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Jackie Robinson Discrimination

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You give me the uniform, give me the number on my back, I'll give you the guts.- Jackie Robinson in 42” Robinson is famously know for his jersey number 42, and being a player for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Not only taking his team to the World Series but breaking down the color barrier that stood in the way. Robinson and many others where “helping pave the way for the civil right movement”(Tygiel 1). Not only that but “general manager branch Ricky would offer Robinson a lifetime deal to redefine the color line within baseball”(Tygiel 2). Jackie was the prefect man for the job, to change up the game not only in the professional world but also the real world. Jackie Robison over came the odds of segregation, mistreatment and color barrier, …show more content…

“Without a doubt Jackie suffered more abuse and more hatred than any other player in the history of the game and had good sportsmanship and complimented a young white boy from Oakland”(Wong 153). Even though tough times where rolling around for Jackie. Staying humble when little baseball fans came around spoke a lot about a person true character. “When Jackie was signed to the Brooklyn Dodgers, Pee Wee Reese’s teammates made an effort to sign a petition to be traded than play alongside a black man”(Wong 274). It goes to show that growing up in segregation mixed with a bunch of racist installed wrong morals in little boys which carry out into adulthood. “More than a decade before Martin Luther King’s development for nonviolent protest techniques for the southern racism Ricky was trying the tactic on Jackie”(Glasser 6). Ricky was reteaching Robinson how to react when violence was thrown at him in every which way. Even the battles that Robinson did not know about where being handle in a good manner. “Jackie performance under unimaginable pressure was true one of the greatest athletic triumphs, if not the greatest in American history”(Glasser 8). Words can not put into say what a young black man had to face to play baseball with rowdy, snobby white man that dominated the game. “In the first 37 games Robinson was hit by the pitchers six times, no player in the history …show more content…

But honestly Jackie Robinson squashed that to pieces. “1947 Robinson became the “rookie of the year” made the difference… Jackie instantly became the league’s biggest draw”(Sailer 4). Jackie was getting so much attention that in “1948 one year after Jackie Robinson milestone… Gotham corporation issued him a baseball game named after him”(Wong 30). The company took note on how much popularity a black rookie and instantly became a huge success. “ The liberal world view, discrimination stem from ignorance of the actual talents of blacks in baseball, opposite was true”(Sailer 3). The pigmentation that is visual to the human eye is very noticeable especially the darker tones. Having so much talent and not being white was look down upon it wasn’t till recently like Jackie Robinson and others started to change the different angle people perceived. “Jackie opened people's eyes of all races that skin color had nothing to do with talent ability, hard work, strength of character, matter the most”(Glasser 11). Finally people where paying attention to what a black person had to say, and if no one listened the actions of Robinson showed through even in the tough times. “Between 1949-1962 black players where dominating the game by winning 11 out of 14 NL MVP awards”(Sailer 3). It wasn't to common to see a black man playing in the leagues after WWII. The odds where still being defined Robinson was a intelligent

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