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Rube Foster Folks who knew Rube called him a pitcher, a cheater, a ticket taker, a popcorn maker, a showmaker, a showstopper, a money maker and, of course, a game breaker. He could do it all. The ultimate baseball attraction in one package—this was Rube Foster. Reared in Texas by a preaching father and gospel-singing mother, Foster disobeyed his parents to pursue a career between the white foul lines. He had the God-given ability to organize and promote teams, but much credit goes to Frank Leland, a product of Fisk University, who tutored a young Rube to immortal stardom. |
Young Rube’s career began in 1897
with the Austin Reds of Tillotson College.
The following year, he joined the semi-pro Yellow jackets in nearby Waco. The new century found Foster singing
with Frank Leland’s Chicago Union Giants for $40 a month and 15 cents meal
money. Here, he developed a nasty
screwball, thrown from an unique submarine delivery.
In 1903, he headed East to play for
the Cuban X-Giants. That fall, he
posted four victories in a seven-game series against the Philadelphia Giants for
the so-called “Colored Championship of the World.” The wandering Foster switched over to
the Philly team the next season and met his old teammates for bragging rights to
the “colored” title. Foster
accounted for both victories in the best-of-three series. He struck out 18 batters in one game,
beating the major league record of 15 set by Fred Glade of the St. Louis Browns.
Andrew Foster’s reputation as a
fine pitcher continue to expand with a victory over Rube Waddell and the
Philadelphia Athletics in 1904, earning the nickname Rube. He also assisted John McGraw, New York
Giants manager, with a few pitching tips for Christy Mathewson. Until 1903, Christy’s won-lost record
was .33 wins and 37 losses. After a
sermon from Foster, Mathewson won 30, 3 and 31 games, and led the league in
strikeouts the next three seasons.
In 1907, he returned to Chicago and
the Leland Giants, leading them to a 110-10 record, including 48 straight wins. In 1909, the Giants enter the tough
integrated city league. In
Foster’s first eleven starts, he won eleven games, with four shutouts. Such a dominating force that season,
that headlines simply stated: “FOSTER PITCHED, THAT’S ALL.”
By 1910, the Leland Giants were the
talk of the Midwest. They
christened a ball park in an all-white neighborhood near 69th and
Halsted as the Leland Giants Base Ball park.
Foster now serving as player-manager, amassed in his opinion the greatest
team of all time. Featuring such
stars as John Henry “Pop” Lloyd, the notorious streak hitter Pete Hill,
Grant “Home Run” Johnson, catcher extraordinaire Bruce Petway and great
pitchers like Frank Wickware and Pat Dougherty, the Leland team won 123 of 129
games. This impelled McGraw of the
Giants to announce, “If I had a bucket of whitewash that wouldn’t wash off,
you wouldn’t have five players left tomorrow.”
The following season, Foster formed a
partnership with John Schorling, a white businessman. Together they purchased the old ball
park (Old Roman’s) at 30th and Wentworh, from White Sox owner
Charlie Comiskey. The park became
home of one of black baseball’s finest teams, the Chicago American Giants. Foster billed his team as “THE
GREATEST AGGREGATION OF COLORED BASEBALL PLAYERS IN THE WORLD.” The Giants normally played semi-pro
teams for a guarantee of $60, rain or shine, with a fifty percent of the gross
receipts if their ace, Rube Foster would pitch.
The Giants creative style of play
epitomize black baseball. With a
merciless assault on the rule book, his teams exploited every trick to its
maximum advantage. Speed and
quickness, gambling and risk were signature trademarks of the Midwest team, as
they consistently defeated high-powered slugging teams.
Although an outstanding player, a
dependable team owner and a brilliant manager, perhaps Rube Foster’s most
impressive fulfillment was the creation of the Negro National League (NNL) in
Kansas City (1920). Foster was able
to accomplish what other black entrepreneurs had been unable to achieve in 1887,
1906, and more recently in 1911. The
league motto’s “We Are The Ship, All Else The Sea” was symbolic of its
relationship with major league baseball. Going
against the tide of segregation, Rube’s voyage became an obsession. For many years, Captain Rube struggled
without a life preserver in his attempts to keep the league afloat.
From his throne in Chicago, Foster
ran the NNL as a noble emperor. He
realized the need for balance competition, as he moved players from team to
team, even sending his star Oscar Charleston to the Indianapolis ABCs to help
their cause. He often lent money to
failing franchise to help meet their payroll and advanced monies to his own
players. With unparalleled
influence, Foster was the undisputed kingpin of black baseball in the Midwest.
In 1926, the czar-like,
baritone-voiced Foster succumbed to mental illness and was institutionalize in
Kankakee, Illinois. One of
baseball’s greatest minds was suddenly torn from the game. Four years later, the son of Sarah Watts
and Rev. Andrew Foster, Sr., was buried in Lincoln Memorial Park in Chicago,
Illinois. Foster with his
dedicated, high-minded approach to baseball was the force behind all subsequent
Negro Leagues.
Renowned sportswriter Frank (Fay)
Young of the Chicago Defender testified in behalf of the late legend, “One of
the most brilliant figures that the great national sports has ever produced. Rube knew every technicality of the
game, how to play it, and how to make his men play it. A true master of the game.”
He redefined the art of base running,
hit and run techniques and the do-or-die sacrifice play. He used creative ways to “stretch” a
hit, to “steal” a run and eventually “swipe” a victory. In 1981, justice was served; Foster was
found guilty of larceny and sentenced to a life term, without parole, in
Cooperstown’s Hall of Fame.
Rube was a phenomenal pitcher, a
magnificent manager, a powerful organizer, and even a greater humanitarian. He had the face of a teddy bear, the
heart of Rocky Balboa, the legendary strength of John Henry, the soul of Malcolm
X, the vision of Dr. Martin Luther King, the oratorical skills of James Earl
Jones and the genius of Ray Charles. Rube
Foster was the most perfect blend of baseball expertise ever assembled.