9781970159639-1970159634-The Negro Leagues are Major Leagues: Essays and Research for Overdue Recognition (Champions of Black Baseball)

The Negro Leagues are Major Leagues: Essays and Research for Overdue Recognition (Champions of Black Baseball)

ISBN-13: 9781970159639
ISBN-10: 1970159634
Author: Cecilia M. Tan, Adam Jones, Leslie Heaphy, Joe Posnanski, Todd Peterson, Adrian Burgos Jr., Larry Lester, Gary Gillette, Sean Forman, Sean Gibson
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Society for American Baseball Research
Format: Paperback 176 pages
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ISBN-13: 9781970159639
ISBN-10: 1970159634
Author: Cecilia M. Tan, Adam Jones, Leslie Heaphy, Joe Posnanski, Todd Peterson, Adrian Burgos Jr., Larry Lester, Gary Gillette, Sean Forman, Sean Gibson
Publication date: 2022
Publisher: Society for American Baseball Research
Format: Paperback 176 pages

Summary

The Negro Leagues are Major Leagues: Essays and Research for Overdue Recognition (Champions of Black Baseball) (ISBN-13: 9781970159639 and ISBN-10: 1970159634), written by authors Cecilia M. Tan, Adam Jones, Leslie Heaphy, Joe Posnanski, Todd Peterson, Adrian Burgos Jr., Larry Lester, Gary Gillette, Sean Forman, Sean Gibson, was published by Society for American Baseball Research in 2022. With an overall rating of 4.3 stars, it's a notable title among other Black & African Americans (United States History, State & Local, Baseball, Americas History) books. You can easily purchase or rent The Negro Leagues are Major Leagues: Essays and Research for Overdue Recognition (Champions of Black Baseball) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Black & African Americans books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.23.

Description

“It’s so important to have all of [this] information accessible to everybody. The more information that can be made available and the more visible that we can make it the better. It's the history of the whole game, not just part of it. People are finally going to get to see both sides of the story and get to understand that the Negro Leagues were very, very important, the players were very important and, most importantly, they brought the community together with a common love.”
—Adam Jones, 14 year MLB veteran
“We are thrilled that MLB has finally acknowledged what we already knew to be true—that the Negro Leagues were indeed major league. We are particularly happy that the numbers of these legendary players will become a part of the official record and, undoubtedly, people will become more curious about these players’ stories.”
—Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum
The Negro Leagues are Major Leagues is a unique introduction to the history of the segregation of professional baseball, telling the story of the Negro Leagues while simultaneously recounting how researchers, statisticians, and historians rebuilt and rediscovered the history of Black baseball that was pushed into obscurity in the wake of Jackie Robinson and integration. Recent examinations of the partially rebuilt statistical record led scholars, notably Todd Peterson, to call for the Negro Leagues to be recognized as major leagues, alongside other historical professional major leagues such as the Federal League and the Union Association. In December 2020, Major League Baseball itself declared its recognition of the Negro Leagues as major leagues, and the work to integrate the statistics compiled by Gary Ashwill and the Seamheads Negro Leagues Database into stats site Baseball-Reference.com began.
To accompany the launch of the newly revamped, integrated site, Baseball Reference commissioned a set of articles to introduce Negro League history and the effort to rebuild the fragmented record of that history to a new audience. Supplemented here with additional articles on Black baseball from the SABR archives, the articles in this book represent multiple groups of pioneers. The contributors include descendants of Negro Leaguers, a major leaguer, and past and present giants in the field of Negro Leagues research. Larry Lester sits alongside 14-year major league veteran Adam Jones, Sean Gibson—the great-grandson of Josh Gibson and director of the Gibson Foundation—joins Vanessa Ivy Rose, the grandaughter of Turkey Stearnes, and Bob Kendrick, the president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. Jules Tygiel and Jerry Malloy share pages with Todd Peterson, Gary Ashwill, Leslie Heaphy, Adrian Burgos, Jr., and many more.

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