Rosenthal: Inclusion of Negro Leagues statistics in MLB records only enhances baseball's history (2024)

To anyone questioning the legitimacy of making Negro Leagues statistics part of Major League Baseball’s official record, I pose this question:

How legitimate were MLB’s statistics prior to 1947, when the league was essentially an all-white men’s club?

If you want to argue Josh Gibson didn’t face the best competition, well, neither did Babe Ruth. And if you want to argue Gibson’s newly anointed record-setting 1943 season is less meaningful because he appeared in only 69 games, well, people who follow the sport are forever engaging in such context-driven debates.

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The question of whether Hank Aaron or Barry Bonds should be considered the all-time home-run leader is not exactly settled in the minds of many fans, is it?

I understand why some found it jarring to learn Wednesday that Gibson was the new all-time leader in batting average, slugging percentage and OPS. But I found it more jarring that MLB, before declaring the Negro Leagues a major league in 2020, did not fully acknowledge a generation of elite Black professional players.

That’s what this is all about, really – acknowledging that Gibson and Oscar Charleston and Turkey Stearnes deserve the same recognition as Ruth, Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner and other pre-1947 greats.

Yes, Gibson, Charleston and Stearnes are among the Negro Leagues players in the Hall of Fame. The difference now is their statistics will be a formal part of the baseball narrative, increasing awareness, sparking curiosity. As Reds pitcher Hunter Greene put it, “I’m going to have to do a little bit more research and understand some of the history to kind of rewire my brain on some of the best players.”

Several Major League records are now held by Josh Gibson as he and other Negro Leagues legends officially join the all-time leaderboards.

The statistics of more than 2,300 Negro Leagues players launch today in a newly integrated https://t.co/Z3s2EpgF39 database that presents… pic.twitter.com/UyvCu0pSzi

— MLB (@MLB) May 29, 2024

“People will be, I don’t know if upset is the right word, but they may be uncomfortable with some Negro League stars now on the leaderboards for career and seasons,” Larry Lester, an author and longtime Negro Leagues researcher, told The Athletic’s Tyler Kepner. “Diehards may not accept the stats, but that’s OK. I welcome the conversations at the bar or the barbershop at the pool hall. That’s why we do what we do.”

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Lester was part of a 17-person committee, comprised of historians, writers and statisticians, as well as a former player and GM, that determined which Negro Leagues games counted toward the official record. The sole goal of the committee members was to achieve historical accuracy. Some worked tirelessly to document Negro League records even before MLB became interested. And the committee will continue trying to assemble the most complete account of Negro Leagues games possible, adjusting as more information becomes available.

Blasphemy, you say? Numbers are immutable?

Please.

As The Athletic’s Marc Carig wrote in 2021, “No official records of the American League exist before 1905. For a period in the 1910s, the National League recorded win-loss records for pitchers. But the American League did not, because league president Ban Johnson believed them to be a poor judge of a pitcher’s performance. When the RBI became an official statistic in 1920, some scorers did not understand the rule, leading to chaos in the records.”

Such gaps in information are nothing new. Ty Cobb’s career totals for runs, hits and batting average vary (though admittedly not by much), depending upon the source. The 60-game COVID season in 2020 disrupted the standard 162-game record-keeping. So did, ahem, the strike-shortened seasons in 1981, 1994 and ‘95.

The Negro Leagues presented a different challenge for those trying to set the record straight, not only in uncovering the right information, but also in determining which information to use. Yet take it from John Thorn, 77, who has been MLB’s official historian since 2011. None of this work would have been necessary if baseball had not been segregated in the first place.

“Shortened Negro League schedules, interspersed with revenue-raising exhibition games, were born of MLB’s exclusionary practices,” said Thorn, who headed the statistical review committee. “To deny the best Black players of the era their rightful place among all-time leaders would be a double penalty.”

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But for more than half a century, that penalty was in effect.

When the Special Baseball Records Committee (SBRC) first assembled in 1968-69, the group never considered or discussed the Negro Leagues. It recognized not only the NL (1876 to the present), the AL (1901 to the present) but also four other leagues that existed between 1882 and 1915. Against that backdrop, excluding the Negro Leagues was even more illogical.

Why not acknowledge Negro Leagues statistics, but keep them separate from MLB’s? This strikes at a sensitive issue. Any celebration of MLB’s embrace of the Negro Leagues should be muted, considering how long the league kept out Black players. The merging of stats risks glossing over that point. It’s a complex question without an easy answer. Still, the idea is to end separation, not perpetuate it.

Why not make stats from the Japanese, Korean and other foreign leagues official as well? When I asked Thorn about that, he said he anticipated such “conceptual drift.” The difference, he added, is that none of those leagues offers the evidence of major-league caliber play required by MLB – though Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB), in his estimation, is inching closer. The current version of NPB also did not take shape until 1950, after MLB’s color line was broken.

Baseball’s history is what separates it from other sports. Fans compare players from different eras, trying to figure out who was best. These comparisons are almost always imperfect, apples to oranges. And so it will be with Negro Leagues players. I can’t say if Josh Gibson was better than Babe Ruth. But I’m sure eager to advance the discussion.

