Tag Archives: Brooklyn Dodgers

"42" Portrays Jackie Robinson as a Master Negotiator

By Jim Camp, Contributor

The new movie 42, mainly about baseball legend Jackie Robinson and his rookie year playing for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, is, in equal parts, a paean to his consummate athletic talent and a bearing witness to his resilience as the first African-American player in big league baseball. Most people who are familiar with the legend know about his skills at bat and stealing bases. Many who aren’t of a certain age don’t know how dealing with racism, even in the sport, was a huge part of his story.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jimcamp/2013/04/18/42-portrays-jackie-robinson-as-a-master-negotiator/

"42" and the Intangible Impact of Sports

By Brian Goff, Contributor

Baseball is life, or so the saying goes.  The release of “42” brings back to light a story that, among its many angles and nuances, turns that saying around — life is baseball.  Sports not only mirrors life but also acts as a vehicle to influence and change it.   Measured solely by revenues, sports rates a relatively minor player as industries go.  Summed together, professional football, baseball, basketball, hockey and auto racing generate only about $30 billion per year.  Even with the major football and basketball revenue producers among college teams lumped in, the total is well under $50 billion.  That’s nowhere near the $100 billion-plus figures for the heavyweights among individual companies, much less entire industries.  Yet, for enormous sales figures and cult-like following surrounding a company like , its ongoing buzz does not come close to sports.  Steve Job and Bill Gates have enjoyed about as much celebrity as any corporate figures, but the events involving Jackie Robinson, Branch Rickey, and the Brooklyn Dodgers took place over 75 years ago and continue to inspire.  Babe Ruth’s exploits in Major League Baseball will soon be 100 years old, but his name is still widely known.  After 100 years, I would expect very little public awareness of names like Jobs or Gates, unless it happens through the naming of some institution.  A reply might be, the Jackie Robinson episode lives on because it centers on an important period of American history — breaking down racial barriers.  Yes, but among all the individual stories that paralleled that of Robinson, it’s his that emerged into and has survived in the common public consciousness.  This kind of influence, however, goes beyond Robinson and race.  Sports is one of the few areas where revenues so radically understate the social impact and awareness of the business.  The very existence of substantial merchandising revenues for sports teams is a tell-tale indicator of this non-monetary interest.  ExxonMobil may generate $400 billion in revenue but hardly anyone walks around wearing caps, jackets, and shirts displaying their attachment as fans do for the Yankees, the Cowboys, the Crimson Tide, or Dale Jr.  In this respect, sports fits with movies, vacations, special romantic moments, and a few other activities where individuals relive, retell, and rehash memorable events over and over, making the initial “consumption value” very durable.  The involvement of thousands of other people in the initial enjoyment offers a relatively unique opportunity for social networking that long preceded the advent of the internet. It’s an interesting exercise to try to add up the non-revenue value of sports to fans.  The amount of time alone, whether at reliving the game in the break room or at home, reading newspapers, blogs, or other sources is not trivial.  Further, the time spent on fantasy sports ultimately derives its value from the sports themselves.  With even modest estimates the number of people involved in these activities along with the time spent and at average wage rates, it’s easy to double the revenue

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/briangoff/2013/04/17/42-and-the-intangible-impact-of-sports/

Magic grateful for many doors Jackie opened

By Barry M. Bloom For the 66th anniversary of the day Jackie Robinson shattered the color barrier as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers, Major League Baseball came full circle at Dodger Stadium. Robinson was the first African-American player of the 20th century to play in the Majors, and the former Lakers great is the first high-level African-American owner.

From: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20130416&content_id=44897352&vkey=news_mlb&c_id=mlb

Cards help pay tribute to Jackie with No. 42

By Jenifer Langosch As has become a yearly tribute to baseball pioneer Jackie Robinson, all players and uniformed staff donned uniform No. 42 on Monday, the 66th anniversary of Robinson breaking the sport’s color barrier by making his debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

From: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20130415&content_id=44870150&notebook_id=44870162&vkey=notebook_stl&c_id=stl

Jackie's legacy celebrated at '42' premiere in KC

By Dick Kaegel This wasn’t your Hollywood red-carpet movie premiere. Not with a brooding grey sky, a breezy 41 degrees and a theater complex set inside a suburban shopping mall. This was Thursday night in chilly Kansas City and yet here came film star Harrison Ford, working his way down the red carpet at the Kansas City premiere of the movie “42,” the story of how Jackie Robinson and Brooklyn Dodgers general manager Branch Rickey, portrayed by Ford, broke baseball’s color line in 1947.

From: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20130412&content_id=44559200&vkey=news_mlb&c_id=mlb

42 Review

By Jim Vejvoda

The life story of Jackie Robinson, the first African-American to play in Major League Baseball, comes to the big screen in director Brian Helgeland‘s 42, a touching, but conventional biopic that never quite sheds its TV movie trappings.

