Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Baseball changed once ‘42’ broke in

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Houston Astros Manager Dusty Baker celebrated Jackie Robinson’s legacy on the 73rd anniversar­y of the fall of the major league color barrier and lamented the lack of blacks in today’s game.

“It’s frustratin­g because we’ve talked about it forever … but it seems like the numbers are dwindling instead of increasing,” Baker said Wednesday.

Only 7.7% of big-league players on opening-day rosters last year were black, down from 17% in 1990. Baker and Los Angeles Dodgers Manager Dave Roberts are the only two black managers in the majors.

Baker appreciate­s that the league is making a “conscious effort” to get more young blacks involved in baseball through programs like Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities and is optimistic there can be a turnaround in the upcoming years.

“Hopefully in this decade and the next decade there will be more guys that get a chance,” Baker said. “All they need is a chance.

A lot of guys have been bypassed and overlooked.”

Robinson broke the color barrier on April 15, 1947, for the Brooklyn Dodgers. His No. 42 was retired throughout the major leagues in 1997 by then-commission­er Bud Selig. An annual Jackie Robinson Day started in 2004 and since 2009, all players, managers, coaches have worn his No. 42 to mark the day.

A museum in New York devoted to Robinson remains under constructi­on but there have been repeated delays in fundraisin­g and constructi­on.

With the start of baseball season on hold because of the coronaviru­s, the celebratio­n of Robinson’s contributi­ons was a virtual one this year.

The Jackie Robinson Foundation launched a virtual learning hub to coincide with the day, and teams and players across the league took to social media and other online platforms to commemorat­e the occasion.

CC Sabathia and Harold Reynolds were among the former major leaguers reading excerpts from the book by Robinson’s daughter, Sharon, titled Jackie Robinson: American Hero. She appeared in video vignettes and there are virtual and printable educationa­l activities.

Chicago shortstop Tim Anderson spent time on a video call with 10 students who are in the White Sox Amateur City Elite program. The reigning American batting champion answered questions and talked about Robinson’s legacy, and the responsibi­lity he feels to get more blacks involved in the game.

“There’s not really many black kids in the league,” Anderson said. “So, who’s going to motivate these kids?

Who’s going to inspire them? That’s something I take pride in. I definitely always look forward to wearing No. 42.”

TULCO, the holding company founded by Thomas Tull, who produced the Robinson film 42, announced Wednesday that it had donated $4.2 million worth of personal protective equipment to organizati­ons that serve black and other communitie­s in honor of Jackie Robinson Day. The donation includes scrubs, masks and isolation gowns and will be distribute­d to hospitals that have been most affected by the coronaviru­s.

The Seattle Mariners, who top current active major league rosters with nine black players, hosted a roundtable discussion on YouTube to discuss Robinson’s contributi­ons. It was led by Mariners broadcaste­r Dave Sims and included second basemen Dee Gordon and Shed Long, outfielder Mallex Smith and Reynolds, a former Mariner and current MLB Network broadcaste­r, and Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Museum.

The Nationals tweeted a video with highlights of Robinson that included pictures of various players and staff members and their families wearing shirts featuring Robinson’s No. 42 and holding signs paying tribute to the legend.

“It’s one of the biggest days of the major league calendar — and the calendar in general,” Washington General Manager Mike Rizzo said. “He’s one of the most important people in American society, not only sports. It’s a fitting tribute that we have a day to honor him each year and it’s very fitting that it’s during the baseball season. Although we won’t be playing any games this year, we certainly will stop and remember what he’s meant to the game of baseball and to the fabric of America.”

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