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Tag: Jackie Robinson

  • Things to do in Denver: ‘Santa’s Big Red Sack,’ Magical Winter Nights and more holiday fun

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    “Santa’s Big Red Sack”

    Thursday-Dec. 24. ‘Tis the final season for the 23-year-old theatrical tradition known as “Santa’s Big Red Sack,” which is returning with “nonstop sketch comedy, music and technology bursting at the seams,” according to its creators. It’s celebrating its last year of offensive glee, so buy a shot and make sure to leave your propriety at the door. (Note: This bawdy production is not, as you may have guessed, for kids.)

    It takes place at various times and dates from Dec. 4 to Dec. 24 at The People’s Building, 9995 E. Colfax Ave. in Aurora. Tickets are $39.10 via thepeoplesbuilding.com/tickets.

    (Provided by Denver Museum of Nature & Science)

    Magical Winter Nights

    Through Jan 4. When it comes to holiday light displays in City Park, Denver Zoo Lights tends to have it covered. But don’t count out the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, also located in City Park. The institution this year has launched Magical Winter Nights, its very own holiday celebration running through Jan. 4, 2026. The “dazzling winter wonderland” has “glowing savannah skies, shimmering northern lights and cozy cocoa (to) create memories that will last a lifetime,” according to the museum.

    “This experience takes you on a journey through select areas of the museum, specifically the West Atrium and third-floor diorama halls,” organizers added. “These spaces have been transformed into a series of enchanting winter worlds just waiting to be explored. Under sparkling stars and through a series of immersive scenes, there’s something for everyone in this adventure designed to delight all ages.”

    The first entry is 4:15 p.m. daily, with 21-and-up nights on Dec. 4, 11 and 18. Tickets are $25 for adults, $20 for ages 3-18, and $22 for seniors. 2001 Colorado Blvd. in Denver. Call 303-370-6000 or visit dmns.org for more.

    The "Moonlight Elves" holiday show blends family-friendly variety acts such as aerial dancers, magicians and more. (Provided by Starry Night Productions)
    The “Moonlight Elves” holiday show blends family-friendly variety acts such as aerial dancers, magicians and more. (Provided by Starry Night Productions)

    Fly, Moonlight Elves!

    Through Dec. 7. Denver’s always-curious (in a good way) Starry Night Productions and Theatre Artibus this year are debuting “Moonlight Elves,” which they dub “a circus-immersive holiday extravaganza,” playing Nov. 26-30 and Dec. 3-7 at Savoy Denver.

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    John Wenzel

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  • Statistics from Negro Leagues to be integrated into MLB record books

    Statistics from Negro Leagues to be integrated into MLB record books

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    In a milestone decision decades in the making, Major League Baseball announced Tuesday that it will incorporate the statistics of Negro Leagues that operated in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s into its record books.  

    “This initiative is focused on ensuring that future generations of fans have access to the statistics and milestones of all those who made the Negro Leagues possible,” MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement provided to the Associated Press. 

    Black players were barred from MLB until Jackie Robinson broke the league’s color barrier in 1947 when he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers. That breakthrough ultimately led to the Negro Leagues ending play in 1960.

    “Their accomplishments on the field will be a gateway to broader learning about this triumph in American history and the path that led to Jackie Robinson’s 1947 Dodger debut,” Manfred said in his statement.

    In 2020, in the wake of America’s reckoning with racial injustice following the murder of George Floyd, MLB announced that it was “elevating” seven Negro Leagues that operated from 1920 to 1948 to “major league” status, a move which, at the time, meant approximately 3,400 players in those Negro Leagues could be recognized by MLB for their on-field achievements. Wednesday’s announcement, however, will take that a step further.

    The immediate impact of the incorporation will see Josh Gibson, one of baseball’s greatest players, take multiple records from the likes of Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth, per CBS Sports.

    Josh Gibson Sliding Into Home
    During the 12th annual East-West All-Star Game of the Negro Leagues, American baseball player Josh Gibson of the East team creates a cloud of dust as he slides into home plate during the fourth inning at Comiskey Park, Chicago, Illinois, on Aug. 13, 1944. West team’s catcher Ted Radcliffe is visible at right.

