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Baseball? That Ain't Hood

By James Harris, Truthdig. Posted January 13, 2006.


African Americans are abandoning baseball in droves in favor of football and basketball. Is the decline of urban baseball a serious crisis?

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It's a warm Saturday in Oakland, Calif., but you couldn't tell by looking at the baseball diamond at the rec center in Sobrante Park. There is only an old man watching a Little League game not being played.

Never mind that just down the street is the birthplace of baseball Hall of Famer Joe Morgan, while a short distance away at Bushrod Park all-time runs and stolen bases leader Rickey Henderson developed his devastating blend of speed and power. In Oakland, the story is the same as in other inner cities: empty playing fields and a declining number of black youths taking interest in America's Pastime.

Morgan and Henderson were part of a wave of black success that peaked in the '70s. Starting, of course, with Jackie Robinson's arrival in the big leagues and the subsequent arrival of Negro Leagues stars like Satchel Paige, a slew of these black heroes inspired the youth.

"African Americans, following their heroes, began filling the ranks of baseball, reaching a high of 175 players on 25 teams in 1975," wrote sports reporter Jake McDonald on BlackAmericaWeb.com. Yet, "since [Hank] Aaron's final [record-setting home run] blast in 1976, the faces of African Americans have disappeared steadily. Once upon a time fans looked forward to seeing Mr. October Reggie Jackson come to the plate. Jackson, one of the most colorful players of his era, retired ten years after hitting a record five home runs in the 1977 World Series. Just about every little leaguer, including myself, wanted to be just like Jackson, right down to the shades."

Today, with football and basketball dominated in numbers and star power by black athletes, major league baseball looks more like the MLB of 1960, when Dominicans and Cubans first began flooding into the then mostly white leagues. Today, American-born blacks comprise only 13 percent of the league -- about 90 players-- and the numbers are projected to continue falling as foreign-born Latinos dominate the lineups of most of the best teams.

Some African-American athletes and fans are furious about this decline. At a time when black men continue to be incarcerated in epic numbers, any decline in the number of positive role models or positive activities for young people is seen as contributing to a vicious cycle plaguing America's poor black communities. However, not everybody agrees about the reasons for African Americans' move away from baseball, or even if the shift is worth reversing.

Morgan, arguably the best second-baseman to ever play the game, is one of those frustrated at the decline of urban baseball. In an interview with Frank Deford, Morgan said many African Americans have been excluded from baseball because there aren't enough inner-city playing fields to foster the game among urban black youth.

Psychological theory, however, suggests that a park alone can't inspire a young athlete, that what is needed is a solid mentor to lead him or her. Still, Morgan is working on solving at least half the problem by urging Major League Baseball to fund nonprofit groups called Breaking Barriers: In Sports, In Life, and Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities (RBI).

In line with McDonald's analysis, I find the role model theory compelling: Young African Americans began abandoning baseball in large numbers in the 1980s, exactly when flashier black athletes were rising to megastardom in football and basketball. Michael Jordan, with his high-flying dunks and wildly popular line of shoes, especially epitomized the intoxicating blend of money, talent, power and fame that kids wanted to copy.

It's easy to see why baseball would lose a fight to football and basketball in the category of "Showtime" in an increasingly celebrity-obsessed culture that sees success as measured by the ability to move product. Through the '80s and '90s, African American baseball stars like the ever-quiet Tony Gwynn and the awesome but subdued Joe Carter had to compete with the likes of the NBA's Jordan and Magic Johnson and NFL glamour boys Deion Sanders and Michael Irving. These showy players just had more appeal.


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James Harris is a radio producer and filmmaker based in San Francisco.

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the decline of beisbol..........
Posted by: lewis_medlock on Jan 13, 2006 7:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ok here goes.....
success in baseball, at high school levels and beyond, requires participation in travelling teams, premier leagues and the like....they dont have the means for such things in the 'hood......Momma Robinson aint loadin' up her minivan (ok, she drives an 89 Tempo) and taking all of her peeps to a travelling tournament two states away....Mr & Mrs Miller will load up the Tahoe and do it every weekend.............
Another thought....Rappers on MTV and BET cant wear cleats or catcher's masks and still be cool...but you can throw on a 150 dollar pair of chinese made nikes and a 'throw back' Lakers jersey and be da man. Like Mike said..."Its the Shoes"
The game is not fast paced enough for urban youths, who live for instant gratification ( scratch off lotto tickets come to mind...)-basketball provides that. Realizing that your team is down by two runs, but your best batters are due up in the next inning and you will have a good shot at pulling ahead aint gonna do it for the young dude who lives for now.
It is easier to play basketball (in an urban setting) past dark......even when the policeman convinces the dept of parks to turn out the lights at 9pm, the black youth can still illuminate their field of dreams with the high beams of their favorite ghetto cruiser.....try lighting up a whole baseball field with car headlights sometime. It requires a WW2 London searchlight to do so.
just my observations on the matter, let the social engineers chime in......

