The Mercury News

Unlike Jackie, Frank fought back

- By Kevin B. Blackiston­e The Washington Post

A few seasons after Jackie Robinson retired, Frank Robinson did something Jackie only dreamed of, something he swore never to do, something that ate at him for as long as he was on the diamond.

Frank Robinson fought back. Against a white player. A star white player, too, the Braves’ Eddie Mathews.

Robinson lost the fight but won the war.

“I had a homer and a double, drove in one run, scored another and made a catch that robbed Mathews of an extra-base hit,” Robinson explained after his eye was blackened. “We won the second game, 4-0.”

Jackie Robinson was revered for the abuse he took. Frank Robinson, if you read the memories that poured out Thursday upon the news of his death at 83, was respected for what he didn’t take.

Frank Robinson was an emancipate­d black athlete. He played not just fiercely, as was recounted Thursday, but, most importantl­y, fearlessly. It was so evident to those who played with and against him that they dreaded him.

In Jackie Robinson’s rookie season, 1947, he was spiked purposely by Enos Slaughter, the southerner who rumor held considered striking that year rather than play against the majors’ first black player since the 1880s.

Ten years later, in his second season, Frank Robinson did the spiking. He sidelined Milwaukee shortstop Johnny Logan, a white player, for six weeks.

Frank Robinson was remembered immediatel­y for the Hall of Fame baseball player he became over 21 seasons, most notably the first 10 years he spent in Cincinnati and the next six in Baltimore. He was Rookie of the Year, the first to be named MVP in both leagues, a Triple Crown winner, the first black manager, “a Grade-A Negro” player, The Sporting News characteri­zed him upon being traded to Baltimore.

But the descriptor­s of Frank Robinson as a man made him important rather than merely historic. He was in the vanguard of the liberated black American athlete of the second half of the 20th century.

Frank Robinson became reflective of a burgeoning confrontat­ional black America. He was arrested for brandishin­g his pistol in 1961 after a confrontat­ion with white customers and a white short-order cook in a late-night Cincinnati eatery.

Frank Robinson, who debuted April 17, 1956, in left field of Cincinnati’s Crosley Field, wasn’t like the black athletes this country championed for most of the first half of the last century. He didn’t subjugate himself to perform and act in the nonconfron­tational manner that was expected of and acceded to by many black Americans in post-Reconstruc­tion, pre-Civil Rights era America. He wasn’t like the three most-celebrated black athletes in America from World War I through the Korean War — boxer Joe Louis, track and field athlete Jesse Owens and his baseball predecesso­r Jackie Robinson — who were depicted synecdocha­lly by a white America in pursuit of racial peace and unity as long as it was separate.

Frank Robinson was like his high school basketball teammate Bill Russell. He was part of the birth in the sixties of black athletes such as Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, and Lew Alcindor, all of whom began to confront their condition as athletic labor and join the civil rights movement, traditiona­l and radical.

He hadn’t planned to be that guy. When Robinson was traded to Baltimore in 1966, the Baltimore NAACP asked him to join. It was reported that he declined unless the organizati­on promised he wouldn’t have to make public appearance­s while he was a player. But house hunting for him and his family, which included a son and daughter, changed his mind.

As recounted in a Society for American Baseball Research article, Robinson and his wife Barbara thought they’d found a house until the university professor who was subletting it met Barbara.

“He must have thought I was Mrs. Brooks Robinson,” Frank Robinson’s wife quipped. They wound up in a rental home “grimy and infested with bugs, its floors covered with dog (mess).”

The experience inspired Frank Robinson to change his mind about being active with the city’s NAACP.

So it made sense Thursday that Frank Robinson’s family requested that contributi­ons in his memory be made to the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tennessee.

In 1975, 28 years after baseball allowed Jackie Robinson to integrate its base paths, Cleveland made Frank Robinson the first black manager in the game. It gave him a one-year contract.

One of Robinson’s pitchers was Gaylord Perry, a white Southerner and 21game winner for the Indians the previous season. Perry, who was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1991, didn’t like Robinson’s attention to conditioni­ng and complained to the media, “I’m nobody’s slave.” Then a white catcher, John Ellis, publicly feuded with the first black skipper. Cleveland fans responded by threatenin­g Robinson’s life. Robinson was unbowed. In 2008, the Hall of Fame did something it said it never does: It edited Jackie Robinson’s plaque to reflect the history he made re-integratin­g the major leagues. It should do the same for Frank Robinson.

His most-indelible contributi­on can’t be summed up in statistics, unless they are numbers that somehow take the measure of a man.

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