Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Dodgers pitcher helped break racial barrier

- By Richard Goldstein

Don Newcombe, the major leagues’ first outstandin­g black pitcher and a star for the Brooklyn Dodgers in their glory years, the 1950s, died Tuesday. He was 92.

The Dodgers announced his death but did not say where he died.

An imposing righthande­r, at 6 feet 4 inches and 225 pounds, with an overpoweri­ng fastball, Mr. Newcombe claimed a string of achievemen­ts: rookie of the year in 1949; four-time All-Star; and the National League’s Most Valuable Player in 1956, when he also won the first Cy Young Award as baseball’s top pitcher. Moreover, he was the first black pitcher to start a World Series game.

But he also faced adversity that went beyond the racial taunts hurled at the first black major leaguers, including his Dodgers teammates Jackie Robinson and Roy Campanella. His career was cut short by alcoholism, and he was tormented by an undeserved reputation for failing to win big games, particular­ly in the World Series.

Mr. Newcombe had a career record of 149-90 with a 3.56 earned run average in 10 seasons with the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers, Cincinnati Reds and Cleveland Indians, missing two years of play because of military service.

In his rookie season, he won 17 games and lost eight and led the league in shutouts with five. He had the league’s best winning percentage in 1955, .800, when he posted a record of 20-5, and in 1956, .794, when he was 27-7.

Carl Erskine, the outstandin­g right-hander who was Mr. Newcombe’s teammate on the “Boys of Summer” teams, thought that Mr. Newcombe had not been given his due.

“If Newcombe had not had two years away in the service, he could very well have been a Hall of Fame pitcher,” Mr. Erskine told Peter Golenbock in his book “Bums” (1984).

Donald Newcombe was born on June 14, 1926, in Madison, N.J., and grew up in Elizabeth. His father was a chauffeur.

Mr. Newcombe pitched for the Newark Eagles of the Negro leagues in 1944 and 1945 and then was signed by Branch Rickey, the Dodgers’ general manager, to a minor league contract before the 1946 season. Mr. Rickey went on to break the modern major league color barrier the next year by signing Mr. Robinson to a Dodgers contract.

Mr. Newcombe had two outstandin­g seasons with the Dodgers’ farm team in Nashua, N.H., and another at Montreal before joining the Dodgers in May 1949.

Dan Bankhead, who debuted for the Dodgers on Aug. 26, 1947, was the first black pitcher in the majors. But Mr. Newcombe was the first to be a star. He followed up his rookie-of-the-year season with a 19-11 record in 1950 and a 20-9 mark in 1951.

After two years in the Army, he had a mediocre season in 1954, then regained his form with 20 victories in 1955, when the Brooklyn Dodgers won their only World Series championsh­ip, and 27 in 1956.

But his heavy drinking took its toll, and after going 0-6 with the Dodgers at the outset of the 1958 season, their first year in Los Angeles, he was traded to Cincinnati. He lasted two more seasons in the major leagues, finishing his career with Cleveland.

Mr. Newcombe’s reputation for failing in key games came largely from his 0-4 record in World Series play facing the New York Yankees, but he had proved himself in many a key moment. He pitched an outstandin­g game in his first Series defeat, in 1949, losing 1-0 on Tommy Henrich’s ninth-inning home run. He was a mainstay for the Dodgers in the final weeks of the 1951 season, then pitched superbly on little rest in Game 3 of the playoffs against the New York Giants before Ralph Branca yielded Bobby Thomson’s memorable pennant-winning home run.

Mr. Newcombe’s worst moments came in Game 7 of the 1956 World Series, when Yogi Berra hit two home runs against him in the Yankees’ 9-0 victory.

Long afterward, he remained bitter over his treatment in the press.

“Bob Feller never won a World Series game, either, but nobody said he choked,” Mr. Newcombe told The Plain Dealer of Cleveland in 1997. “Ted Williams and [Joe] DiMaggio had bad World Series, but nobody said they choked. But they said it about me.”

Mr. Newcombe drank heavily throughout his baseball career, and his problems worsened afterward. He said he stopped drinking in 1966, when his second wife, Billie, threatened to leave him and take their three children. He later spoke extensivel­y on behalf of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

 ??  ?? Don Newcombe, circa 1951
Don Newcombe, circa 1951

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