{"id":10016,"date":"2010-12-09T15:43:50","date_gmt":"2010-12-09T22:43:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.seamheads.com\/?p=10016"},"modified":"2010-12-12T22:38:01","modified_gmt":"2010-12-13T05:38:01","slug":"fraudulent-history-101","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/2010\/12\/09\/fraudulent-history-101\/","title":{"rendered":"Fraudulent History 101"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>So Marvin Miller got screwed again this week in the Hall of Fame balloting. Who didn&#8217;t see <em>that<\/em> coming? Miller certainly saw it coming, undoubtedly the reason why he  requested that his name be kept off future Veterans Committee ballots  after being snubbed in 2008. That time around, the committee was heavily  stacked against him, loaded with executives who had been bested by  Miller in labor negotiations and exacted their revenge by shutting him  out. This time, the new composition of the committee gave Miller a  chance, but he still fell a tantalizing one vote short.<\/p>\n<p>Miller  issued a blistering statement that put a lot of things into focus. Here  is part of what he said: &#8220;Many years ago those who control the Hall  decided to rewrite history instead of recording it. The aim was to  eradicate the history of the tremendous impact of the players&#8217; union on  the progress and development of the game as a competitive sport, as  entertainment, and as an industry. The union was the moving force in  bringing Major League Baseball from the 19th century to the 21st  century. . . .That is a difficult record to eradicate&#8211;and the Hall has  failed to do it. A long time ago, it became apparent that the Hall  sought to bury me long before my time, as a metaphor for burying the  union and eradicating its real influence. Its failure is exemplified by  the fact that I and the union of players have received far more support,  publicity, and appreciation from countless fans, players, writers,  scholars, experts in labor management relations, than if the Hall had  not embarked on its futile and fraudulent attempt to rewrite history.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There  was more, but that&#8217;s the gist of it. I&#8217;d like to bypass the personal  issues here and focus on the history itself, starting with Miller&#8217;s  assertion about taking baseball from the 19th century to the 21st. I  think he&#8217;s understating it; I&#8217;d say he took baseball forward from the  17th century. That&#8217;s when thousands of people moved to the United States  as indentured servants, just a step or two above slavery. There was a  time limit to the servitude of indentured servants, but the people who  had contracted them could transfer their work obligation to someone  else. It wasn&#8217;t outright ownership like slavery, but the servant had no  say in whom he would be working for from one day to the next.<\/p>\n<p>That&#8217;s  what the reserve clause in baseball did. Created in 1879, by the  mid-1880s the reserve clause was a tool the owners used to make money by  selling players&#8217; services to other teams. The player had no choice but  to report to his new team&#8211;or be blacklisted entirely from the  professional sport. More than 80 years later, when Curt Flood challenged  the reserve clause, he was blasted by owners (and sympathetic writers)  for daring to defy an owner who was paying him $90,000 a year. Flood  replied that &#8220;a well-paid slave is a slave nonetheless.&#8221; Actually, he  was an exception&#8211;by being well-paid. Most of his teammates and fellow  major leaguers were poorly paid slaves.<\/p>\n<p>When Marvin Miller was  hired to run the players&#8217; union in 1966, the minimum salary was $6,000,  roughly what it had been for decades. Miller was vilified by owners and  the press as a Communist or, worse, the pawn of &#8220;The Mob.&#8221; They raised  the specter of Jimmy Hoffa coming into clubhouses to dictate policy and  strategy. The players hired Miller primarily because they had doubts  about management&#8217;s ability to administer the players&#8217; pension plan. But  he realized right away that the players had been brainwashed for decades  to believe that the owners were benevolent sportsmen who must love  baseball because they weren&#8217;t making any money from it. It took another  40 years for owners to admit that they&#8217;ve been making a fortune all  along and to stop stonewalling the players&#8217; union during negotiations by  poor-mouthing themselves.