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Baseball Hall of Fame to feature retired players in Memorial Day weekend tribute to Negro Leagues East-West All-Star Game

Chicago White Sox assistant general manager Josh Barfield, right, and CC Sabathia, left, respond to questions during a news conference about the Hall of Fame East-West Classic at the MLB winter meetings on Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2023, in Nashville, Tenn.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — CC Sabathia is getting ready to take the mound again next spring, five years after his retirement, to pitch in a tribute to the Negro Leagues All-Star Game at the Hall of Fame’s Doubleday Field in Cooperstown, New York.

“My career ended with me ripping my shoulder up and not being able to throw a baseball anymore, but I’m rehabbing myself to be able to come back and pitch an inning in this game,” the 43-year-old left-hander said Tuesday during a news conference at the MLB winter meetings.

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Ken Griffey Jr. and Ozzie Smith have agreed to manage or coach at the May 25 Hall of Fame East-West Classic. It will be played in conjunction with the opening of the Hall’s “Souls of the Game: Voices of Black Baseball” exhibit.

The Negro Leagues East-West All-Star Game began at Chicago’s Comiskey Park in September 1933, two months after MLB’s first All-Star Game at the same ballpark, and was played annually through 1962.

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Brothers Jerry and Scott Hairston, whose grandfather Sam played for the Cincinnati and Indianapolis Clowns in the Negro American League, are among the players who said they will participate. Others include Ryan Howard, Prince Fielder, David Price, B.J. and Justin Upton, Curtis Granderson, Dontrelle Willis, Adam Jones, Dexter Fowler, LaTroy Hawkins and Edwin Jackson.

Josh Barfield, a former major-league player who is now an assistant general manager with the Chicago White Sox, has also committed to participate.

“To bring an awareness to the history of Black baseball, baseball is probably the most history-rich sport in this country, and Black players played a big part of that,” Barfield said during Tuesday’s news conference announcing the event. “It means a lot to go out there and be able to put this uniform on and represent what Black baseball means.”

His father, former major leaguer Jesse Barfield, said on social media that Josh’s great uncle Albert Overton had played in the Negro Leagues.

Thirty-seven of 343 people in the Hall of Fame had careers mostly or entirely in the Negro Leagues, including Buck O’Neil, Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, Monte Irvin and Cool Papa Bell.

“The stories have been told and we think we know the stories but the more we dig into the stories, we find out there’s something that hasn’t been told,” four-time 20-game winner Dave Stewart said.

MLB has recognized seven Negro Leagues from 1920-48 as having big league status, but incorporating those numbers has not yet been completed.

“As a kid growing up, I thought Negro League baseball was backyard, barnstorming baseball. These guys were the best athletes in the game and in the world at the time,” Sabathia said. “These guys were the LeBron James of that time.”

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In 1997, the hall celebrated the 50th anniversary of Jackie Robinson breaking the major league color barrier with the exhibit “Pride and Passion: The African-American Baseball Experience.”

“The way in which the world views baseball, Black baseball, race relations has changed in 25 years,” Hall president Josh Rawitch said. “It’s also really important to the curatorial team and everybody else involved that it’s not just stories of struggle and challenges, it’s also a celebration.”

Sabathia, a six-time All-Star and 251-game winner, is eligible for the 2025 Hall of Fame vote. He visited Cooperstown two years ago with his son Carter for a youth game.

“That was the first time I really, really, really thought about it, and I was like, damn, I really want to be in the Hall of Fame. I never thought about being in the Hall of Fame when I was playing,” Sabathia said. “Walking into the plaque room was like — for me was like walking into a church.”


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