
There was a portrait of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. that hung in the living room of his widow, Coretta Scott King. It was painted by Curt Flood. There was a proposal introduced by Rep. John Conyers Jr., the Democrat from Detroit, to remove baseball's controversial antitrust exemption. It was numbered HR 21 after the Cardinals' jersey Curt Flood wore for a dozen of his big league seasons.
So Flood, as I've pointed out before, has been remembered by the widow of a Nobel Peace Prize winner and in legislation proposed on Capitol Hill. He doesn't need the Baseball Hall of Fame to validate his contributions to greater society or the mere game.
But the Baseball Hall of Fame needs Curt Flood to maintain its validation as repository of all things of critical importance to the sport. It is the height of oversight that its gatekeepers passed up their last chance to vote in Flood on a regular ballot in 1996, a year before Flood died from throat cancer.
Moore: Flood Owed Apology From Peers | Steele: Greenberg Could Relate
Blackistone: Flood Belongs in Hall | Stradley: Antitrust Meant Just That
Fletcher: Flood a Hero to Today's Players ... Those Who Know Him
Steele: Flood Extraordinary Man of Principle
Blackistone: Flood Belongs in Hall | Stradley: Antitrust Meant Just That
Fletcher: Flood a Hero to Today's Players ... Those Who Know Him
Steele: Flood Extraordinary Man of Principle
It is not easy to inflate Flood's accomplishments on the baseball diamond to the size of Hall of Fame members who played his position of center field, even though he was an All-Star and Gold Glove winner many times over. His batting average and on-base percentage and other offensive numbers don't add up as high. His fielding does.
But it is impossible to find another player whose impact on his fellow players -- the men who make the game what it is -- was greater than Flood's. He staged the singular protest and filed the lawsuit that started the dismantling of baseball's more-than-a-century old policy of keeping its laborers in a sort of servitude somewhere between indentured and slavery.
Flood is the reason there is free agency in baseball and, for that matter, other pro sports. He is the reason athletes can ply their trade for the employer of their choice, pretty much like the rest of us.
Flood in sports means freedom.
It is hard to imagine nowadays, when athletes stand up for little more than their own pocketbooks, that there was someone among them once who stood up for principle. But he was Flood.
It wasn't surprising of Flood. As he once explained, baseball for him, as it was for many other black men of his era, was never just about fun and games.
"What had started as a chance to test my baseball ability in a professional setting," he wrote in his autobiography, The Way It Is, "had become an obligation to measure myself as a man."
It started in the minors in Savannah, Ga., in 1956, less than 10 years after Jackie Robinson broke the game's color barrier and just two after the Supreme Court declared segregated schools were unconstitutional. Flood suffered, and sustained, the same abuse and disrespect as black ballplayers integrating white baseball before him. He was peppered by fans with racial epithets, ostracized by his teammates and, when his team was on the road, forced to retrieve his meals from the backdoor of the restaurants his teammates dined at and take his plate back to the bus to eat in isolation.
"Of the many indignities to which I was subject," he recounted, "few angered me more than the routine in [the] bus."Then, after a long and very successful run in The Show with the Cardinals, Flood was told he was being traded to the Phillies.
That was the way baseball had always done business. It owned its players and controlled them like heads of cattle. The only way they could get from one place to another was if the team decided so.
"If I had been a foot-shuffling porter, they might have at least given me a pocket watch," Flood said. "But all I got was a call from a middle-echelon coffee drinker in the front office."
Flood then did what every major leaguer before him only dreamed of doing but never woke up to do. He refused to recognize the game's so-called reserve clause and announced that he would not go to Philadelphia. He requested commissioner Bowie Kuhn to set him free.
"I do not believe I am a piece of property to be bought and sold irrespective of my wishes," Flood wrote in a now-famous letter that echoed the plea of black slaves in the country more than a century earlier.
In that sense, Flood stood for more than even Jackie Robinson. For Robinson's role as guinea pig in the re-integration of baseball was chosen and managed for him. Flood chose his role himself and paid for it.
