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Chet Brewer’s best delivery was helping Black players reach the major leagues

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It was just one at-bat, but it surely modified the path of Reggie Smith’s profession.

Lengthy earlier than he was a World Collection champion, a seven-time All-Star or 17-year main league outfielder, Smith was a younger participant rising up in South Los Angeles, making an attempt to grow to be a switch-hitter throughout his highschool years.

At some point early within the course of, he got here to the plate with males on base. Though a right-handed pitcher stood atop the mound, Smith initially stayed on his acquainted right-handed aspect of the plate, the place he felt most comfy for a leverage at-bat.

However then, Smith’s coach known as for time. As he did for therefore many gamers, over so a few years, Chet Brewer wanted a second to impart some knowledge.

In an period of change for baseball, simply a few many years after Jackie Robinson broke the game’s coloration barrier, Smith was certainly one of many younger Black gamers who got here out of South Los Angeles within the Sixties and broke into the massive leagues.

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Most of them had been coached by Brewer, a former Negro Leagues star who turned an influential — if usually ignored — a part of baseball’s historical past. He helped dozens of gamers (most of them Black) attain the majors, cultivating a technology of baseball excellence that resonates to this present day.

“In my estimation,” mentioned baseball researcher and Negro Leagues historian Phil Dixon, “Chet affected Black guys coming to the most important leagues greater than some other single African American particular person.”

Smith, now 77, cited one second particularly throughout a current telephone name to epitomize Brewer’s affect, recalling his dialog with Brewer after he’d deserted his switch-hitting experiment.

“What are you doing?” Brewer requested.

“Nicely, there’s an opportunity for me to drive within the run,” Smith answered.

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Brewer’s response: “No. In case you’re going to be a switch-hitter, you need to study in these conditions.”

So Smith stepped to the opposite aspect of the plate … and hit a house run on his subsequent swing, sending the ball bouncing onto Century Boulevard, past the right-field fence.

“I assumed by hitting right-handed, we had one of the best likelihood to win,” mentioned Smith, who went on to be top-of-the-line swap hitters of his technology. “However my improvement was extra vital than the sport at that time. And I by no means forgot that.

“That’s the form of man and form of coach he was, ensuring that if we selected to play skilled baseball we had been ready.”

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Brewer got here from humble beginnings.

Regardless of shedding a few toes when his foot was run over by a trolley automotive as a child, Brewer turned a promising younger pitcher whereas rising up in Des Moines.

His first style {of professional} expertise got here with a barnstorming workforce that traveled with a carnival and minstrel present. By 1925, he reached the Negro Leagues with the Kansas Metropolis Monarchs, the start of three-decade profession that has earned him consideration (however not but an induction) for the Baseball Corridor of Fame.

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Dave Roberts, Reggie Smith and Fred Claire reveal how the Dodger legend has influenced their lives.

On the top of the Negro Leagues’ recognition, Brewer was certainly one of its finest pitchers. Regardless of making simply $150 per thirty days most of his profession, he had a 3.46 earned run common, in response to Baseball Reference, and gained an ERA title in 1929 with a 1.93 mark. Although he bussed from city to city, dealing with segregation each cease alongside the best way, he racked up a .597 profitable share that ranked tenth all-time amongst Negro League pitchers, in response to the Corridor of Fame.

Sportswriter Jim Murray known as Brewer’s curveballs “certainly one of historical past’s finest” whereas writing for the Unbiased Journal in 1967, including: “A pitcher who ought to have been in Yankee Stadium was in a canebrake within the Philippines, a sand bar in Santo Domingo.”

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Close to the tip of his taking part in days, Brewer served as a player-manager in 1945 for a California Winter League workforce. His shortstop that season: Robinson, who was lower than two years away from his Dodgers debut.

Although Robinson and different youthful star Negro League gamers of that period went on to main league careersBrewer was a part of a a lot bigger group that by no means received an MLB alternative.

“He felt like [his playing career] was vastly underrated,” Dixon mentioned.

It didn’t chase Brewer away from the game, although.

As an alternative, he bounced round throughout his closing few years on the mound, taking part in for groups in Puerto Rico, Panama and the final vestiges of the Negro Leagues in the US. Then, within the late Nineteen Fifties, he took a job scouting for the Pittsburgh Pirates and settled in Los Angeles.

