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How these female coaches are breaking barriers in the MLB

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33ft/iStockBy Danielle Genet, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — April 1 is Opening Day for the sport long considered America’s “favorite pastime.” This season, MLB will have a record 23 female coaches in its lineup — either on the field or in professional-development roles.

Among the women starting this season is 30-year-old Bianca Smith, who made history in January as the first Black woman hired as a minor league coach by the Boston Red Sox.

“It was crazy,” she told ABC News’ Good Morning America of the moment she landed the role. “I’d been interviewing for a scouting position so the fact that they offered a coaching position was huge for me.”

Smith, who had juggled multiple jobs and internships in the past, including assistant athletic director at Carroll University, is expected to primarily instruct minor leaguers in Fort Myers, Florida.

She said her love of the sport started at an early age and was passed down by her mother, who died in 2013.

“She’s the one who introduced me to the game when I was 3,” Smith shared. “She is a diehard Yankees fan. She would actually be cringing if she saw me even in the [Red Sox] sweatshirt right now.”

Still, Smith said her mom was the person who motivated her as a kid.

“She was the one who pushed me to play softball,” said Smith. “And she was the one who pushed me to just pursue my dream.”

In 2019, 33-year-old Rachel Balkovec was hired by the Yankees as the first full-time female hitting coach in the minor leagues.

“I mean the first word that comes to mind is just gratitude, just so many people involved and not just the men who have supported me and hired me, but also women that have come before me, so just really grateful,” Balkovec told GMA.

Her role with the Yankees isn’t the first time she’s made history in professional baseball. In 2014, she was hired by the St. Louis Cardinals as the first full-time female strength and conditioning coordinator in the minor leagues.

Balkovec said her mission is not just to excel as a coach on the field, but also be a “visible idea” to young girls of what’s possible since she said she didn’t have women working in baseball as role models when she was growing up. She uses social media to share her message as well as work as a mentor with young women.

“I just understand that when I signed the paperwork with a major league organization. … I just understood that I was signing up for two jobs,” Balkovec shared. “I just know that being a visible idea is something that I know I need to do, but also what is on my heart and what I want to do.”

As women breaking into a male-dominated industry, Balkovec and Smith said there are roadblocks and barriers that come with it.

“With some perspective, I just always say, being an underdog is an advantage, and I’m glad that I had a longer path,” Balkovec explained. “It’s a gift when someone doesn’t respect you upfront and you have to earn it, because it means that much more when you do earn their respect.”

Smith agreed, adding, “It’s that much more fun when people underestimate you and you prove them wrong.”

Alyssa Nakken, 30, who made history as the first female full-time coach hired by a major league team when she was promoted to assistant coach by the San Francisco Giants, echoed Balkovec and Smith’s outlook on breaking barriers in a male-dominated industry.

“Naturally we tend to just fall into comfort zones and like linear paths … and I think what’s really the most fun and interesting is when you sort of take a step or a turn off that path and then find yourself in a position that has never been done before,” Nakken said. “And then you can help guide and lead the way in helping others get to where they may not know where their ceiling is, and you may be able to help them find something that they never thought that they could do before.”

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ryan Coogler knows Chadwick Boseman would want the 'Black Panther' sequel to go on

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Marvel Studios(LOS ANGELES) — Black Panther director Ryan Coogler has some thoughts about the movie’s sequel, especially about the late Chadwick Boseman. 

When speaking with The Hollywood Reporter Wednesday, Coogler expressed that, while it will be hard to continue Black Panther‘s legacy without Boseman, he admits that his friend would want the legacy to continue.

“You’ve got to keep going when you lose loved ones,” said the Judas and the Black Messiah producer. “I know Chad wouldn’t have wanted us to stop.”

Coogler took a moment to describe what kind of actor Boseman was and how he influenced the set.

Black Panther, that was his movie. He was hired to play that role before anybody else was even thought of, before I was hired, before any of the actresses were hired,” he recalled.  “On that set, he was all about everybody else.”

