
On July 25, 1966, Ted Williams was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.
On September 8, 2021, former New York Yankees shortstop and current Miami Marlins chief executive officer and part-owner Derek Jeter will join him.
What’s not nearly as clear is the kind of induction speech Jeter will give. But if he really wants to follow in the Splendid Splinter’s footsteps, all he has to do is invoke the same kind of social justice activism of the famous 562-word address that Williams delivered 55 years ago, especially the 36-word closing part that turned heads:
I hope that someday Satchel Paige and Josh Gibson will be voted into the Hall of Fame as symbols of the great Negro Players who are not here only because they weren’t given the chance.
On that day, Williams went to bat for all the great persons of color who, because of the color of their skin, were not permitted to play our national pastime until the late Jackie Robinson broke that barrier in 1947.
Of course, baseball was just a mirror image of the institutional racism that affected this country seven plus decades ago. Some would say that racism still persists in sports as well as in life now. But that doesn’t mean it should.
Something else that shouldn’t be tolerated: ageism. That is especially true in a sport whose ratings depend on its older fans watching the games being played. According to data recently released by Street & Smith’s Sports Business Journal and Magna Global, the average age of a baseball viewer is 57, up from 52 in 2006. Of the top major sports, the national pastime has the oldest viewers, with 50 percent of its audience 55 or older, according to the Nielsen ratings. The average age of baseball viewers is 53, compared with 47 for the NFL and 37 for the NBA.
Yet for a sport that relies heavily on its old-timers, Major League Baseball (MLB) sure treats its retired players disrespectfully. That is because there are 610 former players, such as 87-year-old Dave Stenhouse being hosed out of pensions by the league and the players’ association. Dave, who started the 1962 All-Star Game as a rookie for the Washington Senators, turns 88 on Sunday, September 12.
And how’s this for irony: his son, Mike, who also played in The Show, turned 62 last year so, because he is vested, began receiving a MLB pension.
Because they played before 1980, when the vesting rules changed, all the men like Dave Stenhouse have been getting since 2011 are non-qualified life annuities of $625 for every 43 game days they were on an active roster, up to $10,000. Meanwhile, the maximum IRS pension limit is $230,000.
Neither the league nor the union representing today’s players, the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) wants to do anything more to help these retirees; in fact, the nonqualified annuity payment cannot be passed on to a designated beneficiary. So when former Yankees hurler Rich Hinton passes on, the payment he is currently receiving won’t go to any family member, such as his wife Rita.
To date, the MLBPA has been loath to divvy up anymore of the collective pie. Even though the players’ welfare and benefits fund is worth more than $4.5 billion, the union’s executive director, former Yankees first baseman Tony Clark, has never commented about this situation, though many of the retirees are filing for bankruptcy at advanced ages, having banks foreclose on their homes and are so sickly and poor that they cannot afford adequate health care coverage.
In my opinion, Jeter is just the person to deliver a ringing indictment against baseball’s version of elder abuse. Known for his good nature, Jeter’s Turn 2 Foundation is devoted to supporting positive role models for children. As a result, in 2009, Jeter received both the Sports Illustrated Sportsman of the Year Award and MLB’s Roberto Clemente Award for excellence in both baseball and community service. Five years later, Fortune Magazine named Jeter to its list of the World’s 50 Greatest Leaders. According to the magazine, Jeter is “the type of role model player that even a Red Sox fan must grudgingly respect.”
Teddy Ballgame would no doubt agree.
Douglas J. Gladstone is a freelance writer and author of two books, including A Bitter Cup of Coffee; How MLB & The Players’ Association Threw 874 Retirees a Curve.
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