Major League Rebels

Major League Rebels
Title Major League Rebels PDF eBook
Author Robert Elias
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Pages 377
Release 2022-04-13
Genre Sports & Recreation
ISBN 1538158892

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A captivating history of the baseball reformers and revolutionaries who challenged their sport and society—and in turn helped change America. Athletes have often used their platform to respond to and protest injustices, from Muhammad Ali and Colin Kaepernick to Billie Jean King and Megan Rapinoe. Compared to their counterparts, baseball players have often been more cautious about speaking out on controversial issues; but throughout the sport’s history, there have been many players who were willing to stand up and fight for what was right. In Major League Rebels: Baseball Battles over Workers' Rights and American Empire, Robert Elias and Peter Dreier reveal a little-known yet important history of rebellion among professional ballplayers. These reformers took inspiration from the country’s dissenters and progressive movements, speaking and acting against abuses within their profession and their country. Elias and Dreier profile the courageous players who demanded better working conditions, battled against corporate power, and challenged America’s unjust wars, imperialism, and foreign policies, resisting the brash patriotism that many link with the “national pastime.” American history can be seen as an ongoing battle over wealth and income inequality, corporate power versus workers’ rights, what it means to be a “patriotic” American, and the role of the United States outside its borders. For over 100 years, baseball activists have challenged the status quo, contributing to the kind of dissent that creates a more humane society. Major League Rebels tells their inspiring stories.

Baseball Rebels

Baseball Rebels
Title Baseball Rebels PDF eBook
Author Peter Dreier
Publisher U of Nebraska Press
Pages 408
Release 2022-04
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1496217772

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"Baseball Rebels tells stories of reformers and radicals who were influenced by, and in turn influenced, America's broader political and social protest movements, including battles against racism, corporate control, worker exploitation, sexism and homophobia, and American militarism"--

Rebel Baseball

Rebel Baseball
Title Rebel Baseball PDF eBook
Author Steve Perlstein
Publisher
Pages 272
Release 1994
Genre Sports & Recreation
ISBN 9780964033498

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"The Northern League was a bold, rebellious baseball experiment: the first time in decades that an independent minor league bucked the rule of organized baseball and did things the way it wanted to. The results were a shock, even to those involved..." -- back cover.

The Federal League of Base Ball Clubs

The Federal League of Base Ball Clubs
Title The Federal League of Base Ball Clubs PDF eBook
Author Robert Peyton Wiggins
Publisher McFarland
Pages 369
Release 2008-09-30
Genre Sports & Recreation
ISBN 0786438355

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The last independent major league ended its brief run in 1915, after only two seasons at the national pastime’s top level. But no competitor to establishment baseball ever exerted so much influence on its rival, with some of the most recognizable elements of the game today—including the commissioner system, competition for free agents, baseball’s antitrust exemption, and even the beloved Wrigley Field—traceable to the so-called outlaw organization known as the Federal League of Base Ball Clubs. This comprehensive history covers the league from its formation in 1913 through its buyout, dissolution, and legal battles with the National and American leagues. The day-to-day operation of the franchises, the pennant races and outstanding players, the two-year competitive battle for fans and players, and the short- and long-term impact on the game are covered in detail.

Baseball Rebels

Baseball Rebels
Title Baseball Rebels PDF eBook
Author Peter Dreier
Publisher U of Nebraska Press
Pages 440
Release 2022-04
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1496231775

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In Baseball Rebels Peter Dreier and Robert Elias examine the key social challenges—racism, sexism and homophobia—that shaped society and worked their way into baseball’s culture, economics, and politics. Since baseball emerged in the mid-1800s to become America’s pastime, the nation’s battles over race, gender, and sexuality have been reflected on the playing field, in the executive suites, in the press box, and in the community. Some of baseball’s rebels are widely recognized, but most of them are either little known or known primarily for their baseball achievements—not their political views and activism. Everyone knows the story of Jackie Robinson breaking baseball’s color line, but less known is Sam Nahem, who opposed the racial divide in the U.S. military and organized an integrated military team that won a championship in 1945. Or Toni Stone, the first of three women who played for the Indianapolis Clowns in the previously all-male Negro Leagues. Or Dave Pallone, MLB’s first gay umpire. Many players, owners, reporters, and other activists challenged both the baseball establishment and society’s status quo. Baseball Rebels tells stories of baseball’s reformers and radicals who were influenced by, and in turn influenced, America’s broader political and social protest movements, making the game—and society—better along the way.

