league general managers who are giving birth this season.

Already a mother of two, she had her first child, Kennedy, in April 2017 after two years on the job. Son Cooper was born the same month in 2020, but the pandemic had already begun a slow shutdown.

This time things are much different, Knichel said. With her next child (a girl already named Colby) due in September, she’s bearing the brunt of her full-time job during each month of her pregnancy.

“This is my first time being pregnant in the summer, that has been tiring,” she said, but stressing she is glad to do it and praises the team for being supportive. “I always say that whether I am a man or a woman if I can do the job, I should be the one who has it. As a woman you only live one life and you want a career and a family and you can do it all.”

Knichel recalls when she first took over in 2015 that there was some pushback, but mostly due to the surprise related to change, not any real sexism.

“When I first became general manager, we would have calls with all of the other GMs and for so long it was ‘c’mon men,’ or ‘hey you guys’,” she said. “It was something everyone had to adapt to.”

Emily Jaenson, who has been general manager of the Triple-A Reno (Nevada) Aces since May 2018, had her first two children, now ages 4 and 6, prior to getting the job. But she added the third child, daughter Elin, in May.

She also acknowledged a certain surprise among those in the league when they found out the team’s top manager was a woman.

“I have definitely surprised a lot of managers when I go down to the locker room and say hello and introduce myself,” Jaenson said. “That is the interesting part of it. If you have never seen a woman in the role, that’s part of what’s important, this is something that should be this way.”

As for her pregnancy, Jaenson said she worked up until the day before giving birth and plans to be back on the job in mid-August for the Aces, an affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Emily Jaenson, general manager of the Triple-A Reno Aces, gave birth to her third child just hours after making key hires for her team

“We had to get the Aces re-started for the new season,” Jaenson said about her work schedule prior to delivery day. “It was important for me to be there for the opening homestand, opening with COVID protocols and the endless memos about how to take care of our players.”

She recalled having to hire a team store manager and a new community relations manager just hours before going into the delivery room the next day.

“That was a race to the finish line to find the best person for that position following the pandemic,” Jaenson said. “My doctor supported me and told me to keep doing it unless I didn’t feel good. I had not taken maternity leave with either of my boys, I worked from home with them. For Elin, I really wanted to take the time to be a mom and be with her.”

But don’t think either Knichel or Jaensen are using new motherhood as an excuse to slow down on the job. Both are treating this season like any other and vowing to put in the time needed.

“This is the first time I am physically doing the job like this and right in their faces,” Knichel said about the fans and players who are watching her belly bloom. “I was a little nervous about how the players would treat it and treat me, but they are fine.”

One thing that helped was the nursing moms lounge for fans and employees that the BlueCrabs instituted the first year of their existence back in 2008, another idea that caught on first at the minor league level and has expanded to some major league teams such as the Washington Nationals.

“I know that more parks are putting them in,” Knichel said. “I would go in there and do my thing, every two hours. I see people in there every game. It has chairs, magazines and air conditioning.”

It is also another marketing source, having been sponsored by a local hospital, the University of Maryland Charles Regional Medical Center.

“Fans come up to me and ask how I am feeling,” said Knichel. “They ask if I need some water. I am treated very well by everyone.”

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