    Bettmann


    Gibson will become the all-time leader in career batting average at .372, passing Cobb’s mark of .366, according to CBS Sports. His career .718 slugging percentage will also be the all-time high mark now, surpassing Ruth’s previous record of .690, and he’ll be the leader in career OPS (on-base plus slugging percentage) with 1.177, passing Ruth’s mark of 1.164.

    “When you hear Josh Gibson’s name now, it’s not just that he was the greatest player in the Negro Leagues, but one of the greatest of all time,” Sean Gibson, Gibson’s great-grandson, told USA Today in a statement Tuesday. “These aren’t just Negro League stats. They’re major-league baseball stats.”

    In 2020, MLB acknowledged that it was seeking to rectify a 1969 decision by the Special Committee on Baseball Records — a group that was formed to determine which leagues would be recognized as “major leagues.” That 1969 committee recognized six such “major leagues” dating back to 1876, but omitted all Negro Leagues from consideration.

    “It is MLB’s view that the committee’s 1969 omission of the Negro Leagues from consideration was clearly an error that demands today’s designation,” the league said in 2020.

    The late Hank Aaron played in the Negro Leagues before entering MLB and eventually breaking Ruth’s career home run record. In the 2023 documentary “The League,” he described the challenges Negro League players faced.

    “We got one dollar a day meal money, and we would buy one loaf of bread and we would buy a big jar of peanut butter,” Aaron said. “That’s what we lived off of for three or four days.”

    — Zoe Christen Jones and Jericka Duncan contributed to this report. 

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  • Contributions of Black players in baseball being celebrated

    Contributions of Black players in baseball being celebrated

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    Contributions of Black players in baseball being celebrated – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    Monday marks the 77th anniversary of Jackie Robinson’s debut in Major League Baseball. When he took first base for the Brooklyn Dodgers, Robinson ended 80 years of segregation in baseball. Decades earlier, a team of Black players were making a name for themselves in the independent leagues of the Midwest. Now, nearly 100 years later, those players and their contributions to baseball are getting their just due and inspiring a new generation of players.

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  • Stolen Jackie Robinson statue found

    Stolen Jackie Robinson statue found

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    Police in Kansas are searching for a suspect after a bronze statue of Jackie Robinson was vandalized and stolen last week. The dismantled remains of the artwork were found Tuesday morning by the Wichita Fire Department when it responded to a small trash fire.

    Wichita police said Monday it had located the truck that was believed to be used in the theft of the artwork, but added that detectives and officers were still searching for the people responsible.

    The life-size statue, which was erected in 2021 as part of the Jackie Robinson Pavilion in Wichita, is one of just four statues of the athlete in the nation. It was cut off from the ankles up and put in a pickup truck in the very early hours of Thursday morning, according to police.

    Stolen Jackie Robinson statue
    Stolen Jackie Robinson statue

    Wichita Police Department


    The burglary has sparked outrage from members of the community and League 42, the nonprofit organization that put the statue up. Police are not yet sure of the motive for the vandalism, and believe the perpetrators could have stolen the statue to salvage the bronze metal.

    “I’m frustrated by the actions of those individuals who had the audacity to take the statue of Jackie Robinson from a park where kids and families and our community gather to learn the history of Jackie Robinson,” Wichita Police Department Chief Joe Sullivan said Friday in a news conference.

    “What troubles me even more is that the theft occurred just before the beginning of February, which marks the start of Black History Month,” Sullivan said, adding that the timing of this robbery will be considered in the investigation.

    Bob Lutz, the founder of League 42, said in a statement on the fundraising platform GoFundMe, “As law enforcement searches for the statue and the culprits of this crime, we remain devoted to our mission of providing low-cost baseball and education opportunities for our 600 kids, ages 5-14. They are as heartbroken over this theft as any of us and we are determined to either repair the original sculpture or create a new one.”

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  • Jackie Robinson statue was stolen from Kansas park

    Jackie Robinson statue was stolen from Kansas park

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    A prized statue of Jackie Robinson was stolen from a public park in Kansas, spurring a police search Friday and outrage across the city of Wichita.

    The statue honors the first player to break Major League Baseball’s color barrier in 1947. Surveillance video was released of two people hauling the sculpture away in the dark. Wichita police said in a Facebook post that it went missing Thursday morning.

    The statue was cut at the ankles to be removed. All that remained of the statue Friday were Robinson’s feet.

