{"id":15166,"date":"2011-07-11T10:45:22","date_gmt":"2011-07-11T17:45:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/seamheads.com\/?p=15166"},"modified":"2011-07-14T19:48:17","modified_gmt":"2011-07-15T02:48:17","slug":"gambling-at-the-hall-of-fame-part-one","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/2011\/07\/11\/gambling-at-the-hall-of-fame-part-one\/","title":{"rendered":"Gambling at the Hall of Fame: Part One"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>I want to tell you an amazing story about gambling at the Hall of Fame,  but to appreciate the irony of the story fully, you need the background  to put it in context. For that, I have to take you back twenty years to  my first tenure in Cooperstown.<\/p>\n<p>I arrived here in April 1991,  intending to spend five or six months doing research at the Hall of Fame  library for a novel based on the adventures of Charles &#8220;Victory&#8221; Faust.  I wound up spending exactly one year, setting a record that still  stands for the longest continuous research visit, and by the time I was  done I had abandoned the novel and embarked on what wound up being a  nonfiction book about Faust. I did complete my planned research by the  end of September, figuring I&#8217;d head back to my home in sunny Las Vegas  rather than sticking around for the upstate New York winter. Instead, I  was hired to do the research for a very fine book by Richard Scheinin  titled &#8220;Field of Screams&#8221;. It was a long, cold winter, but I survived  and didn&#8217;t return to Las Vegas until April 1992.<\/p>\n<p>By then I was  firmly established as part of the Hall of Fame library&#8217;s family, a  close-knit group of seven employees. Mostly I hung out with the two  full-time researchers, Bill Deane and Gary Van Allen, arriving with them  when the doors opened at 9AM and staying until they kicked me out at  5PM. By mid-summer they allowed me to fetch my own files, located in the  large room on the second floor where visiting researchers sat across  from each other around a large central block of tables. That&#8217;s where I  met Bob Davids, who had founded SABR in that room two decades earlier.  That&#8217;s where I met Danny Peary, who recommended me to Richard Scheinin,  and where I met Dan Heaton, who later served as editor of my book on  Victory Faust.<\/p>\n<p>Most days I was on my own, eventually going  through well over 1,000 clipping files, and some days I was completely  on my own. When they had staff meetings, they literally left me alone in  the library, suggesting that I answer the phone if it rang and answers  inquiries if I could. Looking back, this seems like quite an odd  practice, since that was the era when a lot of material was stolen from  the library. They apparently had no concept of security and  preservation, as they do now. They&#8217;re still paying the price for those  lax practices. But I enjoyed having my run of the place and not having  to impose on them to fetch all those files, and I did answer the phone a  couple of times.<\/p>\n<p>Eventually I dead-ended on the Faust novel and  my money ran out, so it was time to go back to Las Vegas and start  dealing poker again, which I had done on and off since 1980. While  continuing my Faust research and getting sidetracked writing a  screenplay about him (four drafts, two years), I dealt at tournaments  from 1992-95, eventually putting in five years as a dealer at the World  Series of Poker. Along the way, I realized that researching and writing  about baseball history was what I enjoyed most, but that was easier said  than done.<\/p>\n<p>Sometime in the year after my exit from Cooperstown,  Bill Deane alerted me that the library had gotten the authorization to  hire a third full-time researcher. He urged me to apply, and I jumped at  it. He wasn&#8217;t sure how long the hiring process would take, but that  didn&#8217;t matter to me. I felt that researching at the Hall of Fame was my  destiny, and I was prepared to wait. Little did I know that the wait  would amount to a full decade.<\/p>\n<p>In June 1993, I returned to  Cooperstown to deliver a paper (on Faust as an early example of the  media creating a celebrity out of thin air) at the third Cooperstown  Symposium on Baseball and American Culture. Librarian Tom Heitz  suggested that this would be a good time to interview me for the  prospective researching job. That interview was conducted over lunch at  the Doubleday Cafe, with Bill Deane sitting in. Heitz told me, &#8220;We like  you and we&#8217;d like to have you working at the library. But there&#8217;s one  problem. The people in charge are concerned about your poker  background.