Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Robinson, first black manager, dies at 83

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

Frank Robinson, the Hall of Fame outfielder who hit 586 home runs and became a pioneer as the first black manager in the major leagues, nearly three decades after Jackie Robinson broke modern baseball’s color barrier playing for the Brooklyn Dodgers, died Thursday at his home in Southern California. He was 83.

Major League Baseball reported the death but did not specify the cause. The Baltimore Sun recently reported Robinson was in the late stages of a long illness.

He was in hospice care at his home in the Bel Air section of Los Angeles, and MLB said he was with family and friends at the time of his death.

“Frank Robinson’s resume in our game is without parallel, a trailblaze­r in every sense, whose impact spanned generation­s,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement.

Playing for 21 seasons, mostly with the Cincinnati Reds and Baltimore Orioles, Robinson was the only winner of the Most Valuable Player Award in both the National and American Leagues.

The Reds, Orioles and Cleveland Indians have retired his No. 20 and honored him with statues at their stadiums.

“Today is a very sad day because I lost not only my teammate, but also a very dear friend,” said Little Rock native and Hall of Fame third baseman Brooks Robinson, one of Robinson’s former Orioles teammates. “I loved Frank and got to know him so much better after we both retired.

“I spoke to him a few days ago and he sounded good. He wanted to be home. … As a player, I put Frank in a class with Willie Mays, Hank Aaron and Mickey Mantle. He was the best player I ever played with. When he came here in 1966, he put us over the top. He was a great man and he will be deeply missed.”

Robinson was an intense and often intimidati­ng presence, leaning over the plate from his right-handed stance, daring pitchers to hit him (which they did, 198 times), then retaliatin­g with long drives, “pounding pitchers with fine impartiali­ty,” as baseball writer Roger Kahn once wrote.

As a player, Robinson insisted that teammates match his own will to win. As a manager, he had little patience with lack of hustle.

Robinson won baseball’s batting triple crown in 1966, hitting 49 home runs, driving in 122 runs and batting .316 in his first season with the Orioles and helping the team capture a World Series championsh­ip for the first time in franchise history.

He batted at least .300 in nine different seasons, had 2,943 career hits, drove in 1,812 runs and played on 5 pennant-winning teams. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1982, his first time on the ballot.

Robinson made his debut as the majors’ first black manager with the Indians on April 8, 1975, 28 years after Jackie Robinson (no relation) first took the field with the Dodgers. Rachel Robinson, Jackie Robinson’s widow, threw out the ceremonial first ball.

Frank Robinson, who was still an active player, punctuated the historic occasion by hitting a home run in his first at-bat, as the designated hitter, leading the Indians to a 5-3 victory over the New York Yankees.

He managed for all or parts of 16 seasons, with the Indians (19751977), the San Francisco Giants (1981-1984), the Orioles (1988-1991), the Montreal Expos (2002-2004) and their successor franchise, the Washington Nationals (2005-2006). He never managed a pennant winner, but the Baseball Writers Associatio­n of America named him the American League manager of the year in 1989, when his Orioles finished second in the East Division, two games behind the Toronto Blue Jays.

Frank Robinson was born Aug. 31, 1935, in Beaumont, Texas, and grew up in Oakland, Calif., the youngest of 10 children. He played baseball at McClymonds High School in Oakland, where he was also a basketball teammate of Bill

Russell’s. He signed with the Reds organizati­on in 1953 and made his major league debut as Cincinnati’s left fielder three years later.

When the Indians announced in October 1974 that Robinson would become their manager, he received a congratula­tory telegram from President Gerald Ford.

“I don’t think I was hired because I was black,” Robinson said. “I hope not. I think I’ve been hired because of my ability.”

When Robinson lined up with his team in front of the Indians’ dugout at their 1975 season opener before a crowd of 56,204 at Cleveland Municipal Stadium, he received a resounding ovation.

“One hundred thousand fans could not have been louder,” he recalled in his memoir. “It was the biggest ovation I ever received, and it almost brought tears to my eyes. After all the years of waiting to become a big-league manager — ignored because so many team owners felt that fans would not accept a black manager — I was on the job and people were loudly pleased.”

Robinson’s wife was Barbara Ann Cole. They had a son, Frank Kevin, and a daughter, Nichelle.

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