Branch Rickey, a universally acknowledged master scout, was also the visionary strategist who waged the war to make black players eligible. It was by no means necessary that he be both a brilliant scout and a brilliant culture warrior. If Rickey’s social vision belonged instead to some idiot/doofus/baseball ignoramus of a GM/owner lacking all of Rickey’s baseball smarts (no names, nominations have been closed), what might have been the fate of black ballplayers?
Since the two skills—scouting out gifted ballplayers and integrating MLB—have nothing to do with each other, we’re lucky that Rickey knew abundantly well how to do both. But it doesn’t take much imagination to consider that having only the desire to integrate baseball, or only the ability to scout talent, falls WAY short of the mark needed to succeed. Let’s explore a little further, and see what might have been if this alternative-universe Branch Rickey had been lacking both in vision and in luck.
Before we do, however, consider Rickey’s dual roles: GM and owner. In a sense, this consideration is redundant, in that "GM= super-evaluator of baseball talent" and "Owner = man with the power to insist on signing a black player," but in recent years these two titles, GM and owner, have diverged sharply. Soon after Rickey’s time, it became a rarity for a man to own shares in his ballclub (Rickey was, I believe, a minority shareholder in the Dodgers) while heading up his team’s personnel decisions. It’s easy to see, but also easy to forget, how holding both jobs at the same time made Rickey’s path towards integrating baseball much smoother than it would have been if he had to convince a heel-dragging boss or a subordinate at every step along that path.
That circumstance is only one of the building blocks helpful to a baseball team seeking to sign its first black player. That first black player was also not necessarily as talented as Jackie Robinson turned out to be, even if it were Jackie Robinson himself. He might have been not only less talented than Robinson was, he might have been MUCH less talented than Robinson. The first ten black players might have been farbelow the abilities of the average black player in the late 1940s. This is fundamentally a sabermetric concept, one that I’ll call your attention by an analogy that Bill has amply illustrated recently: the possibility that a pitcher with above-average abilities could conceivably, just by chance (plus some influences that we assumed wrongly would even out over a season, run-support, fielding anomalies, ballpark, etc.), have produced below-average results for longer than we think possible. Throw "injuries" and "age" into the mix and it’s conceivable that we could have come away with the mistaken impression that black players are inherently just grossly inferior to their white counterparts.
Below find a listing (taken from Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_first_black_Major_League_Baseball_players) of the first 16 black players signed to a major league contract:
Name
|
Team
|
Date of first MLB game
|
Jackie Robinson
|
Brooklyn Dodgers
|
April 15, 1947
|
Larry Doby
|
Cleveland Indians
|
July 5, 1947
|
Hank Thompson
|
St. Louis Browns
|
July 17, 1947
|
Willard Brown
|
St. Louis Browns
|
July 19, 1947
|
Dan Bankhead
|
Brooklyn Dodgers
|
August 26, 1947
|
Roy Campanella
|
Brooklyn Dodgers
|
April 20, 1948
|
Satchel Paige
|
Cleveland Indians
|
July 9, 1948
|
Minnie Miñoso
|
Cleveland Indians
|
April 19, 1949
|
Don Newcombe
|
Brooklyn Dodgers
|
May 20, 1949
|
Monte Irvin
|
New York Giants
|
July 8, 1949
|
Luke Easter
|
Cleveland Indians
|
August 11, 1949
|
Sam Jethroe
|
Boston Braves
|
April 18, 1950
|
Luis Márquez
|
Boston Braves
|
April 18, 1951
|
Ray Noble
|
New York Giants
|
Artie Wilson
|
New York Giants
|
Harry Simpson
|
Cleveland Indians
|
April 21, 1951
|
Five of them made the Hall of Fame-- Robinson, Doby, Irvin, Paige and Campanella-- and you would certainly have to judge Minoso and Newcombe as having put in very strong careers. Quite possibly, you could judge two or three others not to have been complete disappointments: let’s put Jethroe, Thompson and Easter into the "not complete disappointments" category, leaving the other six.
If Brown, Bankhead, Marquez, Noble, Wilson, and Simpson had been the first six black players signed to a MLB contract, would there have ever been a seventh?
Let’s imagine further that Paige had been signed at the age of 42, as he was, and discovered, like many another 42-year-old former superstar, that his skills were no longer what they had been, not a very far-reaching imaginary trip.
