Just in case anyone is interested UCLA is playing Bethune Cookman game on ESPN2 now. USC and Southern University play next at 11:30PM EST. Games are part of the MLB Urban Invitational Tournament.
Nice to see some baseball!
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as evidenced by that broadcast many feel that way ...quote:by PG: The NCAA has to allow more baseball scholarships in the interest of the game of baseball ... It might increase the number of black players and even give more opportunities to white players, Latin and other players as well. Or would that even make that big a difference?
quote:They are very different sports and to tell you the truth I don't see why MLB owes any sub group anything: are they developing camps on Native American Reservations?... Right now the game is booming in Asia and certain areas of the Americas... what is wrong with that
naturally that is what they say, because then they can convince someone that throwing money at those aspects will fix things.quote:if you watched the game and listened to the commentary... They basicly said the reason for the drop in participation in the innercity was the lack of field's/space to play safely. Also the lack of Quality instruction
I agree ... that's selfishquote:by PG: from a selfish standpoint, I feel we should want every potential great player involved in the game. That includes all people and all races
as it should be ...quote:by PG: We don’t even see players as black or white anymore, they’re just all baseball players
quote:w/all due respect any way you dress that attitude up it seems elitist
would Eck & Pedroia be kicking FGs or shooting thareee pointers?!
that's ok ... like Fungo said, guys fixing their "pet projects" often don't see the bigger problems they create ... ie: you CAN"T bring more guys IN without displacing others OUTquote:by PG: Bee, The above totally confuses me. I don't understand the point you're making.
quote:posted by Catfish in October of 2005:
This thread has been very interesting. Every year around this time the topic of Blacks in Baseball, or the lack there of, comes up. And every year the same reasons pop up: Baseball is too expensive for Blacks; the lack of playing fields in the inner city; and, there is more interest among Blacks in football and basketball than in baseball. While all of these reasons may have minimal impact, none of them is the true reason why, in my humble opinion, there are less Blacks playing college and pro baseball. Honestly, guys, I sometimes feel like Richard Wright's, Invisible Man, on these boards when we talk about this particular topic. My take on this is so different from many of yours.
In my particular area of the country, there are more Blacks in the suburbs than there are in the inner City of Atlanta. The "inner" City of Atlanta is fast becoming half White. Give it another five years and it will be, which will be a good thing for Atlanta. Atlanta was once predominantly White, but Whites succumbed to "White Flight." I work with a large number of those who fled and they regret it. Many of them would like to move back close to their jobs but now cannot even afford to move back into the very house they sold because the property values in Atlanta have literally gone through the roof.
Now please hear me on this: Thousands of Black kids all over the Atlanta Metropolitan area play teeball/baseball during the ages of 5 through 12 or 13. We have baseball parks all over the place and each Spring they are teeming with young Black players. It is around the age of 13 that you see Black kids start to give up baseball. Usually, many of them have played baseball, basketball and football during those years.
Okay, now this kid is in junior high where the high school football and basketball coaches have a huge network to identify those young players who have the ability to play football and basketball. Once those kids have been identified the pressure is on.
I've made this point countless times before: Genetics (Height), for the most part, will determine which of those young players will play basketball. For the other good athletes, the high school football coach has only to point to the College and Pro baseball rosters to "prove" to the young athlete that he does not have a snowball's chance in hell of succeeding in baseball. The football coaches will literally hound these players until either the parents step in, which was our case, or until the athlete gives in. Folks, believe me, it doesn't take much to convince most great Black athletes who also have football abilities to give up baseball. All the coach has to do is ask these three questions: "How many Blacks do you see on (any major D-1 baseball team)?" How many Blacks do you see on (any Pro baseball team)? To these questions the kid will answer, without even having to think about it, either "none" or "1 or 2"). Then the final question: "In which sport do you see yourself having a chance to succeed past the high school level and possibly get any kind of scholarship or even make a living?" I'll let you all answer that question.
Many of you may say that if the athlete "loves" the game of baseball then he won't allow anyone to change his mind. People, we are talking about kids who have dreams of succeeding in life. Many of whom, but not all, and certainly not as many as you would think, come from families whose incomes are below the poverty level. (As a sidebar, and I think many of you can attest, that just because your family's income does not meet the threshold that the government says you should exceed to get out of the poverty level status, does not make you poor.) These kids want to succeed in baseball and if a Black parent, even a poor Black parent thought that it would pay off in the end with some assistance in college and beyond, they would go without, if they had to, to provide there child with the proper baseball equipment, no matter how expensive.
The great Black athletes who remain in baseball definitely do so because they love the game. But even the love for the game is wearing thin for many of these athletes because of the very reason that bbscout said: Black baseball players are not being recruited by college recruiters! It is at this level that Black baseball players are being lost.
I will also say that unless the Black baseball player is a super stud like Delmon Young or a Prince Fielder or a Rickie Weeks they get ignored even by the pro scouts. The regular solid, good, Black baseball player is ignored by everyone. It's almost like a Black baseball player has to be a super stud already, to even get noticed and eventually drafted. If I were a Scouting Director, who was truely interested in increasing the number of Blacks in baseball, I would give my scouts these instructions: "We know that the first 10 or so rounds are reserved for those players who are rated very high, and that should not change. What I would like for you to do is this. Focus part of your efforts on finding Black players who have good solid skills, who are not your stand-outs, but can play the game. Draft them in the later rounds and let's see what happens." I'm simplifying this a lot but I think you get my point.
This seems to be a no-brainer to me. When will baseball recruiters and scouts realize that many Black baseball players have not had the training and instruction that many Whites have had because many baseball coaches in the Black communities lack the skills to teach them. Typically, Black baseball coaches didn't play baseball in college or professionally and truthfully don't really know a lot about what it takes to properly develop a good hitter or fielder, let alone teach the proper mechanics to develop a good pitcher.
Many of you know that I am a realist and I go over board to be fair. But I also call it like I see it. Some of the blame lies at the feet of the Black pro baseball athlete who, once they have retired, does not come back to the Black community and teach our young kids the proper way to play baseball as many of the retired White pro athletes do. I can name Tony Gwynn and maybe a few others and that's it. But, to be fair, there are not very many Black retired pro baseball players to begin with. So, what's the solution?
Until, we put into place some means, or some incentives, for college recruiters and in many cases, pro scouts, to look beyond the stereotypes and know that there are many good Black baseball players out there who love the game of baseball and only need a opportunity to get good instruction, develop and prove that they can play, then nothing will change.
...And so here we are again discussing the same issue that we discussed last year and still, nothing has changed.
quote:Keep in the mind that age old phrase "you can lead a horse to water but you cannot him drink it"
I know many white kids who gave up baseball to play other sports or go into other endeavors while in HS---is that a sin? Not in my mind because they are doing something other than hanging on the street corner
TRhit
quote:cplz quoted:
As long as I've been alive, HS baseball in our area garners a fraction of the interest of the other two majors, basketball and football. Go further north and it also falls in behind hockey.
quote:tr quote:
And yet we have Latino youths playing baseball and they come from households where there are only one or in many cases no parents
quote:so long as they are among the top 750 players in the world at the time.
quote:thats-a-balk quote:
Although baseball is "America's Pastime", would anyone have a problem if all players were Latin or Japanese players on visa's as long as they were the best 750 players in the world?
that's an interesting observation ... others looking at the same data with no bias might conclude that even tho recruited ... most blacks don't want to play college baseballquote:by Catfish: What they did do is show without a doubt that colleges, NOT EVEN BLACK COLLEGES are recruiting Black baseball players...and that's a shame.