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Perhaps MLB got what they wanted....for fans to debate this issue and bring back the spotlight to stats and players who for the most part are long gone and not frequently talked about. We are talking about a time when baseball was still a classically perfect game played by people of all races, religions and all ages. At the same time it was no where near the perfect game as it kept a large part of the population away based solely on their skin color. Baseball NEEDS this discussion and there is no doubt debates such as the one we see here on these boards are happening everywhere.
I guess I look at the inclusion of the stats from the Negro leagues as more of a comparison and celebration of baseball during a complicated time in our history and not a rewriting of history. In my opinion there really is no right or wrong here and the best of the best deserve to be recognized regardless if their stardom was gained through the Negro leagues or MLB itself. After all...in 100 years will any of this really matter anyway? Somewhere I see in my minds eye ol' Buck O'Neil smiling proudly. |
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Seems like an unproductive comment. Missing the analogy here. Maybe you can give one.
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Really? Take a look around you, notice how extremists take something honorable like the inclusion of NL players into ML record books for example, and push things to the point of dividing people instead of uniting people. It hasn't happened in this particular case but I can certainly see some knucklehead group demanding the trophys back since their family member no longer holds the record.
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Thoughts:
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Jeff, that’s well stated.
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#7
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If we’re going to combine stats like this for baseball, why not do it for other sports?
The NHL never had Russian players, yet the Russians were at least as good as the NHL, if not better. So by the same logic as MLB is using here, shouldn’t the Soviet Championship League - which lasted from 1946 to 1992 - have their stats combined with the NHL? After all, we know Soviet players were just as good as NHL players, and whenever the Soviets played the NHL they did very well. The Soviets weren’t allowed to play in the NHL for reasons out of the players’ control - much like Negro-leaguers. Igor Larianov scored 204 goals while playing for Khimik Voskresensk and CSKA Moscow. Those goals should be combined with his NHL goals, right? But his NHL reference page does not include those stats. Where's the outcry for Igor, who was oppressed by his totalitarian government? I would argue that whatever Baseball is stating as the reasons for this are not what they say. This is about something else. I think it’s known in academic circles as Social Justice. And you’re either for Social Justice or your not. |
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Were Russian players ever explicitly banned from playing in the NHL because they were Russian? If not, what is the basis for comparison? |
#9
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It's Social Justice plain and simple. Like it or lump it. Last edited by SAllen2556; 05-30-2024 at 09:19 AM. |
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#12
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There's also the fact that the white/native/passing Latin players could go through the levels of the minors to get better, while the Negro League players didn't have that luxury. They had barnstorming teams. They had very few jobs available in baseball, so it wasn't an avenue most pursued. Even when I point out that the best players will play in any league, so Josh Gibson would have been great anywhere, it doesn't help the common sense argument. It matters who plays around them for the level of competition. Satchel Paige didn't even play every season in the Negro Leagues. He spent plenty of time playing in other leagues, so those players weren't facing him. Josh Gibson played in Mexico in 1940-41. Oscar Charleston spent four seasons in leagues that aren't consider Major League. This list of greats missing time goes on and on. The Negro League comparison would be similar to MLB just saying in 2024 that if you're born in Texas, you play in the 30-team Texas Major League. Players from the other 49 states can play in the Major Leagues. A Texas League All-Star team would compete with a team of quality 49 staters, but the quality of the league itself as a whole would be much lower.
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#13
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Given the enormous size difference in the white and black populations, it seems highly unlikely that a black league would have had the depth that a white league had, even if the best in one league would have been on par or better than the best in other leagues. Am I understanding it correctly? Here are my thoughts: 1) I don't think that as a starting point, there is anything wrong with raising this question. But it certainly is not a question that has no answer. To give one example... In low-income areas and among certain populations, a career in pro sports (or entertainment) is often viewed as one of the few options that children see as a way to escape their conditions, and therefore in these populations, the focus on sport is often far more widespread than in other communities. Such an approach shifts the math. 2) The arguments that the leagues were equal are from many different data points including black players who played afterwards, many, many barnstorming games, observers etc. While the question you raise does make one pause, once it is combined with empirical evidence, the question needs to change to, "given that black population was far smaller than the white population in the United States during that time, how is it that evidence points to the black baseball leagues being on par with white leagues? 3) The black leagues were a few teams smaller than the white leagues and so it is possible that the leagues in fact would not have had the depth, but because they were smaller, fewer Major League caliber players were needed. 4) I'm also not sure why you would assume that there is no statistical issue with saying that the best black team could stand up against the best white team. While it is not an identical question, it would seem that the smaller available pool would also impact the number of truly great players. 5) Whatever the reasons are, we see that the vast majority of elite athletes today are black. I don't know or care whether that is because they focus in this area more, if there are genetic components etc. but the question you asked could equally be asked about today's NBA and NFL. The fact that we find examples in modern times of a level of talent disprortionately coming from a black population means that some combination of factors makes this possible. I think that the disparity in the available pool of players raises a question, and there are indications that the leagues may |
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#15
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Great to see. |
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A concept I was struggling with is: Where is the data coming from, and how valid, accurate and complete is the data.
Years ago I tried to obtain stats for Satchell Paige. At the time, there wasn't much data, if any to be found. Chalk it up to go with the stories (decent amount of first account stories) and judge from there. Not much argument Paige was among the very best if not THE best, so I pencil him in at the top of my personal list. And assume he could easily give Walter Johnson, Lefty Grove, Koufax, Ryan, Seaver, Maddux, Randy Johnson a run for their money. I found this morning some info about how the recently revealed numbers came to be. "...bless those that spent more than 3 years digging through newspapers and other relics is search of the box scores to make it happen." Ok, alright. Sounds like perhaps enough data has been recently been found to formulate some statistical legitimacy. But is it enough to warrant the new "set in stone" stats to be forever more regarded as gospel. And the records - we are talking Major League Baseball MLB official records, are we not ? The Negro Leagues were not MLB. Kind of like in basketball, the ABA records are ABA records and not NBA records. To anoint an ABA record holder the now new king of an NBA stat record is not correct. There are different Leagues, different leagues have different records and different leagues have overall different talent levels. I am not a soccer guy, but professional soccer may also have different leagues. Again, is it appropriate we blend the leagues and their stats to come up with correct and official "together" records. Although I can now better acknowledge and praise the accomplishments of Negro League players, I still find it difficult to incorporate the numbers we do have and rewrite the record books of MLB. |
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#18
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I think it is an interesting question about whether baseball at some point in time will look to incorporate international records under one umbrella. I do agree that the combining of the records, even if the players are of similar caliber, introduces other issues which make the issue far more complex. |
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