Coogler also touched upon the late actor’s silent battle with stage four colon cancer, saying the diagnosis appeared to be the least of Boseman’s concerns.

“Even though he was going through what he was going through, he was checking in on them, making sure they were good.  If we cut his coverage, he would stick around and read lines off camera [to help other actors with their performances]… So it would be harder for me to stop,” the Oscar nominee furthered. “Truthfully. I’d feel him yelling at me, like, ‘What are you doing?’ So you keep going.”

Still, carrying on Boseman’s legacy won’t be easy, says Coogler.

“I miss him in every way that you could miss somebody, as a friend, as a collaborator. And it sucks because I love watching movies, and I don’t get to watch the next thing he would have made,” he reflected.  

Black Panther 2 is slated to start production in July and hit theaters in 2022.

By Megan Stone
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively troll each other while getting COVID-19 vaccine

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ABC – ABC/Lou Rocco(CANADA) — Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively had an interesting way to celebrate getting the COVID-19 vaccine.

The power couple took to Instagram on Wednesday to not only flaunt their newly updated vaccinated status, but to poke fun at their significant other.

Reynolds shared a photo of him getting the jab and, in the caption, took a shot at vaccine conspiracy theories by announcing that he “Finally got 5G.”

The Deadpool star is referencing a conspiracy theory, which was debunked on Snopes, that the COVID-19 vaccines injects people with 5G chips in order to track them.

Reynolds also took to his Instagram story to then poke fun at his wife by comparing the outfit he wore to his vaccine appointment to a similar number Lively wore while on the set of her newest film The Rhythm Section.

While the 44-year-old actor is wearing a red beanie in his most recent snap, Lively is wearing a blue one.

“Who wore it better?” cracked Reynolds and threw up an opinion poll, of which he is currently leading.

Still, even if his fans think his hat is superior, even the Detective Pikachu star admits it’s not a good look by confessing in another story, “Science is sexy. The hat?  Perhaps not.”

As for Lively, she trolled her husband by inferring that she has more love for the nurse who administered her vaccine.

Sharing a photo of her looking up and smiling at the health care worker, the Gossip Girl alum declared, “Find you someone who looks at you like I look at the heroic nurse vaccinating me.”  

In a subsequent Instagram story, the actress revealed how “grateful” she is to have obtained the vaccine.

Reynolds and Lively wed in 2012 and share three daughters,  James, 6; Inez, 4; and Betty, who’s one.

By Megan Stone
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 3/31/21

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iStockBy ABC News

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Wednesday’s sports events:

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION
Portland 124, Detroit 101
Miami 92, Indiana 87
Brooklyn 120, Houston 108
Dallas 113, Boston 108
Minnesota 102, New York 101
Oklahoma City 113, Toronto 103
Utah 111, Memphis 107
San Antonio 120, Sacramento 106
Phoenix 121, Chicago 116
Milwaukee 112, LA Lakers 97

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

Buffalo 6, Philadelphia 1
Toronto 3, Winnipeg 1
Colorado 9, Arizona 3
Los Angeles 4, Vegas 2
San Jose 4, Minnesota 2
Calgary at Vancouver (Postponed)

Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

'Straight Outta the Country', Justin Moore has a secret

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Cody VillalobosIf you loved Justin Moore‘s number one song, “Why We Drink,” and his follow-up single, “We Didn’t Have Much,” it’s no coincidence.

“You know, we actually wrote, recorded, found the outside songs, all of the above that is Straight Outta the Country at the same time that we did the Late Nights and Longnecks album,” he tells ABC Audio.

His current album — and its continuation — were actually recorded at the same time.

“We had 30 or 40 songs ready to go,” he explains. “The Late Nights and Longnecks album ended up being 10, 12 songs, whatever it was.”

“And I just coincidentally, I wrote most of those,” he adds. “We would have put 30 or 40 songs on that album if we could have, but we just obviously, you can’t do that.”  Justin’s new collection, Straight Outta the Country, featuring his current hit, “We Didn’t Have Much,” comes out April 23. 

By Stephen Hubbard
Copyright © 2021, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.