Either
at the beginning of spring training or the beginning of the formal
baseball season, the form of spring fever I experience is the need
to write about Curt Flood.
Curt
Flood, the outstanding player for the St. Louis Cardinals, took
the bold step of challenging the so-called �reserve clause� in baseball
that kept players in a state of near indentured servitude, chained
to their teams for as long as the owners may have wanted.
When he was being traded to the Philadelphia Phillies, he refused
to accept this and brought a law suit challenging the reserved clause.
With the support of the Major League Baseball Players Association,
at that time led by Executive Director Marvin Miller, Flood took
the case to the US Supreme Court. Though he lost the case,
his actions set in motion a series of events that within a few short
years�the early 1970s�brought about the collapse of the reserve
clause and the introduction of what came to be known as �free agency.�
To
put it in its bluntest terms, today�s athletes ALL owe Curt Flood
immense gratitude for opening doors that remained shut, and for
helping to bring into existence a system through which many athletes
have become quite wealthy. Yet, in one of history�s supreme
ironies, few of today�s athletes have even a clue as to the person
of Curt Flood and his contributions.
Flood�s
actions would not have been possible without the support of the
Players Association. In Brad Snyder�s excellent book
about Curt Flood and the struggle for free agency, A Well-Paid
Slave, it becomes very clear that Marvin Miller did not
recklessly approach this case, but had a strategic discussion with
Flood, not only about the theory of the case, but also about the
ramifications that Flood would face for taking such an action.
As such, this was a partnership to take on an injustice.
Flood
did suffer, horribly in fact. His life was ruined for years,
and even when he returned to baseball, it was for all too brief
a time. The Players Association, building on the momentum
from the case brought by Curt Flood, was able to challenge the reserve
clause in negotiations and ultimately bring about its collapse.
This victory, however, was too late to salvage the career of Curt
Flood. Though he rebuilt his life, Flood passed away in 1997
never receiving the true acknowledgement and thanks that he more
than deserved.
There
have been numerous calls for Curt Flood to be inducted into the
Major League Baseball Hall of Fame. They have fallen
on deaf ears. The time has not past, however, to persist in
this demand, yet there is a piece that should be added. Part
of the debate as to whether Flood should be in the Hall of Fame
revolves around how one looks at his baseball record. This
is a mistake. Had he not been taken out of baseball there
is little doubt that his statistics would have stood without question.
Yet
the issue with Flood should actually not revolve around his stats.
He and Marvin Miller should both be inducted because of their major
contributions to the sport of baseball. The struggle that
they led was a struggle that transformed baseball and on that basis
alone the two of these giants should be inducted.
It
is important to be clear, however, that the Major League Baseball
owners hate both Flood and Miller (who, by the way, is still alive).
In that sense, the memory of their contribution will disappear into
oblivion unless there is a well-organized effort to bring this to
national attention and compel their entry into the Hall of Fame.
Acknowledgement
of Flood and Miller is not about saying thanks for making it possible
for athletes to gain great wealth, although that alone should have
guaranteed that the beneficiaries of that struggle would have made
this issue central. Rather, the fight against the reserve
clause was a fight against injustice in baseball, an injustice that
guaranteed a privileged position for certain white players; servitude
for everyone else; and immense profits for the owners.
Flood and Miller were champions of democracy and were prepared to
make the sacrifices to expand its reach. This, alone, should
justify their placement in the Hall of Fame.
BlackCommentator.com
Executive Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the
Institute for Policy Studies,
the immediate past president of
TransAfrica Forum
and co-author of, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path
toward Social Justice (University
of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor
in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher. |