Let’s further suppose a couple of the better early black players had been signed, as they were, at a rather advanced baseball age, and found the skills that got them signed were no longer what they were, as often happens to baseball players through no fault of their own. Robinson was 27 before he ever played a minor league game—it’s easy to think of players who put up impressive stats through age 27, and then suddenly fall off a statistical cliff. Among young (white) position players on the 1959 White Sox, to pick a team randomly, three put up really strong numbers through age 27, but then did very little beyond that age to add to their accomplishments: I’m thinking of Johnny Callison, Jim Landis, and Johnny Romano. It’s not inconceivable that three of the A-A players listed above, including Jackie Robinson, could have been signed on the basis of their talent through age 27, and simply fizzled out after that. It happens. When it does, you simply have to scrape it off your shoe, and move on: being a star player through age 27 is no guarantee that you’ll put in a full star-level career.
Any number of realistic other possibilities could have easily derailed Robinson’s MLB career. He could have gotten badly injured while playing for Montreal in 1946, and never again played to his capacities. Again, the players who suffer career-ending injuries, and career-crippling injuries, and even early deaths, will remind us how much of a role good luck plays in the careers of players who succeed. Jackie Robinson was lucky, in a way that Branch Rickey couldn’t possibly anticipate, in enjoying robust good health for a decade following his signing.
Or Rickey might have simply passed on signing Robinson. He might have found him too intelligent, too independent, too defiant of authority to be a pioneer in integrating MLB. That is to say, Rickey could easily have been far less perceptive than he turned out to be, and all the traits that made Robinson capable of understanding his situation and acting as Rickey wanted him to act—Robinson’s intelligence, independence, and self-reliance—might have filled a lesser man than Rickey with a desire for a dumber, more malleable, more easygoing personality for his great experiment. Any number of possibilities could have reasonably blocked Robinson’s path.
The good luck enjoyed by all the African-American players, those listed above and all who followed them, derives from Jackie Robinson’s success. For that matter, the beneficiary of his success, and a handful of other early African-American players, was American culture more generally. All it would take for us to appreciate how good the luck was is to imagine its opposite: Imagine if Jackie had gotten badly hurt, and Satch had suddenly played like he was in his early 40s, and Larry Doby’s skills had fallen off a cliff mysteriously upon his entry to the big leagues, and so on, leaving Brown, Bankhead, Marquez, Noble, Wilson, and Simpson as the first six Negro League players (plus those aforementioned injured, diminished, aged etc. players) with substantial big-league careers.
We are here, as ever, dealing with a tiny sample size, after all. It’s now required that every article on this site must include the phrase "tiny sample size," so I’m merely complying with requirements, but one of the great truths that Bill has been pounding through my thick skull these past few years is just how many MLB achievements, accomplishments, and records can be attributed to small sample sizes where my untutored mind saw plenty of sample size.
Before the skull-pounding, I certainly believed that one baseball season is sufficient space for luck, good or bad, to even out. Now, not so much. Bill’s long-established "Plexiglas principle" of entire teams typically bouncing back from good seasons with lesser seasons runs contrary to my expectations before I was exposed to it, and Bill’s recent study of deserved pitching records has convinced me that an entire career can be insufficiently long to paint a fair picture of a player’s true abilities. While career stats often give a fair approximation, of course, it’s not at all uncommon for sheer luck to subtract 20 or 30 wins from pitchers’ career marks, or to add them. But it’s the outliers-- the guys who got screwed out of (or screwed into) W-L records wildly out of whack with their deserts—who cause our eyes to pop.
To give an idea how widespread Bill’s concept (that he has been touting for a long time now) of the huge part luck plays in W-L records has become, here’s a recent article I ran across that incorporates (without credit, mind you) the concept into an article, no part of which should surprise any BJOL reader in the least: https://medium.com/@jeremylehrman/the-unluckiest-pitching-staff-in-history-a7f32a6d19e4?fbclid=IwAR1NSn-u9xtDNV11AYLMo6X-4t1_jVdFyGnOjxaiKHnkKrycKOPpoFsRuuw . The formerly common idea that these worst-case-ever pitchers somehow "pitched to the score," "caved in the clutch," "lacked guts," "didn’t know how to pitch," "were throwers, not pitchers," etc. has flown out the window, and it’s now assumed that their W-L records simply reflect bad luck. Further, they get no credit, and "deserve" none for their poor W-L records, in the sense that over the course of a career, they don’t "get back" their bad luck in the form of undeserved good luck later on (or earlier). They might, and probably do, have some seasons of good luck, but wins and losses don’t necessarily even out, nor do bad luck pitchers necessarily have long enough careers to allow for those seasons to take place. To cite one egregious example, Nolan Ryan, who is the last player to complain about a prematurely shortened career, suffered his most undeserved W-L record at the age of 40. Ryan might have had to pitch another decade or two before, purely by chance, he would run into good luck on a scale that would give him back the wins he deserved in 1987. He might be pitching today, at age of 72, and not once have gotten that lucky yet. Things don’t even out, and certainly not in the sample sizes that comprise one man’s career.