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>For the past year, he explained, the Hall of Fame  had been the target of much criticism in the press for the change in  policy that prevented Pete Rose from being elected. He would have been  eligible for election in 1992, but was barred from inclusion on the  BBWAA ballot because he was on MLB&#8217;s &#8220;Ineligible List&#8221;. Heitz mentioned  one Cincinnati writer in particular, Tim Sullivan, who was regularly  raking the Hall over the coals for excluding the popular all-time &#8220;Hit  King&#8221;. I had attended the 1992 induction ceremony, after which a crowd  gathered to chant &#8220;Where&#8217;s Pete? Where&#8217;s Pete?&#8221; at Commissioner Fay  Vincent as his car left the site. The whole issue was painful for the  Hall of Fame officials to deal with.<\/p>\n<p>Heitz asked for permission  to have MLB&#8217;s Security Chief, Kevin Hallinan, conduct a background check  on me as a condition of my application going forward. I said fine and  provided a list of two dozen figures in the Las Vegas gaming industry  they might interview, including the folks who ran the World Series of  Poker. I had nothing to hide.<\/p>\n<p>After lunch, I delivered my paper  and then went right back to the Hall of Fame for two more interviews.  The first was with the #2 man in the operation, Bill Guilfoile. I had  spoken with Guilfoile many times during my one-year visit to his domain,  and he had been very friendly to me. I had even interviewed him for an  hour or so about his earlier posts as publicity director for the Pirates  and Yankees. But on this occasion he was clearly on edge and not in a  smiling mood. He was candid about his concerns, telling me about Tim  Sullivan and others who had been hypercritical of everything the Hall of  Fame did. His chief concern was, as he put it, that these writers &#8220;will  accuse us of being hypocritical if we hire someone with a background in  gambling at the time time that we&#8217;re barring Pete Rose from election  because of his gambling.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I like the response I made, though I  can see now why he didn&#8217;t. &#8220;I think it would be a feather in the Hall of  Fame&#8217;s cap,&#8221; I told him, &#8220;to show that you can make the distinction  between a self-destructive, low-life law-breaker and someone who has  spent over a decade in the industry while maintaining his integrity.&#8221;  That was the end of that subject, though the interview lasted most of an  hour.<\/p>\n<p>After Guilfoile was done with me, I moseyed down the hall  to be interviewed by Hall of Fame Director Howard Talbot. This was a  strange, short conversation, no more than ten or fifteen minutes, in  which Talbot asked me no questions about baseball history, research, the  library, or anything possibly related to the job for which I had  applied. As I departed, he made the only relevant remark made in that  office, saying, &#8220;maybe you can teach me to play poker.&#8221; Sure, Howard,  any time.<\/p>\n<p>Back in Las Vegas, I resumed work on Faust and awaited  my Hall of Fame fate. Bill Deane told me that after the interview, Tom  Heitz consulted with him and Gary Van Allen, telling them, &#8220;We have six  candidates for the job, and these are the top three. Please rank  them&#8211;and it will help if you don&#8217;t rank Gabe first.&#8221; Bill and Gary went  off to neutral corners, did their rankings, and both placed me first. I  will note here that in retrospect, I would have ranked myself third.  The other two top candidates were more qualified. Tom Shieber had  already been a high-ranking SABR officer and done significant research,  most prominently on baseball photography. Rob Neyer was the protege of  Bill James, the sabermetrics guru who had changed the way researchers  approach baseball history. The only advantage I had over them was that  Bill and Gary knew me personally, liked having me around, and could more  easily picture working with me than with a couple of guys they hadn&#8217;t  met.<\/p>\n<p>Heitz saw their preference and said, &#8220;Okay, if that&#8217;s who  you want, I&#8217;ll support you. But it will take time.&#8221; Two factors might  delay the date when a third researcher might be allowed to report for  duty. One was that the Hall of Fame was midway through a massive  renovation in which the library&#8211;a separate building since it opened in  the late 1960s&#8211;would finally be joined to the museum itself. Since late  1991, the library had been housed in the old movie theater down the  block from the museum; in fact, as part of the library family, I had  helped them make the move. The new library was slated to open in 1994,  and it was possible that the new researcher might not be needed until  the larger facility opened. The other factor, I was told, was that both  Talbot and Guilfoile were nearing retirement and simply might not want  to deal with the repercussions of hiring me. So I was advised to be  patient.