USA TODAY US Edition

Stolen statue providing inspiring moments

- Mike Freeman Columnist USA TODAY

In February for Black History Month, USA TODAY Sports is publishing the series “29 Black Stories in 29 Days.” We examine the issues, challenges and opportunit­ies Black athletes and sports officials continue to face after the nation’s reckoning on race following the murder of George Floyd in 2020. This is the fourth annual installmen­t of the series.

Something that remains remarkable, especially when you look at the ugly divisions in our country, is the way the story of the destroyed Jackie Robinson statue continues to be one of the most inspiratio­nal sports stories of the year. Really, one of the most inspiratio­nal stories, period.

To quickly recap, a statue of Robinson was stolen last month from a park in Kansas after it was cut near the ankles, leaving nothing but bronze replicas of Robinson’s shoes. The theft caused almost a nationwide reaction with people rallying around League 42, named after Robinson, which plays its games at the park.

The burned remains of the statue were later found and police announced the arrest of Ricky Alderete earlier this month. He was charged with felony theft, aggravated criminal damage to property, identity theft and making false informatio­n. One law enforcemen­t official told ESPN he believes there will be more arrests in the case.

Bob Lutz, executive director of League 42, told USA TODAY Sports this month that a GoFundMe page, along with private donations, raised $300,000 to help replace the statue and fund some of the league’s programs. Lutz added that more donations, including an undisclose­d sum from Major League Baseball, might come.

That is all remarkable enough. Then recently something else happened that added another layer to the story.

Lutz told ESPN that the cleats, the only things remaining from the destructio­n of the statue, will be donated to the

Negro Leagues Baseball Museum located in Kansas City, Missouri. The hope is to have them delivered by April 11, just prior to baseball’s Jackie Robinson Day on April 15.

Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, said the museum hopes to have a ceremony when the cleats arrive. Kendrick added the cleats could be displayed next to another piece of tragic history.

In 2021, another historical marker, this one in Cairo, Georgia, where Robinson was born, was damaged by gunfire. That marker was donated to the museum. Kendrick plans to display the cleats next to the marker.

“We have a story to tell,” Kendrick told ESPN.

So we’re seeing with the statue something that started out as a tragedy and might now become a wonderful piece of baseball history. Robinson keeps inspiring in ways he probably never imagined.

And he will probably keep inspiring for decades, if not centuries, to come. If not ... forever.

 ?? WICHITA POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? The bronze shoes that remain of a Jackie Robinson statue is headed to a museum.
WICHITA POLICE DEPARTMENT The bronze shoes that remain of a Jackie Robinson statue is headed to a museum.
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