The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Make it better for the many’

Dave Stewart’s constant desire to help people drives his desire to field a majority Black-owned club.

- Andrea Williams

In the fall of 2016, when Dave Stewart was fired by the Arizona Diamondbac­ks after serving as the team’s general manager for two seasons, he was uncharacte­ristically short of words. “To be honest with you, I’m kind of relieved,” he said at the time. “Quite frankly, I’ve got better things to do.”

Fifteen years before, when the Toronto Blue Jays hired J.P. Ricciardi as their general manager — passing over Stewart, who had been the team’s assistant general manager for three seasons — Stewart had been far more outspoken.

“They think the only people capable of doing these jobs are white people, not minorities,” he said.

Whether discussing MLB front offices or pitching rotations, Stewart regularly has been vocal about the league’s enduring whiteness.

But in 2016, when Arizona pushed him out, there was no scathing rebuke for the Diamondbac­ks, nor any mention that, with his ouster, MLB would have zero Black general managers. In April, in a small conference room in Nashville, Tennessee, Stewart finally clarified his muted response.

“The day that I left there, my first thought of ownership came,” he said. “Actually, while I was doing it, the whole time I was thinking, wait till I get my own team.”

In the coming years, he may have his chance.

Stewart was speaking in the headquarte­rs of Music City Baseball, an investment group that he is working with to bring an MLB team to Nashville. The group hopes to call their team the Nashville Stars, in tribute to a semipro Negro leagues team. It would be MLB’S first majority Black-owned club, and it would be led by Stewart.

Dubbed “Smoke” for the power of his right arm, Stewart notched World Series titles with the Los Angeles Dodgers, Oakland Athletics and the Blue Jays, with a dominant stretch for Oakland in which he had four consecutiv­e 20-win seasons. By his own accounts, he was routinely disrespect­ed and discarded along the way — and that was before he ever made it to a coaching staff or front office.

His experience­s working as a pitching coach, an executive and an agent proved heartbreak­ing at times, but they also led to this potentiall­y game-changing moment for baseball.

“There’s no anger,” he said. “When I walk out the door I’m disappoint­ed most days. But then I get on my feet, and I’m good. So my attitude has changed from disappoint­ment to: ‘What can I do today to be the best person I can be? And what can I do to be better than I was yesterday? And how can I help somebody?’”

Eventually he realized the way to help the most people would be to change who is making the decisions in baseball, a sport where things often come down to who a person knows.

He offered himself as an example, saying he wouldn’t have gotten the job in Arizona if not for his decades-long friendship with Tony La Russa, his former manager who was the chief baseball officer of the Diamondbac­ks at the time.

“I know his family; he knows my family,” Stewart said of La Russa.

In 2020, Theo Epstein, the departing top executive of the Chicago Cubs, acknowledg­ed the flaws with that system, saying “the majority of people I’ve hired have similar background­s as me and look a lot like me.”

While Stewart can’t personally bridge the relationsh­ip gaps between MLB executives and nonwhite job candidates, serving as principal owner of a team would allow him to give those candidates a fair shot with his club — whether on the field, in the front office or in the ownership group.

But there is no guarantee that MLB will expand beyond 30 teams in the future, and even as the Tampa Bay Rays and the Athletics are pushing for new stadiums, there are options besides Nashville for them to settle, should they choose to move.

As those situations play out, Music City Baseball works toward its goal of landing a team. John Loar, the group’s managing director who had previously worked with Stewart in an effort to purchase the Miami Marlins, said the group is staying true to Stewart’s long-held beliefs.

“Even in Miami, Dave’s core philosophy was Black leadership and the opportunit­y for Black managers and executives, but also potential equity in the team,” Loar said.

Indeed, a desire to help people, particular­ly Black people, has been a consistent through line of Stewart’s career. It comes with a zeal that surprises those who remember the unflinchin­g stare that was his signature as a player — an approach that was the result of advice from Hall of Famer Bob Gibson, Stewart’s fellow Black Ace. Gibson told him to never show emotion on the field, that visible frustratio­n and elation could both be viewed as weakness.

