We write as baseball fans with a fondness for the game during the 1960s, when it provided a great escape in that turbulent time. In particular, we share an admiration for former St. Louis Cardinals center fielder Curt Flood. He won seven consecutive Gold Glove awards, was a three-time all-star and played an instrumental role in the Cardinals’ winning three National League pennants and two World Series titles.
Russian Call Girls Lucknow Just Call 👉👉 📞 8617370543 Top Class Call Girl Serv...
Why this is the year baseball should correct its mistake and put Curt Flood in the Hall of Fame
1. Democracy Dies in Darkness
Why this is the year baseball should correct its
mistake and put Curt Flood in the Hall of Fame
Opinion by James E. Clyburn and David Trone
Oct. 7, 2020 at 7:00 p.m. GMT+8
James E. Clyburn, a Democrat, represents South Carolina in the U.S. House. David Trone, a Democrat, represents
Maryland in the U.S. House.
We write as baseball fans with a fondness for the game during the 1960s, when it provided a great escape in that
turbulent time. In particular, we share an admiration for former St. Louis Cardinals center fielder Curt Flood. He won
seven consecutive Gold Glove awards, was a three-time all-star and played an instrumental role in the Cardinals’
winning three National League pennants and two World Series titles.
Flood might have been on track for a Hall of Fame career if it hadn’t been cut short because he took a principled stand
on Oct. 7, 1969, and refused to be traded to the Philadelphia Phillies.
Baseball never forgave Flood for asserting his rights and challenging the long-established order. He played only 13
more games in the big leagues. But his inspiring example has echoed down the years and helped shape the way today’s
players are compensated and treated.
The induction of Flood into the baseball Hall of Fame is long overdue. The organization’s Golden Days committee
should vote to induct Flood when it meets in December. The committee exists to consider those who made significant
contributions to the sport between 1950 and 1969, including players no longer eligible for election by baseball writers.
Flood certainly merits a plaque in Cooperstown.
It is difficult to exaggerate the stunning effect of Flood’s refusal to be traded on Major League Baseball. The late 1960s
were a stirring time of African American athletes making powerful statements — heavyweight champion Muhammad
Ali in 1967 refusing the military draft for the Vietnam War, citing his religious beliefs and going to jail instead; Tommie
Smith and John Carlos raising their fists in the Black Power salute at the Summer Olympics in Mexico City in 1968.
Now, here was Flood insisting on his right not to be treated like a commodity.
Since 1922, when a congressionally mandated antitrust exemption was decided by the Supreme Court, professional
baseball players had been bound to their teams by a contract “reserve clause” that essentially bound them to a single
team, with no negotiating rights. Players could be discarded or traded at will.
Flood was 31 and could probably play for only a few more years at the highest level, but he nonetheless dug in for a
long fight. In December 1969, he wrote a scathing letter to MLB Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, demanding free agency.
“After twelve years in the Major Leagues,” Flood wrote, “I do not feel that I am a piece of property to be bought and
sold irrespective of my wishes. I believe that any system which produces that result violates my basic rights as a citizen
and is inconsistent with the laws of the United States and of the several states.”
Support journalism you can trust when it matters most. Get one year for $29
2. Backed by baseball players union leader Marvin Miller, Flood filed a lawsuit in January 1970 challenging the reserve
clause. The suit reached the Supreme Court in 1972, where Flood lost in a 5-to-3 decision. The justices acknowledged
that the suit had merit, but the antitrust exemption prevailed.
Flood might have been rebuffed by the court, but he had shaken up baseball — and emboldened other players to
challenge the status quo. Three years later, Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Andy Messersmith and Montreal Expos
pitcher Dave McNally, again with Miller’s guidance, challenged baseball’s reserve clause. A labor arbitrator sided with
them, and in that instant, the major leagues were transformed and Flood’s dream realized: free agency for players,
unshackled from the reserve clause.
The impact of Flood’s efforts reverberate today. Last December, half a century after Flood sent his letter to Kuhn,
pitcher Gerrit Cole appeared at a news conference announcing his signing with the New York Yankees a nine-year
contract for $324 million. Cole went out of his way to praise Flood, saying, “I want everybody to know, because
challenging the reserve clause was one of the first stepping stones to ultimately the system we have today.”
Cole also tipped his cap to Miller — long reviled in baseball’s front offices, who less than two weeks earlier had been
elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame. When this December rolls around, it will draw to a close a year when the nation
recognized as never before that Black lives matter and Black legacies should be honored. Inducting Flood into the Hall
of Fame would be a fitting tribute to an African American player who stood up for what was right, even though he knew
there would be consequences for him. It took courage and guts — something we could use more of today.
Read more:
Jonathan Eig: The NBA’s short playoff halt was the sports world’s boldest push for racial justice in decades
Peter Dreier and Steve Rosenthal: The Baseball Hall of Fame must stop its bush-league treatment of Marvin Miller
Jennifer Rubin: Professional athletes outshine the RNC
David Byler: Did protests change Americans’ views of race and policing? Yes, but it’s complicated.
Eugene Robinson: We need Black Lives Matter. The police who shot Jacob Blake prove it.
Sign in to join the conversation