(Top photo of Josh Gibson sliding into home at East-West All-Star Game of the Negro Leagues in 1944 at Comiskey Park: Bettmann/Getty Images)

Rosenthal: Inclusion of Negro Leagues statistics in MLB records only enhances baseball's history (1)Rosenthal: Inclusion of Negro Leagues statistics in MLB records only enhances baseball's history (2)

Ken Rosenthal is the senior baseball writer for The Athletic who has spent nearly 35 years covering the major leagues. In addition, Ken is a broadcaster and regular contributor to Fox Sports' MLB telecasts. He's also won Emmy Awards in 2015 and 2016 for his TV reporting. Follow Ken on Twitter @Ken_Rosenthal

Rosenthal: Inclusion of Negro Leagues statistics in MLB records only enhances baseball's history (2024)

FAQs

Will Negro Leagues statistics be incorporated into Major League Baseball's historical records on Wednesday? ›

Following the 2020 announcement that seven different Negro Leagues from 1920-1948 would be recognized as Major Leagues, MLB announced Wednesday that it has followed the recommendations of the independent Negro League Statistical Review Committee in absorbing the available Negro Leagues numbers into the official ...

What impact did the Negro Leagues have on baseball and society? ›

They represent the Negro leagues' remarkable legacy and the communities they cultivated. Black baseball became one of the more profitable businesses in some Black communities. It made a considerable contribution to an enclave economy composed of interrelated businesses that succeeded in response to forced segregation.

How many Negro league players went to the MLB? ›

Below is a list of 52 players who played for major Negro league teams up to 1950 and eventually saw playing time for a Major League team. Of these, nine have been inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Upon the death of Willie Mays, Bill Greason is the sole surviving.

Do Negro league stats count? ›

Major League Baseball's single-season and career leaderboards now have a fresh look. The changes occurred Wednesday, when MLB announced that Negro Leagues stats -- specifically from seven different Negro Leagues from 1920-48 -- have officially been added to its historical record.

Does MLB recognize Negro League? ›

MLB Recognizes Negro Leagues As 'Major League' — Correcting A 'Longtime Oversight' It follows nearly four years of research and a move the league made in December 2020. That year saw both the 100th anniversary of the Negro Leagues and nationwide protests against racial injustice.

Did the Negro League merge with the MLB? ›

Major League Baseball announced it has merged Negro League stats with Major League stats. It's an historic change, and Tigers fans attended their first game Wednesday under the new records. DETROIT (WXYZ) — It's one for the books. The record books.

Which innovation did the Negro Leagues introduce before it was adopted in Major League Baseball? ›

Batting helmets

Many historians cite Negro Leagues star Willie Wells as the first professional player -- Black or white -- to wear protective headgear at the plate.

How did African Americans change baseball? ›

It's hard to overstate the effect Negro League baseball had on South Florida — and America. When Black baseball players were not permitted to join Major League Baseball, they decided to form a league of their own. The Negro League invented wearing helmets, donning numbers on uniforms and instituting night baseball.

How has baseball mirrored racial and historic events in the United States? ›

Racial segregation plagued American society for generations, and sadly, during much of the 19th and 20th centuries, baseball was as segregated as America herself. The result of this culminated in the Negro Leagues, an African-American baseball organization. In so many ways, baseball is a symbol of America.

Did a Negro League team ever play an MLB team? ›

Other than exhibition games played between MLB teams and Negro Leagues teams, there was no shared history.

Who was the first white player to play in the Negro Leagues? ›

The Negro leagues also "integrated" around the same time, as Eddie Klep pitched for the Cleveland Buckeyes during the 1946 season, becoming the first white American to play in the Negro leagues.

Who is the best Negro League player of all time? ›

Negro League legend Josh Gibson is now the all-time Major League batting champion and pitcher Satchel Paige is third all-time for a single season ERA after MLB added Negro League statistics to its historical record on Wednesday.

Why is Negro League baseball important? ›

The NLBM's story began with the founding of the Negro Leagues in 1920, a pivotal moment in sports and cultural history. Founded by Andrew “Rube” Foster, a former player, manager, and executive, these leagues offered a haven for African American and Hispanic players during an era of segregation in Major League Baseball.

How many hits did Hank Aaron have in the Negro Leagues? ›

The Howe Sports Bureau credits Aaron with a . 366 batting average in 26 official Negro league games, with five home runs, 33 runs batted in (RBIs), 41 hits, and nine stolen bases.

How long did the Negro League baseball last? ›

The principal Negro leagues were the Negro National League (1920–31, 1933–48), the Eastern Colored League (1923–28), and the Negro American League (1937–60).

Which Major League Baseball team has the most African Americans? ›

SEATTLE — Of the 30 Major League Baseball teams, the Mariners currently have the most African Americans on their spring training roster. African American players make up a quarter of their current roster, but they are in the minority.

Which African Americans is famous for breaking into Major League Baseball? ›

Ask almost any American on the street who was the first African American to play in modern Major League baseball, and many will say Jackie Robinson. Robinson broke the color barrier when he took the field for the Brooklyn Dodgers on Opening Day, April 15, 1947.

What was the best batting average of all time in the Negro League? ›

Josh Gibson's .

466 batting average for the 1943 Homestead Grays is now the highest mark in Major League history, followed by fellow Negro Leagues standout Charlie “Chino” Smith, who hit . 451 for the 1929 New York Lincoln Giants.

Who was the first Black African American to play Major League Baseball in the modern era? ›

On April 15, 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first African American to play Major League Baseball in the modern era.

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