By The Numbers | How Did MLB’s Race Report Look On Opening Day 2023?

By The Numbers | How Did MLB’s Race Report Look On Opening Day 2023?

The Jackie Robinson Award, named after the legend who broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier in 1947, has lived up to its legacy with half of its past six awardees being Black players: Michael Harris (National League, 2022), Devin Williams (N.L. 2020), and Kyle Lewis (American League, 2020). 

 

 

 

 

Robinson set the precedent that Black players could flourish in Major League Baseball after they were excluded from organized baseball for 80 years. The award started out as an honor for the Majors’ best overall rookie but has since expanded to an award given to one player per league. Today, Black players work their hardest to make the same impression that Robinson did.

 

Baseball fanatics have come to love the intensity that players of color bring to the game. The energy and electricity that has kept fans intrigued has come from youthful players trying to make a lasting imprint on their teams to stay on MLB rosters.

MLBbros By The Numbers: 6.2 % And Rising?

 

Overall, the average age of Black players on Opening Day rosters is 27, with 63% of Black players younger than 30. 

 

Since 1947, MLB has been making progress in terms of inclusion, however slow it may be. Diversity at the Major League level is inching upwards on a consistent basis year after year. Of the 945 players on Major League Opening Day rosters and inactive lists in 2023, 40.34% came from a diverse background (Black, Latino, Asian, Pacific Islander, and Native American), which is more than two percent higher than in 2022 (38%) and 2021 (37.6%). Black players make up just 6.2% (59) of that population.

 

Five MLBbros Chosen In The Top 18 Picks Of 2022 MLB Draft

 

Also, the flow of high-level talent is increasing as Black players represent a higher percentage of the top prospects in the minor leagues.

 

As of April 2023, six of the top 25, 10 of the top 50, and 14 of the top 100 MLB Pipeline prospects are Black, and 49% of this list includes players of diverse backgrounds (Black, Latino, Asian). 

MLB Diversity Programs 

Programs like the DREAM Series, Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities, Youth Baseball Academies, and others have been indispensable in spreading the knowledge of the beloved game to Black and brown adolescents who haven’t previously had the opportunity to engage with the sport. 

 

History was made in the 2022 Draft when, for the first time, Black players made up four of the first five selections, proving that the game continues to develop. All four players were alumni of the DREAM Series, a diversity-focused development program offered in part by MLB & USA Baseball.

 

 

This access to baseball at a younger age in diverse communities plays a role in talent reaching the next level. Nine players selected in the first round of the ‘22 Draft were Black (30.0%), the most by total and percentage since 1992, when 10 of the 28 first-round selections were Black (35.7%). Black players have represented a higher percentage of top selections in the past two years, with 12.5% of the top 100 selections being Black (12 of the top 100 in 2021; 13 of the top 100 in 2022).

World Baseball Classic 

As the World Baseball Classic displayed – and participants agreed – the atmosphere of fans and players from countries around the world makes for an electric environment for games to be played. 

 

“I’ll play in every World Baseball Classic there is until I can’t walk anymore,” Chicago Cubs ace Marcus Stroman said. “That passion is something that’s unmatched and that energy, I love it. I love everything about it.”

 

“You can ask any of those guys, they will tell you they’d rather play in those games than the World Series,” Stroman continued. “Putting your country across your chest and playing for your family and your culture, there’s nothing that competes against it.”

 

These players of color bring their love of the game and their competitive spirit to the Majors to encourage change to the old, washed-up habits that were created about how America should play the nation’s pastime. 

MLBbros Still Fighting For A Fair Shake 

 

While diverse baseball crusaders anxiously anticipate Minor League player call-ups or big-time performances from their favorite players in the bigs, that wasn’t always the case for players of color. And it hasn’t been easy to bring diversity to every team; there are currently three teams without a Black player on their Big League roster (Red Sox, Rockies, Angels). No team has more than four Black players on their squad. 

 

Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier on April 15, 1947, with the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbets Field. Because he was able to hold his ground, bite his tongue and not be intimidated, he left the game in 1956 as one of the most hated players. Seventy-six years later, players are still attempting to bring the passion that was so often seen in the Negro Leagues to the Majors that originally enticed former Dodgers president Branch Rickey to take a chance on Robinson.

