The Rightness of Negro League Player reparations

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Editor’s Updates:
Ernie DiStefano’s interview on Sports360 with Jeff Fannell can be heard here on SoundCloud

For more information listen to Ernest DiStefano interview on WPFW FM in Washington DC. The interview begins at the 32 minute mark. Or go here for a selection of shows from the WPFW FM program The Collision: Sports and Politics.

For Ernest DiStefano’s Bill Fletcher’s interview go here

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” Ernest DiStefano has written a stirring appeal for reparations for Negro League ballplayers and their descendants. This appeal in the form of a letter to Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred is being published in The Stansbury Forum. The letter arrived on the Commissioner’s desk on January 22 in the midst of the video sign stealing crisis. Hopefully, but certainly not without public pressure, Manfred will feel compelled to answer “The Rippling Manifesto”.”

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“THE RIPPLING MANIFESTO”

The following essay is from a letter I recently sent to Major League Baseball Commissioner, Rob Manfred. If upon reading this essay, you agree with the cause for which I am advocating, please make your voice heard by contacting The Office of the Commissioner of Baseball,  1271 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020; 212-931-7800. You may also contact Commissioner Manfred on his Twitter account (twitter@RobManfred). Thank you.

Dear Commissioner Manfred,

Robert Kennedy said that “each time someone stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, they send forward a ripple of hope.” It is in this spirit that I am making a direct appeal to you, and your thirty fellow stewards of the great sport of baseball, to right the wrong of your predecessors and provide direct monetary reparations to the Negro League players and their surviving family members. There are three considerations that drive this request: RIGHTNESS, ATTAINABILITY, and REWARD. I will address each of these separately.

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First, the moral RIGHTNESS of Negro League Player reparations is undeniable and supported by several historical facts:

  1. The Major League Baseball establishment intentionally conspired to deprive Negro League baseball players of the opportunity to showcase their talents on baseball’s biggest stage; thereby depriving them of the opportunity to improve the standard of living for themselves and their families;
  • Throughout the years, Negro League teams competed against white Major League teams in at least 438 exhibition games during the offseason. Of those, the white Major League teams won 129 games and the Negro League teams won 309 games.  This translates into a winning percentage of more than .700 for the Negro League teams, leaving little doubt that Negro League players had the skills to compete at the Major League level.[1]
  • The vast disparity between the average player salaries in the Negro Leagues and the average Major League player salaries are amplified by the following examples:[2]
  • During the 1880’s, the first all-black baseball team was established in Babylon, Long Island, New York. This team began barnstorming in the Northeast region of the United States. Its players made $12.00 to $18.00 per week, while the average major league baseball player’s salary during that decade was $3,012.
  • In 1905, the average major league player made $2,000 per season; the average minor league player made $500 per season. The average Negro League player made just $466 that year. During the 1920’s, monthly Negro League player salaries averaged approximately $230, but most of them made between $40 to $100 per month plus expenses, and during the 1930’s, a depression-ridden decade, those salaries dropped to approximately $170 per season.

During my research, I used a sabermetric tool that you and the MLB owners are well aware of and widely considered the current benchmark statistical category for determining a player’s value: Wins Above Replacement (WAR). Every Negro League player I researched had a career WAR score that was in the positive range. When combined with the aforementioned record of the Negro League teams versus the white major leaguers, and using a 0.0 War score as the definition of an ”average” player, any reasonable observer would agree that the Negro League players would have been entitled to at least the average major league salaries of their time.

The unfortunate reality, as you know, is that very few Negro League players are still alive. I therefore believe the surviving generations of the families of the deceased players should receive the monetary reparations on behalf of those players.  Studies performed by the Chronic Poverty Research Centre indicate poverty is often intergenerational among families. A CPRC study that was presented in London, and published in a series of working papers, showed that access to asset inheritance helps build resilience and prevention of intergenerational poverty.[3] Since, therefore, these families suffered as a result of their ancestors’ forced poverty, they should now benefit from its rectification.

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I have heard the broader arguments against reparations. One of these arguments is that reparations are economically impractical. This leads me to my next factor for consideration: ATTAINABILITY. 

In the case of Negro League reparations, there is a specific, finite number of individuals who would receive these reparations. Using the average Major League player salary for each decade prior to 1947, the year Jackie Robinson broke the color line in baseball, and the career spans of the Negro League players, I calculated the total career salary compensation that the 129 Negro League players I have identified and researched would be entitled to, based on the dollar values during the span of their playing careers. The results of these calculations indicate that combined total reparations for these players would be $32,634,141. When divided equally between the owners of the thirty Major League Baseball franchises, this amount comes to $1,087,804.70 contribution per franchise; a small price to pay, in my view, when you consider the following facts[4], ones with which you are undoubtedly familiar:

  • The average major baseball player currently receives a salary of $4,360,000 and the absolute worst major league player is currently required to make a minimum salary of $555,000.
  • In 2018, Major League Baseball teams generated a total of 9.9 billion dollars in revenue, nearly twice the annual revenue from ten years ago (5.82 billion dollars), with an average of 330 million dollars in revenue per each Major League franchise.
  • In 2019, the average revenue multiple per MLB franchise (a determining factor of a franchise’s value) was 5.19, more than twice the figure from 2011.
  • Almost 30 percent of the MLB’s total league-wide revenue was earned from ticket sales in 2017. In November 2018, Major League Baseball and Fox Sports announced an extension of their national television rights agreement through the 2028 season and is worth 5.1 billion dollars.
  • Major League Baseball has additional deals with Facebook, ESPN, and Turner Sports. In addition, MLB and its franchises generated 938 million dollars in sponsorship revenue during the 2018 season, a steady increase in revenue over the past decade.