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There, he discovered his second calling teaching younger gamers within the coronary heart of the town.

When a household pal first launched Smith to Brewer in 1960, the longer term All-Star was an undersized shortstop, his physique making little in the best way of a primary impression.

However Brewer, then teaching a semipro workforce of minor-league gamers and ex-Negro League professionals, gave Smith the possibility to work out anyway. Even amongst a bunch principally of grown males, Smith’s robust arm and stunning pop stood out. Brewer gave him a spot on the bench.

Smith’s first recreation with the workforce got here two weeks later, at a subject in South Park in opposition to one other semipro workforce. When Smith got here to the plate, the opposing third baseman moved in. At first Smith was rattled. Then he heard Brewer’s voice ring out from the dugout.

“You higher again up,” he shouted.

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Certain sufficient, Smith rifled a line drive previous the third baseman’s head for a double. From then on, Smith was a daily on Brewer’s groups. And over the following few years, the coach started to convey extra gamers Smith’s age, specializing in growing a brand new technology of gamers from the predominantly Black neighborhoods of South L.A.

“The younger gamers who had that want to play skilled baseball, he needed to make it possible for we had been ready,” Smith mentioned. “As a result of at the moment, the sensation was you need to be twice nearly as good because the white participant.”

Certainly, Brewer rapidly developed a pipeline of expertise that led straight to the majors. At one level, his workforce featured Smith, who performed in MLB for 17 years, largely with the Dodgers and Boston Purple Sox; Bob Watson, a two-time All-Star with the Houston Astros who additionally turned the primary Black common supervisor to win a World Collection; Davey Nelson and Dock Ellis, who every earned All-Star picks of their prolonged careers; and several other different future MLB gamers together with Willie Crawford, Enos Cabell, Bobby Tolan and Leon McFadden.

One other future big-league star round that squad: Eddie Murray, who was the bat boy whereas his huge brother, Charles, performed for the workforce.

“I keep in mind solely shedding one recreation in about three years,” mentioned Dennis Gilbert, who was one of many handful of white gamers on the workforce and went on to have a prolonged profession as an MLB agent and entrance workplace government. “And that was once we confronted a pitcher by the identify of Rollie Fingers.”

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Brewer commanded respect from his gamers — they referred to him as “Mr. Brewer,” a title Smith and Gilbert proceed to make use of to this present day — but in addition confirmed them compassion.

Smith mentioned Brewer turned so near him and his household, his mother and father trusted the coach to select Smith up from their residence on Sundays to take him to observe whereas they went to church.

Gilbert remembered Brewer steering the workforce by way of the turmoil of the Watts riots, when smoke billowed within the distance throughout certainly one of their video games.

“He might be essentially the most revered individual I’ve ever met in my life,” Gilbert mentioned. “Everyone cherished him.”

On the finish of his life, Dixon mentioned, Brewer didn’t point out his lineage of gamers a lot. The monitor document spoke for itself. However after he struggled so mightily as a participant, seeing the success of his pupils introduced deep satisfaction, a reminder of how far the game had come — and the way a lot he’d contributed to its progress.

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“[The Negro Leagues players] had fun again then, they loved what they did,” Dixon mentioned. “However [he was] growing ballplayers and sending them to the massive leagues, and now they’ll care for their households and do issues that Negro League gamers might by no means do.”

Dixon added: “Chet would all the time say, ‘These had been the great previous days, however I’d quite have these.’ ”

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LIV Golf star posts bizarre motivational message as next event looms

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LIV Golf star posts bizarre motivational message as next event looms

LIV Golf’s Anthony Kim posted a bizarre motivational message on social media on Wednesday as he prepared for the series’ next event at Andalucía in Spain next week.

Kim made a reference to working harder than a crackhead as he posted early on X.

Anthony Kim is shown during the first day of LIV Golf Miami at Trump National Doral Miami on April 5, 2024, in Florida. (Megan Briggs/Getty Images)

“Good morning. Does a crakhead (sic) ever let a day go by w/out finding a way to get high? NO. I would know,” he wrote. “Not gonna let a crakhead (sic) outwork me today. 1% better today lessssgoo!!!”