During his playing days, Stewart followed Gibson’s advice. But changing times have brought increased responsibi­lities — and a different approach.

“Sometimes the few have to speak for the many, to make it better for the many,” Stewart said. “I’d much rather be the guy that got shot dead if it makes it good for everybody else.”

Music City Baseball’s proposed site for a new stadium is on land controlled by Tennessee State University. That historical­ly Black college is in north Nashville, an area that has been both a source of pride and frustratio­n for residents who believe they have been overlooked as Nashville achieved its “It City” status. For Stewart, the proposed developmen­t is an opportunit­y to revitalize a community that reminds him a lot of the East Oakland, California, neighborho­od he was raised in.

Stewart remembers Sunday afternoons when he and his childhood friend Warnell

Simpson would convene on his front porch and discuss what they would do if they ever had a great deal of money. “It’s crazy,” Stewart said. “Even as kids, the things we talked about were putting our money into the community.”

East Oakland was an enclave of pro-blackness that just happened to be the home of the A’s. During the baseball season, he and his cousins would sneak into Oakland Coliseum. They hid out in the right field seats, gobsmacked as A’s greats like Reggie Jackson and Bert Campaneris took batting practice.

When he wasn’t at the Coliseum, Stewart was immersed in the culture of the times. As much as he was shaped by baseball, Stewart was molded by Martin Luther King Jr., by Malcolm X, and by the Black Panther party, which was headquarte­red in his hometown. “When you grow up in a Black community, those were the things that gave us hope,” he said. “I wasn’t raised in an environmen­t where we talked about what’s against us or what we can’t do. What was against us, in Oakland, you knew it, because it was around you. You could see it.”

On May 16, Stewart, Loar and Alberto Gonzales, the former U.S. attorney general and currently the chair of Music City Baseball’s board of directors, had a meeting with Commission­er Rob Manfred that Stewart said went well. He said Manfred applauded the group’s commitment to diversity as well as the work they’ve already done to build the Nashville Stars brand (50% of merchandis­e sales benefit the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum).

The response was promising, even if it stopped short of a promise that a team could call Nashville home. Stewart insists that the north Nashville developmen­t will happen regardless and that his promise to his people remains unwavering. He also knows that he’s got a lot of work to do to get to know the people of that community and to convince them that he is looking out for their best interests.

“People have said, ‘Well, good luck, I hope it happens,’” Stewart said. “My response is, ‘I’m going to make it happen.’ It’s not if it happens; it’s a matter of when it happens. I’m 65 years old. This is my last great mission. This is the one last thing that I get an opportunit­y to leave and have people say, ‘This guy really cared about us as a community.’”

 ?? DEANNE FITZMAURIC­E/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dave Stewart and the Music City Baseball investment group are hoping to field an MLB team in Nashville, which would make them Major League Baseball’s first majority Black-owned club. Stewart said the notion of owning a team first came to him on the day the Arizona Diamondbac­ks let him go as their general manager — a day many recall as an uncharacte­ristically quiet day for the usually outspoken former player.
DEANNE FITZMAURIC­E/THE NEW YORK TIMES Dave Stewart and the Music City Baseball investment group are hoping to field an MLB team in Nashville, which would make them Major League Baseball’s first majority Black-owned club. Stewart said the notion of owning a team first came to him on the day the Arizona Diamondbac­ks let him go as their general manager — a day many recall as an uncharacte­ristically quiet day for the usually outspoken former player.
 ?? AP 2019 ?? Former Athletics starting pitcher Dave Stewart learned from Bob Gibson not to reveal any frustratio­n on the field, and he applies that to his work now.
AP 2019 Former Athletics starting pitcher Dave Stewart learned from Bob Gibson not to reveal any frustratio­n on the field, and he applies that to his work now.

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