
 
        
         
		72 THE QUEENS COURIER • BUZZ • SEPTEMBER 6, 2018  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
  buzz 
 Meet the Mets’ fi  rst female PA announcer: Marysol Castro 
 BY KARMINA L. FONSECA 
 El Correo NY 
 Special to The Courier 
 With a cordial personality and a warm  
 but convincing tone of voice, Marysol  
 Castro achieved a ‘double’ this year, as she  
 not only became the fi rst woman to be a  
 public address (PA) announcer for the  
 New York Mets, but also the fi rst Latina  
 to have the position. 
 Castro, 44, is about to fi nish her fi rst  
 season as a Mets announcer, however, the  
 television host also plans to keep scoring  
 “homers” now that the baseball season  
 ends in October. 
 “Before starting with the Mets, I was  
 developing  a  program  to  support  the  
 Latino community, but the universe told  
 me: ‘Wait a minute, because you have to  
 do this job with the Mets,’” the Puerto  
 Rican confi ded to El Correo NY. “I’ve  
 been working on television for almost 20  
 years, so this role with the Mets is a little  
 diff erent but a little bit similar.” 
 Th  e Bronx native is passionate about  
 baseball. 
 “In almost all my jobs I was the only  
 woman, especially the only Latina. Look,  
 I worked on ESPN covering boxing and  
 baseball too - and I was the only woman -  
 so it’s not new to me,” she said. “It’s that I  
 bring my experience as a Latina, a Latina  
 from New York, a Puerto Rican. So being  
 Latina and being a woman is something  
 totally diff erent. “ 
 Despite her achievements, not everything  
 has been a grand slam for Castro,  
 as she has faced some resistance from the  
 male audience. 
 “Of course there are a lot of people who  
 say: ‘How? A woman in the sport of baseball?’ 
  ‘No way!’ and I do not care,” Castro  
 said with confi dence. “Everyone has the  
 right to have their opinion. It does not  
 matter if he is a woman or a man, he has  
 an opinion and he wants to communicate  
 it. With respect, I do not care. Th at’s not  
 easy, but I try to do it every day. I am very  
 grateful because now I’m part of the Mets  
 family, and that they protect me and support  
 me.”  
 Also, Marysol jokes that on Twitter,  
 everyone is an expert. 
 “I sometimes read the tweets and they  
 make me laugh, but sometimes I say,  
 ‘Okay, I have to do this job a little better,’”  
 she said, referring to her occasion mistake  
 behind the microphone. 
 “When  you’re  wrong,  you  can’t  go  
 back to the microphone and say ‘Sorry,  
 that was a mistake,’ you have to continue. 
  However on Twitter, the comments  
 quickly  emerge:  ‘Please,  this  woman  
 should not be in that role!’ and I ignore  
 them. I’m not going to get into that game  
 because in that game I can not win. You  
 have to choose the battles, to win the  
 war. “ 
 However, when fans do off er constructive  
 criticism, Marysol does take the time  
 to thank people for the observation.  
 Although  Marysol  will  go  down  in  
 history as a pioneer for being the fi rst  
 Latina woman to be chosen as a MLB PA  
 announcer, she feels that there’s more to  
 be done. She hopes to be a guide for more  
 women to enter the sports fi eld. 
 “I hope so! I think it’s very important.  
 You see that baseball is the favorite pastime  
 of America, and for me it is a pride  
 to have this position to support other  
 women who may one day want to choose  
 this career. I try to do my job as best I  
 can,” she said. 
 As a single mother, Marysol knows that  
 her most important job is to be the mother  
 of her two little ones of 9 and 12 years  
 old. 
 “Th  ey only know that mom works on  
 television. But when I started this job, my  
 little boy told me: ‘Not for the Yankees?’  
 And the older one ran to the computer  
 and said: ‘Mommy, do you know that  
 there are only two women with this job?’,  
 Photo courtesy of New York Mets 
 And I told him yes, and he said to me:  
 ‘Good job mom.’” 
 With regard to what follows, Marysol is  
 very optimistic in the future. 
 “I am always open to the opportunity of  
 new experiences. I never say no because  
 a person never knows. I never imagined  
 that I would have this job with the Mets  
 and look at me today, “she says with satisfaction.