<\/p>\n<p>I had the good fortune to interview  Marvin Miller in 1992. He and his wife graciously hosted me at their  Manhattan apartment, where Miller and I talked for two hours. I got a  first-hand lesson in why owners thought <em>he<\/em> brainwashed the  players. A union rabble-rouser is generally portrayed as some  combination of agitated, strident, angry, bullying, fast-talking, and  overbearing. Miller was <em>none<\/em> of these things. He was calm,  soft-spoken, and patient. As the players&#8217; representative, he was  outraged at the conditions he discovered, indignant about how badly the  players were treated, and confident in taking the moral high ground on  their behalf. Those were the qualities that enabled him to outlast the  owners every time. He <em>knew <\/em>he was right and knew that the owners&#8217; self-interest would prevent them from remaining unified in the long run.<\/p>\n<p>Of  course, Miller is best-known for overturning the reserve clause, which  existed for nearly one century and was considered the backbone of the  baseball business. Here&#8217;s where his statement about &#8220;eradicating&#8221;  history applies. Unless you were around at the time, you have no idea how tenaciously management clung to the notion of the reserve clause as  <em>essential<\/em>. Time and again, the owners and Commissioner Bowie  Kuhn declared that if the reserve clause disappeared, baseball would go  out of business. It was that simple. A milder statement of this  conviction appeared in Kuhn&#8217;s book <em>Hardball<\/em>: &#8220;There was no  doubt in my mind that the game&#8217;s integrity and public confidence were at  stake in the potential destruction of the reserve system.&#8221; The key  argument advanced was that if players became free agents and could sign  wherever they wanted, the &#8220;rich&#8221; clubs would buy up all the best players  and destroy the notion of competitive balance (that&#8217;s what Kuhn meant  by &#8220;the game&#8217;s integrity&#8221;).<\/p>\n<p>In fact, there was only a <em>myth<\/em> of competitive balance. From 1921-1968, a 48-year span leading up to  the &#8220;playoff era,&#8221; the Yankees won 29 American League pennants (60%). In  the National League, the Cardinals, Giants, and Dodgers combined to win  33 pennants (69%). What kind of competitive balance was that? In the <em>last<\/em> ten years, nine different franchises have won the World Series, and 14  franchises have made the World Series (with only the Yankees appearing  more than twice). <em>That<\/em> is competitive balance, and it exists <em>because <\/em>there is no longer a reserve clause.<\/p>\n<p>Miller&#8217;s  15-year tenure as executive director of the MLBPA (and post-retirement  advisor\/guru status with subsequent union leaders) was not just about  making the players rich or creating a lucrative pension plan well beyond  the dreams of the men who hired him. No issue was too small for him  when a principle or the welfare of players was involved. When I  interviewed him, for instance, he told me that he continually had to  remind the owners that &#8220;the players are your <em>only<\/em> assets.&#8221; Take  Royals Stadium, which opened in 1970 and was designated as the site for  that year&#8217;s All-Star Game. Miller learned that the &#8220;warning track&#8221; at  the new park was not a cinder or dirt section but rather a part of the  outfield Astroturf <em>painted a different color<\/em>! He brought this  dangerous situation to the attention of Royals owner Ewing Kauffman,  whose response was &#8220;well, outfielders pretty much know where the fences  are.&#8221; Miller had to point out that an outfielder chasing a long fly ball  is looking up at the ball, not down to see where the Astroturf changes  color. Kauffman refused to do anything about it&#8211;until Miller threatened  to have the players boycott the All-Star Game. Only then did Kauffman  put in a warning track that the players could feel as they ran toward  the wall. Same thing with padded walls, an innovation he had to fight  for. I would&#8217;ve thought that the first time Pete Reiser ran into a wall  back in the 1940s and received last rites on the field, owners would&#8217;ve  padded the walls. But no. It wasn&#8217;t until Miller came along that players  were protected from running into concrete walls and chain-link fences.  It was the right thing to do, and he plugged away until it was done.<\/p>\n<p>Let&#8217;s  cut to the chase: is it accurate to say that the Hall of Fame has  embarked on a &#8220;futile and fraudulent attempt to rewrite history&#8221;? Yes.  