On the day she officially became a trailblazer in Major League Baseball, Kim Ng remembered the little girl who played stickball on the streets of Queens.
At the time her gender wasn't nearly as big of an issue as knowing the layout of the field.
``First base would be the red car on the right, second base was the manhole,'' she said. ``Those were great memories.''
The layout has changed some for Ng, who sat next to home plate Monday at Marlins Park for the virtual press conference that coronated her historic appointment as the new general manager of the Miami Marlins. Behind her was an immaculate field, with nary a red car or manhole in sight.
In front of her is a job that for way too many years has been off-limits to anyone but a man.
That it took so long for Ng to get a job running one of MLB's 30 teams was, sadly enough, no surprise. Baseball evolves slowly, and the idea that a woman could actually be in charge of a team was inconceivable to past generations.
Maybe the best thing about Ng's appointment by the Derek Jeter and the Marlins is that a lot of other girls like the one who played stickball in Queens can have their own dreams, too.
``Girls can see it,'' Ng said. ``There's an adage you can't be it if you can't see it. I guess I would suggest to them now, now you can see it.''