February 2, 1989 - Bill White - a podcast by Stephen Hammond

from 2018-02-02T07:01

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Bill White becomes the first black president of baseball’s National League. William DeKova White had an extraordinary baseball career both on and off the field. He spent 13 years as a major-league first baseman with the New York Giants, the St. Louis Cardinals and the Philadelphia Phillies. In 1966, White tore his Achilles tendon during a paddle-ball game. It curtailed his baseball career, prompting him to retire from the game entirely in 1969. But he didn’t stray far; he landed a job at a television station that led to work as an on-air sports announcer. When he became the New York Yankees’ play-by-play announcer, he was hailed as America’s first black announcer for a major league team. He held that position for 18 years, until February 2, 1989. That’s when he took a salary cut to become the National League’s first black baseball president, and incidentally the highest-ranking black official in American professional sports. He held the job for five years before retiring.


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