I understand and respect that the time and manpower required for completing the reparations process may be a concern for you and MLB owners; consequently, I would like to offer my services, free-of-charge, to assist you in this effort by creating a team of people who, like myself, have a passion for this cause. Furthermore, any financial reparations that are subsequently distributed will not be handled by me or any member of my team; instead, said reparations could be delivered directly from Major League Baseball to the players or their beneficiaries.

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Another chief argument used against reparations is a philosophical one: that the current generation is not responsible for the acts of previous generations, and should therefore not be required to shoulder the burden of righting the wrongs of previous generations. I see reparations not as a burden, however, but as an opportunity for Major League Baseball and other industries. This brings me to my third and final factor for consideration: REWARD.

Brooklyn Dodgers owner Branch Rickey is regarded, and rightly, as a courageous man who was a champion for social justice inside the Major League Baseball industry. Yet Mr. Rickey also had his detractors who accused him of signing Jackie Robinson simply for purposes of profit. Mr. Rickey himself acknowledged the business benefits of breaking baseball’s color line and expanding baseball’s fan base to the African-American community. We must remember, however, that there were fifteen other MLB owners at the time, all with the primary goal of maximizing their teams’ profit margins, who refused to employ a black baseball player. Through his actions, Mr. Rickey demonstrated that businesses can champion social justice and in the process enhance their bottom lines. Because of Mr. Rickey’s brave leadership, the Brooklyn Dodgers earned the title of Black America’s team. We can therefore conclude that, as with the beneficiaries of any righteous act, those who benefitted from Mr. Rickey’s actions cared little about his motivations.

I now move forward to the twenty-first century. In a 2014 Nielsen report, African-Americans comprised just nine percent of MLB viewers and according to Nielsen ratings released in 2017, the average viewer for a Major League Baseball telecast was a fifty-three-year-old white male.[5]

When considering the above Nielsen data, it is likely that Major League Baseball could increase their current African-American fan base by following the successful business model put forth by Branch Rickey seventy-three-years ago. By doing so, Mr. Manfred, you and the Major League Baseball owners will be that resounding ripple of hope that Robert F. Kennedy spoke about so many years ago, and in the tradition of Mr. Rickey, establish a business model for other industries to emulate. Then, with each subsequent small step and tiny ripple, you will have created a tidal wave of justice that our world so desperately needs.


[1] “Baseball,” Documentary Film by Ken Burns, 1994

[2] Negro League Database, Seamheads.com

[3] Chronic Poverty Research Centre, Copyright 2005-2020, Chronicpoverty.org

[4] “Revenue of Major League Baseball Teams,” by Christina Gough, September 16, 2019, Statistica.com

[5] “The struggles of being a black baseball fan,” by Stephon Johnson, August 30, 2018, theweek.com

About the author

Ernest DiStefano

Ernest DiStefano is a former sports agent and Certified Sports Counselor/Pastoral Sports Counselor with the International Sports Professionals Association (ISPA). He has also worked as an Associate Baseball Scout with the Kansas City Royals, Philadelphia Phillies, and the Global Scouting Bureau (GSB). He authored the book, “The Happy Athlete (A Success Guide for Parents, Coaches, and Student-Athletes)”, which was published by Langmarc Publishing in May 2006. Mr. DiStefano has also worked as a manager and mental training coach for boxers and MMA fighters. In addition to his vast experience in the sports world, Mr. DiStefano also has nearly thirty-seven years of professional experience with criminal offenders. He is currently the Founder-CEO of the Comeback Athletes & Artists Network (CAAN, Inc.), a non-profit organization offering assistance to legally at-risk and previously incarcerated athletes and artists who wish to pursue or revive their athletic and artistic careers. Mr. DiStefano holds three college degrees, including a Master's Degree in Human Resources Management. View all posts by Ernest DiStefano →

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5 thoughts on The Rightness of Negro League Player reparations

  1. When my children were small, all of their Little League teams were named for teams of the Negro Leagues. I new they existed, some of the more famous names, and that the greatest players in baseball were on these teams. My husband educated the kids and me. Living in LA, being a Dodgers fan, we frequently hear about the desegregation of baseball, but nothing is said about the great talents that were never seen in “the Show” or the poverty so many lived in because of baseball segregation. It’s Tim to pay up.

  2. Pingback: The Rightness of Negro League Player reparations

  3. Thanks to all involved with this.

    When I was a kid we didn’t have much money for ball games although my
    dad was quite a fan. However, one day in the early 50’s he took me to
    Wrigley Field. After a couple of innings he said, “I brought you here
    to see the greatest pitcher that ever was.” Then he talked about the
    man on the mound, Satchel Paige. He said that sometimes when the
    catcher would call for a fast ball at the belt, Paige would signal
    back, ‘top edge of the belt or bottom edge.’ I don’t know if either
    of us believed that last part, but after almost 70 years I remember
    that conversation clearly. I’m sure those few words formed a par6t of
    my character.

    Around that same age our family was at a beach weenie roast with some
    of my mother’s family. As I watched my uncle at the grill, he asked
    me, “How do you want your hot dog, black as a n*****’s penis?” I was
    shocked and didn’t answer. I never liked that uncle after that.

    Doug

  4. This is an excellent and well researched article.
    This is long overdue and should be seriously considered by major league baseball. It would show a lot of courage of MLB to follow through.

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