    “I’m frustrated by the actions of those individuals who had the audacity to take the statue of Jackie Robinson from a park where kids and families in our community gather to learn the history of Jackie Robinson, an American icon, and play the game of baseball,” Wichita police Chief Joe Sullivan said during a news conference Friday. “This should upset all of us.”

    He said even more troubling was the statue’s theft shortly before Black History Month.

    Robinson played for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Leagues before joining the Brooklyn Dodgers, paving the way for generations of Black American ballplayers. He’s considered not only a sports legend but also a civil rights icon.

    Wichita City Council member Brandon Johnson called the theft “horrendous” and “disgusting,” and said that residents are feeling hurt and angry, and demanding justice.

    “Many people want to find those folks before law enforcement,” Johnson said. “So again, like the chief and the (district attorney) said, if you’ve got that statue, bring it here today. Now.”

    The Wichita Metro Crime Commission offered a reward Friday of up to $2,500 for tips leading to arrests and another $5,000 for tips that lead to the statue’s recovery.

    Sullivan said he hopes area salvage yards will contact police if the statue is brought in for money.

    “Once the statue is returned, we also want the individuals who robbed our community of a treasure to be held accountable for their actions,” Sullivan said. “And I assure you, they will. The resources of the Wichita Police Department have been mobilized.”

    Little League nonprofit League 42, named after Robinson’s number with the Dodgers, paid about $50,000 for the model of him, Executive Director Bob Lutz said. The sculpture was installed in 2021 in McAdams Park, where the roughly 600 children play in the youth baseball league.

    Copyright © 2024 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

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    AP

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  • New documentary explores the history and legacy of baseball’s Negro leagues

    New documentary explores the history and legacy of baseball’s Negro leagues

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    Paterson, New Jersey — For Black baseball players from the 1920s through the 1940s, the Negro leagues were home.

    Notable owners, managers and players who never made it into the history books of Major League Baseball are a major part of a new documentary called “The League,” which recounts the dramatic ups and downs of the Negro leagues.

    “It’s just amazing, the trials and tribulations they had to go through, just to play the game that they loved, baseball,” director Sam Pollard told CBS News.

    Pollard relied on archival material and accounts from players like the late Hank Aaron. Before being known as the man who broke Babe Ruth’s MLB career record for home runs, Aaron played for Negro league teams.

    “We got one dollar a day meal money, and we would buy one loaf of bread and we would buy a big jar of peanut butter,” Aaron says in the documentary. “That’s what we lived off of for three or four days.”

    The film chronicles the boom times of Black baseball, when legends like Josh Gibson were drawing huge crowds.

    “It’s probably the best documentary that I’ve seen so far,” Sean Gibson, Josh Gibson’s great-grandson, told CBS News.

    “He was a single father raising twins, trying to play the game of baseball during a segregation time, and also trying to make a living for his family,” Sean Gibson added.

    In 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first Black man to integrate the MLB, a move which marked the beginning of the end. The loss of the Negro leagues’ biggest stars led to their demise in 1960.

    Stadiums like Hinchliffe in Paterson, New Jersey, would eventually fall into disrepair. In May, however, Hinchliffe reopened, serving as a sports comeback story and a symbol of urban renewal.

    It was saved by local activists from demolition, undergoing a $100 million renovation. It is one of the last surviving Negro league ballparks, and once again a place of civic pride.

    “To know that players like Cool Papa Bell or Satchel Paige or Larry Doby or Monte Irvin played on this field is just such a pleasure,” Pollard said.

    A field of dreamers who made history, with a legacy bigger than baseball.

    “It’s important history for Americans to understand,” Pollard said.  

    “The League” is now available on digital streaming platforms. 

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  • MLB The Show breaks barrier, adds Negro League players to video game

    MLB The Show breaks barrier, adds Negro League players to video game

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    ShowBiz Minute 3/30: Crow, Paltrow, Baldwin


    ShowBiz Minute 3/30: Crow, Paltrow, Baldwin

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    LOS ANGELES (AP) — MLB The Show has broken a video game barrier: For the first time, the franchise will insert some of the greatest Negro League players — from Satchel Paige to Jackie Robinson — into the 2023 edition of the game as playable characters.

    Video gamers are now able to venture into a storyline mode involving eight Negro League legends through MLB The Show 23, which releases Tuesday. The narrative experience will feature short videos about the players along with gameplay focused on the epic moments of their careers.

