Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rename the Cleveland Indians the Satchels — after Satchel Paige

- By Peter Dreier Peter Dreier is the E.P. Clapp Distinguis­hed Professor at Occidental College in Los Angeles, Calif. He has written or coauthored six books.

TheClevela­nd Indians are searching for a new name. I suggest calling the team the Satchels — after Leroy “Satchel” Paige, who played for Cleveland teams in both the major leagues and the Negro Leagues, and was probably the greatest pitcher in baseball history.

Born in Mobile, Ala., in 1906, Paige earned his nickname as a young boy carrying passengers’ bags at railroad stations.

Because the major leagues banned Black players until Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, most Negro League players toiled in relative obscurity because white newspapers ignored Black baseball. But Paige — who pitched for eight different Negro League teams between 1926 and 1947 — was relatively well known because he was a colorful figure and because he often pitched against, and beat, white teams in exhibition games.

In 1971, as a tribute to Paige’s place in baseball’s pantheon, he was the first player who spent most of his career in the Negro Leagues to be elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

The Cleveland team’s recent decision to change its name came in response to years of protests from Native American activists and many of the team’s fans. It has already phased out images of its longtime mascot, Chief Wahoo, from the walls of its stadium and from its uniforms, temporaril­y replacing it with the letter C, until they select a new name.

The recent upsurge of outrage over systemic racism has accelerate­d the urgency to right past wrongs. In

December, for example, Major League Baseball officially recognized the Negro Leagues as equal to the American and National Leagues, which will involve incorporat­ing the records of more than 3,400 Negro League players into its official statistics. Sports teams are also feeling the heat to revise names that many consider de meaning racial slurs.

The Cleveland baseball team officials are gathering ideas and suggestion­s are pouring in.

Name changes are nothing new in profession­al baseball. Cleveland’s first entry in the big leagues was called the Blues, who competed in the original National League from 1879 to 1884, when the team folded. Next came the Cleveland Spiders, who played in the American Associatio­n from 1887 to 1888, followed by 11 seasons in the National League. In 1899, the Spiders were so bad that they weredroppe­d from the league.

When the American League began in 1900, the Cleveland franchise was one of eight charter members, resurrecti­ng the name Cleveland Blues. In 1902, they became the Cleveland Bronchos. That year, they recruited star infielder Napoleon Lajoie to join their roster and changed their name to the Naps. After Lajoie left the club after the 1914 season, they became the Indians.

The team has long maintained that the name honored Native American Louis Sockalexis, who played for the Spiders from 1897 to 1899, but historians have cast doubt on that story.

Some fans have suggested that the team name revert to the Spiders, but many Clevelande­rs consider that name too creepy.

Others favor the Rockers, which links to the city’s bestknown tourist attraction, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. (The term “rock and roll” was coined by Cleveland radiodisc jockey Alan Freed.)

But Denver already has the Rockies, and a RockiesRoc­kers World Series could prove confoundin­g.

Still other fans hope that the Indians’ owners will rename the team after one of Cleveland’s Negro League franchises, which include the short-lived Cubs (1931), Stars (1932), Giants (1933), Red Sox (1934), and Bears (1939–1940). The most enduring was the Buckeyes, which lasted from 1942 to 1950 and won the Negro League World Series in 1947. But Ohio State University already has a claim on the name Buckeyes.

Cleveland may be the only city where two pro teams have been named for individual­s — the Naps and the Cleveland Browns football team, which fans voted to name after the team’s founder, coach, and general manager Paul Brown. Calling the team the Satchels would be an homage to the Negro Leagues, the city’s history, and its current demography: African Americans comprise half of Cleveland’s population and 20% in the Cleveland metro area.

Paige briefly played with the Cleveland Cubs in 1931 before joining the heralded Pittsburgh Crawfords later that season.

A few months after Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color line, Indians owner Bill Veeck signed Negro League star Larry Doby, the American League’s first Black player and a future Hall of Famer. Some fans suggest renaming the team the Dobys.

The following year, 1948, Veeck recruited Paige as a 42-year-old “rookie.” Some sportswrit­ers thought that signing the aging Paige was simply a stunt to gain publicity and increase attendance. But Paige surprised the doubters.

Although he didn’t join the team until early July, he started seven games, hurled three complete games, and relieved in 14 others. He won six games, lost only one, compiled a remarkable 2.48 earned run average, and helped the Indians win the pennant and World Series. He was the first Black pitcher to pitch in a World Series game.

By the time he reached the majors, Paige was past his prime. After two seasons in Cleveland, the Indians traded him to the lowly St. Louis Browns, where he pitched for three more years, and was named to the American League All-Star team in 1952 and, at age 47, in 1953. He pitched for three more years (1956–1958) for a Triple-A minorleagu­e team in Miami.

In 1965, at 59, he returned to pitch one more game for the Kansas City Athletes, making him the oldest player in major league history. Against the Boston Red Sox, he hurled three innings, giving up only onehit and no runs.

Paige, a tall, lanky righthande­r, had a blazing fastball and pinpoint control. He used a variety of windups, including his “hesitation pitch,” that baffled the best of hitters.

In addition to pitching in official Negro League games, Paige constantly barnstorme­d across the country in exhibition games, playing local amateur and semi-pro clubs as well as teams comprised of white major leaguers. There was no television, and radio didn’t cover Negro League games, but Paige’s legend grew by word of mouth and reports in the Black newspapers.

At his peak, Paige pitched in hundreds of games a year. Because of the incomplete record-keeping, we’ll never know precisely how many games he pitched, won, and lost; how many no-hitters, shutouts, or consecutiv­e scoreless innings he threw; or his lifetime earned run average. His biographer Larry Tye has concluded that Paige “pitched more baseballs, in more ballparks, for more teams, than any player in history. It also is safe to say that no pitcher ever threw at a higher level, for longer, than the ageless right-hander.”

In exhibition games, Paige often pitched against and beat the best white major leaguers. In one game he struck out Rogers Hornsby — perhaps the best righthande­d hitter in major league baseball history, with a lifetime batting average of .358 — five times.

In 1934 alone, Paige beat Dizzy Dean — then at the height of his career, winning 30 games that season — in four of six games. Dean, Joe DiMaggio, and Ted Williams called Paige the best pitcher they ever saw.

Paige was a charismati­c character, always good for a quote from his homespun philosophy, such as “Age is a question of mind over matter. If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter” and “Don’t look back. Something might be gaining on you.”

On the mound, too, Paige was a showman. In barnstormi­ng games, he would occasional­ly call in his outfielder­s, ask them to sit down, and then strike out the opposing batters. But his antics couldn’t obscure the fact that he was an outstandin­g athlete whose success helped persuade his white counterpar­ts that African Americans could compete in the major leagues if given a chance.

Paige, who died in 1982, was a pathbreake­r in many ways. Renaming Cleveland’s team the Satchels would be a way for baseball to honor this legendary player and participat­e in the country’s efforts at racial reconcilia­tion.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Cleveland Indians pitcher Satchel Paige during a World Series game against the Boston Braves in Boston, Mass., in 1948.
Associated Press Cleveland Indians pitcher Satchel Paige during a World Series game against the Boston Braves in Boston, Mass., in 1948.

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