Has it done so by excluding Miller from the ranks of inductees? I don&#8217;t  think so. The first time Miller came up for election, the majority of  voters were living Hall of Famers, and that was the most shocking  failure of an electorate to enshrine Miller. If the players who  benefited so greatly from his work didn&#8217;t overwhelmingly elect him, that  was strong evidence of Hall of Fame President Jeff Idelson&#8217;s statement  after this week&#8217;s election that this is a reminder of just how tough it  is to get elected. Yes, the Hall of Fame stacked the deck against Miller  in 2008. I don&#8217;t think that was the case this year. Miller needed 12  votes out of 16. There were eight players and four writers on the  committee. There is no rational reason why he shouldn&#8217;t have gotten all  12 of those votes. The one person who (no doubt) joined the four  executives in refusing to vote for Miller is the asshole who should be  strung up. I don&#8217;t think you can pin this one on the Hall of Fame.<\/p>\n<p>However,  I don&#8217;t think Miller was simply referring to his own non-election as  this &#8220;fraudulent attempt to rewrite history&#8221;. I think he was referring  to the 2008 election of Bowie Kuhn to the Hall of Fame (by the same  management-loaded voting body that gave Miller his lowest percentage of  votes), an election viewed by a large portion of the Hall of Fame staff  as the biggest joke since Morgan Bulkeley was elected back in 1937  because he was a one-year figurehead president of the National League.<\/p>\n<p>One  of my duties as a Hall of Fame library researcher was to copy-edit and  critique proposed plaque text for newly elected Hall of Famers. I  pointed out several inaccuracies in the proposed text for Kuhn, who was  apparently being immortalized for things he didn&#8217;t do. I am chagrined to  report that my suggested changes were not adopted, and the inaccuracies  remain on the plaque that is hanging in the main gallery of the Hall of  Fame museum in Cooperstown.<\/p>\n<p>When the person who wrote the  original text described Kuhn&#8217;s administration as &#8220;proactive and  inventive,&#8221; I wrote a note in the margin asking for some clarification  of what those adjectives meant when applied to Kuhn, and requested some  specific examples of what was meant. I&#8217;m still waiting for a response  apart from the fact that those vague adjectives made it onto the final  plaque. If you read a book like John Helyar&#8217;s <em>Lords of the Realm<\/em>,  you get a portrait of Kuhn as a man who fought progress and innovation  on almost every front. He led the battle against the reserve clause and  kept his head firmly planted in the sand on nearly every issue involving  the balance of power between the owners and players. This was perfectly  understandable: he was hired by the owners and owed his power to Walter  O&#8217;Malley and the other owners who actually ran the game.<\/p>\n<p>Let&#8217;s  look at some of the other statements on Kuhn&#8217;s plaque. The one I fought  the hardest to delete was the claim that Kuhn &#8220;extended postseason with  creation of the league championship series.&#8221; That simply is <em>not<\/em> so. Kuhn&#8217;s tenure as commissioner began in February, 1969. The  expansion from 20 to 24 teams occurred in 1969, as did the institution  of divisional play and the second tier of playoffs, the LCS, which  preceded the World Series. The Hall of Fame would like us to believe  that Kuhn created all of this in the two months between the date when he  took office and the start of the 1969. That&#8217;s bullshit. Expansion was  okayed two years before that, the expansion draft occurred in 1968, and  the playoff system was solidly in place before the owners turned to Kuhn  as a one-year compromise commissioner when they couldn&#8217;t elect anyone  else. Kuhn had <em>nothing<\/em> to do with the creation of the LCS.<\/p>\n<p>Another  statement of purported fact which I protested was the assertion that  Kuhn &#8220;tripled major league attendance&#8221; during his tenure (1969-1984).  That simply isn&#8217;t true. In 1962, the first year when there were 20 major  league teams, MLB attendance totaled 22,519,278. That&#8217;s a little over  1.1 million per team. Attendance in the 1960s peaked at a little over 25  million in 1966, and in 1968, the last year before Kuhn became  commissioner, it was 23,102,745. That was still less than 1.2 million  per team.<\/p>\n<p>The highest attendance during Kuhn&#8217;s tenure was  45,540,302, in 1983. In his final year, 1984, attendance was 44,742,863.  