|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
July
Latino
ballplayers played key role in overcoming game's racial barriers
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
Released
7/6/07
 |
Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
Adrian Burgos, professor of history at Illinois,
is the author of a new book that chronicles the
role of Latinos in America’s favorite pastime, “Playing
America’s Game: Baseball, Latinos, and the
Color Line.” |
|
|
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Despite
the wealth of information available to them, baseball writers, historians
and aficionados somehow have managed to bench one of the game’s
greatest stories.
So says the author of a new book that chronicles the role of Latinos
in America’s favorite pastime – they not only played great
ball, but did so “while negotiating the color line at every turn.”
In “Playing America’s Game: Baseball, Latinos, and the
Color Line,” a study of Latinos and U.S. professional baseball
from the 1880s to the present, author Adrian Burgos Jr. traces the
racial and ethnic tensions that developed over the incorporation of
Latinos in professional baseball.
He shows how Latinos were “central figures in baseball’s
racial saga,” and how they and African American players worked
closely together in the Negro Leagues to “challenge the dictates
of baseball’s Jim Crow system and the color line imposed by Major
League Baseball.”
“To this day, their shared past remains one of the most overlooked chapters
in baseball history,” said Burgos, a history professor at the University
of Illinois.
“Playing America’s Game” is the first historical work on
Latinos in baseball that “treats as one story their experience on either
side of baseball’s racial divide,” Burgos said. His inspiration
for telling “this story in this manner” arose from having grown
up a baseball fan “with no knowledge that the vast majority of Latinos
had performed in the Negro Leagues prior to integration – by about a
5-to-1 margin,” he said.
“Moreover, I found unsatisfactory the explanation that the 50 or so Latinos
who performed in the Majors prior to Jackie Robinson were all considered ‘white’ and
likewise, the Latinos in the Negro Leagues were all viewed as ‘black.’
“The story that I uncovered was much more complicated, revealing individuals
and team officials who manipulated ideas of race to negotiate or ameliorate
the impact of baseball’s color line. In some cases it was for fleeting
gains such as being served at a segregated restaurant.
Access was the goal
in other cases, such as when big league officials presented a player as ‘Cuban’ and
not ‘black’ to justify signing the player to a team in the segregated
majors.“
This story emerged from archival materials from the U.S., Cuba and
Puerto Rico, Spanish- and English-language publications and personal
interviews with Negro League and Major League players. Collectively,
they demonstrated, among other things, how the “manipulation
of racial distinctions” that allowed management to recruit and
sign increasingly racially ambiguous Latino players – especially
during World War II – provided a “template” for Brooklyn
Dodgers general manager Branch Rickey when he initiated the dismantling
of the color line by signing Jackie Robinson in October 1945.
Still, Burgos’ extensive examination of Latino participation
before and after Robinson’s 1947 Major League debut documents
the ways in which “inclusion did not signify equality” and
shows how notions of racialized difference “have persisted for
darker-skinned Latinos like Orestes ‘Minnie’ Miñoso,
Roberto Clemente and Sammy Sosa.”
“Notably, the focus on Latinos highlights how integration is a process,
and while integration changed racial matters in baseball, it did not instantly
change institutional practices.”
For example, Major League organizations with a few notable exceptions
opted against incorporating the off-field expertise of Negro League
managers, front office personnel and owners, Burgos said. The New York/San
Francisco Giants hiring former Negro League team owner Alex Pompez
to direct its international scouting – and who opened the Dominican
talent pipeline into the Majors, or the Chicago Cubs employing Buck
O’Neil as a coach “were the exceptions.”
Twelve years passed before each big league team fielded a black player,
Burgos noted, “and pioneering players included Miñoso
and Ozzie Virgil Sr., who integrated the Chicago White Sox and Detroit
Tigers, respectively. Yet the role of Latinos as integration pioneers
has been largely ignored in the recent spate of books commemorating
the 60th anniversary of Jackie Robinson and baseball integration.
“This contributes to the notion that Latinos are merely recent arrivals
to baseball – a perception that unfortunately shapes contemporary discussions
of race and America’s game, and that often leaves Latinos as an afterthought
while shortchanging their long history of contributions,” Burgos added.
According to Burgos, recent discussions in the sports world following
the comments of Detroit Tigers star Gary Sheffield in the July issue
of GQ linking the growing presence of Latinos in Major League Baseball
to their being “easier to control” than African Americans, “lose
sight of the shared history of struggle on the other side of organized
baseball’s racial divide – in particular, that Latin American
leagues provided an alternative model, an integrated one that welcomed
the best of North American players, regardless of color, to play alongside
the best Latino players, and that by participating in the Cuban or
Mexican leagues, African American and Latinos extended the battle against
Jim Crow beyond the territorial boundaries of the United States.”
In June, Burgos was in San Diego working with the Padres on their “Tribute
to the Negro Leagues.” He will be in San Francisco on Sunday
and Monday to sign books and attend All-Star game activities.
Burgos also was among a group of scholars who conducted a comprehensive
study of the Negro Leagues and black baseball. In June 2005, the National
Baseball Hall of Fame selected Burgos to serve on committee charged
with drafting a ballot of Negro League candidates to be inducted into
the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
Last October, he appeared in two segments of ESPN TV’s special, “Baseball:
The Latin Game.” That documentary has just been released on DVD.
|
 |
 |
|