    Along with Robinson and Paige, the game also features other players including Buck O’Neil, Rube Foster, Hilton Smith, John Donaldson, Hank Thompson, and Martin Dihigo.

    MLB The Show-Negro League Players
    This image released by Sony Interactive Entertainment shows a digital rendering of Jackie Robinson as a member of the Kansas City Monarchs from the game MLB The Show 23. The franchise has inserted some of the greatest Negro League players into the 2023 edition of the game as playable characters. 

    (Sony Interactive Entertainment via AP)


    “This made sense on multiple levels,” said Bob Kendrick, the narrator of storyline experience and president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, which is located in Kansas City, Missouri. Along with the museum, he partnered with Sony for the historic Black players’ insertion into the game.

    “The way the Negro League players played, it fits perfectly for a video game,” he said. “There were so many gaming fans who have been clamoring for the inclusion of the Negro Leagues. People were popping into my timeline on social media. This has been stirring for several years.

    “I never really dreamt this would become reality. And I didn’t really think it would happen with arguably the biggest baseball video game of them all. This is something we are inherently proud of.”

    Kendrick said the multi-year partnership is a “gigantic step in keeping the legacy alive” for the Negro Leagues. The last time Negro League players were featured in a video game was on EA Sports MVP Baseball 2005 that included Robinson, Paige and Bob Gibson as legendary figures.

    “For the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, this is all about creating relevancy,” he said. “How do I establish a relevant connection with an ever-changing generation of young people? I can’t sit back and wait for them to come to me at the doors of the museum. I have to got to them in the mode of which they are getting information. If it’s a video game, then so be it.”

    Ramone Russell was the first to pitch Sony executives the concept of breathing life into the Negro League players through the franchise’s popular video game. He’s been mulling over the idea for more than a decade as a mainstay for the development and marketing team for the MLB The Show series.

    “This is a project I’ve always wanted to do,” said Russell, the product development communications and brand strategist for Sony Interactive Entertainment. He played a vital role in working across multiple teams who did a “tremendously smart job” in creating the mode.

    “So many of our fans — even when they hear the word ‘Negro Leagues’ — they have no context of what the Negro League is and what it represents,” Russell continued. “I’ve been asked ‘Hey, when are you going to have the Negro Leagues?’ My answer would be, ‘As soon as we can find the right way to do it.’ As you know, perfection is the enemy of progress. But about two years ago, I felt like now is the time.”

    Not a lot of game footage from the Negro Leagues exists, so game creators gathered archive video and photos from the museum and family members of the deceased players to collect as much as they could. That helped nail down the fine animation details for each player, jerseys, and the stadiums where games were held.

    Russell said the process was a tedious one, but it couldn’t have fully come together without the expertise of Kendrick — who he says knows the real history of the Negro Leagues and players “more than anyone else.” He said Kendrick was the perfect person to narrate the storyline mode, because of his well-rounded knowledge about player’s greatness.

    Even though Jackie Robinson was the first African American player to play in a Major League Baseball game in 1947, Kendrick said during his narration in the mode that Robinson was not the best player from the Negro Leagues. He said the league had such a rich talent pool where players played with in a “bold, brash way” and was “fast and daring.”

    “It’s not to disparage Jackie at all, but this is how great the talent was in the Negro Leagues,” Kendrick said. “I tell people all the time that the talent in the Negro Leagues would not take a backseat to any league. We’re talking about some of the greatest athletes to ever put on a baseball uniform. And unfortunately, the majority of the public, they don’t know these names. But they should for both from a baseball perspective as well as a historical perspective.”

    Sony’s San Diego Studio will donate $1 to the Negro Leagues Museum for every MLB The Show 23 Collector’s Edition is sold.

    Kendrick said having the Negro League storyline in the game will hopefully inspire young Black kids and others of color to learn more about their heritage. He wants the visibility of the video game to help bring more awareness to the museum.

    “Through animation and a project like this, you can bring them to life,” he said. “It’s a beautiful way to convey everything the Negro Leagues represents. I was amazed by people who didn’t know night baseball originated from the Negro Leagues. They just didn’t get their just due. It’s not there in the pages of an American history book. … Now, we have a chance to let people know.”

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