This past February, Sportsnet’s Hazel Mae sat down for an interview with Kim Ng — then MLB’s vice president of baseball operations — in advance of International Women’s Day. With nearly 30 years of service in MLB, both on the league side and at senior positions within the front offices of multiple franchises, it’s hard to imagine anyone better suited than Ng to speak to the realities and challenges of being a female executive in North American professional sports.
Ng had obvious aspirations of leading a baseball operations department. She’d interviewed for general manager openings with numerous clubs, finishing as a finalist time and again. With decades of experience as a decision maker within the front offices of multiple successful franchises, she was ridiculously over-qualified. And yet she was passed over for job after job.
Why was that? Why wouldn’t an MLB franchise want to benefit from Ng’s knowledge and expertise? Those questions are part of the reason why Mae asked Ng if baseball was ready for a female GM.
“They should be,” Ng said. “We see female world leaders, CEOs, secretaries of state. There’s no reason that there shouldn’t be a woman general manager.”
Finally, there is one. Friday, the Miami Marlins announced they’ve hired Ng as the club’s next GM. It’s a groundbreaking moment not only for baseball but for North American professional sports. Ng will be the first female GM of an MLB, NHL, NBA or NFL franchise. It will be a hard-earned bullet point atop an extensive and impressive resume.
Ng’s MLB career began more than three decades ago — years prior to the founding of the Marlins in 1993. She earned an internship position with the Chicago White Sox, who eventually hired her full time and promoted her up the ranks to assistant director of baseball operations, a role that saw her become the first woman to present a salary arbitration case.
In 1998, she became the youngest assistant GM in baseball when New York Yankees GM Brian Cashman added her to his front office. Three years later, she joined the Los Angeles Dodgers as a vice president and assistant GM, where she worked for a decade before leaving the club to join MLB as a senior vice president, the job she held until today.
Along the way, Ng was part of the front offices of eight postseason teams — three of them World Series winners. She was a candidate for a score of GM openings, including positions with the Dodgers, Seattle Mariners, New York Mets, San Diego Padres, Anaheim Angels, Baltimore Orioles, Arizona Diamondbacks, Philadelphia Phillies and San Francisco Giants. Every one of them passed.
That she was up for so many GM jobs speaks to her unquestionable qualifications to oversee an MLB front office. It speaks to the sport’s willingness to consider non-traditional candidates.
But it may also speak to a tokenism tendency on the part of organizations, which make it publicly known they’ve interviewed minority candidates even if they aren’t genuinely considering them for the position. And what it certainly speaks to is the much steeper hill women must climb compared to their male counterparts to attain one of those 30 jobs. How many men younger and less experienced than Ng have been chosen for GM positions after far fewer interviews?
The answer is a lot. Ng’s first interview for a GM opening was in 2005. Since then, MLB franchises have hired GMs who were just beginning their baseball careers in mail rooms and as scouts while Ng was negotiating free agent contracts and big-league trades. They’ve hired individuals who were working outside front offices as agents and at consulting firms while Ng was handling arbitration cases and building out player development departments both domestically and overseas.
Ng has long been considered a GM in waiting — a skilled executive whose ascension to the top of a club’s baseball operations department was inevitable. And it turns out it was. But it took longer than it ever should have. And longer than it ever would have if a male candidate with Ng’s talent and experience had existed over the last 15 years and interviewed as often as she has.
What it took, as Ng put it to Mae during their interview last winter, was “a bold, courageous, gender-blind owner.” She was right. But what she never could have predicted was that that owner would be the same all-star shortstop she won several World Series with when she was working for the Yankees.
That it’s Derek Jeter — the Hall of Famer was putting up 200-hit seasons for Ng 20 years ago — who finally helped her break through baseball’s glass ceiling is a fitting turn of fate. Since he took over as Marlins CEO in 2017, Jeter has been a strong advocate for members of minority communities within the game. He’s spoken out repeatedly against racial injustice. He’s mandated Spanish lessons for English-speakers in his front office. Jeter’s been a refreshing and needed progressive force within the halls of power in a game stubbornly beholden to tradition. He had a necessary role to play in this moment.
But that moment is still Ng’s. Next week, she’ll turn 52. That makes her the sixth-oldest GM in the sport behind Jerry Dipoto, Dayton Moore, Cashman, Mike Rizzo and Al Avila. What separated her from those individuals who have all helmed front offices for years — not to mention the 20-plus GMs younger than her — wasn’t qualification or acuity. It was opportunity.