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Kim is tied for last in the LIV Golf standings. In Nashville last month, he finished 46th in the standings, posting an even score in 54 holes. He was 48th in Houston and 53rd in Singapore, dating back to early May.

He disappeared from the PGA Tour years ago and his return to the professional ranks was highly publicized back in January.

HAYDEN SPRINGER ETCHES HIS NAME INTO PGA TOUR HISTORY WITH EPIC JOHN DEERE CLASSIC 1ST ROUND

Anthony Kim at hole 8 in Singapore

Anthony Kim acknowledges the crowd after holing out on hole 8 during the first day of LIV Golf Singapore at Sentosa Golf Club on May 3, 2024. (Getty Images)

The last time Kim competed before joining LIV Golf was at the 2012 Wells Fargo Championship when he was 26 years old. He withdrew from the tournament due to injury, which was his third straight withdrawal.

One month later, Kim had surgery to repair his left Achilles tendon, and then he wasn’t heard from in the golf world as many wondered whether he would be back at all.

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Kim also dealt with tendinitis in his left arm and a left thumb injury during his 122 starts on the PGA Tour.

He was open about his battle with addiction in an interview on LIV Golf Plus in April.

Anthony Kim in Tennessee

Anthony Kim is shown during the opening round of LIV Golf Nashville on June 21, 2024, at the Grove Golf Course in College Grove, Tennessee. (Michael Wade/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

“Golf is important to me and not important to me at the same time,” Kim said, per ESPN. “I’ve had some very dark moments. I’ve had some very low moments. I’ve felt very alone, even when there’s a million people around. I needed to get my mind straight and figure out what my purpose was on this planet.”

Fox News’ Scott Thompson contributed to this report.

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Opinion: End the blows against the beauty of baseball

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Opinion: End the blows against the beauty of baseball

The following confession may come as a shock to those who know me: I am now a conservative. When it comes to baseball, that is.

I watched the blown check-swing call that allowed the Dodgers to win a game against the Rockies last month in an improbable comeback and to the fury of Colorado fans. The ump’s clear mistake will only add to demands that check-swing calls be included in the instant replay protocol.

But check-swing subjectivity is a fundamental part of the way baseball is supposed to function: humanly, in sublime, sometimes maddening imperfection. MLB interventions to “fix” it — larger bases, the ghost runner at second base in extra innings, batters limited to one timeout per at-bat and, worst of all, the pitch clock — are blows against the beauty of the game.

Admittedly, these changes seem to be quite popular. Games had been running longer and longer with incessant pitching changes, dawdling batters and, yes, replay reviews. But what monstrous hubris to think we know better than baseball’s Original Framers! Ninety feet between bases, 60 feet, 6 inches between pitching rubber and home plate — these are divinely induced measurements. Start messing with tradition and the heart of the game is lost to hyper-regulated “reality.”

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Baseball is not reality. It is myth performed by real bodies. And imperfection, which is also the unexpected, beyond the reach of metrics, is where the magic comes from — magical triumph and magical heartbreak, larger than life, operatic.

There is no doubt that soccer is the “beautiful game,” but baseball gives it a run for its money. Its own beauty has resulted from the gradual accrual of tradition, which has given us a poetics.

Languor is one of baseball’s essential characteristics. Seemingly nothing happens for long minutes; no one scores, no “bang-bang” double plays, just lazy fly balls and dribbled grounders; you are swayed by the lullaby of sun and beer into a somnambulant state.

And then “just like that,” as Vin Scully used to say, there’s a majestic home run blast, a leaping catch, a fierce duel between pitcher and batter, a spectacular strikeout. The explosion of affect is all the more powerful for having emerged so suddenly from the caesura. (Soccer fans experience a version of these symphonic changes of tempo on the pitch.)

Baseball’s temporality is inseparable from its physical dimensions, the space-time of the game. The vast swath of grass between outfielders, the closer quarters of the infielders, the tunnel of focus that connects pitcher, batter, catcher and umpire.

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The imperfection of umpires is indispensable in the gestalt. Video appeals rob us of the opportunity to yell at the ump to get glasses, or suffer much worse things. A blown call can lead to simultaneous jubilation and heartbreak, with the losers rending their garments and smarting from the insult of being “robbed.”

All as it should be.

