USA TODAY US Edition

Red Sox turn shame into opportunit­y

Supporting Yawkey Way rename latest step by team co-owner Henry

- Bob Nightengal­e

This won’t change Boston’s reputation as one of baseball’s most racist cities, reinforced a year ago by the ugly incident involving Orioles center fielder Adam Jones.

It won’t erase the Red Sox’s haunting history of being the last baseball franchise to integrate.

Yet led by co-owner John Henry, the Red Sox ensured that they no longer will honor or celebrate their racist past.

Former team owner Tom Yawkey’s name will be forever erased on the streets outside Fenway Park.

The Boston Public Improvemen­t Commission made history Thursday by stripping Yawkey’s name off the twoblock stretch around Fenway Park, returning to its original moniker: Jersey Street.

This doesn’t mean that anyone will forget how the Red Sox snubbed Jackie Robinson and Willie Mays, refusing to integrate its team until 1959 — 12 years after Robinson’s arrival with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

It shouldn’t dull anyone’s memory either that the Red Sox had 45 managers in history, the same number as U.S. presidents, but have never employed an African-American manager or GM.

This is the first season they’ve even had a minority manager, Alex Cora, a Puerto Rican.

Yet after last year’s incident when a fan threw a bag of peanuts toward Jones — one of 68 African Americans on opening-day rosters this season — and berated him with racial slurs from the stands, the Red Sox took action that reverberat­ed throughout baseball. They finally were sickened by their ugly history of bigotry, with Yankees pitcher CC Sabathia saying, “I’ve never been called the N-word, except in Boston. We all know. When you go to Boston, expect it.”

Henry, who came to the Orioles clubhouse the following day with Red Sox President Sam Kennedy and apologized to Jones, realizes that he can’t change the views of an entire citizenry. Racism will never completely go away. Yet he can control how Red Sox history is celebrated and honored.

He immediatel­y sought to rid the Red Sox of Yawkey’s legacy; the man who owned the Red Sox from 1933 to 1976 was called baseball’s biggest bigot by Robinson.

“When we arrived in 2002, one of the most important things we did was acknowledg­e the shameful past of the Boston Red Sox,” Kennedy said in the aftermath of the Jones’ incident. “They acknowledg­ed this is the last team to integrate and there’s a reputation of not being the most friendly and hospitable environmen­t. We’ve worked really hard to change that.”

Now, in one swift decision, the Red Sox are breaking the celebrator­y link between Yawkey and all of his problemati­c beliefs.

“The undeniable and regrettabl­e history of the Red Sox with regards to race and integratio­n during the Yawkey stewardshi­p,” Red Sox attorney David Friedman said at a hearing in February, “make it difficult to give prominence to a symbol associated with an era marred by racial discrimina­tion and inequality.”

The Yawkey Foundation, which has donated $300 million to area organizati­ons, is furious by the decision. The foundation argues that its patriarch wasn’t a racist. Its officials deny the reports that Yawkey screamed a racial slur from the grandstand­s at a Red Sox workout with Robinson and two African Americans.

“Tom Yawkey deserved to have his name live on at Fenway Park,” the Yawkey Foundation said in a statement. “We can’t change today’s decision, but we remain hopeful that he will be remembered as the good and decent man he truly was.”

His supporters say Yawkey hardly was a pioneer for racial equality but that he wasn’t David Duke, either. Still, it was clear that Yawkey enabled racism simply by not having a black player until the arrival of Pumpsie Green in 1959.

The Red Sox can’t expunge that fact from their history, but if nothing else, Yawkey’s legacy won’t be a constant reminder every time their fans walk through the turnstiles.

It was as if Yawkey Way was the Red Sox’s version of a confederat­e statue.

Now, the name is gone, and surely the plaque honoring Yawkey on the side of Fenway Park will be removed, too.

“Restoring the Jersey Street name is intended to reinforce that Fenway Park is inclusive and welcoming to all,” the Red Sox said in a statement.

Maybe one day the Red Sox will come up with a different name instead of Jersey Street too. The name honors the British Isle of Jersey where the local aristocrac­y bought and sold slaves.

If they want to truly celebrate the man responsibl­e for change, maybe they should call it Adam Jones Way. Jones, after all, is the one who had the courage to stand up for his beliefs and publicly shame the Red Sox.

It’ll be fascinatin­g to see if this prompts other organizati­ons to react, examining their own troubled history. We have statues, plaques, street names and awards honoring racists throughout baseball. Maybe now organizati­ons will feel comfortabl­e enough to strip those honors.

Perhaps even the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America can act and change the name of its highest award. The BBWAA annually presents the J.G. Taylor Spink award to one of its members for meritoriou­s contributi­ons to baseball writing. The award is named after the longtime publisher of the Sporting News.

Yes, the same man who wrote an editorial in 1942 insisting there was no reason for baseball to integrate, saying the game was better off having black players stay in the Negro Leagues.

Now, here are the Red Sox, changing the name of a street because of its racial connotatio­n, a month after the Indians stopped using their Chief Wahoo logo.

Perhaps this is the start of a trend, and after decades of disgracefu­l behavior, we can thank the Red Sox for being at the forefront of a movement, and end honoring those who accepted, or even emboldened baseball’s ugly racial history.

Shame has turned into opportunit­y.

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA/AP ?? In June 2017, Red Sox legend David Ortiz had a portion of Yawkey Way named after him.
CHARLES KRUPA/AP In June 2017, Red Sox legend David Ortiz had a portion of Yawkey Way named after him.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States