Finally, she’s receiving it. Like Ng told Mae earlier this year, this moment has long been overdue. There was never a reason there shouldn’t have been a female GM. And there’s no reason for the next to be far behind.
The past weekend of football was all about the favourites.
The favoured teams went 13-1 straight up and 10-4 against the spread in the NFL. In college football, the three most teams bet at the BetMGM Sportsbook in terms of number of bets and money all won and covered. All three were favourites.
Trends of the Week
The three most bet college teams that won and covered on Saturday were Ohio State (-3.5) vs. Penn State, Indiana (-7.5) at Michigan State and Oregon (-14.5) at Michigan. Penn State has now lost seven straight home games as underdogs. The Nittany Lions were up 10-0 in the first quarter and were 3.5-point favourites at the time. The Buckeyes won 17-10.
In the NFL, the three most bet teams in terms of number of bets and money were the Washington Commanders (-4) at the New York Giants, the Detroit Lions (-2.5) at the Green Bay Packers and the Buffalo Bills (-6) vs. the Miami Dolphins. All three teams won, but only two of the three covered the spread as Buffalo beat Miami 30-27.
When it came to the players with the most bets to score a touchdown on Sunday, only two of the five reached the end zone — Chase Brown (-125) and Taysom Hill (+185). David Montgomery (-140), Brian Robinson Jr. (+110) and AJ Barner (+500) did not score.
Upsets of the Week
The biggest upset in the NFL was the Carolina Panthers coming from behind to beat the New Orleans Saints 23-22. New Orleans closed as a 7-point favourite and took in 76% of the bets and 79% of the money in against-the-spread betting. The Saints fired head coach Dennis Allen following the loss. They have now lost seven straight games after starting the year 2-0.
Arguably the biggest upset in college football was South Carolina beating No. 10 Texas A&M 44-20 at home. Texas A&M closed as a 2.5-point favourite and took in 59% of the bets and 58% of the money.
NEW YORK – Washington Capitals left-wing Alex Ovechkin, Carolina Hurricanes centre Martin Necas and Pittsburgh Penguins centre Sidney Crosby have been named the NHL’s three stars of the week.
Ovechkin had a league-leading five goals and nine points in four games.
The 39-year-old Capitals captain has 14 points in 11 games this season, and his 860 career goals are just 34 shy of Wayne Gretzky’s record.
Necas shared the league lead with nine points (three goals, six assists) in three games.
Crosby factored on seven of the Penguins’ eight total goals scoring four goals and adding three assists in three appearances. The 37-year-old Penguins captain leads his team with 14 points (five goals, nine assists) in 13 games this season.
Crosby and Ovechkin, longtime rivals since entering the league together in 2005-06, will meet for the 70th time in the regular season and 95th time overall when Pittsburgh visits Washington on Friday.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 4, 2024.
TORONTO – Running back Brady Oliveira of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and Hamilton Tiger-Cats quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell are the finalists for the CFL’s outstanding player award.
Oliveira led the CFL in rushing this season with 1,353 yards while Mitchell was the league leader in passing yards (5,451) and touchdowns (32).
Oliveira is also the West Division finalist for the CFL’s top Canadian award, the second straight year he’s been nominated for both.
Oliveira was the CFL’s outstanding Canadian in 2023 and the runner-up to Toronto Argonauts quarterback Chad Kelly for outstanding player.
Defensive lineman Isaac Adeyemi-Berglund of the Montreal Alouettes is the East Division’s top Canadian nominee.
Voting for the awards is conducted by the Football Reporters of Canada and the nine CFL head coaches.
The other award finalists include: defensive back Rolan Milligan Jr. of the Saskatchewan Roughriders and Montreal linebacker Tyrice Beverette (outstanding defensive player); Saskatchewan’s Logan Ferland and Toronto’s Ryan Hunter (outstanding lineman); B.C. Lions kicker Sean Whyte and Toronto returner Janarion Grant (special teams); and Edmonton Elks linebacker Nick Anderson and Hamilton receiver Shemar Bridges (outstanding rookie).
The coach of the year finalists are Saskatchewan’s Corey Mace and Montreal’s Jason Maas.
The CFL will honour its top individual performers Nov. 14 in Vancouver.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 31.