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Henry Kimbro now recognized as the 1947 MLB batting champion

Discussion in 'GatorGrowl's Diamond Gators' started by gatorjjh, Jul 11, 2024.

  1. BA69MA72

    BA69MA72 GC Legend

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    It’s not as if anyone took away any raise the white players lost for leading the AL/NL in some statistics
     
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  2. candymanfromgc

    candymanfromgc Moderator VIP Member

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    Only problem is it didnt happen.
     
  3. hogtowngator

    hogtowngator VIP Member

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    Right or wrong, there were two leagues. To that someone who didn't play in that league won the batting title in a different league is simply revisionism.
     
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  4. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    WRITTEN BY: LARRY TYE
    Negro Leaguers were pros at using charm and humor to deflect tension on and off the diamond. They had to be.

    Half their life was spent playing in the backwaters of the racially-segregated baseball universe that prevailed in America during the first half of the 20th Century, where Black players wore home-stitched uniforms, played on fields with makeshift fences, and earned enough for room and board but not to support their wife and kids back home. The other half they barnstormed the country and the continent, spending so much time dueling with second-rate white teams and dodging the minefields of Jim Crow that they had to laugh to keep from sobbing.

    Sluggers like future Hall of Famer Josh Gibson learned to hit one-handed or on their knees. Hurlers like the incomparable Leroy “Satchel” Paige – another player destined for Cooperstown – took his warm-up throws sitting down, with his catcher stationed behind the plate in a rocking chair. Best of all was a riff called Shadow Ball, perfected by a traveling team Satchel later played for: The Indianapolis Clowns. The hitter swung so hard, fielders reacted so convincingly, and the runner tore down the line so fast that fans could hardly tell that it was pantomime. It was baseball so brilliant it could be played without the ball.

    Another way Negro players coped with their wayfaring life in racist surroundings was to dream up their own lexicon – born from necessity, nurtured by humor. Most outsiders never knew because players never used it with them, and even if they overheard they would not have understood. Which was the point. It let players talk about fans, foes and anything else without worrying about being overheard, the way immigrant parents used Yiddish, Polish or Italian to keep things from their English-speaking children. For the baseball men, their language was about more than secrecy. It fostered intimacy. It was a shorthand for making their world make sense.

    [​IMG]
    King Tut, Oscar Charleston, and Connie Morgan of the Indianapolis Clowns. BL-6547.76

    "My be ball is a be ball ’cause it ‘be’ right were I want it, high and inside. It wiggles like a worm."
    Satchel Page
     
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  5. WESGATORS

    WESGATORS Moderator VIP Member

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    I don't have a strong opinion on this topic, but I do find it interesting. It reminds me a little bit of when the Cleveland Browns moved to Baltimore, and the history of the team did not move with them. I get what they were trying to do, but it was factually inaccurate. It contradicts what happened with the Cleveland Rams (now the LA Rams). Ultimately, it's probably useful that the controversy draws attention to the segregation that existed.

    Go GATORS!
    ,WESGATORS
     
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  6. shelbygt350

    shelbygt350 VIP Member

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    Kimbro played in 64 games in 1947. Ted Williams in 156, so Kimbro played in 41% of Ted's. If plate appearances dont count anymore, how about Matt Batts and Al Lyons? In 1947 Batts hit like .500 and Lyons hit .667.

    All of this is silly nonsense. Do you really think dead people care about their batting titles now?

    What this does is diminish what guys like Ted Williams or Ty Cobb or Joe DiMaggio actually did. Boxing does it right. They divide by weight the divisions. Was Joe Louis better than Carlos Monzon? Was Jack Dempsey better or worse than say Floyd Mayweather Jr? We should simply have the Leagues as Leagues. That way there are the greatest of X vs the greatest of Y. No harm, no foul.
     
  7. TheBoss

    TheBoss Premium Member

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    First you sum up the issue pretty well. No, dead people truly don't care about arguments over meaningless, subjective comparisons and neither should live people. Then you toss out a contrary assertion. Wait! Ty Cobb was a hardcore racist. Even dead, he would care.
     
  8. keefer

    keefer If I Was Any Dumber I'd Be You Premium Member

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    Sounds like we need to start adding some USFL stats into the NFL record book.
     
  9. KronoGator

    KronoGator GC Hall of Fame

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    Definitely AAFL stats, make sure the Dolphins know they weren't the first to go undefeated.
     
  10. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    In his #HallofFame induction speech #OTD in 1966, Ted Williams of the #RedSox said that Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson and other Black stars should also be inducted, as they "are not here only because they were not given a chance."
    [​IMG]
     
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  11. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    Carlton Molesworth, who spent more than 50 years in baseball as a player, manager and scout, died #OTD in 1961. He was the manager of the Birmingham Black Barons when the historic Rickwood Field opened in 1910
    [​IMG]
     
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  12. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    Six months before his MLB debut, Jackie Robinson and Honus Wagner
    [​IMG]
     
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  13. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    Paul Skenes + Randy Johnson
    \[​IMG]
     
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  14. gatorjjh

    gatorjjh A Gator with a Glass half full attitude Moderator VIP Member

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    Thank you Jackie Robinson… but also thank you Branch Rickey
    [​IMG]
     
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  15. orangeblue_coop

    orangeblue_coop GC Hall of Fame

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    Well said
     
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  16. SeabudGator

    SeabudGator GC Hall of Fame

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    But what is being proposed here is not “division” but including negro league records with major league records. This is just broadening our lens on the historical record to give the subjugated an even look - looking at history more broadly to include simple information (statistics). How is that “divisive”? Everyone there then is dead so who is being impacted personally?

    This “inclusion” of all statistics is not divisive but inclusive, and the effort to ignore real history and statistics of all paid baseball players, black or white, sure seems to reject inclusion.
     
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  17. TheBoss

    TheBoss Premium Member

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    Sorry SeaB, your good efforts may be futile. The issue is the same as it was when the Negro Leagues existed. In those days, a segment of the population argued that letting black players appear on the field with white players would "diminish" white players- and for that matter, white people in general. Now, some feel that black players appearing in the record books with white players will "diminish" them and their achievements. I'm certain the majority of those who take that position sincerely feel they are more enlightened that those who shared their position in the past, but feel that further enlightenment is being forced into their lives. After all, those were the good old days, weren't they? It's not my intent to argue my opinion is better, but I don't mind asserting that there was a time when some people who post on this board were alive that our country was badly flawed in some ways. There have been changes that make life much, much better than those old days, but there's the same sort of resistance today to those changes. My intent is to give opportunities for people to explain and justify their resistance.
     
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  18. manigordo

    manigordo GC Hall of Fame

    It saddens me that this explanation is still needed.
     
  19. candymanfromgc

    candymanfromgc Moderator VIP Member

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    Except it didnt happen
     
  20. TheBoss

    TheBoss Premium Member

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    I perceived that first post, early in the thread, as an ineffective effort at sarcasm, but not everyone does a good job at clearly expressing themselves. The other two posts were in reply to mild statements that recognition of Negro League stars doesn't deprive or diminish old time white players, but you don't really make any sense. Why not go ahead and state your actual complaints? Maybe the substance of your concerns will be more clear and seem less like trolling.
     
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