Kuhn turned Flood down, and fans and media turned on Flood. How dare Flood thumb his nose at a $90,000 salary as a baseball player, they charged. As Howard Cosell asked of Flood on January 3, 1970, a little over a week after Flood wrote to Kuhn, "What's wrong with a guy making $90,000 a year being traded from one team to another? Those aren't exactly slave wages."
Flood responded: "A well-paid slave is nonetheless a slave."
That only incited fans and the media more. But Flood was unbowed. He surrendered his salary to take his stance, not unlike Muhammad Ali had done to his fabulous living in refusing to join the Vietnam War effort. Flood filed a lawsuit and pushed his case to the Supreme Court in 1971, where it lost, mostly on technicalities, 5-3.
Strapped for cash, Flood attempted a comeback with my childhood Washington Senators in 1971. He lasted 13 games before declaring he didn't have his skills anymore and walking away from the diamond for good. That was the last the game saw of him, but it should not have been.
Four years later, pitchers Andy Messersmith and Dave McNally successfully challenged the reserve clause and were unshackled from baseball's reserve clause. So too was every player after that.
"Mr. Flood ... risked his career when he challenged baseball's reserve clause," Rep. Conyers told Congress when he introduced HR 21. "We all owe a debt of gratitude for his willingness to challenge the baseball oligarchy."
The lawmaker was talking about the rest of us in this country who believe in freedom to earn a living where we desire, not just ballplayers. That's what the Hall of Fame is missing in Curt Flood.











Comments (Page 1 of 2)
a great player in a troubled time. definitly HOF quality!!!!
You gotta be kidding. Who says free agency has been good for the game? As a result of free agency and the gimme-gimme-gimme player's union, ticket prices have risen 50 million bazillion percent, one World Series was wiped out, and indirectly they brought on the Steroid Era. And they're not done yet. Who thinks there won't be more work stoppages and who knows what else in the future? How do you figure that's good for the game? Regarding Curt Flood specifically, he was a fine player and a courageous man. But they don't call it the Hall of the Pretty Good. It is reserved for the cream of the crop, the absolute best who ever played the game. Curt Flood is not among that group.
I cannot believe the ignorant comments posted here. In 1969 I was Cardinals fan. This trade broke up my favorite team. As a 9 year old, I could not understand why Curt Flood did not report. People who say free agency ruined baseball have no idea what they are talking about. Yes, there are flaws in the system. Ask yourself this question. What if I were forced to work for 1 company my whole life in my chosen profession. Of course, they can throw you away anytime they want but you cannot find another employer. In America we have choices. If you are dissatisfied with your employer you can explore (interview) other job opportunities. Before free agency, players were owned. No one forced owners to overpay and give stupid contracts. I had the pleasure of meeting Curt Flood in 1990. What a classy man. Every player fortunate enough to make a living playing the game of baseball should learn the history of the game.
Curt flood was a great man and always treated me and my 4 brothers like sons i met flood when i was 6 years old i was poor white boy in MO he didnt care about race creed money or fame just about what he believed in he was a great man he was so nice to us we had a friendship with him for years after that i didnt even know who he was then just that he was nice to me now looking back i wish i would have known who he was but he was a good man and his motives wasnt money just equality and not to be traded against his will like a slave.
Flood belongs nowhere near the Hall of Fame. The HOF is for what players did on the field. Flood's numbers come nowhere near HOF quality.
If this good ole USA waSN'T SO racist, there would not be a need for BET. WAKE UP BUTT HEAD, you live in the land of the free and the home of the RACIST.
Someone needs to tell blackistone that he doesn't work for BET
and tell him he doesn't need to write the same article over and over again.
You know, normally id agree with some on Blackistones diatribes and continual playing of the race card, but in this instance he hits the nail on the head.
Curt Flood had been through far more indignity and scorn than most of todays players combined, and his dream of being able to choose somewhere else, instead of oh, i dont know, maybe going to a town that would be equally unaccepting of his skin tone, and more bus dinners made him decide hed rather take his fate into his own hands than endure anymore of what hed been tolerating to begin with. Not saying Philly is a bad town, but the freedom to pick ANYWHERE wouldve been invaluable. he couldve played near his hometown in Texas. Having a fanbase much more inclined to him mightve added five six more years, who knows.
