KKK and K's- They're All in the Hall
Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2012 11:09 am
I've given up on the Hall of Fame being clean.
First and foremost is because there is no definition for 'clean'.
The Hall of Fame wants its members to be full of virtue, full of import, along with the talent that put them under consideration.
But it is too late.
Although the Hall prides itself on keeping a 'clean' house. It is not.
Joe Jackson is barred from the Hall. He was accused of being in on the fix of the 1919 World Series. Banned from baseball by Judge Landis, Jackson was on the outside looking in.
Not that Jackson cared much (For sure not as much as I do). Jackson's playing days were over before the Hall of Fame was built.
Jackson was barred in a one-man decision. Landis. Landis, who perpetuated the lie that Abner Doubleday invented baseball.
Abner Doubleday, who lived in Cooperstown, where the Hall of Fame was erected, is not in the Hall of Fame.
Baseball people know why.
Pete Rose bet on games while a Manager. He'll never walk the hallowed grounds.
Is Rose a stand up guy?
No.
Did he do something abhorrent to baseball? Even hurting the game? While playing and Managing the game?
Yes.
Would it shock you if I said Ty Cobb did the same thing?
Along with another Hall of Famer, Tris Speaker?
They did.
In their time, gambling was more of a constant in baseball. Bets in the crowd were common and players sent 'clubhouse boys' to make bets for them.
Sometimes on themselves, sometimes not.
In September of 1919, the White Sox had already clinched the pennant. The Indians had clinched second and the Tigers were trying to nail down third and scheduled to play the Indians.
Now, if there was a man who hated black folks more at that time than Ty Cobb, it was Tris Speaker.
There is little proof that Cobb was a member of the Ku Klux Klan, but no doubt, Speaker was a member.
Speaker said, "Don't worry about tomorrow's game" in a conversation with Detroit pitcher Dutch Leonard, outfielder, Joe Wood and Cobb.
"We have second place won already, you guys will win tomorrow, understand?"
Wood 'won' $600 betting the game, which he split with Speaker, while giving $30 to the clubhouse boy for placing the bet.
Cobb didn't act soon enough and didn't get his bet down.
Leonard did not bet.
In 1926, seven years after, Leonard wrote a letter to American League President Ban Johnson, detailing the whole sordid deal. He also produced letters from Cobb and Wood that verified his claims.
Cobb and Speaker, both near the ends of their careers, quietly and quickly, resigned as Player-Managers of their clubs and hinted at retirements.
Nefarious?
You haven't read the whole story.
Ban Johnson knew that an affair of this magnitude would rock baseball.
Like the McGwire-Sosa high that baseball experienced then, Babe Ruth was providing the same during this era.
Baseball was the talk of America, and Ban Johnson did not want that conversation to be about two of its heroes, Cobb and Speaker.
So, here is what Ban Johnson does.
Johnson tells Leonard that he will BUY the letters from Leonard for $20,000.
In effect, buying his silence.
$20,000 is more than what Leonard made over a five year span.
He took the money.
Afterwards, Ban Johnson suspended Cobb and Speaker, without publicly noting why.
And here, here is where the plot even thickens more.
Ban Johnson has his ruling of the suspensions overturned by none other than my good buddy, Judge Landis.
"These players have not been, nor are they now, found guilty of fixing a ballgame."
Landis re-instated Cobb and Speaker to the game.
Although Joe Jackson was found by court to have not been involved with the 1919 Black Sox, Landis didn't care.
He wanted to make his mark at the time and that mark was at Shoeless Joe Jackson's expense.
Seven Years later, without a court ruling, Landis, now in the role of not rocking baseball's boat, pronounces Cobb and Speaker as innocent.
I see that early picture of the first inductees to the Hall of Fame in 1939.
I look at Speaker's face, and that of Cobb, and I think of Judge Landis and Shoeless Joe Jackson.
Cobb, a bigot, a better, and a possible murderer (More about that in a later post) is in the Hall of Fame.
Speaker, A bigot, a KKK card carrying bigot is in the Hall of Fame.
Baseball is not a 'clean' game. Neither, the playing or the business.
