STORRS, Conn. -- UConns Tyler Davis says hes spent a lot of time on the internet watching highlights of Washington Redskins tight end Jordan Reed.He was a quarterback when he came into Florida and they transferred him over to tight end, Davis said. Look at him now.Davis, who also was touted as a top quarterback prospect when he arrived at UConn in 2014 made a similar switch before this season.During UConns spring game, the redshirt freshman completed 10 of 17 passes for 83 yards, but found himself third on the quarterback depth chart behind junior Bryant Shirreffs and senior Garrett Anderson.Coach Bob Diaco said at 6-foot-4 and 235 pounds, Davis may be one of the top 10 athletes on the team. It just didnt make sense he said, to have someone that talented standing next to him on the sideline as a third-stringer.Diaco talked to Davis about the possibility of becoming a linebacker before deciding that tight end would be the best fit.He thought I had all the traits to do it and so far, its been working out, Davis said.Davis is third on the team in receiving, with 11 receptions for 107 yards and a touchdown, a 24-yard catch from Shirreffs in UConns 31-24 loss to Syracuse.What was initially met with some trepidation ends up being, `Wow, I cant imagine that I would be doing anything other than this, Diaco said. Thats how it looks. Hes really a weapon for that position.Davis said catching the ball hasnt been an issue and hes always been a good runner. He threw for 1,092 yards and 13 touchdowns and rushed for 1,553 yards and 22 touchdowns as a senior at Mepham High School in North Bellmore, New York. But he said learning to block has not been as easy.Its a lot more than you think, he said. More technique and footwork and leverage than I ever knew. I like to think that Im getting better each and every day.Diaco also has found a way to keep Davis as a throwing option.As a holder on special teams, hes already converted two fake field-goal attempts. The first, against Navy, set up a touchdown. The second gave the Huskies a first-and-goal late in the game against Syracuse, which the Huskies failed to convert.Hes 2 of 2 for 42 yards. But Davis said while hes enjoyed making those throws, he has no plans to return to quarterback.I think Im going to stick with tight end, Davis said. Coach Diaco and myself and all the coaches really like my progress that Ive been making. Thats definitely for the future, too.UConn (2-3, 0-2 American) will need more production from Davis and the offense Saturday as it hosts Cincinnati (3-2, 0-2)The Huskies average just 350 yards a game, which ranks 104th among the 128 Bowl Subdivision teams.Theres been a bunch of plays where were just one block away from busting this thing open, Davis said. That gives us a lot of confidence knowing that were just a few inches away from really executing and really getting this thing together. Cheap Yeezy Boost 350 . Marincin has played in two NHL games so far this season with two penalty minutes. The 21-year-old has three goals, four assists and a plus-5 rating in 24 games with the American Hockey Leagues Oklahoma City Barons this season. Yeezy Boost 350 China Wholesale . Reassurance came from Paul Tesori, his caddie and close friend whose newborn son is in intensive care in a Florida hospital. 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Its been 24 years since the film A League of Their Own told the story of the pioneering All-American Girls Professional Baseball League of the 1940s. The movie, which starred Geena Davis and Tom Hanks, was the countrys first on-screen depiction of women in baseball and served as an important reminder that the female cleat-print in the history of the game is a significant one.Tonight, more than two decades later, Fox will premiere the TV show Pitch, which tells the fictional story of Ginny Baker, the first female pitcher in Major League Baseball.Beyond these Hollywood depictions, women have achieved a number of historic firsts in baseball, and female participation in the sport is increasing. But beyond the pioneers, its difficult for women to find lasting opportunities in baseball. Youth and amateur players alike consistently face cultural and structural obstacles that deter them from playing the sport and shunt their advancement into higher levels of competition.Women started playing baseball in the U.S. as far back as the 1860s, when all-female teams formed at schools such as Vassar College. Those teams were later dissolved by university administrators who believed in the strict social norms of the Victorian era and that athletic demands of the game would harm a womans fragility, said Jean Hastings Ardell, author of the book Breaking into Baseball: Women and the National Pastime.Women who continued to play were quickly deemed novelties and were often covered in the media as oddities of the game. The history of women in the game was largely been relegated to footnotes in the record books, said Ardell, as those who were given opportunities (typically as spectator attractions) didnt play more than a single game or even a single inning.They were one-shot wonders, Ardell said. Women were brought in for a single game or a game or two. That makes it hard to find good role models.Still, there were women who found success on the diamond, including Jackie Mitchell, who famously struck out both Babe Ruth and Lou Gerhig in 1931, or Toni Stone, Mamie Johnson and Connie Morgan, who played in the Negro League in the 1950s. Julie Croteau was the first woman to play for a college mens baseball team when she walked on at St. Marys College of Maryland, an NCAA Division III program, in 1989. The first womans professional team since the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League came in 1994 with the creation of the Colorado Silver Bullets.In 1997, Ila Borders became the first woman to play in a mens professional league when she pitched for the St. Paul Saints of the independent Northern League. She was previously the first female to earn a scholarship to play college baseball.Its like you were in a playoff every time you went out there, said Borders, who co-wrote a memoir with Ardell scheduled to release in February called Making My Pitch.At the beginning of her professional career, Borders said she faced heavy resistance to her participation on the team, ranging from managers who saw her as a publicity stunt, to drunk fans of opposing teams who threw beer at her from the stands. And Borders says some of her biggest dissenters werent men, but women who believed that if she failed on the field, she would be viewed as a setback for womens progress.I had a lot of women athletes and women organizations calling me saying, Please dont