Who is Jen Pawol, the woman set to become the first female umpire in MLB history
Baseball was always on television at the Long Island home where Jen Pawol grew up with her parents, Victoria and Jim.
From a young age, the now 48-year-old knew that the sport was destined to be her future. โI love being on the field the whole time,โ Pawol said. โItโs in my DNA.โ
When she was seven, her mom and dad took her to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown. A few decades later, it was a full-circle moment when Pawol returned to donate her own gear to celebrate the history of women in baseball.
After rising through the ranks, umpiring the lower minor leagues all the way to Triple A, Pawol is set to make history this weekend as the first female umpire in Major League Baseball history when she works the bases at the Miami Marlins and Atlanta Braves games.
Everything Pawol ever worked for has been building up to this moment.
โCatching and playing multiple sports throughout my career, catching a little bit on the side and things like that, all of that has culminated to help me be ready to be an umpire,โ she told MLB.com last year.
โOnce I started umpiring, I said, โThis is for me.โ I canโt explain it.โ
Pawol โbeggedโ her parents to let her play baseball as a child, but girls played softball at the time, which is what she did, according to a 2023 profile in The Athletic.
At the age of 13, Pawolโs mother Victoria died suddenly from an aneurysm. Her momโs untimely death solidified the bond with her dad, Jim. They pulled one another through and remain close today. โWe just pressed on,โ Pawol told the outlet. โWe got super close and still are.โ
Pawol attended West Milford High School in New Jersey, where she was an all-state softball and soccer player for three seasons in each sport.
From there, she went to Hofstra on a softball scholarship, where she had a successful college softball career as a catcher. She became a three-time all-conference pick and was on the USA Baseball women’s national baseball team in 2001.
Alongside sport, Pawol worked as an art teacher and got a masters degree in painting from Hunter College in New York.
But it wasnโt enough. โI wasn’t really satisfied,โ she said last year. โComing off of a huge competitive career, just playing locally, I wasn’t getting my fix. And I remember looking at the umpire and being like, I think that’s it. I got to go for that.โ
During her studies on weekends Pawol umpired fastpitch softball to help fund her tuition. She continued to teach art in upstate New York and umpired on the side.
In all, Pawol umpired for the National Collegiate Athletic Association softball from 2010 to 2016. In 2015, she was invited to an MLB umpire tryout camp which launched her career to the next level.
โYou know Iโm a woman, right?โ Pawol told longtime MLB umpire Ted Barrett, who was among the instructors and was impressed with what he saw, according to The Athletic.
Pawol was invited to the Umpire Training Academy at Vero Beach, Florida and was offered a job in the Gulf Coast Leagueโone of the lower minor leaguesโ in 2016. It was where she made her debut as the first woman to umpire a Minor League Baseball game in almost a decade.
The culture of the game has changed significantly, but Pawol said she was well aware of the additional scrutiny on her at the time, as she stepped up to the professional ranks.
โI can control my hustle, my calls, my professionalism. But gender and color and things like that, no one can control those,โ she told MiLB.com in 2016. โI can see why people are talking about it, asking those questions, because of the rarity of women being involved.โ
Ultimately, Pawol said she hoped her achievements โmight inspire more girls and women to get involvedโ in the sport.
As for the men she has dealt with on the field throughout her career, Pawol didnโt have a bad word to say. โIt’s so much fun, and the men I’ve met in both Major and Minor League Baseball have been so wonderful and friendly,โ she said.
In April 2023, Pawol became the first female umpire in 34 years to reach Triple A.
The significance of that day on April 30 in North Carolina struck her when St. Louis Cardinalsโ veteran Adam Wainwright, who made a rehab start for the Memphis Redbirds that game, approached the mound.
โJen, I have four daughters and I think what youโre doing is awesome,โ Wainwright told Pawol, she recalled to The Athletic. In her no-nonsense manner, Powell replied: โI still got to check your hands,โ Pawol recalled, laughing. โJust so you know.โ
Pawol has not forgotten the women who came before her, who each played a part in making her incredible achievement possible.
Former umpires Bernice Gera and Christine Wren both shortened their first names to Bernie and Chris in a bid to force their way into the sport. Gera umpired one game in 1972 after fighting for years to do so, before she quit because of โresentmentโ from other umpires and the baseball establishment. Wren umpired for three seasons in Class A from 1975 to 1977.
Pam Postema, a close friend of Pawolโs, umpired in the minor leagues for 13 seasons before she became the first woman to umpire a big-league spring game in 1989. Her contract was canceled after six years at Triple A.
And Ria Cortesio, the second woman to umpire a major-league spring training game, even lowered her voice and cut her ponytail to fit in. Cortesio spent nine years in the minor leagues, including the last five in the Double-A Southern League, then was released after the 2007 season.
โThe things that Pam and Ria and Chris had to deal with, they were moving the big boulders,โ Pawol said.
โYou donโt have to change your name or pretend to be a boy. You just show up.โ
The Associated Press contributed reporting.