Curt Flood had a solid, not HOF, but solid career, his strikeout totals are the most glaring. Less than once per hundred at bats did he whiff on a third strike. Thats beyond amazing. Throw in the fact that he was the sparkplug for some VERY good Cardinals teams and there you go. His movement to daringly ask for the freedom to choose his employer wasnt about the Steroid Era, or overinflated ticket prices, those issues are modern issues involving both players AND owners.
It was about freedom.
Good call, Kevin, a very good article indeed.
does Blackistone evr write a story about anyone other than African-American athletes? And, NO,Curt Flood does not belong in the HOF based on his stats. To say he belongs in because of the way he fought MLB management is ridiculous. I don't mean to sound bigoted, I am absolutely not,but when Blackistone writes a story that has nothing to do with race I will take back every negative word I have evr said about him.
"Fought MLB management"
Really? The guy did ten years, five with the same team, in this day and age THANKS to a player like Curt Flood, players with those rights can refuse a trade, or at least select a few clubs theyd be willing to play for. Why? Because players have lives, not all of them are steroid ridden moneygrubbers, some actually appreciate the communities theyve come to live in for so many years. Without a player like Curt Flood who gave the Cardinals 90%+ of his career to and only wanted the right after so many years to pick a team of his choosing to be employed with, these players dont have that. Thats wrong. Deeply wrong.
The above poster had it correct, imagine if you landed your career gig as a freaking door greeter for WalMart at 7 an hour....would you sit there and take it until the day you retired? Or would you oh, i dont know, venture out and seek more gainful employment, in a more satisfying environment of your choosing. MLB has NO problem voting commisioners in, and for the most part a few of them that are in? didnt really do jack for the sake of baseball. Giamattis big deal along with Faye Vincent? lol, BANNING Pete Rose. Thanks for that other worldy contribution to the game, youre clearly a HOFer!
I know Blackistone gets carried away with the race card, hes a black writer, its going to happen, but not every one of his articles are hands down senseless diatribe about the plight of an undeserving black athlete. He countered this genuinely good article with a needless one about Blount, who obviously doesnt deserve to step on the field this year, or frankly speaking? he will have learned NOTHING. Hes got a full scholarship and the guy isnt happy enough with that to take advantage of?
Curt Flood wasnt a bad man, unlike Vick, unlike Blount, unlike Burress. This man worked his ass off for what he earned, and endured treatments WELL beyond what ANY of the aforementioned athletes have and or will ever endure, jail time included. His opinion about freedom of choice is nothing short of HOF worthy, he didnt ask for one billion dollars. Just the chance to choose where to end his career.
KEVIN, if you can’t stand the heat get out of the blogging business. You next blog on Rush was typical of you. But one of the few times I was going to agree with you. Don’t be such a coward!
You are boring and your opinions stink... BORING
Its interesting that we can't comment on your puff piece on Limbaugh there Mr. Blackinstone. Wonder why that is?? You establish all those "Bullets" then don't allow for comment?
lol heres 2:
1. The NAACP is nothing more than a corrupt special intrest group maintaing AND exploiting the racial divide in this nation.
2. I hope Limbaugh DOES by the Rams, maybe he'll finally fire the Murderer on the team. Go look that up puffer piece guy.
Bunch of overpaid wife beating, animal abusing CRIMINAL sissies in the NFL.
There's no comment part on the Rush piece because Blackistone is nothing more than a hypocritical, racist coward.
Site is a bunch of cowards for removing the comment option from the Limbaugh piece.
Rush will draft Blount from Oregon!!!!!
What say you Kevin?
Why not just let everyone in and forget voting for them....we have dumb down most sports ...why should the hall of fame be any different!!Has this writer ever saw a white athlete he likes....his column on Rush Limbaugh sucked...can you imagine believing Al Sharpton!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Blackistone would you say the same if he was white? Your a reverse racist and only write your fiction if it's about a black man
I remembert Curt Flood with Brock they were great ball players and people he dezerves the Hall of Fame he was a great centernfielder and team mate from what i here people are to critical now days he just wanted to be treated fairly