pitch, because if you do youre taking away their opportunity, Borders said.Borders played professionally for four years before retiring after the 2000 season. During her career, Borders said acceptance of her participation grew, especially as she proved herself on the field.Attitudes changed as they saw that I wasnt trying to pick up guys. I wasnt there for media, I was there because I loved the game, Borders said.That mindset has held over for Kelsie Whitmore and Stacy Piagno, the two women who this summer played for the Sonoma Stompers, an independent professional baseball league.The opportunity arose when Justine Siegal, who became the first female coach in the MLB by guest-coaching in an instructional league, received a phone call from the Stompers asking for recommendations for women to play on the team. At the time, Whitmore was a 17-year-old high school pitcher and outfielder playing on the womens national baseball team, which was established in 2004 by USA Baseball.I said yes before I even talked to my dad about it, said Whitmore, who made her Stompers debut alongside national team teammate Piagno July 1 after joining the team midseason.Whitmore says there were times when she felt her inclusion on the Stompers was more of a publicity stunt than a genuine opportunity to play baseball, a feeling she said shes had whenever she plays on male teams, which she has her whole life.Not a lot of people expect that girls can play baseball, so they try and find another way to make it believable, Whitmore said. And thats to just put us out there to make it seem like something is happening, rather than putting us out there because they want to.Whitmore picked up her first hit on July 20. Two days later, she and catccher and national team teammate Anna Kimbrell, who was brought in for a single game, became the first female battery in professional baseball.ddddddddddddThe reception of the three women was overtly positive, Whitmore says; shes received messages of support over social media and has been approached by parents after games who tell her that their daughters want to play in a league after watching her. Whitmore, who said she struggled to find a female role model growing up, said she was honored to even be in that position.They would come up to us and tell us how we were their favorite players and they wanted to be like us and their dreams and goals changed, Whitmore said. That stuff is great.While a handful of women have cracked the rosters of professional teams, theres isnt a defined path to success in the sport, which has stunted the growth of any female pipeline. Even at the youth level, participation barriers are keeping girls from playing with their male peers.Girls werent allowed to play Little League until 1974, when a New Jersey Division on Civil Rights hearing officer ruled there was no reason why that part of Americana should be withheld from girls. Since their inclusion in Little League, 18 girls have appeared at the Little League World Series, five of whom represented the U.S., including 2014 phenom Mone Davis.According to coach Siegal, while more than 100,000 girls play youth baseball, only 1,000 of them end up playing at the high school level. According to the National Federation of State High School Associations, 1,290 girls played high school baseball in the 2015 to 2016 school year. While some of that could be due to attrition, the blame falls largely on two reasons: the lack of opportunity for girls at the high school level, and softball.Too many schools are telling girls that they cant try out, Siegal said. These girls arent being supported in their efforts to move up the chain.And then theres softball, which siphons girls who mightve had an interest in baseball away from the sport from the very beginning. For author Ardell, its no coincidence that in the same year Little League allowed girls to play baseball, they also created a girls softball league, which now has 360,000 participants worldwide, according to its website.That is my favorite conspiracy theory, Ardell said. People are still more comfortable with girls playing softball -- its nice and neat and tidy. Softball, over the last 50 years, has really been a problem for girls who want to play baseball.Softball is often deemed the girls equivalent to baseball, a notion that former professional pitcher Borders vehemently disqualifies.Its hard to explain to people who havent played the game, its like comparing apples to oranges, Borders said. You can take Jennie Finch and pitch a softball with Derek Jeter at bat. Shes going to strike him out every time.But softball is where girls can find the most opportunities to advance in their sport. Jessica Mendoza, an ESPN Sunday Night Baseball color commentator and former professional softball player, said she came across women all the time who would have preferred careers in baseball, but that the path for girls isnt straightforward. If you want to go to college, or pursue a route of free education, you play softball.Kimbrell and Whitmore, who played high school baseball, both decided to play softball in college.It kind of sucked because baseball is my true love and passion, but I saw it as a scholarship opportunity, Kimbrell, who played at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, said.I wanted to play baseball in college, but I didnt know where to start, Whitmore, who will play for Cal State Fullerton this fall, said. For women its limited [after high school], theres really nothing.Without a defined path to a professional career or the ability to commit full time to baseball-skill development, Borders said its difficult to expect a woman from the U.S. to crack the majors, unless she has uncanny ability.Its extremely difficult for someone to play baseball until theyre 13, go play softball and change your swing until youre 18, and then go back to baseball, Borders said. Youre not going to make it in the major leagues going that path.Still, in July 2015, French shortstop Melissa Mayeux became the first known female baseball player to be added to the MLBs international registration list, making her eligible to sign with a major league club.When size and strength are the leading dissent against womens participation in mens contact sports, baseball is the one major sport where that argument holds the least weight, Mendoza said, pointing to the leagues best hitters Mookie Betts and Jose Altuve.Im hoping that theres going to come a tipping point where we become so familiar with the idea [of women in baseball], Ardell said, acknowledging that Pitch can be an avenue to build that sense of familiarity. Yes, this is a possibility. Yes, there are young women out there who can play. Thats my hope. ' ' '