Honoring the Past by Focusing on the Future (Published 2022)
NASHVILLE — It’s becoming that the Nashville Stars, a group for gamers ages 10 and below, are named in honor of an previous Negro leagues group that performed in Music City within the Nineteen Thirties, ’40s, and ’50s. From the aggressive base operating to the all-Black teaching workers and the speaker blaring a mixture of hip-hop and R&B from the bleachers, the Stars embody the power and pleasure that made pre-integration Black baseball a cultural phenomenon as a lot as a sporting attraction. The group additionally serves as a stark contradiction of the stereotypical picture of American youth baseball.
For the youngsters on this group, nearly all of whom are Black, baseball isn’t a spring stopgap to carry them over till soccer season begins, or the free exercise sponsored by the group group which will or could not obtain monetary help from Major League Baseball. For these youngsters, baseball is each ardour and goal.
As Major League Baseball and the game’s wider group have a good time the seventy fifth anniversary of Jackie Robinson’s debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers, the inclination is to look to the previous, to look at what Robinson achieved along with his pioneering efforts — and, in the end, what he didn’t. Robinson’s willingness to show the opposite cheek and his potential to achieve the face of overt racism could have made him an icon and hero, however it didn’t make the game much less hostile to Black individuals on the entire.
Today, the variety of African-American gamers within the majors is at its lowest level because the Nineteen Fifties, when some groups had but to signal a Black participant, and the variety of Black youth within the sport isn’t a lot greater. According to a report from the Sports and Fitness Industry Association, solely 11.1 % of Black American youngsters performed baseball in 2018 — a statistic that impacts the numbers of athletes competing on the highest stage.
This lack of participation is commonly attributed to the excessive prices related to youth baseball and a basic lack of entry to the game for a lot of Black youths of their city neighborhoods. But the Stars aren’t a group of “inner-city kids,” and lots of the Black mother and father in this system don’t have an issue shopping for $300 bats and paying for further coaching charges. Here, their youngsters discover refuge from different challenges that plague the youth sport, and due to the management of Black males who’re dedicated to pushing Robinson’s legacy ahead, they’re able to play the sport they love with out compromise.
A Team’s Origins
If you ask Ro Coleman Jr. and D.J. Merriwether, who coach the Stars with Xavier Turner, there was by no means purported to be an precise group.
They each grew up with the sport — Coleman in Chicago and Merriwether in Nashville — and although they took divergent paths after highschool, they knew they’d ultimately discover themselves again locally, planting the love of baseball within the hearts and minds of a brand new technology of Black youngsters. They additionally each believed they’d be most helpful by offering in-depth coaching for youths after which sending them off to play for different coaches.
Then destiny and necessity intervened.
After taking part in at Kentucky Wesleyan after which at Crichton College in Memphis, Merriwether returned to Nashville and, in 2016, launched Beyond the Diamond. The developmental program supplied youth baseball coaching with a deal with serving to youngsters discover advantages from the sport past a university scholarship or shot at taking part in professional ball.
“The whole thing for me was not saying that every kid is going to make the major leagues,” Merriwether stated. “It’s about using baseball to create other avenues for kids, like it’s created for myself. Being able to network, to meet a lot of different people from a lot of different places. Being able to sit at tables I never thought I’d sit at. That’s what baseball has done for me.”
Eventually, after sufficient begging from mother and father dissatisfied with different packages within the metropolis, he determined to place a group collectively. Doing all the things on his personal was taking its toll, however Merriwether solid forward, noting that he believed if he simply stored “planting seeds and trying to build baseball around the city, eventually some things would connect.”
The connection that modified all the things got here in 2019, when he was launched to Coleman and Jarrod Parker, the previous main league pitcher who had been drafted ninth general by the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2007. After rehabbing his chronically injured elbow for 2 years, Parker determined to open a sports activities coaching facility, later providing the area to Coleman and the group of coaching purchasers he’d begun to domesticate.
Coleman, a former standout at Chicago’s Simeon High School, had received a nationwide championship with Vanderbilt in 2014 earlier than being drafted by the Detroit Tigers after his senior 12 months. He says now that the minors have been a drag, and with a level in hand and no assure of creating it to the large leagues, Coleman determined to hold up his cleats and head again to Nashville to get to the business of his life’s work. Like Merriwether, he knew the potential of baseball to have a deep impression on the lives of Black youngsters.
“Growing up, my friends and I wanted to be able to create a change, and we didn’t realize at an early age that we’d have the impact that we do now,” Coleman stated. “We just wanted to see more Blacks play the game at a high level.”