I say: Bring back smaller bags and keep stealing a base a rare art! I say: No more ghost runner (what did he do to deserve to be there?) and go on all night with punch-drunk players if that’s what the game demands. And most of all I say: Smash the pitch clock with an Adirondack bat. The timer is an abomination under baseball heaven, depriving us of the organic crescendo of tension in an epic at-bat in the late innings of a close World Series game (Kirk Gibson, 1988).

When I interviewed Scully after the Los Angeles riots-uprising of 1992, I asked him what he‘d said on the air about the chaos unfolding that first night, as a game was underway at Dodger Stadium. “I didn’t say a word,” he told me. He thought first of his responsibility to the fans and their safety — what if he caused panic? And he added: “There should be one place left where the rest of the world doesn’t intrude.”

He might as well have said baseball is sacred. Not to be messed with. Not even (as if it were possible) by history itself.

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On all this, I come down as far more conservative than, say, old-school, bow-tied traditionalist George Will, who for once approves of the “progressive” in the form of the new rules he thinks augur a return of baseball to its one-time status as national pastime. The game, awash in play-by-metrics, Will has argued, is bloated not by poetic languor but by analytical ennui.

True that, Mr. Will. We agree about baseball’s slow death-by-numbers. At the end of the day, all the measurements miss the point — the ineffable beauty of a summer afternoon ever so slowly turning to night at the ballpark.

Some of us know when a cure is worse than the disease.

There is a reason baseball was famously the preferred sport of American literati in the mid-20th century. And the pitch clock wasn’t part of the poetry.

Rubén Martínez is a literature professor at Loyola Marymount University, the author of numerous books and co-creator and executive producer of the performance piece “Little Central America, 1984.”

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Pat Bertoletti crowned hot dog eating champion amid Joey Chestnut's absence

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Pat Bertoletti crowned hot dog eating champion amid Joey Chestnut's absence

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The Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest has a new champion, as Pat Bertoletti ate 58 hot dogs.

Bertoletti’s victory comes as Americans across the nation are celebrating Independence Day. Thousands of fans descended on Conley Island to watch competitive eaters wolf down as many hot dogs (and buns) as possible in a 10-minute time span during the hot dog eating contest.

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However, this year’s slate of competitors was noticeably missing one high-profile contestant — 16-time champion Joey Chestnut.

Patrick Bertoletti wins the men’s title with 58 hot dogs at Nathan’s Annual Hot Dog Eating Contest on July 4, 2024 in New York City. (Adam Gray/Getty Images)

He was reportedly barred from competing in this year’s event. Chestnut recently signed a deal with Impossible Foods, a rival of Nathan’s that has launched a vegan wiener, the New York Post reported.

JOEY CHESTNUT GEARS UP FOR INDEPENDENCE DAY HOT DOG COMPETITION FACEOFF AGAINST HUNGRY SOLDIERS

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Instead, he will compete against soldiers at a U.S. Army base in El Paso, Texas, beginning at 5 p.m. ET.

Chestnut’s absence left the traditional Brooklyn event wide open for a new winner in the men’s division, with eaters from around the world competing for the highly-coveted mustard belt.

Joey Chestnut with hot dogs

Joey Chestnut, winner of the 2021 Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog-Eating Contest, poses for photos in Coney Islands Maimonides Park on July 4, 2021 in the Brooklyn borough of New York. (AP Photo/Brittainy Newman, File)

Last year, Chestnut, of Indiana, chewed his way to the title by downing 62 dogs and buns in 10 minutes. The record, which he set in 2021, is 76.

He was initially disinvited from the event over a sponsorship deal with Impossible Foods, a company that specializes in plant-based meat substitutes.

Hot dogs on a plate

Hot dogs are ready for the 2024 Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July hot dog eating competition at Coney Island in the Brooklyn borough of New York on July 4, 2024. (LEONARDO MUNOZ/AFP via Getty Images)

Major League Eating, which organizes the Nathan’s Famous contest, has since said it walked back the ban, but Chestnut decided to spend the holiday with the troops anyway.

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Chestnut said he would not return to the Coney Island contest without an apology.

Impossible Foods will also donate to an organization supporting military families based on the number of hot dogs eaten at the event, a spokesperson said.

Fox News’ Ryan Morik contributed to this report.

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