Rachel Balkovec, a groundbreaking baseball coach, will become the manager of a team in the Yankees' minor league system, making her the first woman to lead an affiliated professional baseball squad.
Balkovec, 34, will manage the Tampa Tarpons, the low Class A affiliate of the Yankees, for the 2022 season, which begins in April. The Yankees hired her in November 2019 as a hitting coach in their minor leagues. She was believed to be the first woman hired as a full-time hitting instructor by a big-league team.
The news of Balkovec's promotion to manager was first reported by The Athletic and was confirmed by a Yankees official.
Balkovec began working in professional baseball in 2012, on a temporary contract as a strength and conditioning coach for the St. Louis Cardinals' minor league affiliate in Johnson City, Tenn., where she was the Appalachian League's strength coach of the year. She was the Cardinals' minor league strength and conditioning coordinator in 2014 and 2015 and the first woman to hold a full-time position in that field in major-league-affiliated baseball.
In 2016, she was the Houston Astros' Latin American strength and conditioning coordinator. Two years later, she became the strength and conditioning coach for the Astros' Class AA Corpus Christi Hooks.
Balkovec was a catcher on the softball teams at Creighton and the University of New Mexico. She has a master's degree in kinesiology from Louisiana State. She left the Astros in 2018 to pursue her second master's degree, in human movement sciences, at Vrije University in the Netherlands. While there, she also served as an assistant hitting coach for the country's baseball and softball programs.
She taught herself Spanish to be a more effective communicator. And before the Yankees hired her, she was working at Driveline Baseball, a data-driven baseball training center in Washington State. At Driveline, she was researching eye tracking for hitters and hip movement for pitchers.
Balkovec faced resistance when she applied for strength and conditioning jobs in baseball years ago. When she changed her first name on her résumé and applications to "Rae" from "Rachel," she got calls back from teams. But she has said officials on the other end of the line were taken aback when they discovered she was a woman. Some wouldn't call back, and some said they wouldn't hire a woman.