<font size="5"><center>Jackie Robinson’s cause stalls</font size>
<font size="4">the number of African-American players in the majors
has dwindled from 27 percent in 1975 to 18 percent in
1982 to less than 10 percent last season</font size></center>
By Terence Moore
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Wednesday, March 28, 2007, 08:15 PM
The conversation involved Jackie Robinson, a national treasure who died 35 years ago. He nevertheless lives forever after he used April 15, 1947 as his springboard toward immortality. He broke more than baseball’s color barrier back then. He unleashed the spiritual forces that would integrate everything from the military to restrooms to schools.
What would Robinson say today about baseball turning “diversity” into only a theoretical word in the dictionary regarding African-Americans?
What would he do?
Tommy Davis sighed over the phone from Los Angeles on Wednesday, and then the former Dodgers standout of the early 1960s said, “He’d probably march. Yeah, he’d probably do something, and I’m quite sure he could get an audience. I know he would get on television. I’m sure he could arrange a roundtable discussion about it, because there’s a problem here.”
A big one, and let’s start with the following: Baseball officials are sponsoring events this weekend in Memphis around something they are calling their inaugural Civil Rights Game. According to a press release from the Commissioner’s Office, this is to “honor [baseball’s] involvement in the historic struggle through which players of color broke barriers and made important contributions to American society.”
Well, if they say so. The NFL had more African-American head coaches during this year’s Super Bowl (two) than the number of African-Americans on the Braves’ current 40-man roster (zero). That’s compared to the 11 African-Americans on the Braves’ 40-man roster just a dozen years ago after they won their only Atlanta world championship.
This isn’t just a Braves thing. It’s a baseball thing. The Chicago White Sox’s Ken Williams is the only African-American general manager. Ron Washington of the Texas Rangers joins Willie Randolph of the New York Mets as the only African-American managers. In addition, the number of African-American players in the majors has dwindled from 27 percent in 1975 to 18 percent in 1982 to less than 10 percent last season.
And, please, no more silliness about how African-Americans are just not into the game anymore and preferring basketball and football.
“I’m not putting the Latins down, because they can play, but baseball has purposely built a bunch of camps and academies in other countries, and they’ve ignored areas in this country where you have African-American talent,” said Davis, telling the truth. As Hall of Famer Joe Morgan likes to say, “You won’t find African-American players if you’re not looking for them.”
Last summer I wrote about the gathering of more than a hundred African-American prospects from high schools across the South. They played at Georgia Perimeter College in Clarkston, and the pro scouts who bothered to come were significantly impressed.
Let’s just say it was a start toward shifting baseball back toward fulfilling Robinson’s legacy. To hear baseball officials tell it, so is this Civil Rights Game. It will be preceded on Saturday by a luncheon to honor Spike Lee, deceased Negro leagues legend Buck O’Neil, and Vera Clemente, the widow of Roberto Clemente. There also will be a group discussion involving various baseball personalities and others on baseball and civil rights.
Davis won’t be one of the panelists, but he should be. He was born and raised in Brooklyn, where he spent his youth watching Robinson terrorize Dodger, opponents with his bat, glove, legs and grit. In fact, Davis signed with the Dodgers instead of the Philadelphia Phillies, Cleveland Indians or New York Yankees after a plea over the phone from his hero.
“When I heard his voice, I couldn’t believe it,” said Davis, now 68, still emotional with the memory. “Jackie obviously was a big part of my life. They should have a holiday, not only for Martin Luther King Jr., but for Jackie Robinson.”
They have an unofficial one in baseball, with every April 15 declared “Jackie Robinson Day.” Baseball also has ordered every team to retire his No. 42.
Now baseball has to retire its hypocrisy regarding it all.
http://www.ajc.com/blogs/content/sh...lumns/entries/2007/03/28/jackie_robinson.html
<font size="4">the number of African-American players in the majors
has dwindled from 27 percent in 1975 to 18 percent in
1982 to less than 10 percent last season</font size></center>
By Terence Moore
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Wednesday, March 28, 2007, 08:15 PM
The conversation involved Jackie Robinson, a national treasure who died 35 years ago. He nevertheless lives forever after he used April 15, 1947 as his springboard toward immortality. He broke more than baseball’s color barrier back then. He unleashed the spiritual forces that would integrate everything from the military to restrooms to schools.
What would Robinson say today about baseball turning “diversity” into only a theoretical word in the dictionary regarding African-Americans?
What would he do?
Tommy Davis sighed over the phone from Los Angeles on Wednesday, and then the former Dodgers standout of the early 1960s said, “He’d probably march. Yeah, he’d probably do something, and I’m quite sure he could get an audience. I know he would get on television. I’m sure he could arrange a roundtable discussion about it, because there’s a problem here.”
A big one, and let’s start with the following: Baseball officials are sponsoring events this weekend in Memphis around something they are calling their inaugural Civil Rights Game. According to a press release from the Commissioner’s Office, this is to “honor [baseball’s] involvement in the historic struggle through which players of color broke barriers and made important contributions to American society.”
Well, if they say so. The NFL had more African-American head coaches during this year’s Super Bowl (two) than the number of African-Americans on the Braves’ current 40-man roster (zero). That’s compared to the 11 African-Americans on the Braves’ 40-man roster just a dozen years ago after they won their only Atlanta world championship.
This isn’t just a Braves thing. It’s a baseball thing. The Chicago White Sox’s Ken Williams is the only African-American general manager. Ron Washington of the Texas Rangers joins Willie Randolph of the New York Mets as the only African-American managers. In addition, the number of African-American players in the majors has dwindled from 27 percent in 1975 to 18 percent in 1982 to less than 10 percent last season.
And, please, no more silliness about how African-Americans are just not into the game anymore and preferring basketball and football.
“I’m not putting the Latins down, because they can play, but baseball has purposely built a bunch of camps and academies in other countries, and they’ve ignored areas in this country where you have African-American talent,” said Davis, telling the truth. As Hall of Famer Joe Morgan likes to say, “You won’t find African-American players if you’re not looking for them.”
Last summer I wrote about the gathering of more than a hundred African-American prospects from high schools across the South. They played at Georgia Perimeter College in Clarkston, and the pro scouts who bothered to come were significantly impressed.
Let’s just say it was a start toward shifting baseball back toward fulfilling Robinson’s legacy. To hear baseball officials tell it, so is this Civil Rights Game. It will be preceded on Saturday by a luncheon to honor Spike Lee, deceased Negro leagues legend Buck O’Neil, and Vera Clemente, the widow of Roberto Clemente. There also will be a group discussion involving various baseball personalities and others on baseball and civil rights.
Davis won’t be one of the panelists, but he should be. He was born and raised in Brooklyn, where he spent his youth watching Robinson terrorize Dodger, opponents with his bat, glove, legs and grit. In fact, Davis signed with the Dodgers instead of the Philadelphia Phillies, Cleveland Indians or New York Yankees after a plea over the phone from his hero.
“When I heard his voice, I couldn’t believe it,” said Davis, now 68, still emotional with the memory. “Jackie obviously was a big part of my life. They should have a holiday, not only for Martin Luther King Jr., but for Jackie Robinson.”
They have an unofficial one in baseball, with every April 15 declared “Jackie Robinson Day.” Baseball also has ordered every team to retire his No. 42.
Now baseball has to retire its hypocrisy regarding it all.
http://www.ajc.com/blogs/content/sh...lumns/entries/2007/03/28/jackie_robinson.html