<\/p>\n<p>Within a few weeks, however, the whole situation  changed. I forget the order in which two events combined to make the  situation seemingly clearer. One was that Rob Neyer took himself out of  the running after accepting a job with ESPN. The second was that Gary  Van Allen died suddenly. This was in July 1993, not long after my  interviews. Now the arithmetic was easy: there were two research jobs  available, and two preferred candidates.<\/p>\n<p>The logical course of  action, even from the viewpoint of Talbot and Guilfoile, was simple:   hire Tom Shieber to replace Gary Van Allen, and either hire this  Schechter guy when the new library opened or at least okay his hiring  after they were out of the picture. Did they do any of this? Nope. They  didn&#8217;t hire anybody, not even after Bill Deane left early in 1994,  creating a vacuum with no full-time researchers. The powers-that-be were  willing to let the library&#8217;s service deteriorate to a scandalous  state&#8211;part-time interns answered the phones the rest of that year and  let unanswered research inquiries pile up&#8211;rather than hire anyone. It  wasn&#8217;t until Tim Wiles arrived in January 1995 to fill the newly created  post of Director of Research that a qualified researcher joined the  staff.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile, Tom Shieber and I were left to twist slowly,  slowly in the wind. In 1995, during my next visit to Cooperstown, Tom  Heitz showed me a copy of the &#8220;background check&#8221; compiled by Kevin  Hallinan&#8217;s crack staff. It was a joke. They had not interviewed a single  person on the list I had provided. All they did was go to City Hall to  check public records, establishing that I didn&#8217;t have a police record or  any blotches on my credit history. That was all. The biggest joke in  the report was the notation that I was residing on &#8220;an empty lot&#8221;.  That&#8217;s right. Talk about wishing that I&#8217;d vanish into thin air! In  reality, I was living in a new condo that had been built in 1991, but  the blueprint the &#8220;investigators&#8221; checked two or three years later  identified it as an empty lot, and that was good enough for them.  Obviously the whole notion of the background check was a smoke screen,  and I realized that they had no intention of hiring me.<\/p>\n<p>I took  that personally for a long time, until years later when I met Tom  Shieber, who was hired by the Hall of Fame in the late 1990s as a  curator. We compared notes and discovered that we had been treated the  same, i.e. totally ignored. Nobody representing the Hall had informed  either of us that our applications had been rejected, or were dormant,  or that the whole hiring process had been put off. The only news I ever  got was from Bill Deane, and that had usually amounted to &#8220;hang in  there, we haven&#8217;t heard anything yet.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>I never heard anything  until 2002, when I returned to Cooperstown to do research for what I  planned as my third book, and to keep showing up at the library until  they hired me. Six months after my arrival, I was hired. Tim Wiles  interviewed me, and I don&#8217;t recall being asked anything about poker,  gambling, or the gaming industry, even though it was only two years  since I had dealt my last hand of poker. I&#8217;m not sure he was even aware  at that point of my application for a research job nearly a decade  earlier. This interview was job-related, and I got the job.<\/p>\n<p>So  it seemed that with the new regime and with the passage of time, nobody  cared about my poker past. Howard Talbot and Bill Guilfoile were long  since retired, and Talbot&#8217;s successor, Donald Marr, had given way to  Dale Petroskey. It was a new century, a new library, and a new life for  me. I wouldn&#8217;t even have to think about dealing poker again&#8211;or so I  thought.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I want to tell you an amazing story about gambling at the Hall of Fame, but to appreciate the irony of the story fully, you need the background to put it in context. For that, I have to take you back twenty years to my first tenure in Cooperstown. I arrived here in April 1991, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":722,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[9,77,4235],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-15166","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-general","category-hall-of-fame","category-top-stories"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15166","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=15166"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/15166\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=15166"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=15166"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/seamheads.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=15166"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}