The Hall of Fame is no different.
First and foremost is because there is no definition for 'clean'.
The Hall of Fame wants its members to be full of virtue, full of import, along with the talent that put them under consideration.
But it is too late.
Although the Hall prides itself on keeping a 'clean' house. It is not.
Joe Jackson is barred from the Hall. He was accused of being in on the fix of the 1919 World Series. Banned from baseball by Judge Landis, Jackson was on the outside looking in.
Not that Jackson cared much (For sure not as much as I do). Jackson's playing days were over before the Hall of Fame was built.
Jackson was barred in a one-man decision. Landis. Landis, who perpetuated the lie that Abner Doubleday invented baseball.
Abner Doubleday, who lived in Cooperstown, where the Hall of Fame was erected, is not in the Hall of Fame.
Baseball people know why.
Pete Rose bet on games while a Manager. He'll never walk the hallowed grounds.
Is Rose a stand up guy?
No.
Did he do something abhorrent to baseball? Even hurting the game? While playing and Managing the game?
Yes.
Would it shock you if I said Ty Cobb did the same thing?
Along with another Hall of Famer, Tris Speaker?
They did.
In their time, gambling was more of a constant in baseball. Bets in the crowd were common and players sent 'clubhouse boys' to make bets for them.
Sometimes on themselves, sometimes not.
In September of 1919, the White Sox had already clinched the pennant. The Indians had clinched second and the Tigers were trying to nail down third and scheduled to play the Indians.
Now, if there was a man who hated black folks more at that time than Ty Cobb, it was Tris Speaker.
There is little proof that Cobb was a member of the Ku Klux Klan, but no doubt, Speaker was a member.
Speaker said, "Don't worry about tomorrow's game" in a conversation with Detroit pitcher Dutch Leonard, outfielder, Joe Wood and Cobb.
"We have second place won already, you guys will win tomorrow, understand?"
Wood 'won' $600 betting the game, which he split with Speaker, while giving $30 to the clubhouse boy for placing the bet.
Cobb didn't act soon enough and didn't get his bet down.
Leonard did not bet.
In 1926, seven years after, Leonard wrote a letter to American League President Ban Johnson, detailing the whole sordid deal. He also produced letters from Cobb and Wood that verified his claims.
Cobb and Speaker, both near the ends of their careers, quietly and quickly, resigned as Player-Managers of their clubs and hinted at retirements.
Nefarious?
You haven't read the whole story.
Ban Johnson knew that an affair of this magnitude would rock baseball.
Like the McGwire-Sosa high that baseball experienced then, Babe Ruth was providing the same during this era.
Baseball was the talk of America, and Ban Johnson did not want that conversation to be about two of its heroes, Cobb and Speaker.
So, here is what Ban Johnson does.
Johnson tells Leonard that he will BUY the letters from Leonard for $20,000.
In effect, buying his silence.
$20,000 is more than what Leonard made over a five year span.
He took the money.
Afterwards, Ban Johnson suspended Cobb and Speaker, without publicly noting why.
And here, here is where the plot even thickens more.
Ban Johnson has his ruling of the suspensions overturned by none other than my good buddy, Judge Landis.
"These players have not been, nor are they now, found guilty of fixing a ballgame."
Landis re-instated Cobb and Speaker to the game.
Although Joe Jackson was found by court to have not been involved with the 1919 Black Sox, Landis didn't care.
He wanted to make his mark at the time and that mark was at Shoeless Joe Jackson's expense.
Seven Years later, without a court ruling, Landis, now in the role of not rocking baseball's boat, pronounces Cobb and Speaker as innocent.
I see that early picture of the first inductees to the Hall of Fame in 1939.
I look at Speaker's face, and that of Cobb, and I think of Judge Landis and Shoeless Joe Jackson.
Cobb, a bigot, a better, and a possible murderer (More about that in a later post) is in the Hall of Fame.
Speaker, A bigot, a KKK card carrying bigot is in the Hall of Fame.
Baseball is not a 'clean' game. Neither, the playing or the business.
The Hall of Fame is no different.