These figures are less than twice the figures from 1968, so how this  translates into <em>tripling<\/em> attendance is beyond me. Moreover, by  the 1980s the majors had expanded from 20 to 26 teams. The average  attendance in 1984 was roughly 1.7 million per team. That&#8217;s barely a 50%  increase over 1968. That&#8217;s way further from <em>tripling<\/em> attendance (or 300%, for those of you keeping score at home) than the  total figure. But that&#8217;s what his plaque in Cooperstown says he did.  Huh?<\/p>\n<p>In fact, it was Kuhn&#8217;s poor business record which caused  owners to oust him in 1984. As Expos owner Charles Bronfman put it  (quoted in Helyar&#8217;s book), &#8220;the economics of the industry were in bad  shape and Bowie wouldn&#8217;t do anything to help. As salaries started to  escalate, you had to improve revenue streams.&#8221; Gee, it sounds as though  MLB needed a commissioner who was &#8220;proactive and inventive&#8221; to come in  and save the day, because Kuhn was neither of those things. So they  hired Peter Ueberroth, who proved to be proactive and inventive by  instituting the collusion policy which later cost MLB some $280 million  in lawsuits. But that&#8217;s another story.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;m far from the first  observer to point out that Bowie Kuhn being in the Hall of Fame while  Marvin Miller is not, is the biggest travesty of recent baseball  history. It&#8217;s that simple, and it definitely constitutes fraudulent  history. Nobody has had a bigger influence on the past 40 years of  baseball than Miller. What Branch Rickey did for African-American  ballplayers, Miller did for <em>all<\/em> ballplayers. He freed them. He liberated them over the strident protests of Kuhn and the owners that he would <em>kill<\/em> baseball by doing so. Say what you want about the balance of power  possibly tipping too far in the players&#8217; favor in recent years. Maybe  it&#8217;s 60-40% in favor of the players today, and that might or might not  be a good thing. Before Miller took over, it was 100-0% in favor of the  owners, an evil only he was patient and shrewd enough to overcome. For  that, he should&#8217;ve been elected 20 years ago.<\/p>\n<p><em>Gabriel Schechter grew up within ten miles of the Polo Grounds                      and Yankee Stadium, is a lifelong Reds fan, and once        attended       games    in      Los Angeles and San Diego on the  same       day. From 2002-2010     he was a      Research  Associate at  the      library of the    National    Baseball    Hall of    Fame    in       Cooperstown, and is the    author of <\/em><em><a href=\"http:\/\/charlesapril.com\/2008\/03\/victory-faust.html\">Victory             Faust:         The Rube Who Saved McGraw\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s Giants<\/a>; <a href=\"http:\/\/charlesapril.com\/2008\/03\/unhittable.html\">Unhittable:                     Baseball\u00e2\u20ac\u2122s Greatest Pitching Seasons<\/a>; and <a href=\"http:\/\/charlesapril.com\/2008\/03\/this-bad-day-in-yankees-history_05.html\">This                     BAD Day in Yankees History<\/a>, as well as the blog <a href=\"http:\/\/charlesapril.com\/\">Never Too Much Baseball<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>So Marvin Miller got screwed again this week in the Hall of Fame balloting. Who didn&#8217;t see that coming? Miller certainly saw it coming, undoubtedly the reason why he requested that his name be kept off future Veterans Committee ballots after being snubbed in 2008. That time around, the committee was heavily stacked against him, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":722,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[9,4235],"tags":[12527,11658,6948,861,12022,12524,12526,21230,12525,11563,12522,12523,191,193,12528,12430,521,12529,12530,9293],"class_list":["post-10016","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general","category-top-stories","tag-17th-century","tag-19th-century","tag-21st-century","tag-assertion","tag-ballots","tag-countless-fans","tag-gist","tag-hall-of-fame","tag-history-101","tag-indentured-servants","tag-labor-management-relations","tag-labor-negotiations","tag-major-league-baseball","tag-marvin-miller","tag-metaphor","tag-moving-force","tag-personal-issues","tag-publicity","tag-revenge","tag-veterans-committee"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10016","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/722"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=10016"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10016\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=10016"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=10016"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=10016"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}