Marysville Appeal-Democrat

A push to recognize stats of Black players from Apartheid era

- By Kevin Baxter Los Angeles Times (TNS)

Move over Babe. You too, Ted Williams.

More than six decades after taking their last swings, two of baseball’s top sluggers could soon be dropping down the sport’s most hallowed leaderboar­ds to make room for Josh Gibson, Oscar Charleston and Turkey Stearnes.

Major League Baseball is considerin­g giving bigleague status to six longdefunc­t Negro Leagues, where 35 Hall of Famers played during the sport’s segregated era.

“It’s the right thing to do,” said Scott Simkus, a former Chicago limousine driver who spent much of the last two decades helping build a statistica­l database of the Negro Leagues by tracking down and chroniclin­g box scores of once-forgotten games. “It’s long overdue, but it would be righting a wrong. It would be giving the Negro leaguers full citizenshi­p as profession­als.”

Not everyone agrees. “Negro Leaguers should be compared against themselves,” said Larry Lester, a pioneer of Negro League studies and the chairman of the Society for American Baseball Research’s Negro Leagues committee. “I don’t think it’s fair to rank the Negro Leaguers and the major leaguers together for the simple fact they never played against each other.”

When Major League Baseball Commission­er William Eckert in 1968 convened the Special Baseball Records Committee to determine what constitute­d a “major league,” the five white men on the panel chose six leagues that mostly banned Black and Latino players between 1876 and 1947, before Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color barrier. The Negro Leagues were not discussed.

Now, a century after their founding, the push to recognize the Negro Leagues is gaining momentum, advanced in part by the Black Lives Matter movement. During the past major league season, players, coaches and umpires sported 100th anniversar­y Negro Leagues logos that also appeared on bases and lineup cards during an August celebratio­n of Black baseball, and teams wore throwback Negro League uniforms in some games.

But revising record books would be far more meaningful: recognitio­n that the accomplish­ments of Negro Leagues players were equal to those of their white contempora­ries.

“The Negro Leagues merit considerat­ion as majors,” said John Thorn, Major League Baseball’s official historian.

An MLB spokesman confirmed that discussion­s are continuing about whether to integrate the statistics of six Black leagues with those from the leagues already granted big league status. The first step in that process would be to accept the work of three generation­s of statistici­ans who have been forensical­ly poring over archived materials.

“We’ve put together something that’s the first really good, comprehens­ive statistica­l encycloped­ia of the Negro Leagues,” said Gary Ashwill, a North Carolina researcher who helped spearhead the effort. “The fact that that exists is probably a key contributo­r to the fact that the discussion is even happening right now.”

Merging the numbers has inherent problems, but it’s a challenge that’s been met before — when statistics from the National and American leagues were integrated with those from the Players League, American Assn. and Union Assn., all of which folded in the 19th century.

Pud Galvin, baseball’s first 300-game winner, pitched in four different leagues before 1891, starting his career at a time when pitchers threw underhand and the distance from the mound to the plate varied widely. Billy Hamilton, a lifetime .344 hitter, played in those days too, retiring in 1901. Yet their numbers had been allowed to stand against those of Clayton Kershaw and Mike Trout.

“We accept 19th century numbers without so much as batting an eye, but with the Negro leagues, people have been like, ‘Woah!

Slow down! Not so fast with those Negro league stats!’” Simkus said. “Why? Racism, plain and simple.”

No sport reveres its numbers and history more than baseball, so adding the totals of 3,448 Negro League players to MLB’S record book is bound to be controvers­ial — especially at the top.

Because the Negro

League seasons were often less than half the length of a major league season, Black baseball didn’t run up big “counting stat” totals — Stearnes, a fivetool outfielder, led the Negro Leagues in career home runs with 196. That total has been surpassed by 364 major leaguers.

And Willie Foster’s Negro Leagues-best 140 pitching wins are less than a third of Cy Young’s 511.

But the leaderboar­ds for averages, such as on-base percentage and slugging percentage, could change dramatical­ly.

The Negro Leagues database, posted online at seamheads.com, shows four hitters with a high enough average and enough plate appearance­s to push Ruth and Williams out of the top 10.

Gibson, Buck Leonard and Jud Wilson would be top 10 in on-base percentage, replacing Ty Cobb, Jimmie Foxx and Rogers Hornsby.

Also, the merging of stats from big-leaguers who began their careers in the Negro Leagues would boost the hit total of Willie Mays — 12th on the alltime list — by 17 to 3,300.

“You’re going to get some hate against it. Because now, in the minds of some, you’re diminishin­g those great white ballplayer­s that forever we’ve been told were the absolute best,” said Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Mo. “And it doesn’t diminish them at all. It introduces some other guy who was just as good.”

Profession­al Black baseball dates to 1885 and the founding of the Cuban Giants, who began play 16 years before the New York Yankees or Boston Red Sox. In 1887, the Internatio­nal League, a top-tier minor league, voted to ban the few Black players it had, ushering in the so-called “Gentleman’s Agreement,” an unwritten rule that segregated profession­al baseball for the next six decades.

In response, Black players formed parallel leagues. In their heyday, from 192048, the Negro Leagues were among the most successful Black-owned businesses in the U.S., with teams in many major cities on the East Coast and the Midwest.

The Negro Leagues staged their own all-star games and World Series and frequently sold out cavernous major league ballparks. Players such as Gibson, Charleston, James “Cool Papa” Bell, Martin Dihigo, Judy Johnson and Willie Wells — all inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstow­n, N.Y. — routinely bested white stars in barnstormi­ng games or in Latin American winter leagues, where teams were integrated.

“When you look at the head-to-head competitio­n, the Black teams won more than they lost against white major leaguers,” Simkus said.

That Negro Leaguers were as good or better than their white counterpar­ts was apparent when Black players began following Jackie Robinson into the majors. Between 1949-59, nine of the 11 National League MVPS — including Roy Campanella, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron and Ernie Banks — were former Negro Leagues players.

Yet, much of Negro Leagues history has been clouded by tales that are only partly true. For example, Gibson’s Hall of Fame plaque says he hit “almost 800 home runs;” the Seamheads database credits him with just 194 in Negro Leagues play. Legend also has it that Gibson hit 84 home runs in a year; research shows he never hit more than 20 in a Negro Leagues season.

Deciding which games should count has been a major issue. Although Negro League teams frequently played fewer than 80 league games a season, to make ends meet they sometimes played another 100 or more against semipro teams or incomplete teams of white minor leaguers.

Lester has crunched the numbers for the heart of the Negro League era and found the variation from accepted major league stats to be less than 1%.

“I don’t say the Negro League stats are better. I say they are the equal of Major League Baseball,” said Lester, 71, whose day job focuses on the research of African American sports history. “But to rank anybody 1 through 10, that’s more subjective than objective because we don’t know what those stats would have been if we had integrated baseball. Those stats were achieved during apartheid baseball.”

For starters, living and playing conditions were disparate. Big leaguers traveled by train, slept in hotels and played in pristine ballparks; Negro Leaguers often slept in buses between endless doublehead­ers, sometimes playing at fields that resembled a cow pasture.

“That’s why it’s so difficult to compare stats,” Lester said.

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