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» RE: the decline of beisbol.......... Posted by: lewis_medlock
Complex Issues
Posted by: dlf on Jan 13, 2006 7:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article raised several issues. I don't believe that playing baseball alone would work as a deterent to criminal behavior. Also, I find it interesting that the writer brought up Barry Bonds, a man who grew up in a predominately white suburb (I know because I lived in the same town). He had the best baseball influences in his life, competing with a virtually non-existent crime rate. On the other hand having lived in that environment as well, I know the criminal activity which existed (primarily fighting, stealing, and drug dealing) did not carry the same consequence for the White kids I grew up with as it does for many inner-city Blacks. That doesn't excuse the behavior in the inner-city, but it does speak to the issue of statistics. Whenever I see how many Black men are locked up I'm reminded of all the incidents I've witnessed of White criminality that gets brushed aside. Which means those numbers are created by the same system that sees Blacks as looters in New Orleans, while Whites were simply looking for supplies. Unfortunately a criminal record is a bell that rarely gets unrung. What Barkley and others should be suggesting is that some of that prison money would be better spent in mentoring and sports programs when kids are beginning to make bad decisions.

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Save Baseball from the Nerds
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jan 13, 2006 9:37 AM   
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In my youth I loved to play baseball, but not organized baseball. Sandlot Baseball. Played for the love of the game and the joy of sport in the outdoors on a hot summer day.

No Parents.
No Coaches.
No League Rules.
No Uniforms.
No kids there because their parents talked them into it.

The parents, coaches and league rules drained the game of all it's joy. They restrict what the kids can do (young kids cannot steal bases, etc.) or go overboard with the sports version of stage mom/dad.

Baseball as a sport is great. As a game, Baseball is a dull as Forest Gump. Professional Baseball is the worst. You wait 5 minutes for some pitcher to warm up, he pitches to one batter and then you wait 10 more minutes for another pitcher who will be throwing instead because he is left/right handed. I want to stand up and yell-- enough already-- pitch the d*mn ball. It's not strategy-- it superstition.

If there is one thing more boring than listening to a baseball nerd (George Will & Bob Costas come to mind) prattle on about the game, it's sitting and watching the glacial pace that the game moves. Baseball is not cerebral, it's a kids game that a few lucky people get to play for a great deal of money.

The decline of baseball among black kids is just reflective of the irrelevance
of the sport as it exists today. The earlier post about the caravans to tournaments and all that other suburban BS is quite true. I know quite a few parents who pay adults to privately coach their kids-- both in and out of season.

Baseball lost all of it's relevance when it stopped being fun. The inner city black youth are smart to turn their back on this sport. Baseball has been ruined by nerds, control freaks and corporate types.

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Basketball vs. Baseball
Posted by: lamar on Jan 13, 2006 9:55 AM   
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I don't particularly enjoy pro baseball or basketball. But lets face it, the NBA is more like pro wrestling than pro sports. It's more about look and attitude (hood style) than playing a game where the refs appear to make stuff up, and the players are as selfish and unsportsmanlike as you can imagine. I'm sure kids can pick up on the competitive nature of baseball and basketball. In baseball, you compete against fellow man, in basketball, you compete against a Nike commercial.

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America's game
Posted by: redfrog on Jan 13, 2006 2:14 PM   
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is not baseball, although maybe it once was. Today it is war; you don't have to look any further than games nor listen beyond everyday language to know this.

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Decline of more than Baseball
Posted by: LJAllen on Jan 13, 2006 4:14 PM   
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Part of the issue has less to do with baseball and more to do with what we value. I am a 40+ Black female who grew up believing that Hank Aaron and Felipe Alou were the second coming. I was there when Aaron hit his 500th and when he broke Babe Ruth's homerun record. There was nothing better!

Today, it does seem that baseball is listed as being much too tame for the more aggressive tastes of a generation spoon fed violence from every corner. And in my day the Black Dominican Felipe Alou was just as revered and loved as any American born Black. His non-American origins and culture were revelant precisely because of the long history of interaction between Afro-Latin and Afro-American "Negro" League players. Sorry, but the real story is not about declining numbers, but rathe how we have failed to pass this important history on to our youth.

l j allen

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listen to.......
Posted by: crusty on Jan 13, 2006 5:55 PM   
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george carlins football and baseball dialouge.

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Where are the fathers?
Posted by: Dodger Tony on Jan 14, 2006 12:19 PM   
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Baseball is a game of father's and sons. This is at the core of the game. The ongoing decline of this essential relationship within the black community is perhaps the most salient point in the diminution of African/American interest in the playing the game of baseball. The spirit of this exchange cannot be underestimated in the vitality and joy that is brought forth from such a social neccesity. This absence cannot be overestimated enough in it's impact on human social groups, particularly in the modern world. The vacuum this creates brings devastation to the core of the human child and retards the child's moral compass and sense of the larger, transcendent world. These values, whether real or imagined, are the plenum to the world of baseball. They are fundamentally American, in the best sense of this civic concept, and portend crushing consequences for any society that misses this patriarchal influence. This is the continuing tragedy of African/Americans. Boxing as well as Olympic Baseketball has also reflected these issues. Hence the need for an additional African/American presence on each baseball team to reflect and mirror the isolation the black baseball player must feel in his position (see Milton Bradley). Had Mr. Bradley not been traded to the A's, he would reap the benefits of the newly hired Dodger hitting coach, Eddie Murray, as this absent figure. He did not have this in Los Angeles last year and the results were disastrous.

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