The Rebel League

The Rebel League
Title The Rebel League PDF eBook
Author Ed Willes
Publisher McClelland & Stewart
Pages 305
Release 2011-03-18
Genre Sports & Recreation
ISBN 1551996006

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The wildest seven years in the history of hockey The Rebel League celebrates the good, the bad, and the ugly of the fabled WHA. It is filled with hilarious anecdotes, behind the scenes dealing, and simply great hockey. It tells the story of Bobby Hull’ s astonishing million-dollar signing, which helped launch the league, and how he lost his toupee in an on-ice scrap. It explains how a team of naked Birmingham Bulls ended up in an arena concourse spoiling for a brawl. How the Oilers had to smuggle fugitive forward Frankie “Seldom” Beaton out of their dressing room in an equipment bag. And how Mark Howe sometimes forgot not to yell “Dad!” when he called for his teammate father, Gordie, to pass. There’s the making of Slap Shot, that classic of modern cinema, and the making of the virtuoso line of Hull, Anders Hedberg, and Ulf Nilsson. It began as the moneymaking scheme of two California lawyers. They didn’ t know much about hockey, but they sure knew how to shake things up. The upstart WHA introduced to the world 27 new hockey franchises, a trail of bounced cheques, fractious lawsuits, and folded teams. It introduced the crackpots, goons, and crazies that are so well remembered as the league’s bizarre legacy. But the hit-and-miss league was much more than a travelling circus of the weird and wonderful. It was the vanguard that drove hockey into the modern age. It ended the NHL’s monopoly, freed players from the reserve clause, ushered in the 18-year-old draft, moved the game into the Sun Belt, and put European players on the ice in numbers previously unimagined. The rebel league of the WHA gave shining stars their big-league debut and others their swan song, and provided high-octane fuel for some spectacular flameouts. By the end of its seven years, there were just six teams left standing, four of which—the Winnipeg Jets, Quebec Nordiques, Edmonton Oilers, and Hartford Whalers—would wind up in the expanded NHL.

Dangerous Danny Gardella

Dangerous Danny Gardella
Title Dangerous Danny Gardella PDF eBook
Author Robert Elias
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages 0
Release 2025-04-15
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN

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The first-ever biography of an unlikely baseball pioneer. While baseball's postwar years are often called the "Golden Age" of the sport, it was also an era when the reserve clause bound players to their teams and suppressed their rights and wages. Into these conditions came Danny Gardella, who openly resisted this bondage and launched the legal fight against the reserve clause that set the stage for Curt Flood and Marvin Miller's challenge two decades later. In Dangerous Danny Gardella: Baseball's Neglected Trailblazer for Today's Millionaire Athletes, Robert Elias tells the story of this little-known yet remarkable ballplayer who stood up to Major League Baseball and laid the foundation for free agency. Elias recounts Gardella's humble beginnings, his struggles to establish himself as a professional baseball player, his entertaining antics on and off the field, and his jump from Organized Baseball to the Mexican League that was the spark not only for challenging the reserve clause, but for creating America's most powerful labor union, the MLB Player's Association. Gardella was an unlikely working-class hero: a Renaissance man who played ball and wrote poetry; who quoted Shakespeare, Freud, and Dewey; who was an acrobat and Golden Gloves boxer; who was an opera, vaudeville, and Broadway singer; and who became a weight training and nutrition pioneer. His remarkable life, full of twists and turns, tells the hidden history of the struggle against the reserve clause, delivering a new perspective on America's Golden Age of Baseball and the origins of free agency.