"Baseball players now tend to come in two groups. There are Latino players, scouted before they are 10, signed into baseball academies before their sweet 16 and imported along a global pipeline until they are cast aside or make the majors. Then there are white players, who largely come from suburban backgrounds and college programs. Baseball--in the US context--has gone country club. Like golf and tennis, or their hemp-addled cousins in the X Games, they are sports that require serious bank for admission. In addition, you need parents with the leisure time to be involved. These sports just don't fit the reality for today's working families, black or white."
Dave Zirin in The Nation frets about the lack of African-American players in baseball.
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Strike Out
Labels:
2000s,
class,
race and ethnicity,
social history,
sports
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment