Sunday, May 19, 2024

Book review: Luke Easter

By Ed Piper

I'm reading the recently-released book, Larry Doby in Black and White: The Story of a Baseball Pioneer, about the first Black player in the American League, the same season (1947) that Jackie Robinson broke the color line in the National League for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Doby, a high-average and home run hitter in the Negro Leagues as a second baseman, didn't have any allies on the Cleveland Indians the way Robinson had with the Dodgers in Pee Wee Reese and others. The contrast in the behavior of the managers foretold how things would go: manager Leo Durocher of Brooklyn called a clubhouse meeting before the season, and told his team, "Jackie Robinson is going to be your teammate, and if you don't like it, then step forward and we'll ship you out" to another team, words to that effect.

Unfortunately, in Doby's case, Bill Veeck, the maverick owner of Cleveland, was totally on board with integrating major league baseball. But his manager, Lou Boudreau, an all-star shortstop who also filled out the lineup card, hadn't been brought into the situation. He announced to the team that Doby had joined them, but he didn't do him any favors or try to lighten the way. Five players shook Doby's hand, others gave him an obligatory handshake with a dead-fish shake, while two others turned their backs and walked away.

More pertinent to this blog entry, the book, well-written and researched by Jerry Izenberg, discusses Luke Easter's coming to the Indians in 1949. Easter played for the Padres in the PCL the season before to prepare him for the majors, and in San Diego the big power-hitting first baseman didn't have to deal with the racist Jim Crow rules of the South.

The major league team roomed Doby with Easter--this was after Cleveland won the 1948 American League title following Doby's rough debut, and manager-shortstop Boudreau was named the league MVP--when Luke came up from San Diego. Luke could hit, and he hit homers. Just one thing sabotaged his future with the franchise, situated in a city that wasn't eager to integrate, just as the team wasn't. Easter had a white girl friend, and the white sportswriting press brought this out.

Easter was demoted from the big club, and his career never fully blossomed.

These pioneers had a hell of a time making a way in a sport that resisted change. I mentioned the book to a campus supervisor at a middle school I subbed at Friday (May 17). He commiserated, saying, "Sometimes we don't appreciate what the earlier folks had to go through."

What saved Larry Doby was his wife, Helyn, who was a rock and who had to be the CEO of the family during the baseball season, when Larry would be away for six months or more each year. Helyn had the view that all people are made by God and should be respected. When two of their five kids acted up, she put the pair in Catholic school, where the Catholic nuns weren't afraid to discipline them. Their eldest daughter mentions this, and that her mom had a loving but iron hand in keeping them on the right path.

Larry Doby didn't smoke, drink, swear, or party. His own mother, Etta, insisted when she signed for him to play for the Newark Eagles in the Negro Leagues prior to all of this, that Abe and Effa Manley, the club owners, had to house her son each night after games. Or, barring this, he had to travel home to Paterson, New Jersey, to sleep for the night. He was only 18 when they signed him--prior to his graduation from high school--as a slugging second baseman/outfielder. (He played under an assumed name, so that he could accept a basketball scholarship to Long Island University. But that is another story.)

Saturday, May 18, 2024

LJ track: CIF SDS Finals 5/18

Photos by Ed Piper

Payton Smith (left, La Jolla)
#1 in San Diego Section
#1 in California
Won her 400-meter heat in 54.22


Friday, May 17, 2024

MLB: Pitching a gem

By Ed Piper

A few days ago, I pitched a gem.

In my view, at least.

The night before the Padres game I was contemplating, I eyed a $6 ticket on StubHub and went for it. The service fee (to give the site its cut) was more than the ticket price! $7.

The details: $6.47, to be exact, for the seat. (A resale from someone else.) No tax, the receipt says. $7.21 for "Total fees" at the bottom. A big $13.68 total.

After I hopped on the trolley ($1.25 for seniors each way) and had a good day at the park, I remembered the old days.

Four dollars, including parking, a ticket, and whatever. This was 1993-1994, Qualcomm Stadium, so few people there you could hear this one individual calling out--echo, echo, echo.

The parking was in the dirt behind third base, next to where IKEA ended up. A dirt field, no more. The ticket was for straight-away centerfield, not far behind the fence.

I would sit and read a book while I watched the game on a Sunday afternoon, relaxing and looking forward to the rest of the week.

"Whatever" meant I didn't buy concessions (my parents modeled never buying things from concessions; costs too much--my dad was a Depression kid). So, no other expenses...

I realized recently this type of outing isn't for everyone. One person I asked about going to a game (to the Hated Blue North) said if he was going to go, he wanted to buy good seats. Too expensive for me. A couple of seasons ago, I bought seats in the upper left field area of Petco, and they were $37 each, plus fees (and that was before post-COVID inflation hit).

The Padres were owned by Tom Werner in those days, and the Fire Sale was on. Under 10,000 attended games, so people were pretty sparse at the games.

Oh, the good old days...

LJ FB: Spring workouts

Photos by Ed Piper

Aidan "Carolina" McGill
Second Team All-Eastern League
running back


Thursday, May 16, 2024

Petco Park: Breitbard Hall of Fame

By Ed Piper


Johnny Ritchey is considered the "San Diego Jackie Robinson". A catcher, he played for the Padres in the Pacific Coast League (minor leagues) in 1948. He braved racism and paved the way for many other Blacks and persons of color on the West Coast. Ritchey starred for SDHS, SDSU, and the Negro Leagues' Chicago American Giants. In 2020, the Padres introduced scholarships in his name for high school seniors who have broken similar barriers.



Bob Skinner played baseball at La Jolla High. As a young man, I had his baseball card in the 60's after he was an established major league player with the Pirates. He also played for the Cardinals. 


Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Log: A Day in the Life...of a Sportswriter/Photographer

"Lost in Space" on the Bishop's campus
(see 12:42 entry below).
(Photo by Ed Piper, now escaped)

By Ed Piper

8 a.m. Meeting.

9:02 a.m. Head up I-15 from I-8 junction to CIF Division 3 Track Finals in Valley Center (39 miles away). Take circuitous route via Bear Valley Parkway to Valley Center Road.

9:58 a.m. Arrive outside Valley Center High, parking lot packed, meet about to start. Park down Cole Grade Road on the street. Have to harch up the sidewalk, panting, not yet hot in Valley Center but warming up.

10:02 a.m. First photo shots of the morning inside the high school stadium. Small crowd so far, lots of colorful awnings from each school for sun cover, prep athletes in girls long jump and girls 4x100-meter relay on the field and track.

Planning to stay one hour, then jet back to La Jolla to cover the Vikings-Bishop's girls lacrosse quarterfinal playoff game, starting at 12 noon.

10:02-11:02 a.m. Photos of long jump, relays, girls pole vault (boys not yet started), etc.

11:02 a.m. Hustle back to car in late morning heat. (Avery Redfern, La Jolla long jumper, says, "But it's beautiful out here.") Much warmer now (upper 70's, sunny--unlike La Jolla).

Caught a glimpse of flower stands for Mother's Day tomorrow across the road. Pulled off, they take only Venmo or Zell or cash (no credit cards)--try to set up the Venmo app on my phone, it needs to be connected to a debit card, can't do. Have to say goodbye, maybe go to our local Von's for something later?

The lady says "Sell" (what else they accept besides cash at the pop-up stand on Cole Grade Road). I can't figure that one out. It turns out she means "Zell", but in Spanish, like the good Spanish student I was, you pronounce the "Z" as an "s" sound, so you say "Sell". I didn't get it, rushed off.

12:22 p.m. I hurry from the underground parking lot on the Bishop's campus out onto the lacrosse field above, take first shots. It is already the second quarter, 10:10 on the clock. Phenomenal time arriving, considering Cole Grade Road, and especially Valley Center Road and Bear Valley Parkway--people are up and out, so there is much more traffic than at 9 a.m. earlier in the morning.

12:42 p.m. First half ends, Vikings trailing 7-5. I haven't gone to the restroom since I-8 start at 9 a.m., so the need is urgent.

I go into the Science Building next to the turf athletic field on the Bishop's campus. No problem. But instead of going out the way I came in, I think I'll be smart and learn a new way. Out the door I went--the door locking behind me! I go upstairs and downstairs, and it only leads outside the campus to the side street on Draper.

I walk all the way around, down Pearl--I eye the Racket Stringing Workshop business at the corner of Draper and Pearl--then right on La Jolla Blvd., back in.

12:55 p.m. I take my first photos of the third quarter. Most of the third period has elapsed during my lost-in-space episode! La Jolla now trails 8-6. I tell the Knights trainer, Jason, whom I have known for years, of my Science Building lockout debacle. He smiles, I laugh. Pretty embarrassing.

1:26 p.m. The Vikings drop a 12-10 heartbreaker, end of their season.


LJ baseball: Senior Game 5/10

Photos by Ed Piper


Andrew Cho

Declan Kelly
Centerfielder-pitcher

Shortstop Corey Druse


Pitcher Cole Roberts y familia

Outfielder Chris Monell

Catcher Shane McMillan