Consider This from NPR - Trying to Reverse the Decline of Black Players in Major League Baseball

Episode Date: July 11, 2023

Baseball was once known for breaking racial barriers in the U.S. But now, Black representation in the major leagues is at its lowest level in decades.This year, MLB did something to try and change tha...t, by staging the first annual HBCU Swingman Classic. It's an opportunity for players from historically Black colleges and universities to play in front of scouts and executives on a national stage.NPR's Juana Summers reports from Seattle on MLB's efforts to reverse the decline and recruit Black American players.In participating regions, you'll also hear a local news segment to help you make sense of what's going on in your community.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This message comes from Indiana University. Indiana University performs breakthrough research every year, making discoveries that improve human health, combat climate change, and move society forward. More at iu.edu forward. Baseball was once known for breaking racial barriers in the U.S. On April 15, 1947, at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, Jackie Robinson makes his first appearance as a Major League Baseball player and shatters a half-century of tradition. And since then, Black players have been many of Major League Baseball's leading lights breaking records on their way into the history books. Players like Willie Mays. What a catch by Willie Mays!
Starting point is 00:00:50 Hank Aaron. What a marvelous moment for the country and the world. A black man is getting a standing ovation in the deep south for breaking a record of an all-time baseball idol. And Ken Griffey Jr. But now, Black representation in the major leagues is at its lowest in decades. This year, the MLB did something to try and change that. All-Star Week kicked off this past weekend in Seattle by putting a new generation of diverse
Starting point is 00:01:26 talent in the national spotlight. The first annual HBCU Swingman Classic, an opportunity for players from historically Black colleges and universities to play in front of scouts and executives on a national stage and on national TV. Consider this. The decline in Black representation in baseball has been steep in recent decades. Now the major leagues and Black former pro players are trying to reverse that trend.
Starting point is 00:02:25 From NPR, I'm Juana Summers. It's Consider This from NPR. I played with like 17, 18 percent. So, you know, there was only, I think, one year where I was the only black ballplayer on my team. That's Ken Griffey Jr., the swingman himself, a legendary Hall of Famer and former Seattle Mariner. Back in 1991, black American players made up 18 percent of MLB rosters. Now that's down to 6.2%. That means, in terms of numbers, It's been 76 years since Jackie Robinson integrated the National League. league. But Black American representation in baseball has been declining in recent decades for a number of reasons that are economic, structural, and cultural. And last year's World Series was a sobering moment for the sport. It was the first series without a single
Starting point is 00:03:37 American-born Black player. The Swingman Classic is pro baseball's latest attempt to try to change the way pro baseball looks by bringing 50 players from 17 historically Black colleges and universities to All-Star Week. One of those players is Mike Dorcian. Stepping on that field is going to be a surreal experience, and I just want to take it all in and enjoy the moment. The 22-year-old was a catcher at Coppin State University in Baltimore for the last four years. We first met
Starting point is 00:04:05 him a couple of weeks before the game while he was working at a baseball training gym in Queens, New York, not far from where he's lived his whole life. Same swing, just think about hitting it on the floor. Better. Dorsey and trains younger players who, like him, want a shot at making a career out of baseball. Come in every single day because if they see I can do it, it gives them more of a belief that they can do it as well. When we talk, Dorsey keeps referring to his Queens baseball community as a family. Everybody's very proud of me and excited for me. And for me, I never imagined playing on a big league field
Starting point is 00:04:41 with Hall of Famers in the dugout. So I'm still trying to wrap my head around it. He traces his lifelong love of baseball to his father, who introduced Dorsean to the game long before he can remember. He says both of his parents grew up in working-class families. Dorsean's dad is from Haiti and his mom's from Puerto Rico. His father couldn't pursue pro baseball himself, but it's been his dream for his son. So my dad is my idol. Seeing him make so many sacrifices to give me the opportunities I've had, all I want to do is give back to him by making it as far as I can and not letting up no matter what. For most of his life, Dorseyan says he didn't really see anyone who looked like
Starting point is 00:05:24 him playing his position in pro baseball. I don't think you see any black catchers in the league right now, at least main black catchers on the team. And this is going to get not only at the catching position, but every position on the field. A bunch of HBCU minority kids going out there on the biggest stage, performing, showing everybody what they have, showing that they're prospects. There was not a single HBCU alumni on any Major League Baseball roster on this year's opening day. There rarely is.
Starting point is 00:05:54 But when we caught back up with Mike Dorcian in Seattle at a workout, nearly every face in the crowd was Black, and HBCUs were well-represented, not only among the players, but also the coaches. Hall of Famer and National League MVP Andre Dawson has seen the numbers of Black players in the sport dwindle right before his eyes, which is why events like this one mean so much to him. This is groundbreaking, especially for these young men, I like to call them.
Starting point is 00:06:36 It provides them with an opportunity to get a look for a change. Why do you think it's so important at an event like this to kick off MLB All-Star Week to focus on HBCU students specifically? Because I think the game itself was lost to a degree, and that's a task in itself to get them back their involvement, their participation in the game. When you start asking why there are fewer U.S.-born Black players in the league, you get a variety of answers. Dawson points to the draw of popular sports like football and basketball and the loss of cultural cachet. Others point to the economics.
