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All the Egregious sins by MLB, Shoeless Joe Should No Longer have to Say in Ain't So for the Hall of Fame

Enough Already, Put Joe Jackson in the Hall

By Rich MonettiPublished 4 years ago Updated 2 years ago 3 min read
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Photo by Nicolas Henderson

Joe Jackson was likely involved in a plot to throw the 1919 World Series. He, along with his White Sox cohorts, had to be suspended permanently for the survival of the game. But almost a hundred years later, can we lift the ban and give him a plaque in the hall. There’s simply far more significant wrongs, and the time is right enough to finally put Joe Jackson in the hall.

As is, A. Bart Giamatti declined Joe Jackson’s reinstatement in 1989, Bud Selig kept the consideration under review during his tenure, and Rob Manfred officially rejected the last petition. Come on, the utter hypocrisy of Major League Baseball.

Let’s begin with baseball’s original sin. The first ban on black players was instituted in 1867 by Pennsylvania State Convention of Baseball in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

The official ban at the major league level occurred in 1890. The final straw, among a number of player mutinies, happened when the St. Louis Browns refused to take the field against the New York Cuban Giants. I wonder if this action altered the outcome of any baseball games in the next 56 years.

The same could be said of American history. Had African Americans been allowed to compete in the National Pastime, intergration would have gotten a natural boost, and the Civil Right era might have come much faster.

Nonetheless, the abomination in place, the players then got what they deserved when the owners missed the outcome of the Civil War. The Reserve Clause had its partial beginnings in 1879 and served as baseball’s Peculiar Institution for the next 95 years.

Of course, the U.S. Government didn’t find it a laughing matter when the Federal League sued the National League to apply the Sherman Antitrust Act to baseball. Preventing companies from colluding to set prices or pay scales, the Supreme Court ruled that baseball was amusement and not interstate commerce.

Someone should tell that to owners who ran Curt Flood out of the game when he challenged this system of legalized slavery. Of course, Charles Comiskey has the reputation of being stingy, but by the standards of the day, the assumtion is untrue.

At $93,000, the Sox had the highest payroll in baseball and baseball-refernce.com proves that Eddie Cicotte was not held out at the end to block the $10,000 bonus that would have come with a 30th victory. (See September 24) Still, his players - like most workers - weren't probably in lock step with their pay.

That said, the buck must stop here, according to Tim Hornbaker’s Turning the Black Sox: The Misunderstood Legacy of Charles A. Comiskey “”Not every athlete deserved the money they thought they were personally worth, and it was up to a discerning owner to figure out who truly merited the big bucks,” Hornbaker affectionately conveys Comiskey’s reasoning.

Such logic works perfectly in the absence of the free market. You know, the same place where Hornbaker can easily judge the value of his work, and the location of the banks, where the owners laughed all way to.

Anecdotally, Ty Cobb made 20,000 a year, and Joe Jackson, his certain equal, made a paltry $6,000 a year. Window dressing to the larger crimes, I’m not arguing against the immediacy that Jackson’s infraction required, but isn’t it time we let the offense go.

Is there really a danger that baseball players will suddenly miss the message Commissioner Landis sent a hundred years ago. This especially since the free market largely legislates the gambling issue out of existence.

Pete Rose takes care of the rest of the problem. But if Joe Jackson continues to be left out of the hall, we diminish far more significant areas where baseball itself should be saying it ain’t so.

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Rich Monetti

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