Ria Cortesio, who will start the season in double-A ball, is set to ump Thursday's spring training game between the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Chicago Cubs in Mesa, Arizona.
This hasn't happened since Pam Postema called an exhibition game in 1989. But she only made it as far as spring training for two seasons before she was given her walking papers. And before that, in one of the greatest mysteries in baseball, Bernice Gera fought her way to become the first female umpire in professional baseball when she worked a New York-Penn League (single A) game on June 24, 1972, She then, promptly, resigned and never umped again..
However Cortesio, 30, seems in it to stay. Currently the only woman umpire in professional baseball, she's starting her ninth year overall and her fifth in AA ball.
"It's awesome," Cubs star Derrek Lee said, in an interview with New York Newsday. "I think it's about time. Female eyes are as good as male eyes. Why can't they be umpires? Good for her."
Cubs reliever Scott Eyre also liked the choice.
"I could care less. [if she's male or female] If she can call a game, she can call a game."
However this will not be Cortesio's first appearance on a big-league field. She worked some of the All-Star exhibitions last year in Pittsburgh, and also worked the Home Run Derby.
She also earned one of baseball's uncelebrated badges of honor - criticism by New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner. He complained about her strike zone after she umped a game thrown by Roger Clemens when he was in the Florida State league recuperating from an injury.
Also an instructor at the Jim Evans Academy of Professional Umpiring, this year she's in line for a promotion to Triple A ball. Although a move to Triple A would give her a chance to be evaluated by major league supervisors, it puts her in no greater stead than a Double A ump to be drafted to the majors, as a Double A player has a greater chance of being picked up than an umpire.
Although Cortesio began her career in baseball's Pioneer League and has major league aspirations, she doesn't see herself as a pioneer in a male-dominated profession.
"I don't do this job to get on TV," she said last July. "But I hope it will raise the awareness a little."
Published by Laurie Boris
An editor and graphic designer/desktop publisher who has also been writing professionally almost twenty years, Laurie has taught at the Art Institute of Boston and Northeastern University. Her first novel, T... View profile
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- "It's awesome," said Cubs reliever Derrek Lee. "Female eyes are as good as male eyes."

1 Comments
Post a CommentIt's a shame that there aren't more women umpires who make it in professional baseball. I wonder when one will hit the big leagues.