Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Jackie Robinson Day
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by notjimrose View PostMy one suggestion for an improvement on Jackie Robinson Day would be to have one player from each pre-expansion team wear the number of the team's first black player. Show a little love for Minnie Minoso, Larry Doby, Elston Howard, Ernie Banks, and the rest and let their legacies live on in their respective cities.
This isn't a matter of being the first. It's for making Larry Doby, Minnie Minoso et.al. possible.
Leave a comment:
-
My one suggestion for an improvement on Jackie Robinson Day would be to have one player from each pre-expansion team wear the number of the team's first black player. Show a little love for Minnie Minoso, Larry Doby, Elston Howard, Ernie Banks, and the rest and let their legacies live on in their respective cities.
- Likes 2
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by TDog View PostToday is Jackie Robinson Day,... Still too important not to be noted in baseball discussions... It's not political to add that the 42 is as relevant today as ever.
Leave a comment:
-
Jackie Robinson Day
Today is Jackie Robinson Day, adjusted from marking his MLB debut to another anniversary so the importance of the 42 on the wall at the ballpark isn't ignored in a season that had to scuttle the All-Star Game. More of a news story than a baseball story this year, a thorough discussion of it is perhaps, unfortunately political. Still too important not to be noted in baseball discussions.
My father, who grew up in New Jersey listening to Brooklyn Dodgers games, told me stories of Jackie Robinson. I recently read Opening Day, about Jackie Robinson's rookie season, which brings in the context of 1947 America and how people were inspired by the season. Of course, so much has been written. Movies have been made. Baseball-wise, I came of age with Carlos May and Walt "No-Neck" Williams as my favorite ballplayers when the White Sox were the center of my universe. It's easy to take Jackie Robinson's debut, even his career as historically inevitable, something that was going to happen, and he got there first. The 42 on the walls, on the backs of player's uniforms today only, is an important reminder of a man who was so much more than just the first.
It's not political to add that the 42 is as relevant today as ever.Tags: None
Leave a comment: