The Big League Years. |
Note: Yesterday
we followed Satchel Paige’s wild ride from childhood to the cusp of World War
II. Now the rest of the story.
Such achievements [his 19–3 record, a 1.93 ERA, and 208 strikeouts in 205 innings in the Puerto Rican League in 1940] naturally revived interest in Paige despite
ban in the Negro Leagues for jumping to the Mexican League in 1938. The Kansas City Monarchs were now in the
new Negro American League and could
not promote Paige to their regular roster until the ban could be dealt
with. Paige started the 1940 season with
his barnstorming team. The Negro
National League (NNL) Newark team
claimed they owned rights to Paige. It took a meeting between the two league presidents to work out a deal that
let the Monarchs promote him to their squad and let Newark keep several players
they had poached from the NAL.
Paige debuted with the Monarchs in
September, pitching 5 innings and striking out 8.
In the ’41 season Paige appeared
with the Monarchs but was also frequently leased
out to other teams between starts.
He boosted attendance
wherever he played. To facilitate this
arrangement J.L. Wilkinson, Monarchs
owner, leased a DC-3 to ferry Paige
to distant engagement. He and the
pitcher shared the fat payments
which could range from $250 a game for appearing with a small town squad to
more than $2,000 or a third of the gate to play for top Negro League
teams. The arrangement was making Paige rich. By the early 40’s with many top players in
both Major League Baseball and the Negro leagues in service, Paige was making
$40,000 a year, triple the average salary of a Yankee and even topping star
slugger DiMaggio.
Paige as a member of the Kansas City Monarchs, the premier team of the Negro Leagues. |
Despite the distractions, Paige
helped lead the Monarchs to their third straight NAL championship with a 26-4
record.
In the preseason of 1942 Dizzy Dean
organized a barnstorming team of recently
drafted Major Leaguers to play their last games before entering the
service. Paige beat Dean’s All Stars 3–1
at Wrigley Field—the first ever
appearance there by a Negro team. Then
on lease to the Homestead Grays he
beat Dean’s team again 8-1 at Griffith
Stadium in Washington, DC.
After the Monarchs captured the NAL
pennant they went on to face the Grays of the NNL for the first Negro World Series since 1927. Paige started game 1 and hurled 5 shutout
innings before being lifted for a reliever.
The team won 8-0. Two days later
he entered the second game in the 7th inning.
After a shaky start giving up four in the bottom of the 8th to make it
5–4 Paige settled down and fanned Josh Gibson to retain a one run edge. The Monarch’s picked up four more in the 9th
to ice the game. Both Gibson and Paige
would embellish this encounter in
their memoirs to have him fanning the
slugger in the bottom the last inning.
Paige started game three on two days
rest but was pulled after a bad start.
The Monarchs went on to win anyway.
In game four the Grays padded their injury riddled roster with players
from other teams. The Monarchs played
under protest. Paige entered the game as
a reliever but the Gray’s and their fresh bats won. The protest,
however, was upheld the results nullified.
In the replay of game four Paige missed his scheduled start when he was stopped for speeding in rural Pennsylvania. Arriving in the 4th inning he threw on his
uniform and spikes and entered the game without warming up with the Gray’s
ahead 5-4. He did not allow a hit or run
and struck out six and the Monarchs went on to a 9-5 win sweeping the
series. Paige had appeared in all four
official games as well as the nullified one striking out 18 in his 16 innings.
During the war years Negro league records are not even complete. Paige was slipping, but still
effective and made annual appearances in the East-West All Star games. In ’43 his Monarch’s suffered a setback as
many top players entered the service, including Buck O’Neil. Paige started the war years classified as 1-A despite his lingering shoulder
problems. He was reclassified with a 2-A deferment for “essential service,”
despite the fact he was in fact over age. He had listed his birthdate at 1908, two
years late, on his Selective Service
forms putting him at the upper range of Draft
liability. He finished the war years
as a 4-F.
In ’44 Paige painted himself into an embarrassing corner when he told the press that he would lead a player strike unless the proceeds of the All Star Game was donated to war relief. Owners retaliated by releasing evidence that he had accepted
under-the-table appearance fees in ’43 and was demanding more that
year. The revelation angered both the
public and his fellow players. Paige was
banned from the All Star game that year.
By 1946 the Monarch stars in the
service returned to the field. The NAL
had folded and the Monarchs were in the NNL.
To retain a World Series, the season
was divided in half with the winners of the first half facing the winners
of the second. The Monarchs faced the Newark Eagles that fall. In game one Paige entered the game as a
reliever in the 7th with his team trailing.
Not only did he hold the line over the final four innings he struck out
eight and allowed no runs. He even contributed offensively, hitting a
single. He was credited with a win. The rest of the series did not go as well,
working as a reliever Paige played in games 2 and 4, giving up several hits in
each and was charged with the losses.
Paige, who was scheduled to be used in relief, once again, never showed up for game 7, which
Newark won, claiming the championship.
Paige did not explain his absence but team owners believed he was meeting with Bob
Feller to plan a post season barnstorming tour.
That would be the swan song of Paige with the
Monarchs. He did go on that now
legendary barnstorming tour with Feller, who lined up a hectic 35 games in 31
cities in in 27 days including split city double
headers. Feller and Paige each
recruited top talent and each toured on DC-3s emblazoned with their names. Feller played a few games against other
opponents, but Paige’s team faced only Fellers.
Before the tour was finished Paige threatened
to sue Feller, widely regarded as one of baseball’s straightest arrows for allegedly not paying him his full due. That was patched up and tour continued. In the end Feller pitched 54 innings against
Paige's team and given up 15 runs, an average of 2.50 per nine innings and
Paige had pitched 42 innings and allowed 18 runs, or 3.86 per nine
innings. Paige, facing some of the best
hitters in baseball, was still an effective pitcher, but clearly not as dominating as he once was.
In 1947 Feller took his All Stars
back on the road, but Paige was not invited, supposedly because Feller had booked heavily in the South.
Unable to hook up with any regular team, Paige peddled his own
services on a day by day, game by game basis.
People still paid good money to see a living legend.
Meanwhile Paige suffered the bitter disappointment of watching his younger former Monarch teammate Jackie Robinson become the first Black player to be signed to a Major League contract. Paige believed, rightfully, that it was his
dominating performances in the late ‘30’s and early ‘40’s that first started
Major League baseball seriously considering
breaking the color line. He believed he had earned the honor. But Branch Rickey and other owners knew
that Paige was manifestly unsuited
to be the first. His pride would never have allowed him to start with a minor league contract, as
Robinson did, working his way to the Big League club. And his prickly,
aggressive personality would never have allowed him to withstand the vicious abuse Robinson endured without lashing back.
It was painful to watch other
players follow Robinson. But he was not forgotten. Bill
Veek, who had signed Larry Dolby the
first Black player in the American
League and who was owner of the
Cleveland Indians remembered the dazzling display he had seen in Los
Angeles a decade earlier. His pitching
ace, Bob Feller, confirmed that Paige was still a quality pitcher and just the thing to fill a late season need in the bullpen. On his 42nd birthday he signed a $40,000
contract to pitch for player manager
Lou Boudreau. Two days later on July 9, 1948 Paige
became the oldest Major League Rookie
to debut.
Boudreau pulled starter Bob Lemon in the
4th inning with the Indians trailing 4-1 to the St. Louis Browns. Paige had
not even had time to learn the Indians
signs. Pitching cautiously to avoid crossing
up his catcher, Paige allow two men to reach base before tossing caution to
the wind and unleashing the still
considerable heat of his famous fast ball.
He also used his hesitation
pitch, a change-up most major
leaguers had never seen. He settled down
and held the Browns for two and a half innings before being lifted for pitch hitter Dolby.
Six days later he notched his first Major League victory against the Philadelphia Athletics just one day
after he had thrown an exhibition game in Cleveland against the Brooklyn Dodgers. He got his first start and second win
against the Washington Senators at
home on August 3. More than 72,500 fans
jammed the ballpark, a record for a
Major League night game. His next
start, at Comiskey Park against the Chicago White Sox resulted in largely
Black fans jumping the turnstiles joining 52,000 paying customers. They saw Paige go the 9 inning distance,
shutting out the Sox 5-0 and silencing
critics who said he could never
pitch a complete game again.
Despite the American League ruling
his hesitation pitch would be considered
a balk, Paige continued to pitch
effectively as the Indians were in a heated
pennant race with the White Sox.
They had an impressive pitching
roster led by Lemon and Feller, who after a shaky first half came on strong
with a nine game winning streak. With a
boost from Paige, the Indians clinched
the pennant. He the season with a
6–1 record, 2.48 ERA, 2 shutouts, 43
strikeouts, 22 walks and 61 base hits allowed in 72 2⁄3 innings. It was good enough to earn Paige serious consideration
for Rookie of the Year. In the World
Series against the Boston Braves he
made only one brief appearance in relief.
But when he team took the Series in six games, Satchel won his World Series ring.
Unfortunately the ’49 season did not
go as well. Paige fell to a record of
4–7, 1–3 in starts, with a still decent 3.04 ERA. It was his first losing season in baseball.
To make matters worse, Bill Veek, his biggest champion had to sell
the team in the off season to pay for his messy divorce. The new
owners released Paige unconditionally. He could not catch on with another Big League
team for the 1950 season.
He returned to barnstorming then
signed with the Philadelphia Stars
in the Eastern Division of the NAL.
Veek came to the rescue again when
he returned to baseball as owner of the St.
Louis Browns. Paige was the first
player he signed. His first game back in
the Bigs was on July 18, 1951. He
finished a lackluster season with
the bottom dwelling Browns with a
3–4 record and a 4.79 ERA.
Despite Veek/s assurances of his
continued support, Paige was nervous when the tough, blunt Rogers Hornsby, reputedly a former
Ku Klux Klansman, became manager the next year. But Hornsby had batted against Paige in their
barnstorming days and had faith in him. Hornsby used Paige regularly and to good
effect. But Hornsby could not help an
otherwise awful team and was fired by Veek less than halfway through the
season. New manager Marty Marion liked what he saw and continue to use him regularly in
relief. By All-Star break he had appeared in 25 games and Yankee Manager Casey Stengel named him to the American League squad, the first
Black pitcher ever selected. He game
was called on account of rain before
Paige could take the field. Still it was
an impressive year with a wretched team—finishing 12–10 with a 3.07 ERA.
Unfortunately the next season was
rocky. Stengel did still name him to the
All Star game and this time he got in but had a shaky inning charged with three
runs. The whole season was like that.
Although he had a respectable 3.53 ERA, the Browns were still awful and he had
only a 3-9 record. In the off season
Veek was once again forced to sell the team and Paige was released.
Paige and basketball clown legend Goose Tatum in the short-lived baseball version of the Harlem Globetrotters fielded by promoter Abe Saperstein. |
Despite some high earning years, Paige had never
saved a dime. Now he had to go back
to barnstorming. He even tried to set up
a baseball version of the Harlem Globetrotters with Abe Saperstein and toured for a while
with the basketball team performing
a baseball skit with Goose Tatum. Paige returned to the Monarchs, then on its last legs, for a humiliating $300 a month and a portion
of the dwindling gate. In 1955 he
signed a contract with the Greensboro
Patriots of the Carolina
League. It was Paige’s first time
playing in the Deep South where racial tensions were running high and resistance to integrated baseball was still
strong. When he was scheduled to
start against a Phillies farm team, protests were lodged in an attempt to block his appearance. Only Hurricane
Diane, which forced the cancelation of
the scheduled game, prevented what
could have been a very ugly incident.
When Veek bought a controlling
interest in another Phillies farm team, the Miami Marlins of the International
League, he once again signed Paige, this time over the strenuous objection of manager Don
Osborn. Osborn said he would only
use Paige in exhibition games. Veek had
Paige pitch against Osborn’s line up and he fanned all of them. Now a believer, Osborn taught Paige how to throw a curve ball for the first
time in his career, re-invigorating
his career. He finished the season 11–4
with an ERA of 1.86 with 79 strikeouts and only 28 walks. It was impressive enough so that when Veek
once again sold the team, Paige was kept on for two more seasons. In ’57 he went 10–8 with 76 strikeouts, 11
walks and 2.42 ERA.
In ’58 Osborn was replaced by Kerby Farrell with whom he clashed repeatedly for his casual
disregard for curfews and chronic lateness. He was fined
and sat down several times. He finished
the season 10-10 and announced he would not return.
With the Negro leagues now just a thing of the past, Paige kicked around
the edges of baseball for the next several years, returning to barnstorming,
hurling for the Havana Cuban Stars in
1959, and spending a stint with the Triple-A
Portland Beavers of the Pacific
Coast League in 1961 at the age of 56.
He appeared in middle relief in 25 games, struck out 18 and giving up
only 8 earned runs.
The first of two autobiographies, an "as told to" book penned by sportswriter Dave Lipman and the source of many of the pithy quotes atributed to the veteran hurler. |
In 1962 Paige worked with ghost writer David Lipman on the first of two autobiographies, Maybe
I’ll Pitch Forever.
In 1965 Charlie Finley, maverick owner
of the Kansas City Athletics in
Paige’s long time adopted home town,
signed him for a single appearance
at a game where Negro League old timers
were honored. Paige was brought in
to start to the surprise of the crowd
who had watched him being attended by a “nurse”
in the bullpen. After a shaky first
inning against the Boston Red Sox but
allowing no runs, he settled down to send the next six players back to the
bench, one of them a strike out. As
planned he was replaced in the fourth inning.
The wildly cheering crowd serenaded
him singing The Old Gray Mare.
It was Paige’s last appearance in the majors, although it did not end his
association. In 1968 Atlanta Braves owner William Bartholomay signed him as a pitching and catching coach, although
the title was mostly ceremonial. The job,
with no real duties, was enough for Paige to finally earn enough Major League service to qualify for a pension.
The year before he appeared in his last game in organized baseball for the
Peninsula Grays of Hampton, Virginia in the Carolina
League against the same Greensboro Patriots who had been forced to cut him
before his first game for them more than a decade earlier.
In 1969 Ted Williams gave his induction
speech at the Hall of Fame bluntly
demanding the inclusion of Negro league players, which had been resisted by the Hall of Fame foundation
and by many owners. Bowie
Kuhn, the new Commissioner of
Baseball announced a committee to
study the issue and make recommendation. Everyone agreed that Paige had to be the first inducted. But Kuhn’s first plan, announced in February
of 1971, for a separate Negro wing
of the Hall of Fame was met with an
uproar for smacking of segregation.
Forced to back down, when the
specially appointed Negro Committee
came forth with their nomination of Paige the next year, Kuhn took pains to announce that he would be
enshrined, as would all subsequent Negro honorees, in the Hall on an
equal basis.
At his induction ceremony that
summer some in Baseball thought that Paige was not grateful enough to them for the honor and was bitter. Paige in his speech had merely outlined the long and sad past of segregated baseball. After the induction despite some backlash, Paige enjoyed renewed attention and was invited to appear on numerous television shows. He became a fixture on the lucrative
sports banquet and Major League Old Timers circuits.
In 1981 Lou Gossett Jr. played Paige in the television bio pic Don’t Look Back. He was paid $10,000 as a consultant on the film. A
few weeks after the May broadcast, an obviously ill Paige made an appearance at
a Negro leagues reunion in Ashland, Kentucky where he was the special honoree. It was his last major public appearance.
On June 8, 1982 Paige died in his Kansas City home of a heart attack during a power outage. He was not quite 76 years old.
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