Or the sample sizes that comprise the first sixteen African-Americans signed to MLB contracts. The seventeenth, as some of you have guessed by now, and the reason I cut off my list in April of 1951, is Willie Mays, who immediately emerged as a big-league superstar when he was called up in late May of 1951. Oh, no, wait, Mays actually kind of famously stunk his first week of 1951, which is another danger of small sample size I haven’t mentioned here: if we assume that the first sixteen A-A players had done poorly by chance alone, would Mays have even gotten called up to the big leagues? Or if he had, would Leo Durocher have given him the assurance after he had gone 1-for-25 that Mays was his centerfielder no matter what? Durocher, to his credit (that I am loath to grant this loathsome man), recognized that Mays was a talented hitter despite his small-sample-size showing in May of 1951, but I would argue that any baseball manager in 1951, and especially Durocher, might have begun to draw sweeping general conclusions about the skill-level of Negro League players if the first few had done poorly. In a context of black players uniformly underperforming, Mays might not have gotten called up at all, or if he had, his first 25 at-bats might have been more than enough to get him sent down to the minors, or maybe released entirely. I should look up the NYC papers to see how Mays’ first few games were received in the popular press, even given the precedent set by Robinson’s and Doby’s early stardom.
(OK, I looked up the NY Times for late May and early June of 1951—surprisingly little mention of Mays at all, with an equally surprising plethora of newsprint dedicated to covering college sports, mainly Ivy League baseball and basketball and golf. One misconception of mine did get cleared up: I had been thinking that Mays had gone 0-for-25 and then hit a massive HR off Warren Spahn that jump-started his career, but it turns out that Mays’ HR off Spahn came in the middle of his 0-for-25 streak: one 0-for-12, a HR, and then 0-for 13. The other thing I hadn’t known, or had forgotten, was that Leo’s support for Willie Mays was visibly beginning to crumble: Durocher batted Mays in the middle of the order throughout the long drought, but in Mays’ 8th game, where he finally got ONTO the interstate, raising his BA from .038 to .100, 3-for-30, Durocher slotted him into the #8 hole, and kept him at or near the bottom of the order for almost a month. To me, that signifies that Leo’s steadfast support was not all that steadfast: I can imagine if Mays’ drought had continued another game or two in the #8 hole, the next step would have been a ticket back to AAA, Leo’s insistence to the contrary notwithstanding.)
If Robinson and Doby et al. hadn’t done well from the start, if Rickey and Veeck et al. hadn’t been such keen scouts of talent, don’t you suppose the naysayers in MLB would have been happy to draw the unwarranted conclusion that ALL black players were simply inferior to their white counterparts? On what order—weeks or months or years or decades—do you suppose it would have taken for baseball to become fully integrated, given colossal bad luck? As it was, with all these A-A Hall-of-Famers performing well from the outset, the Phillies, Tigers, and Red Sox didn’t start to integrate their teams until over a decade after Jackie Robinson’s debut. Slow learners, I guess. If they’d actually performed badly, might we still be waiting for the first Red Sox player of African-American descent?
If you arranged players by any arbitrary system of organization—by birth-month, or by the third letter of their last names, or by hat-size—it’s virtually certain that one of those systems would eventually result in at least one mindboggling outcome in a sample size that is too large for you to refute comfortably. If I were to tell you, say, that no major league pitcher with a hat-size of 8 and ½ has won a game in the first three months of the 2019 season, you might (pre-Bill) be tempted to lend some credence to the correlation of hat-size and pitching ability. In 1947, there was (and still is, I’d argue) sufficient racism in America to correlate a poor start by Jackie Robinson with some sweeping statement of the entire black race’s inability to compete in sports at the highest level.
But let’s go in the opposite direction for a moment. Baseball, and America ultimately, caught a real break in Jackie Robinson’s immediate emergence as a superstar. All Robinson really needed to do to show that Branch Rickey was on to something, after all, was to have a mediocre year in 1947—the fact that he won the Rookie-of-the-Year award (and the odd fact that his rookie year was the first year there was a Rookie of the Year award to win), or the fact that the Dodgers won the pennant his first year, merely underlined the broader point Rickey was seeking to make, that black players were, on average, about as good as white players. The great good luck that 7 out of the first 10 A-A players played at, or close to, Hall of Fame levels can’t be overstated—but imagine if the level of play of Robinson and Doby and Campy were at the minimum level, not the maximum, of the first few A-A players. Imagine if, for all their skill, the other A-A players had out-performed them.
