Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Curt Flood’s little-known fight will surprise you

Friends, family worry he will keep getting shunned by HOF, his story will be forgotten

- By Jon Becker

Editor’s Note: Long before this tumultuous moment in American history where sports figures are using their powerful platforms to demand change, well before Colin Kaepernick quietly refused to stand for the national anthem, there were changemake­rs in the world of sports. And not surprising­ly, given its role in the civil rights movement, the Bay Area has long been an epicenter for sports activism. This is the fourth in a series of stories looking at those athletes who have used their status to effect change.

Curt Flood, a complicate­d man with a convoluted legacy, spent the final years of his life consumed with fear he’d somehow be forgotten.

He wondered if sabotaging his own baseball career to help other players win their freedom — in what he really saw as a civil rights issue — would just be a footnote in sports history.

It’s been nearly 25 years since Flood, the kid who grew from an Oakland playground legend into a three-time All-Star, two-time world champion and once-ina-lifetime baseball pioneer, died in a Los Angeles hospital. He was 59 when he passed away on Jan. 20, 1997 due to complicati­ons from throat cancer.

Sadly, just as Flood feared, he may be a forgotten man today.

The most tangible evidence of Flood’s impact in his hometown can be found at the corner of School St. and Coolidge Ave., just off I-580, where a modest, rectangula­r sign tells all they’ve arrived at

“Curt Flood Field,” a multipurpo­se space used by high school and youth teams.

“But if you go within two blocks of the field named after him, and ask people who Curt Flood is, they wouldn’t be able to tell you,” lamented Arif Khatib, founder of Oakland’s MultiEthni­c Sports Hall of Fame and a longtime friend of Flood’s. “Nobody knows who the hell he is. That’s the sad part.”

Sure, some remember Flood’s defiant, solo fight against Major League Baseball in 1969 that ended with a Supreme Court defeat, but led to modern free agency and the freedom to choose that players still enjoy today. Flood, though, was essentiall­y blackballe­d from the sport when he refused to go to Philadelph­ia after being traded by St. Louis.

His reason for resisting was two-fold. First, like his hero Jackie Robinson, who famously broke baseball’s color line, Flood felt he’d found a noble mission he could champion. He told MLB Players Associatio­n director Marvin Miller he didn’t care if suing baseball would end his career as long as it would ultimately benefit other players and those to come.

Secondly, he viewed baseball’s old Reserve Clause, which bound a player to a team for as long as the team wished, as just a version of indentured servitude.

A few people also remember Flood was quite a player. He was an even better defensive center fielder than Willie Mays, winning seven straight National League Gold Glove Awards for the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1960s.

But even fewer still remember the uncomforta­ble stories of racism Flood endured, which tormented him for much of his life.

It started in 1957 when he was 19 years old, after the Cincinnati Reds signed him following his senior year at Oakland Tech and flew him to Tampa, Fla. for spring training. That’s where Flood got his introducti­on to the Jim Crow laws of legalized racial segregatio­n.

He took a taxi to the Reds’ lavish hotel, only to be greeted by a hotel employee, who told him it was for Whites only. He led Flood out to a back alley to catch a taxi ride to another hotel where the Black players were staying.

Flood and the other Black players had to dress separately in the locker room, sometimes having to change into their uniforms in a small shack beside the field. After their first practice, Flood mindlessly tossed his uniform on top of a giant pile of others, only to be immediatel­y yelled at by the clubhouse attendant.

The man grabbed a long stick with a nail on the end of it to pick up Flood’s jersey and pants, then dropped them onto a nearby stack with the dirty gear belonging to the other Black players.

He later told his wife he was so shaken that he sat naked on a chair in the crowded locker room and silently cried.

“I think it was something that he could never forget,” said Jim “Mudcat” Grant, one of Flood’s exteammate­s, in an interview with HBO a few years ago. “When you lose your dignity you lose an awful lot. How do you regain that?”

For Flood, the most troubling part about the way he was treated wasn’t that he was discrimina­ted against and called the N-word while playing baseball in the southern United States, it was that he and his family faced racism in his own backyard.

When he helped the Cardinals win the 1964 World Series, Flood decided to move his pregnant wife and four kids from Oakland to a bigger house in a better neighborho­od. He thought he’d found the perfect place to live out in the Tri-Valley in Alamo.

After agreeing to the “high-priced rental terms” — $290 per month for the spacious, $35,000 ranch home — their real estate agent went to the home to secure the deal. The agent was met by the property owner, who was brandishin­g a shotgun. He had found out Flood and his family weren’t White and he allegedly threatened to shoot them if they tried to integrate the all-White neighborho­od.

Although shocked and outraged, Flood had a measured reply. He sued the property owner for the right to move into the home. He received a victory in the form of a temporary injunction. Then, accompanie­d by armed guards, Flood and his family moved in while local and national television reporters were there to capture it.

The daily battles for Flood, both inside and outside the home, were also taking a heavy toll on him.

‘I am pleased that God made my skin black, but I wish he had made it thicker,” Flood once said.

He was an alcoholic and his drinking became more out of control. Months later, his marriage was over. He left his five kids with his exwife and essentiall­y disappeare­d from their lives.

“Dad was always gone and I missed him,” Shelly said. “I missed him most all of my life.”

As imperfect as Flood’s life was at times, friends and family still believe his effect on baseball is not only worth rememberin­g, but worth honoring with an induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame. He’s eligible to be elected as a contributo­r by the Golden Days Committee when it votes for the 2021 class in December.

 ??  ??
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Curt Flood is shown during spring training, Feb. 1966.
ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Curt Flood is shown during spring training, Feb. 1966.
 ?? JEFF DURHAM — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ILLUSTRATI­ON ?? Curt Flood was essentiall­y blackballe­d from the sport when he refused to go to Philadelph­ia after being traded by St. Louis.
JEFF DURHAM — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP ILLUSTRATI­ON Curt Flood was essentiall­y blackballe­d from the sport when he refused to go to Philadelph­ia after being traded by St. Louis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States