Baseball second fiddle for black athletes

Bear-Arms

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YOUNGSTOWN â€â€￾ Brent Thomas is black, and like many black 23-year-olds, Thomas grew up playing and excelling in a variety of sports, including basketball and football. What makes the Seattle-native different, perhaps an anomaly, is that he spurred the court and the gridiron for the diamond, a decision fewer and fewer black athletes are making.

A recent report by the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport found that only 8.5 percent of Major League Baseball was black in 2005.

The report, the Institute's 14th Racial and Gender Report Card, reported that "the percentage of African-American players is the lowest it has been in 26 years."

Numbers

This season, there were only 69 black players â€â€￾ roughly 9 percent â€â€￾ on opening-day rosters in the majors. In addition, the percentage of major league baseball players has been cut in half over the last 15 years. In 1991, blacks made up 18 percent of baseball.

"I think it's a shame to see it," said Thomas, a second-year outfielder with the Mahoning Valley Scrappers, a Class A affiliate of the Cleveland Indians. "Baseball is a good way to keep black kids out of trouble."

Thomas has seen firsthand the declining popularity of baseball among blacks, as America's pastime loses more and more black athletes to the allure of quicker paydays and bigger fame provided by basketball and football.

His high school football and basketball teams were predominantly black, while he was one of only four black baseball players.

"Would you want to make 10 million now or later?" he asks.

In the NBA or NFL you are in right after college, whereas in MLB you have to be patient and work your way through the minor leagues, he said.

Last Tuesday's 77th MLB All-Star Game, in which the National League failed to win for the 10th consecutive season, is a terrific example of how steep the decline has become.

Numbers slip

The last time the NL won the Midsummer classic, in 1996, eight black players were voted by the fans to start the game.

In 2006, biracial Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter was the only black player voted to start the game.

The lack of black participation is affecting all facets of baseball, from youth leagues to college and the pros.

Take a visit to Youngstown's Gibson Field. Once a haven for youth baseball in inner-city Youngstown, the field is a shell of its former self. Overgrown grass covers the field. Benches and bleachers are splintered, broken and buried, strangled amongst weeds. The field is a backdrop to Youngstown's struggle to keep baseball in the urban community.

Youngstown Babe Ruth League Director Al Franceschelli figures that only seven to eight percent of the league's 350 kids are black.

Franceschelli said that at one time 30 percent of the Babe Ruth League (for kids 13-15) was made up of black players. The league even had three all-black teams at one point.

Now the league is lucky to average one black kid per team.

Basketball is magnet

Like Thomas, he thinks basketball is partly to blame. Black kids would rather play street basketball than baseball in the summer, he said.

He noted that as interest waned among the black community, inner-city fields like Gibson weren't kept up and eventually forgotten.

Ernie Brown, an assistant regional editor for The Vindicator, wrote a column about the phenomenon on April 3, 2004. In "Why has Major League Baseball lost its appeal among blacks?" Brown interviewed his brother Mark, a former baseball player at Mount Union and current treasurer of the Babe Ruth League. In 2004, Mark expected no more than 10 African-American children to participate in the Babe Ruth League that summer.

A little over two years later, Mark said that the situation is "more horrific now."

He singled out the decline of the black family along with transportation as key factors contributing to the decline.

"It's very difficult for single mothers, after working [long] days to try to cart their children around," Brown said. "[Kids] used to be able to ride a bike to games, but not now. No parent would let their kid ride to a game clear on the other side of town and then ride back."

Logistics

There are few inner city parks, so some games and practices must be held far from where a kid might reside, he added.

The problem has hit colleges hard too. Historically, even black colleges have baseball teams comprised of more whites than blacks.

According to a NCAA survey in 2004, only six percent of the Division I baseball players were black, compared with 58 percent of basketball players and 44 percent of football players.

Locally, Youngstown State had no blacks on this year's 33-man baseball roster.

The increase in Latino participation and the cost of baseball could also be responsible for the decline.

In 1991, 18 percent of major leaguers were black, while 14 percent were Latino. In 2005, 8.5 were black, while 28.7 were Latino.

"The Latin players, in their countries, baseball is it," Thomas said.

Money is another factor, as well. Its much cheaper to purchase a basketball or a football, than a baseball, bat and glove. (Although many leagues cover all or most of equipment costs.)

So what can be done before, as Mark Brown said in 2004, "this sport for black males will slowly fade away"?

Outlook

It appears hope is out there.

Young black baseball prospects B.J. and Justin Upton and Delmon Young were all among the top picks in recent MLB amateur drafts. Also, MLB has made an effort with programs like Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities to increase interest in the black and urban communities.