This is even more unlikely a scenario than my grim, "bad luck," scenario, in that the first ten A-A players actually DID play at remarkably high levels, but just imagine if (again, by sheer chance) all of them got off to career starts better than Robinson’s or Mays’, if just by chance they blew the lid off MLB even more than they did. Imagine if the first ten A-A players just happened to have their best seasons when they broke into MLB, and if in that first season they had all gotten off to strong starts. Imagine furthermore that the Dodgers and the Indians had won the first three pennants starting in 1947 (which wasn’t all that far from reality) and played each other in the World Series in 1947, 1948, and 1949, after romping to their league championships by 15 or 20 games with 3 or 4 A-A superstars apiece.
Would even the most hardened racist team owner have been able to resist the conclusion that A-A players were pretty good? How many years of their teams getting their ears kicked in on the field would it have taken for baseball to integrate fully? What effect would this have had on integration in America more broadly?
Actually, it’s hard to imagine getting any luckier than baseball did in having so many Hall-of-Fame type talents emerge in the first decade of integration—not only the ones on the list of the first sixteen players above, but also Mays, and Aaron, and Banks and Frank Robinson and others. It’s quite an amazing list of Inner Circle HoF players that you would never get by chance taking ten years’ worth of any other randomly chosen rookies of the same sample size. But if we imagine anyway getting even luckier, and having black talent not only make the impression it did make on MLB but a much stronger impression—that the first ten A-A players played even above the level of Jackie Robinson, Doby, Campy, Satch, Mays, Aaron, Banks, Frank Robinson—there might have been a stampede to sign A-A players based purely on the color of their skin, and not at all on the content of their caliber.
Of course, this too would have been as wrongheaded as my doomsday scenario of all ten early A-A players being flops, and for the same reason, an insufficient sample size of players to base a general impression on, and I can’t speculate precisely as to MLB’s response to inner-circle HoFers making a travesty of the game from the start, only that there certainly would have been some sort of grotesque overreaction.
I will suggest that the overreaction would have been socially beneficial, that teams would have naturally integrated much quicker than they did, that A-A players would have been more numerous early on, and that by, say, 1951 or so most teams would have been at least 50 per cent black (and black Hispanic). More broadly, the country would have had to come to grips with the significance of this development.
Obviously, I think the whole idea of accepting blacks more broadly would have been a great advance, but we also must consider that the effect of A-A domination of baseball might have been disastrous as well. Was the U.S. in the late 1940s ready to come to grips with the idea that black people are at least equal to whites, and possibly even their superiors, in any regard? Would baseball, to stick with this one symbolic realm, simply have shut down rather than accept the evidence of black superiority? (It is false evidence, I remind you, but the exact type of false evidence based on wholly inadequate sample size that we insisted for decades was absolutely true.) I can imagine some racist owners, maybe one whose name rhymed with "Bomb Talkie", tiring of seeing his lily-white team get stomped on for a whole season or two by these Negro upstarts, refusing to field a team against black opponents, or just giving up on owning his team. I can imagine widespread talk of baseball going straight to hell, of white fans boycotting games (especially if their particular teams stunk), of sponsors pulling out of their association with MLB until this whole controversy settled down.
Not that Mr. Talkie would have been the lone racist among owners—as it was, baseball was so slow to integrate that we can only impute most of the owners’ motivations to racism, some of it couched in terms of what "the fans" were willing to accept but obviously Brooklyn’s fans and Cleveland’s fans were no different from fans of other teams—it was Branch Rickey and Bill Veeck and one or two other owners who were themselves simply far less racist. How would a man committed to the principle of white supremacy have responded to clear-seeming evidence of black supremacy? Again, I’ll remind you that I’m not claiming that blacks are superior to whites at playing baseball (though Bill’s comparison by race in the 1987 Abstract continues to blow me away), merely projecting that through some good luck, and a small sample size, the few teams signing black players early on, the Dodgers, the Indians, the Braves perhaps, could have dominated MLB more than they did at first, and created that impression. What would have been the Red Sox owner’s response to losing a hundred games each year while the crosstown Braves, led by superstar Sam "Death-Row" Jethroe, were winning pennant after pennant? Or the Yankees owners’ response to losing a hundred games while the Indians were perennially meeting the crosstown Dodgers in the World Series? Would they have kept their rosters lily-white in perpetuity? Would they have integrated more quickly than they did? Would they have gotten out of the baseball business entirely?
To paraphrase Samuel Johnson, "Depend on it, Sir, when a man knows he’s going to lose 100 games each season in perpetuity, it concentrates his mind wonderfully." Both of these unlikely scenarios, that the first dozen black major leaguers could have played much better or much worse than they actually did, are possible only because of the small sample size involved, but I wonder what effect either extreme would have had on baseball and society more generally.