Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

O’Neil among six added to HOF

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“You just cannot not be happy for all of those who continued to beat that Buck O’Neil drum.”

— Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Mo.

Buck O’Neil never uttered a single word of bitterness or regret about not being elected to the baseball Hall of Fame. Until the end, he urged those who loved and rooted for him to do the same.

Now, long after a near miss that left many wondering if he’d ever make it, they can rejoice.

O’Neil, a champion of Black ballplayer­s during a monumental, eight-decade career on and off the field, joined Gil Hodges, Minnie Minoso and three others in getting chosen for the Hall of Fame on Sunday.

Former Minnesota Twins teammates Tony Oliva and Jim Kaat also were elected along with Bud Fowler by a pair of veterans committees.

“Jubilation,” said Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Mo., that O’Neil helped create.

“While we’re all sad that Buck is not here, you just cannot not be happy for all of those who continued to beat that Buck O’Neil drum,” he said.

Oliva and Kaat, both 83 years old, are the only living new members. Longtime slugger Dick Allen, who died last December, fell one vote shy of election.

The six newcomers will be enshrined in Cooperstow­n, N.Y., on July 24, 2022, along with any new members elected by the Baseball Writers’ Associatio­n of America. Firsttime candidates David Ortiz and Alex Rodriguez join Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens and Curt Schilling on the ballot, with voting results on Jan. 25.

Passed over in previous Hall elections, the new members reflect a diversity of accomplish­ments.

This was the first time O’Neil, Minoso and Fowler had a chance to make the Hall under new rules honoring Negro League contributi­ons. Last December, the statistics of some 3,400 players were added to Major League Baseball’s record books when MLB said it was “correcting a longtime oversight in the game’s history” and reclassify­ing the Negro Leagues as a major league.

O’Neil was a two-time All-Star first baseman in the

Negro Leagues and the first Black coach in the National or American leagues. He became the ultimate ambassador for the sport until his death in 2006 at 94 and already is honored with a life-sized statue inside the Hall of Fame.

For all O’Neil did for the game his entire life, many casual fans weren’t entirely familiar with him until they watched the nine-part Ken Burns documentar­y “Baseball,” which first aired on PBS in 1994.

There, O’Neil’s grace, wit and vivid storytelli­ng brought back to life the times of Negro Leagues stars Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson and Cool Papa Bell, plus the days of many more Black ballplayer­s whose names were long forgotten.

Kendrick said it was too bad O’Neil won’t be in Cooperstow­n for the induction ceremonies, “but you know his spirit is going to fill the valley,” he said.

O’Neil played 10 years in the Negro Leagues and helped the Kansas City Monarchs win championsh­ips as a player and manager. His numbers were hardly gaudy — a .258 career batting average, nine home runs.

But what John Jordan O’Neil Jr. meant to baseball can never be measured by numbers alone.

O’Neil was a coach with the Chicago Cubs and enjoyed a prolific career as a scout.

His impact is visible to this day. Along with his statue in Cooperstow­n, the Hall’s board of directors periodical­ly present the Buck O’Neil Lifetime Achievemen­t Award to a person whose “whose extraordin­ary efforts enhanced baseball’s positive impact on society … and whose character, integrity and dignity” mirror those shown by O’Neil.

In 2006, it appeared O’Neil would get to soak in the praise earned for his work when the Special Committee on Negro Leagues convened to study candidates for the Hall of Fame. The panel indeed elected 17 new members but O’Neil was not among them, narrowly missing out.

O’Neil was chosen to speak on behalf of those 17 newcomers, all deceased, on induction day. True to his nature, he didn’t emit a single word of remorse or self-pity about his own fate of being left out.

Two months later, O’Neil died in Kansas City.

Minoso was a two-time All-Star in the Negro Leagues before becoming the first Black player for the Chicago White Sox in 1951. Born in Havana, “The Cuban Comet” was seven-time All-Star while with the White Sox and Indians.

There was nothing mini about Saturnino Orestes Armas Minoso on the field. He hit over .300 eight times with Cleveland and Chicago, led the AL in stolen bases three times, reached double digits in home runs most every season and won three Gold Gloves in left field.

Minoso finished up, or so it seemed, in 1964. He came back at age 50 for the White Sox in 1976 — going 1 for 8 — and batted twice in 1980, giving him five decades of playing pro ball.

The White Sox retired his No. 9 in 1983 and he remained close to the organizati­on and its players before his death in 2015.

Fowler, born in 1858, is often regarded as the first Black profession­al baseball player. The pitcher and second baseman helped create the popular Page Fence Giants barnstormi­ng team.

Hodges became the latest Brooklyn Dodgers star from the pennant-winning “Boys of Summer” to reach the Hall, joining Jackie Robinson, Duke Snider, Roy Campanella and Pee Wee Reese.

An eight-time All-Star with 370 home runs and three-time Gold Glover at first base, Hodges enhanced his legacy when he managed the 1969 “Miracle Mets” to the World Series championsh­ip, a startling five-game win over heavily favored Baltimore.

Hodges was still the Mets’ manager when he suffered a heart attack during spring training in 1972 and died at 47.

Oliva was a three-time AL batting champion with the Twins whose career was cut short by knee problems.

“I was looking for that phone call a long time,” Oliva said on MLB Network. “I had so many people work so hard for me to be elected. They said I should have been elected 40 years ago. To be alive to tell the people means a lot me.”

Kaat was 283-237 in 25 seasons and a 16-time Gold Glove winner.

“I never thought I was the No. 1 pitcher,” he said. “I wasn’t dominant. I was durable and dependable. I am grateful they chose to reward dependabil­ity.”

O’Neil and Fowler were selected by the Early Days committee. Hodges, Minoso, Oliva and Kaat were chosen the by the Golden Days committee.

 ?? (AP file photo) ?? Buck O’Neil, shown with a statue of himself at the Negro League Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Mo., in 2005, was chosen for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday. O’Neil died in 2006.
(AP file photo) Buck O’Neil, shown with a statue of himself at the Negro League Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Mo., in 2005, was chosen for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday. O’Neil died in 2006.
 ?? (AP file photo) ?? Orestes “Minnie” Minoso was a two-time All-Star in the Negro Leagues before becoming the first Black player for the Chicago White Sox in 1951. Minoso was one of six players elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday.
(AP file photo) Orestes “Minnie” Minoso was a two-time All-Star in the Negro Leagues before becoming the first Black player for the Chicago White Sox in 1951. Minoso was one of six players elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday.

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