Starting point is 00:07:11 Today, American baseball is very expensive. It's a travel sport. The equipment is expensive. The travel is expensive. It's become more professionalized than ever. That's longtime sports journalist and NPR contributor Howard Bryant. He says the rising costs of elite youth baseball mean that young players whose families can afford it get more visibility, which is usually white players in suburban areas. This is a specific problem with baseball. And the reason isn't because it's a natural evolution away from the sport. There are financial and structural barriers to entry that are guaranteeing the disappearance of the Black player. Bryant thinks the problem starts early and continues as players get to college,
Starting point is 00:07:54 where there's also a lack of diversity in the sport. Ultimately, this is all reflected in pro baseball. I don't look at it now as 6 or seven percent of Black players at the major league level. Tony Regans was hired by MLB in 2015 to tackle this very issue. He's MLB's chief development officer and the sport's highest ranking Black executive. I just don't look at it that way because I work in a space where I'm around young people that are playing the game at a high level, young Black players, and that are really good. And so I know that this people that are playing the game at a high level, young Black players, and that are really good. And so I know that this is a time where the numbers aren't what
Starting point is 00:08:30 we want them to be at the major league level. I just think that there's going to be a pipeline that we're building that's going to be sustained for years to come. Part of building up that pipeline and improving those statistics is investing in young talent like the players who came to Seattle and sending them the message that there is a place for them in baseball, whether it's on the field or in the front office or on coaching staffs. We pulled Mike Dorcian aside near the end of practice to see how things were going. I'm looking to my right, and I see a Hall of Famer right now.
Starting point is 00:09:02 Okay. When I was growing up, you picked up a bat, you tried to copy Kendrick if you swing, and hopefully this event allows for more of that, more people to get some nice idols, look up to some minority athletes that are doing it at such a high level, and just motivate the youth to pick up again at baseball again. What's going to be the biggest thing going through your mind tomorrow when you step into that ballpark? The biggest thing going through my mind is probably going to be
Starting point is 00:09:30 the strikeout on national television. I did. Thank you so much for being here for the first ever HBCU Showcase as we kick off Major League Baseball All-Star Week here in Seattle. I am a big baseball fan and this game just felt different. A black choir from Seattle sung the black national anthem. There was a local drum line with members dressed in bright purple and silver. And from the field to the dugout to the crowd, there were more Black people than I've seen at a baseball game in my life.
Starting point is 00:10:16 While this event put HBCUs in the spotlight on and off the field, the reality is that these schools have limited resources compared to others in Division I baseball. When you go to lower tier colleges, they're out there because they love the game because they're not being seen like they should be. That's Ken Griffey Jr. again. They're not getting the exposure like everyone else is. So they love the game differently than someone who's just good at it. Like the All-Star game itself, the players divided up into two teams. The letters HBCU were written across every player's chest. And now, the reserves for tonight's national team from Southern University. Catcher Mike Dorsey watched the first part of the game from the dugout,
Starting point is 00:11:02 high-fiving and cheering on his teammates. Finally, he ran onto the field in the seventh inning, and he was first up at bat at the top of the eighth. The catcher number 12, Mike Dorsey. A swing and a crack of the bat, the ball flew high and was caught by a player on the national team. Dorsey jogged off the field. Alabama State's Randy Flores doubled, stole third base,
Starting point is 00:11:27 and scored at the bottom of the eighth, and Dorsean's team came out on top, 4-3. After the big win, the American team was presented with a trophy, and players and coaches posed for photos on the field, including Mike Dorcian, but he kept turning over his shoulder and scanning the crowd, looking for one person. This is the man that made my career happen. Is that your dad? Hi, how are you? Hi, I'm Donna. Eric Dorcian said he just had to be there. He flew in from New York that morning to see his son play. When we've been talking to Mike over the last few weeks, he said such wonderful things about how much you and your family have sacrificed to let him live this dream and play. It wasn't a sacrifice. That's our obligation.
Starting point is 00:12:15 Eric Dorcian looked on as his son posed for photos with his teammates. Mike Dorcian was beaming. He even signed a few baseballs for young fans through the netting. It's just an absolutely amazing experience. Great for community back home in Queens. Great for the HBCU community, the minority community. Great for everybody. I just hope it sparks something in the right direction and we get more people that look like me and you in here. Mike, you've been talking a lot about what you hope this does for the sport.
Starting point is 00:12:42 What do you hope comes next for you? That's a question and a half right there. I mean, whatever is planned in the cards for me, I just hope it gives back to baseball if it's not putting me on the big stage. Hopefully the cleats aren't getting hung up in the next few years, but if it does, the first thing I'm going to do is go to the gym and start teaching kids the right way to do things. And to show them that there's a place for them in baseball, too. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Juana Somers.

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