Saturday, June 27, 2009

Pittsburgh Pirates honor Homestead Grays

Gray might be the Pittsburgh Pirates' lucky color.

The team is paying homage to the Homestead Grays for the Pirates' Heritage Weekend by wearing the Grays' uniforms in the series against the Kansas City Royals.


With two wins and four home runs so far, the Pirates are doing a sensational job honoring the Grays, who won more Negro League World Series titles than any other team.

The Grays won three championships, including the last one before the league disbanded in 1948.

The previous year, Jackie Robinson played his first game as a Brooklyn Dodger, making him the first African-American to play in the white-only major leagues.

At Friday night's game, fans received free commemorative Grays baseball caps. Some tried to answer a trivia question about the Negro League.

Like many of the other attendees sporting those "G" caps, my knowledge of the Pittsburgh's black baseball teams was minimal.


Unknowing of the Grays' success, I wondered why they were being honored since Pittsburgh had its own team in the Negro National League, the Pittsburgh Crawfords. Their successes weren't comparable. Even though the team showcased five Hall-of-Famers during its run, the Crawfords never saw a championship game.

The navy blue hat with an embroidered "G" gave me more than just something to fiddle with during the game's slow times. It gave me something to think about.

There isn't much of a lesson in this blog except to remember those who struggled for acceptance.

And if the Pirates have seen a little further, it's by standing on the shoulders of Grays.

This might have helped the Pirates too.



Let's go Buccos!

Thursday, June 18, 2009

White men can't jump? Black men can't skate?: Ethnic excuses for athletic ability

Three hours before the beginning of game seven of the Stanley Cup, I paced around the set of "Warrior" nervous about whether the director would wrap the scene before the puck dropped - I committed to being an extra before I realized that the series would go on for seven games.

It seemed like everyone was eager to get out; the crew moved the start time from 8:30 a.m. to 8 a.m. and dozens of crew members wore their Penguins gear. Some even had the moxie to wear Detroit Red Wings jerseys around Pittsburgh's North Hills Senior High School, where some of the movie's classroom scenes were shot.
While I was standing in a hallway waiting to enter the classroom, I heard a girl laughing and telling people why she couldn't like hockey.

"I don't follow the Penguins. Sure, I smile when they win, but I don't watch hockey. I'm black, and black people don't watch hockey. They just don't. My race doesn't let me watch hockey," she said.

I had to jump in. I told her that there are fewer Asians in the National Hockey League than black people, but my ethnicity doesn't keep me from watching hockey or football. Her excuse was just a cop out.

She tried to tell me off saying that the black people in the NHL were Canadians and not Americans so they aren't "black." That argument got tired out during Barack Obama's run for president. She couldn't name a black player in the league and yet she knew that their families didn't go through the struggle.

Well they are going through a struggle. They're overcoming stereotypes of their race. Perhaps their parents pushed them to pick up footballs, basketballs or at least baseballs, but they were happier with hockey sticks in their hands.

Mike Grier had a stint with youth football, but he soon realized that he was in the wrong sport. He became the first African-American to play in the NHL when he joined the Edmonton Oilers in 1996, with the support of his parents. However, growing up in "Hockeytown, USA" might have helped.

Willie O'Ree became the first man of African descent to play in the NHL in 1958, but he's Canadian.

**I have to put a plug in for the charitable, vegetarian, anti-fur, hockey-fight-extraordinaire Georges Laraque, who hails from Montreal but is of Haitian descent. I have to say that is seems like his Web site got an Obama-style makeover. You've got to love the blue gradient.

I told the girl that most hockey stars are not American, whether black, white, yellow or brown. The Canadian Ray Emery, Russian Evgeni Malkin, Canadian Manny Fernandez and the first player of Asian descent to captain a team in the NHL, Paul Kariya, who was born in Canada, have many things in common. But there's one glaring similarity: they weren't raised in the United States.

**Don't mind if I put in another plug. Paul Kariya had a cameo in D3: The Mighty Ducks, which is all about a diverse group of youngsters who outplay the contentious and preppy varsity team that believes ducks don't belong. Plus, his Japanese father played rugby, and his mother is Scottish. The Kariyas broke boundaries left and right.

Paul Tetsuhiko Kariya

If anything, the girl could have partially blamed her lack of interest in hockey on the country's and networks' lack of support since the lockout, pushing games on to more obscure networks and giving Conan O'Brien preference over the Stanley Cup finals.

But anyone who has interest in any sport, despite his or her color or culture can find a way to follow it, even if it's not on cable television.

The same goes for playing the sport. Physical superiority only goes so far; the only thing that can stop an athlete from playing the game is his or her mind.

To the nonbelievers, I have this video for you.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Penguins on parade

Enough of this "march of the penguins" talk. I was happy to see the Penguins ride today.

The victorious Pittsburgh Penguins waved at their fans from the back of pickup trucks at the team's parade Downtown.

The parade began on Grant Street at noon and proceeded down the Boulevard of the Allies and onto Stanwix Street, where the team showed off the Stanley Cup and thanked their supporters.

For those of you who were trapped at work, out of town or want to relive the excitement, I made a slideshow from the parade. Some highlights of the parade were seeing game-seven-hero Maxime Talbot clean shaven and joking around, a few local high school bands with black and gold colors, Marc-Andre Fleury next to Sidney Crosby and the Stanley Cup and, of course, Vladimir and Natalia Malkin. Unfortunately, I wasn't close enough to see Evgeni Malkin holding the Conn Smythe Trophy dressed up in a penguin (not Penguins) hat.



And here's a video of the MVP himself, Malkin. The crowd chants his nickname, Geno, as rides with the Conn Smythe Trophy.



Hopefully, we'll get to see the Penguins ride again soon.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

City of Champions

The morning after the "next generation" of Pittsburgh Penguins hoisted the Lord Stanley's cup above their heads, the Strip District was ready to honor the city's newest set of champions.


Saturday mornings at the Strip District are usually busy, but yesterday's crowd seemed a little different than usual. Vendors took the taunting shirts off the tables and made room for official Stanley Cup champions shirts and unofficial "City of Champions" shirts. People gave equal time to chat about Maxime Talbot, the scorer of the only two goals in the final game, as they did to the most valuable player of the playoffs - and possibly the season - Evgeni Malkin. Talbot got his number (and age) drawn on a black and gold cookie, which enjoy plate time next to the youngest captain to win the Stanley Cup, Sidney Crosby, 21.



Some vendors ran out of Marc-Andre Fleury shirts and smaller shirt sizes less than 12 hours after the final buzzer sounded in Detroit. Patrons interrogated vendors about when the locker room shirts, hats and other merchandise would be coming off the trucks.

It was how I envisioned the Pittsburgh in the early '90s after the Penguins won back-to-back championships: happy, buslting and confident in their teams. Plus, people were buying newspapers!

It was a great day to be a Pittsburgher, and Monday will be too. Check back for lots of pictures from the victory parade Downtown.