Forgotten Stars
by Thomas Sowell
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by Thomas Sowell: The
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Three recent
sports biographies – two about baseball stars Stan Musial and Hank
Greenberg, and another about boxing great Joe Louis – are not only
interesting in themselves, but also recall an era that now seems
as irretrievably past as the Roman Empire.
They also raise
questions about who is remembered and why.
The St. Louis
Cardinals' great hitter Stan Musial was one of those stars who dominated
his era in the 1940s and 1950s, and yet is almost forgotten today,
even among baseball fans. Mention baseball in the 1940s and 1950s,
and the names that come to mind immediately are Ted Williams and
Joe DiMaggio.
Yet Stan Musial
had a higher lifetime batting average than Joe DiMaggio – and Hank
Greenberg hit more home runs in a season, and had more runs batted
in, than either Williams or DiMaggio.
Maybe the reason
for the difference is that it is easier to remember some things
when they are associated with other things. Ted Williams was the
last .400 hitter and Joe DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak is a
record that may never be broken.
There are no
similarly spectacular records associated with Hank Greenberg or
Stan Musial. Greenberg hit 58 home runs in a season, so that two
more would have tied Babe Ruth's record at the time. Greenberg also
had 183 runs batted in, just one short of Lou Gehrig's American
League record. But close only counts when pitching horseshoes or
throwing hand grenades.
Mark Kurlansky's
biography says in its preface, "Hank Greenberg was a baseball player
who hit a lot of home runs before most of us were born." But not
all of us. The longest home run I ever saw was hit by Hank Greenberg,
deep into Yankee Stadium's 3rd deck, back when it was 415 feet down
the left field foul line.
The book about
Musial is titled Stan
Musial: An American Life by George Vecsey. It is more about
his life than about baseball. In it, Musial recalls that, back in
his childhood, creating mischief far from his own neighborhood was
still risky, because relatives who lived in other neighborhoods
would not hesitate to grab you and spank your behinds.
Ah, but we
are so much more enlightened today – or are we? Will anyone ever
call us "the greatest generation"?
The cover of
the recent book about Louis, by Randy Roberts, simply says Joe
Louis – a name with enormous impact in his era. It too is
more about the life of the man, and the great but forgotten role
he played in the history of American race relations.
Joe Louis was
the first black hero of white Americans, as well as black Americans.
The dignity and sportsmanship with which he conducted himself had
much to do with changing the image of black people in general, and
eventually opening many doors for them.
In those days,
you didn't have to act like a lout to try to show that you were
black. Acting like a gentleman was something admired by blacks and
whites alike.
Louis engaged
in none of the cheap, show-off antics that have become all too common
among boxers of a later era. He came to the ring to do a job, and
he did it professionally, skillfully and with devastating results.
He still holds the record for the most one-round knockouts in heavyweight
championship fights.
With all his
fine qualities, Joe Louis also had his flaws as both a man and a
boxer. Author Randy Roberts covers both the good and the bad, and
clearly sees the good as far more predominant.
The
central boxing dramas of Joe Louis' career were his two fights with
Max Schmeling. In the first fight, when Louis was a new young sensation
bursting onto the boxing scene, and clearly headed toward a championship
fight, he still had both defensive vulnerabilities and an over-confidence
born of his unbroken string of victories.
The older and
canny Schmeling studied Louis' fights, spotted his flaws and took
advantage of them to score an upset knockout. As Louis' own manager
said at the time, it was probably the best thing that could have
happened to a young Joe Louis.
That defeat
got Louis' full attention, focused his mind, and dominated his work.
So intense was Louis' focus on vindication that, before the second
fight, he confessed to an astonished friend that he was scared –
scared that he might kill Schmeling.
As it turned
out, he sent Schmeling to the hospital, after a devastating one-round
knockout that shocked the boxing audience.
July
13, 2011
Thomas
Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.
To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other
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