2007 marks ten years since the passing of baseball
legend Curt Flood. Many of today’s sports enthusiasts, including
those who follow baseball, have little sense of the man and his
contributions to the sport of baseball.
There were two Curt Floods. There was Curt Flood
the baseball player who had a 162 game average of .293 and a career
high of .335. There was the Curt Flood who received seven consecutive
Gold Gloves. There was Curt Flood the All-Star player.
Then there was the other Curt Flood. There was the
Curt Flood who challenged the notorious “reserve clause” which bound
players to the clubs that owned their contracts. In 1969 when
the St. Louis Cardinals attempted to trade Flood to the Philadelphia
Phillies, he refused to move. Taking this to court, he proceeded
to the U.S. Supreme Court in a case that came to be known as Flood
v Kuhn. Flood, with the backing of the Major League Baseball
Players Association (the union of the players) attempted to break
a system that was the equivalent of a 20th century indentured
servitude. Though the Supreme Court ruled against Flood, Flood’s
actions set in motion a series of events that ultimately led to
the elimination of the reserve clause and the emergence of the system
of “free agency,” which most Major League baseball players take
for granted.
In taking these actions, Flood’s career was effectively
ruined and the owners, who resented his actions, went on to ensure
that Flood would not be considered for the Hall of
Fame. Though many people over the years have raised the call to
right this great wrong, it has fallen on deaf ears. With 2007 upon
us, perhaps the time has come for more voices to be heard.
Flood’s actions took place in the context of the great
battle to expand democracy that was represented by the social movements
of the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s. Flood became a champion for
the goals of those movements on the field of baseball. While Jackie
Robinson, by his presence, broke the color line in baseball, Flood,
by his actions, challenged the feudal-like system
that restricted the ability of players to get out from under the
thumb of the team owners. In that sense, Flood was more than a
symbol, but was as much an agent of change.
In 1997 Curt Flood died from cancer. In the subsequent
years, those who have raised his name to be advanced into the Baseball
Hall of Fame have been dismissed. While there are many people who
believe that Flood’s record, plus his sacrifice, deserve his being
placed in the Hall of Fame, there is no organized constituency that
has been willing to push the envelope.
The time has come for this to change.
The Major League Baseball Players Association, for
instance, which stood with Flood in his legal challenge, does not
normally take a position on who goes to the Hall of Fame. Given
that they are a union of players this makes sense under normal
circumstances. Yet the Curt Flood case is not normal, and
that is precisely why the Players Association should
be at the forefront of demanding that Flood be inducted into the
Hall of Fame. Flood took a stand on behalf of all baseball
players. He is not simply an icon of a constituency of
fans, such as “Shoeless” Joe Jackson from the Chicago White Sox
of the early 20th century (denied entry into the Hall of Fame due
to his being accused, though never convicted or proven, of being
connected to the 1919 Chicago “Black Sox” scandal). Flood was the
person who threw himself on the barbed wire that encircled the baseball
players, making it possible for others to jump over not only the
restrictions imposed by the reserve clause, but to jump over him
as well.
Flood’s actions are those that organizations from
within the Black Freedom Movement, whether the NAACP, the Coalition
of Black Trade Unionists or the Black Radical Congress should embrace
and extol. Yet even within our own movement, there has been silence,
a silence that seems to have represented some combination of having
taken for granted the courage and vision of this great man, along
with simply forgetting him altogether. The fact that upon his death
so few great baseball players, of whatever race or ethnic group,
showed up to pay respect was an insult to Flood’s commitment. That
Black players did not show in mass is nothing short of humiliating.
We need symbols of courage to inspire us forward,
but also to remind us that the job of overcoming injustice has not
yet been accomplished. 2007 needs to be the year where we take
one small step in redressing a wrong: Curt Flood needs
to be in the Hall of Fame!
BC Editorial Board member Bill
Fletcher, Jr. is a long-time labor and international activist who
currently serves as a visiting professor at Brooklyn College-CUNY. He
is the immediate past president of TransAfrica Forum. Click
here to contact Mr. Fletcher. |