As major
league baseball celebrates Jackie Robinson Day on Monday, it is remarkable that
the number of African Americans in baseball has fallen from a quarter of all
players during the mid-1970s to 8.5 percent in 2011(Ruck, Raceball, 177;
“2011 Race and Gender Report Card,” p. 1). Indeed, Hispanics have
surpassed blacks as the largest minority in the game and there is little sign
that the number of African Americans playing in the majors will increase
anytime soon. Though the integration of baseball was a seminal event in the
civil rights movement, most young blacks going into professional sports today
seem to prefer basketball and football.
It was not
always this way. During the first half of the 20th century,
the major leagues were segregated, but baseball was at the center of black
culture. After players and owners drew the color line in the 1890s, a
number of independent teams such as the Cuban Giants continued the tradition of
African-American baseball. With the Great Migration of blacks to the
North during World War I, a fan and consumer base emerged capable of supporting
a league. Organized under the leadership of former pitcher Rube Foster in
1920, the Negro Leagues became one of a number of African-American institutions
that sustained black life under Jim Crow. Though they often labored in
obscurity compared to their white contemporaries, players such as catcher Josh
Gibson and pitcher Satchel Paige were among the best in the sport in the 1930s
and 40s, even if they never played in the majors (Gibson) or didn’t during
their prime (Paige)
After
struggling during the Depression, the Negro Leagues thrived during World War
II, as a number of forces laid the groundwork for integration. The fight
against fascism and Nazi racism abroad exposed the contradictions between
American rhetoric and American practice. Black sportswriters agitated for
major league teams to sign black players, with help from liberal politicians
and the Communist Party. The passing of Commissioner Kennesaw Mountain
Landis in 1944, who had long held the line on segregation, opened the door for
change. Brooklyn Dodgers’ GM Branch Rickey walked through it when he
signed Jackie Robinson, then playing for the Kansas City Monarchs in the Negro
Leagues, to a contract in 1945.
When Robinson
played his first game as a Dodger on April 15, 1947, he debuted a year before
President Truman integrated the military and nearly a decade before the epochal
civil rights landmarks of Brown v. Board of Education and the Montgomery
Bus Boycott. Robinson faced incredible racism in his early years in the
league, but excelled, paving the way for a parade of black stars in subsequent
years, including Willie Mays and Hank Aaron. As a result, the Negro
Leagues declined and disbanded. Not every team quickly followed
Brooklyn’s lead, however, as the Boston Red Sox only became the final team to
integrate in 1959. While black players entered the league, there were no
African American managers or coaches in the majors during this time, as the end
of the Negro Leagues meant the loss of opportunities for blacks in these
positions.
The 1960s and
70s were the heyday of African American participation in the majors as well as
the game’s popularity in black America. As ESPN’s Michael Wilbon
recalled, “The talk in the barbershop wasn’t of Wilt and Russell nearly as much
as it was of Aaron and Mays.” (Washington Post, April 14, 2007) In
the face of racism and death threats in 1974, Aaron broke Babe Ruth’s all-time
home run record. The percentage of blacks in the major leagues reached an
all-time high of 27 percent the following year as 16 black players, comprising
40 percent of all non-pitchers, played in the 1975 All-Star Game (Ruck,
177-178).
The change
seemed to begin in the 1980s as other sports emerged. The National
Basketball Association (NBA) had nearly gone bankrupt during the disco era, in
part because some viewers and advertisers saw the league as “too black.”
The merger with the American Basketball Association (ABA) in 1976 brought
Julius “Dr. J” Erving into the league, reviving it, followed by the arrival of
Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, whose rivalry helped make it comparable to
football and baseball in terms of popularity. The arrival of Michael
Jordan then sent the league into a stratosphere by the 1990s, with millions of
young black (and white) kids wanting “to be like Mike.”
Football grew
and surpassed baseball in popularity while featuring plenty of black players on
the field, but there was one major position that remained closed to African
Americans as late as the 1980s—quarterback. Racial stereotypes suggested
that blacks did not have the intelligence and leadership skills to run an NFL
offense. It was routine for pro coaches to move a black college
quarterback to another position after he was drafted. Those that insisted
on playing QB had to leave for the Canadian Football League (CFL), as future
Hall of Famer Warren Moon did for several years in the early 1980s.
The Washington
Redskins’ Doug Williams punctured this myth when he threw five touchdown passes
in a victorious MVP performance in Super Bowl XXII in 1988. In the
following years, Donovan McNabb, Steve McNair, and others achieved success as
quarterbacks. The Atlanta Falcons and Oakland Raiders drafted Michael
Vick and Jamarcus Russell 1st overall in the NFL Draft in 2001 and
2007, respectively, something that would have been inconceivable as late as the
1990s. Though black QBs do not yet face a completely even playing field,
they are unlikely to be forced to change roles anymore. The opportunity
to play the prestige position has encouraged more young African Americans to
pursue football at the expense of baseball.
The number of
blacks in the game remained reasonably high, as there was a lag before
declining youth participation impacted the percentage of African Americans playing
the game. As late as the mid-1990s, there were still as many blacks as Latinos
in the majors and Ken Griffey, Jr. and Barry Bonds competed for the title of
“best player in the game, ” though their choice of the sport was no doubt
influenced by the fact that they were both the sons of star players.
For the most
part, it appears the decline of black players reflects greater sports options
rather than discrimination. Both college basketball and football hold out
the promise for earlier stardom than college baseball, and there are far more
scholarship possibilities for the former than the latter. Under Commissioner
Bud Selig, major league baseball has made great efforts to rejuvenate the game
in urban areas through its Revive Baseball in the Inner Cities (RBI)
program. Still, some African-American players, such as the Los Angeles
Angels’ Torri Hunter, have complained that management’s search for Latin
players comes partly out of a desire for a cheaper and more malleable work
force.
As players
take the field with Robinson’s historic 42 on their back, there will be
relatively few African Americans in the lineup or on the mound, though nearly
40 percent of the participants will be people of color (2011 Race and Gender
Report Card, p.2). Indeed, no sport better reflects the multiculturalism of
today’s US more than baseball with its large Latino and Asian
contingents. Without Jackie Robinson’s courage 66 years ago, the
contemporary diversity of the sport would be inconceivable.
Sources: Rob
Ruck, Raceball: How the Major Leagues Colonized the Black and Latin
Game (Beacon Press, 2011)
“2011 Race and
Gender Report Card,” The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in
Sports.
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