Youngstown isn't giving up either.

Franceschelli and Mark Brown have made it a major priority to recruit more blacks and inner-city kids into the sport.

"We've never stopped trying and I'm never going to stop recruiting kid's from the inner city," Franceschelli said. "It's a major mission to bring baseball back to the city."

Source
 

Poacher

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I really don't know what to say anymore. Articles like these are insulting on so many levels. I guess we're all supposed to cater to black America's wants and needs 365 days a year. What's that? You don't want to play baseball anymore? Well what can we do to make it better for you...boo hoo hoo....

Gimme a friggin' break.

I love the beginning of this article: "Brent Thomas is black..." As if this were an accomplishment or something to be proud of in and of itself. PFFFFT.Edited by: Poacher
 

whiteCB

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Poacher said:
I really don't know what to say anymore. Articles like these are insulting on so many levels. I guess we're all supposed to cater to black America's wants and needs 365 days a year. What's that? You don't want to play baseball anymore? Well what can we do to make it better for you...boo hoo hoo....

Gimme a friggin' break.

I love the beginning of this article: "Brent Thomas is black..." As if this were an accomplishment or something to be proud of in and of itself. PFFFFT.

Yeah pretty much I really don't have anything left to say except where are the articles on the extinction of white CBs and RBs on the collegiate and professional level.
 

Don Wassall

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The whole thing is written from the unstated point of view that blacks are naturally superior athletes and everyone knows it. What amazing racism institutionalized on such a large and daily scale in a country where even the slightest inference that whites might be better at something, anything, than blacks is regarded as the most heinous crime possible.


I skimmed it, I already know what it says without reading itword for word,but what caught my eye was this quote by Thomas: "Would you want to make 10 million now or later?" he asks.


That says a lot imo. About how totally unrealistic blacks are about their chances of making it as a professional athlete, even in the Caste System U.S., and also about their vaunted lack of long-term planning.


First, out of the 17 or 18 million black males in the U.S., how many are going to "make 10 million now" as a basketball or football player. None as a football player, and only a very select few basketball players. Yet many, maybe the majority, of black males seem to believe that they are destined to be professional football and basketball players. And thecorporate media sanctions this completely illogicalviewpoint by rarely refuting it.


Second, baseball careers on average are longer than those of football and basketball players, especially the former. A baseball player need only wait four years until he is eligible to be a free agent, then he can clean up for 10-15 years for huge money. The average star baseball player makes a lot more money over his career than in any other sport and can still retire in his late 30s and live like a king for the rest of his life. Somebasketball players clean up financially, but there is more potential in baseball because it starts 8 position players and 5 starting pitchers plus the key role played by closers compared to 5 starters in basketball, thus MLBwill always have more big-time earners than the NBA. As far as football, I would bet that on average star baseball players earn at least five times what NFLers do over their respective careers, given how much shorter football careers are and how much less football players, because of the huge 53 man rosters and lack of guaranteed contracts, are paid per season compared to baseball players.


This is very basic stuff, but is alien to most affletes and probably also to whites such as the person who wrote this article, who was too busy worshipping Brent Thomas to even notice such a skewed outlook on the relative earning power in professional sports.
 

bigunreal

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This whole "not enough blacks in baseball" thing is becoming a real media crusade. It's discussed constantly, with black ex-players bemoaning the "crisis," and every white jock-sniffer that has access to the airwaves shaking his head sadly and in stunned disbelief about the situation. I confess that I haven't watched much baseball in several years. I think the game has deteriorated to a sad state, through expansion, huge salaries, astroturf, horrible fundamentals, the nasty attitude of too many players, the designated hitter, wild card teams and interleague play, among other things. But on the rare occasion that I have watched at least part of a game (or the incessant highlights on ESPN), I seem to see a whole lot of dark, non-white faces on the diamond. Players like David Ortiz are not black? Funny, most of the "hispanics" seem to have quite a bit of african blood in them. But, this is an "issue" that is gaining momentum, and our corrupt establishment doesn't stop "discussing" these kinds of "issues" in their non-debates until they achieve the desired outcome. That desired outcome here is clearly stated; more American blacks playing Major League Baseball. Maybe they will actually institute some kind of quota system to force teams to hire undeserving blacks as players on the major league level. That would be absolutely no different that what is done in every other industry in our pathetic, collapsing country.
 
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As the previous comments have pretty well covered what needed to be said in detail, I'll just second the notion that this article is a POS without going into details.
 
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