Get That Nigger Off the Field: An Oral History of Black Ballplayers from the Negro Leagues to the Present
Saturday, January 16, 2010
Art Rust Jr., author and radio host, dies at 82
January 16, 2010
Art Rust Jr., Deaths, Get That Nigger Off The Field, Obituary, WABC Radio
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Get That Nigger Off the Field: An Oral History of Black Ballplayers from the Negro Leagues to the Present
Monday, January 11, 2010
How Willie Mays and Ruben Gomez slugged it out in Puerto Rico
January 11, 2010
1955 Caribbean Series, Fight, New York Giants, Ruben Gomez, Santurce Crabbers, Willie Mays
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Willie Mays and Ruben Gomez
were not only teammates on the New York Giants from 1954-58, but were
teammates on arguably the greatest winter team ever assembled, the
1954-55 Santurce Crabbers. Both were integral players on a team that
would run away with the 1955 Carribbean Series championship. Mays
anchored an outfield which included Roberto Clemente and Bob Thurman.
Gomez chiefed a staff which included "Sad" Sam Jones, Luis Arroyo and Bill Greason. With their infield including George Crowe, Ron Samford, Don Zimmer and Bus Clarkson, many experts have said that this team could hang with any of the great teams in baseball history.
As wonderful as the team played, things were not harmonious between two
of it's biggest stars, Gomez and Mays. Before a January exhibition
game. Gomez and Mays engaged in a scuffle over a turn in batting
practice. According to an Associated Press report,
Santurce club president Pedrin Zorilla described the events as followed.
"Gomez started kidding Roberto Clemente, his teammates who was having his swings," Zorillia recalled. "Gomez said he wanted to get in a couple of swings but batting practice pitcher Milton Ralat said Clemente wasn't through yet. Gomez still kidding, sat on home plate. Mays was behind the cage, watching the horseplay, and stepped out to ask Ralat to pitch to him while the other two decided their argument. ... Finally, Ralat threw some slow ones to Mays. He hit one directly at Ralat, knocking off his glove. Ralat got mad and said something like, 'What are you trying to do, kill me?'
"That led to arguing between Ralat and Mays and finally got to blows. Gomez tried to intervene to halt it. Mays apparently mistook Gomez' intentions and gave him a shove. Gomez, unexpecting it, went down."
Many other reports have Gomez going down as a result of one of Mays punches. Damage control quickly ensued and the two squashed their beef. The Associated Press reported that Gomez said, "There's nothing to it. We both consider the case closed and are good friends."
Mays went on to deny the fight.
"We want to make clear there was no fight and you can say without reservation that there is no difficulty between Gomez and myself."
Days after the incident, the Victoria Advocate reported that Mays left the Santurce team as a result of the fight. Mays told the International News Service that he was leaving Puerto Rico because, "it was just too much." He cited the 154 games he played with the Giants and the additional 62 games with Santurce as, "taking too much" and "not being fair to the Giants."
Mays left Puerto Rico and returned two weeks later for the playoffs. Mays went hitless in his first 13 at-bats in the series, until he hit a two-out, two-run walk-off homer in the 11th inning of Game Six. He then went 11-for-13 in the next three games to finish with a .462 average (12-for-26) and leading the series in RBIs.
Gomez chiefed a staff which included "Sad" Sam Jones, Luis Arroyo and Bill Greason. With their infield including George Crowe, Ron Samford, Don Zimmer and Bus Clarkson, many experts have said that this team could hang with any of the great teams in baseball history.
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Willie Mays and Ruben Gomez in Santurce |
"Gomez started kidding Roberto Clemente, his teammates who was having his swings," Zorillia recalled. "Gomez said he wanted to get in a couple of swings but batting practice pitcher Milton Ralat said Clemente wasn't through yet. Gomez still kidding, sat on home plate. Mays was behind the cage, watching the horseplay, and stepped out to ask Ralat to pitch to him while the other two decided their argument. ... Finally, Ralat threw some slow ones to Mays. He hit one directly at Ralat, knocking off his glove. Ralat got mad and said something like, 'What are you trying to do, kill me?'
"That led to arguing between Ralat and Mays and finally got to blows. Gomez tried to intervene to halt it. Mays apparently mistook Gomez' intentions and gave him a shove. Gomez, unexpecting it, went down."
Many other reports have Gomez going down as a result of one of Mays punches. Damage control quickly ensued and the two squashed their beef. The Associated Press reported that Gomez said, "There's nothing to it. We both consider the case closed and are good friends."
Mays went on to deny the fight.
"We want to make clear there was no fight and you can say without reservation that there is no difficulty between Gomez and myself."
Days after the incident, the Victoria Advocate reported that Mays left the Santurce team as a result of the fight. Mays told the International News Service that he was leaving Puerto Rico because, "it was just too much." He cited the 154 games he played with the Giants and the additional 62 games with Santurce as, "taking too much" and "not being fair to the Giants."
Mays left Puerto Rico and returned two weeks later for the playoffs. Mays went hitless in his first 13 at-bats in the series, until he hit a two-out, two-run walk-off homer in the 11th inning of Game Six. He then went 11-for-13 in the next three games to finish with a .462 average (12-for-26) and leading the series in RBIs.
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Aroldis Chapman signs with the Reds

Saturday, January 9, 2010
Fallout over 2010 Baseball Hall of Fame voting
January 09, 2010
2010 Baseball Hall of Fame Voting, Andre Dawson, Barry Larkin, Bert Blyleven, Hall of Fame Election, Hall of Fame Results, Roberto Alomar
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In light of Andre Dawson's election to the Baseball Hall of Fame, much attention has been given to the BBWAA writers whose votes put Dawson in, but kept out the likes of Roberto Alomar, Bert Blyleven and Barry Larkin. Many non-voting writers, fans and bloggers cried foul when some BBWAA writers said they didn't vote for the likes of Alomar and Larkin just to make them wait a year. There was also outrage over the reportedly five BBWAA writers who submitted blank ballots, including Jay Mariotti who said he didn't care if he was thrown out of the BBWAA.
Howard Bryant of ESPN.com wrote an excellent piece entitled, "Outrage at HOF voting baseless", where he reminds us the likes of Cy Young, Joe DiMaggio, Whitey Ford, Rogers Hornsby, Roy Campanella and Yogi Berra weren't elected on the first try. Look at that list. Cy Young (the most wins ever), Rogers Hornsby (2nd highest career batting average all-time), Joe DiMaggio (arguably the best centerfielder ever) weren't "first-time" Hall of Famers. Bryant argues that, "Alomar cannot claim superiority over anyone on that list. Each was eventually inducted, and the free world survived." Bryant is right, the clock keeps turning and Alomar and Larkin will see their plaques next to these legends in the near future. This doesn't mean that the process isn't flawed.
While past transgressions in voting don't justify this year's results, maybe the publicity given to this year's vote will start a shift in voting where the BBWAA writers vote for candidates that are Hall of Fame material starting from the first year they are on the ballot. There is no need to make a candidate wait just because the sole reason for not voting is that it is their first year of eligibility. Let's begin to dissolve the mythical sanctity of the "first ballot" Hall of Famer by voting for players like Alomar and Larkin as soon as they're eligible.
Monday, January 4, 2010
Prediction: Nobody will be elected by the BBWAA to the Hall of Fame in 2010
January 04, 2010
2010 Hall of Fame, Andre Dawson, BBWAA, Bert Blyleven, Hall of Fame Election, Hall of Fame Voting, Roberto Alomar, Tim Raines
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