There are St. Louis baseball fans of a certain age (translation: over 65) who will swear up, down, and sideways that the Cardinals never threatened to go on strike to protest Jackie Robinson's integration of the major leagues in 1947. But do some online searching and there it is, big as brass, from the New York Herald Tribune of May 8, 1947. It's best summed up by this entry from the Encyclopaedia Brittanica:
"Some Dodger teammates openly protested against having to play with an African American, while players on opposing teams deliberately pitched balls at Robinson's head and spiked him with their shoes in deliberately rough slides into bases. Not everyone in baseball was unsupportive of Robinson. When players on the St. Louis Cardinals team threatened to strike if Robinson took the field, commissioner Ford Frick quashed the strike, countering that any player who did so would be suspended from baseball."
I include this not only because we're approaching the 60th anniversary of the strike story, reported by legendary sportswriter Stanley Woodward, but because it serves as a reminder of how foggy we can all get when we swear our allegiance to and define big parts of our lives by a professional sports team.
A number of media outlets (including Fox 2) have been lambasted by some fans (which in this case is, literally, short for fanatics) demanding that newspapers, radio, TV, and online news sources stop reporting about the death of pitcher Josh Hancock. Like Bill Maher says when he skewers the White House "I couldn't make this stuff up, folks."
Hancock was reported by eyewitnesses to be visibly intoxicated the night of the crash. Managers at Mike Shannon's offered to get him a cab or give him a ride. He was overheard saying he'd been ripped by Tony LaRussa for staying out drinking and being late for a game. The night before that game, Hancock was involved in a wreck. In Sauget. At 5:30 a.m.
Ahem. None of this is to imply Josh Hancock was anything but a stand-up guy in the clubhouse. He apparently signed autographs for kids. His teammates thought the world of him. But it appears he died as the result of drunk driving. We're lucky no one else was killed. So where is the problem in all of this?
The answer is hidden deep inside the minds of people who identify so completely with a multi-million dollar business--in this case, the Cardinals--that their judgement is impaired.
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devas_yb_ecarg
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stlweatherfanatic
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Banger11
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mincooper
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mimi38
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mimi38
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I'm a reporter for Fox 2 and host of The Jaco Report, seen Saturdays at 6:30 p.m. and Sundays at 8:30 a.m.
Member Since: 9/13/2006