The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Pumpsie Green, first black player in Boston, dies

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BOSTON — Former Boston Red Sox infielder Elijah “Pumpsie” Green, the first black player on the last major league team to field one, has died. He was 85.

A Red Sox spokesman confirmed the death Wednesday night, and the team observed a moment of silence before its game against the Toronto Blue Jays. Green, who was inducted into the Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2018, had been living in California.

A speedy but lighthitti­ng utilityman, Green brought baseball’s segregatio­n era to an end of sorts when he took the field against the Chicago White Sox on July 21, 1959 — more than a dozen years after Jackie Robinson broke baseball’s color barrier with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Green joined the team on a lengthy road trip and had played nine games before taking the field at Fenway Park for the first time. Green said this year in an interview with NESN, the Red Sox TV network, that he remembered receiving a standing ovation when he came to the plate, batting leadoff.

“It was heartwarmi­ng and nervewrack­ing,” he told reporters in 1997, when he returned to Boston to take part in ceremonies marking the 50th anniversar­y of Robinson’s debut. “But I got lucky: I hit a triple off the leftcenter fence.”

Green didn’t have Hall of Fame talent like Robinson, or Larry Doby, an AllStar who was the first black player in the American League. The Red Sox infielder reached the majors as a role player, just once playing more than 88 games, and never hitting more than six homers or batting better than .278.

Green played parts of four seasons with the Red Sox before finishing his fiveyear career with the New York Mets, batting .246 overall with a total of 13 homers and 74 RBIs.

But his first appearance in a Boston uniform ended baseball’s ugliest chapter, and the fact that it took the Red Sox so long left a stain on the franchise it is still trying to erase.

A few days after Green was called up, the Red Sox added Earl Wilson, a black pitcher. Green said there was an informal quota system that required teams to have an even number of black players so they would have someone to room with on the road.

There were few blacks in the clubhouse, the offices or the Boston stands, Green said in ‘97.

“Most of the time it was just me,” he said. “It was almost an oddity when you saw a black person walking around the stands.”

But unlike Robinson, Green said, he received no death threats. “It was mostly insults,” he said.

“But you can get those at any ballpark at any time,” he said. “I learned to tune things out.”

Green returned to northern California and worked as a counselor at Berkeley High School before retiring in the 1990s. The Red Sox honored him again before a game in 2009, but he was unable to attend the ceremony in 2018 when he was inducted into the Red Sox Hall of Fame.

Upon his return to Fenway, he noticed that things had improved, but he still saw work to be done.

“Baseball still has its problems, and so does society,” Green said. “I don’t believe things are that much better in baseball or society. Hopefully, it will be shortly.”

A brother, Cornell Green, was a star safety for the Dallas Cowboys.

PRICE, ECKERSLEY FEUDING AGAIN

David Price ignited an old feud Wednesday with Red Sox TV analyst Dennis Eckersley after the Hall of Fame pitcher commented about a confrontat­ion between the men in a story by The Boston Globe this week.

Two years ago, Price confronted Eckersley on a team flight after Eckersley was critical of a player’s performanc­e on air. On Wednesday, Price called it “trash” that Eckersley discussed the incident during an interview for a lengthy piece on the former pitcher’s life and career.

“I didn’t know how to deal with that. I don’t plan on saying a word to him, I don’t plan on seeing him, never,” Eckersley told The Boston Globe Magazine about the incident. “I don’t really give a (expletive) one way or another. I don’t think he really cares one way or the other.”

That was the only time Eckersley was quoted about the runin.

About three hours before the scheduled first pitch of the Red SoxBlue Jays game at Fenway Park, Price let loose about Eckersley to reporters in the home clubhouse.

“The fact that it was two years ago, over two years ago now. The fact that he wanted to move on and since then he’s went on the radio and talked about it, done it again,” Price said. “In 2017, I addressed it, told you guys in front of the camera I wish I handled it differentl­y. I did it again in 2018 in spring training on Day One. Said the same thing.”

Price said a meeting was arranged for he and Eckersley in 2017, in which Price planned to apologize. He said Eckersley backed out of that meeting.

Price also criticized a recent MLB Network documentar­y about Eckersley’s career.

“The one thing that definitely stood out to me — he had zero former teammates in that interview, not one, talking about him. It was him talking about himself,” Price said. “If anybody everybody ever does a special on me after baseball, I won’t need to go on that interview. I will have former teammates. I will have former coaches — they can all vouch for me. He didn’t have that. To me, that is, that’s all you need to know. That tells the entire story right there.”

Chad Finn, the Boston Globe columnist who wrote the Eckersley profile, tweeted in response to Price’s comments that he cut numerous interviews from his story — including Jim Rice, Buddy Bell and Tony La Russa — because “there was so much universal praise for him that it got redundant.”

Price is in the fourth year of a $217million, sevenyear deal he signed as a free agent before 2016.

Eckersley wasn’t scheduled to work Wednesday’s game.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Elijah “Pumpsie” Green, right, is given some friendly tips by Ted Williams in 1959. Green was the first African American ever to play for the Red Sox.
Associated Press file photo Elijah “Pumpsie” Green, right, is given some friendly tips by Ted Williams in 1959. Green was the first African American ever to play for the Red Sox.

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