 

While there are still fans who want the old school game to be played, there are lovers of the new play style that exudes passion and swagger with bat flips, trash talk, and celebrations that bring thrills to the game of baseball in the regular season, rather than waiting until that expectation during the postseason. 

 

“They want to be in that moment each and every time playing for their country, regardless of what month it is in,” Stroman said about competing in the WBC.  

 

With talent clawing at the gates of the Minors to get their shot in the bigs, it’s seemingly the end of the old-timers’ game and the beginning of a new era, an era that appreciates the young players and their riveting gamesmanship that keeps fans glued to the television and buying tickets to catch a glimpse of the superstars that are being molded from diverse backgrounds. 

 

 

“There needs to be a way to put our personalities and players on display much better,” Stroman said. “You’re now seeing from the World Baseball Classic how much viewership we can truly have as a sport. So there’s a lot of work to be done in MLB.”

Jackie Robinson would agree.

Exclusive| MLBbro Jeffrey Hammonds Drops Jewels Live From Hank Aaron Invitational

Exclusive| MLBbro Jeffrey Hammonds Drops Jewels Live From Hank Aaron Invitational

13-Year #MLBbro Jeffrey Hammonds played from 1993-2005 for six different teams and was an All-Star in 2000 when he batted .335 with 20 homers and 106 RBI.

He’s a representative of the MLBPA and a long standing contributor to baseball’s diversity efforts. The NJ native and Stanford University alum recently completed his fourth season with #HankAaronInvitational cultivating, developing and mentoring the next generation of ball players.

So many jewels dropped in the interview. Here is Part 1

 

“I’m About To Go Where My Granny’s Gonna Be My Biggest Fan” | Yankees Great CC Sabathia’s Son, Carsten Ready To Slug Away For Georgia Tech

“I’m About To Go Where My Granny’s Gonna Be My Biggest Fan” | Yankees Great CC Sabathia’s Son, Carsten Ready To Slug Away For Georgia Tech

Former Yankees legend CC Sabathia accomplished a lot as a pitcher. The physically imposing 6-foot-6, flamethrowing lefty won the 2007 AL Cy Young Award, and a World Series with the Bronx Bombers in 2009. Sabathia who was taken 20th overall in the 1998 MLB Draft by the Cleveland Indians (Guardians), also became the 17th pitcher in MLB history to record 3,000 strikeouts.

He’s also the third lefty to ever reach the mark. CC finished his career tied with the great Bob Gibson in wins by a Black pitcher with (251), only trailing Ferguson Jenkins.

Now in retirement CC is guiding his son, Carsten, a 6-foot-4 and 240-pound slugger who’s headed to Georgia Tech. The power-hitting first baseman has displayed tremendous pop from both sides of the plate, and that unique trait got him some looks in last week’s MLB Draft. Carsten projects as a first baseman in the mold of former Phillies great Ryan Howard.

 

 

When he committed to the “Rambling Wreck,” in February, Carsten had this to say: “I’m about to go where my granny’s gonna be my biggest fan.” Carsten’s grandmother lives near the Atlanta institution.

Carsten Goes Off The Grid: Not A Pitcher Like Dad

While most MLB father-son duos are usually hitters or position players, CC and Carsten are polar opposites with dad being a pitcher and Carsten being a slugging infielder. But that isn’t the only difference, as Carsten is much more mobile and agile than his hulking dad.

 

 

That skillset made him one of the top 400 prospects in this year’s MLB Draft. While he wasn’t drafted, he’s headed to Georgia Tech where he’ll continue to develop as a hitter and overall player.

 Carsten Was A Coveted Recruit: Why Did GT Win Out?

While Carsten chose GT to continue his baseball career, he was a highly sought-after recruit with offers from Harvard, UCLA and Wake Forest to name a few. Following his commitment, in an interview with Northjersey.com he explained why the Yellow Jackets were the right fit for him, beyond being near his grandmother.

“Since Day 1, the first time I came in contact with them, they were all about family, and the culture, and the culture of winning that it takes to play at Georgia Tech. And once I started to get into conversations, not just about baseball, but about family, life, and things outside the white lines, I fell in love.”