Chadwick Boseman plays Robinson, who in 1947 gets the chance to break the color barrier in baseball when Brooklyn Dodgers boss Branch Rickey (Harrison Ford) gradually brings him up through the farm system and finally signs him to play for the Dodgers.

Rickey’s motives are not entirely egalitarian as he says there’s money to be made from black baseball fans and how he wants his team to win championships. But the motives of Rickey, a devout Christian, are gradually revealed to also be more personal as the story progresses.

Continue reading…

From: http://feeds.ign.com/~r/ign/movies-reviews/~3/AdzPkiAEZiM/42-review

The Trail Blazed By Jackie Robinson

By The Huffington Post News Editors

When the seasons changed in April 1947, baseball and the country began to change as well.

Jackie Robinson, number 42, made his debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers — the sole black man in an all-white league.

“My first thought was, ‘Can he help us win the pennant?'” said Ralph Branca, who was a young pitcher with the Dodgers back then. “I didn’t care about the color of his skin.”

Read More…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Why Jackie Robinson still matters

By hnn

LOS ANGELES — There’s a scene in “42” in which Jackie Robinson, the first black player in modern Major League Baseball, endures intolerably cruel racial slurs from the Philadelphia Phillies’ manager.

It’s early in the 1947 season. Each time the Brooklyn Dodgers’ first baseman comes up to bat, manager Ben Chapman emerges from the dugout, stands on the field and taunts him with increasingly personal and vitriolic attacks. It’s a visible struggle, but No. 42 maintains his composure before a crowd of thousands.

As a viewer, it’s uncomfortable to watch — although as writer-director Brian Helgeland points out, “if anything, the language we have in that scene was cleaned up from what it was.”…

Source:
WaPo

Source URL:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/celebrities/42-shows-why-jackie-robinsons-accomplishments-still-matter-decades-later/2013/04/03/4045b9da-9c74-11e2-9219-51eb8387e8f1_story.html

Date:
4-3-13

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Dodgers celebrate Jackie's legacy at '42' screening

By Ben Platt It’s one of the most anticipated films to be released this spring and on Monday night more than 300 members of the Dodger family, including Major and Minor League players, coaches, staff and their families came to the AMC Westgate 20 Theatres in Glendale, Ariz., for a private screening of “42,” which chronicles how Jackie Robinson was signed by Branch Rickey and broke Major League Baseball‘s color barrier when he played his first game for the Brooklyn Dodgers on April 15, 1947. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at MLB

Branch Rickey Bible signed by 1953 Pittsburgh Pirates surfaces in California

A California book repairer reportedly knew something was unusual when she opened up an old Bible found last week amid thousands of materials donated to the Friends of the Sacramento Public Library.

But little did she know that the 31 signatures on the Bible’s first page along with “Pirates 1953” written in blue ink were a piece of baseball history. Even though that year’s team from Pittsburgh finished in last place at 54-100, the signatures not only included a future member of baseball’s Hall of Fame, the book itself was once owned by a legendary Cooperstown enshrinee, Branch Rickey.

“The Bible had been sitting in my shop for months waiting to get repaired,” Murphy, 65, told the Sacramento Bee. “No one wanted it.”

The Bible was signed by 30 players and manager Fred Haney from the 1953 Pittsburgh Pirates and was given to general manager Rickey, who was best known for breaking Major League Baseball‘s color barrier by signing Jackie Robinson six years earlier when he ran the Brooklyn Dodgers.

So, how exactly did Rickey’s Bible end up in a donation bin in Sacramento?

Rickey’s grandson, Branch Barrett Rickey, said it’s a mystery to him as well.

“It’s the first I’ve heard of the Bible,” Branch B. Rickey said by phone from Texas.

Branch Rickey, who was posthumously inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame, died in 1965. About a dozen of the 30 Pirates players who signed the Bible, including Hall of Fame member Ralph Kiner and broadcaster Joe Garagiola, are still living. But of the five reached by The Bee, none recalled signing the Bible.

“I don’t remember signing it, but maybe I did,” said Eddy Fitz Gerald, a former catcher who lives in Folsom.

Branch B. Rickey, president of the Pacific Coast League, said a number of his relatives live in California, including a sister in Davis and a cousin in Sacramento. But both said they didn’t know about the Bible.

“Much of the stuff from my grandfather was parceled out among five daughters and a daughter-in-law,” Branch B. Rickey said. “The division of who got what was very informal.”

He said it was possible his grandfather had “given the Bible as a gift to a dear friend,” but acknowledged “there’s any number of speculations.”

Baseball collectors told Murphy the restored Bible could fetch as much as $800, the newspaper reports.

Click for more from the Sacramento Bee.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News