Parker was fully bought on Coleman’s imaginative and prescient, and Merriwether proved to be a lacking piece of the puzzle that allowed Coleman and Parker to succeed in an excellent wider viewers. And in 2020 — after partnering with Music City Baseball, a company working to carry an M.L.B. growth group referred to as the Stars to Nashville — the Nashville Stars youth program was born.
“Seeing another Black male in Nashville trying to provide opportunities in the game of baseball for African American and other minority kids was something special to see,” Coleman stated of Merriwether. “It’s that same passion me and Jarrod had as far as investing in the kids. He’s a real dude; we vibed; and it just took off.”
Playing Where They Should
The Stars started with a group for gamers 17 and below (17U) in 2020, and after a profitable first season (gamers have already dedicated to Vanderbilt, Stanford, and a few smaller colleges), Coleman and crew determined to discipline groups on the 13U and 10U ranges in late summer time 2021.
The choice to discipline a 10U group was proper on time for Brandon Hill, who had simply relocated his household — together with his 10-year-old son Brendon — from Hoover, Ala., to Nashville. Hill says that Brendon fell in love with baseball early, and from a younger age, Hill has at all times sought out Black-run groups.
“I didn’t want him to be treated differently,” Hill stated. “I didn’t want to be a part of the good ol’ boy system, or be in a situation where a coach is like, ‘Well he should be playing there, but he can’t because my friend’s son wants to play there and we go out for beers on the weekend.’”
While specialists regularly talk about the monetary limitations to youth baseball, these mother and father know that lots of the points impacting the sport on the professional stage — the isolation Black gamers really feel on groups the place few, if any, gamers appear to be them, the strain to change to positions stereotypically related to Black gamers like heart discipline, and the unstated guidelines and political maneuvers that exhaust even probably the most steadfast athletes — permeate the youth sport, too. In addition to financial challenges, these are the problems stopping extra Black youngsters from taking part in the game.
Before becoming a member of Merriwether’s Beyond the Diamond group and in the end touchdown on the Stars, Christopher Gordon’s son, Austin, performed in a predominantly white program in a suburb simply south of Nashville. Though the group had a stable repute, Gordon says that Austin was pushed into the outfield as a result of the infielders have been typically coaches’ youngsters.
“For me, as his dad, I had to make a decision that he needs to be in a program that really is going to invest in him,” Gordon stated. “If he’s an outfielder, he’s an outfielder. But I want it to be fair; a level playing field.”
Merriwether moved Austin to second base, and he now alternates between pitcher and different infield positions. Gordon says that he’s additionally having much more enjoyable — and never simply because he’s taking part in a unique place.
The complete program charges are about $2,400 per 12 months, Coleman stated, or corresponding to these for best journey groups. The Empowerment Pursuit basis works with mother and father to offset prices as a lot as potential.
According to father or mother after father or mother, Black or white, the emphasis on having enjoyable whereas remaining aggressive differentiates the Nashville Stars from different packages within the space. “You move from having parents who are doing it as a second job to having coaches who are doing it as a profession, and the level of investment and quality of coaching just improves overall,” stated Kristen Menke, mom of infielder Max Goetz.
Gordon agrees. “It’s awesome to have a program with coaches of this caliber, and to be able to give the kids this type of exposure to the sport that, frankly, when I was growing up, I didn’t even know existed,” he stated.
Dealing With Adversity
Sometimes, nevertheless, that publicity isn’t optimistic. At a match in Lawrenceburg, Tenn., a small city on the Alabama border, the Stars encountered a bunch of hostile mother and father from a group from Alabama.
“I think that they were shocked to be losing to a majority-Black team, and they didn’t behave well,” stated Menke, who’s white. “They felt like the umpires were calling things in our favor when the reality was, things were being called the same way.”
Though Merriwether stated the coaches didn’t hear something on the sphere, the mother and father stated they heard the mother and father from opposing group utilizing the n-word and making different crude statements.
It was a wake-up name for Menke, who stated that she’d by no means skilled something like that however, afterward, was extra sure than ever that she’d made the fitting choice in having her son be a part of the Stars.
At the identical time, Merriwether’s previous expertise allowed him to information the group and deal with “controlling the controllables.”
“His dad was there, saying, ‘We dealt with this the whole time D.J. was growing up,’ that this kind of stuff has always plagued Black baseball,” Menke stated. “And I’m thinking, ‘If our mission is to change the culture of baseball, then we can’t take this anymore.’”
“There’s a community among the team, but it’s also about having this team be a reflection of the community.”
Andrea Williams is a contract author in Nashville and the creator of “Baseball’s Leading Lady: Effa Manley and the Rise and Fall of the Negro Leagues.”