RecensionsBook Reviews

Lost Champions: Four Men, Two Teams, and the Breaking of Pro Football’s Color Line, By Gretchen Atwood (2016) New York: Bloomsbury, 288 pages. ISBN 978-1-62040-600-7[Notice]

  • Braham Dabscheck

…plus d’informations

  • Braham Dabscheck
    Senior Fellow, Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne

Both baseball and American football operated systems of segregation, which barred African Americans from playing for their respective teams. Jackie Robinson has been lauded for his role in civil rights struggles when he played his first game for the Brooklyn Dodgers, in April 1947, in a Hall of Fame career. He was signed by the Dodgers in 1945 and spent 1946 with the AAA team, the Montreal Canadians, helping them to win the ‘Little World Series’. Dodgers’ management correctly surmised that the environment in Montreal would be more conducive in aiding his preparation for the majors. Football, however, was integrated a year earlier. The Los Angeles Rams signed Kenny Washington and Woody Strode (Strode’s ancestry also included Native Americans); both former teammates of Jackie Robinson when they were at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). The Cleveland Browns also signed Bill Willis and Marion Motley in 1946. Washington played three years for the Rams. Strode played one year and then spent two years with the Calgary Stampeders, who he helped win Canada’s Grey Cup in 1948. Upon retiring he had a successful acting career. Willis played with the Rams for eight years. Motley also played with the Rams for eight years and one year with the Pittsburgh Steelers in 1955. Both were elected to Pro Football’s Hall of Fame. Gretchen Atwood, a former sports journalist, stumbled across these pioneers of football integration by chance and was perplexed about her ignorance of this phenomenon. She asks: “If these guys came before Jackie, why do we know so little about them? This book is my answer” (p. ix). Unfortunately, the answer she provides is unsatisfactory. The major reason for this is that Atwood had other objectives in mind and her narrative is poorly structured. Atwood’s major (unstated) goals were, first, to provide accounts of the football careers and major games of the four players at high school, college, the army and professionally, and of a clash between the Rams and Browns for the 1950 National Football League Championship. Second, she provides a chilling account of major examples of racist hatred and segregation which occurred in America at this time of sporting integration. They are murders/shootings (what Atwood calls lynchings) of African Americans in Georgia and how the good “ol boys” made sure no one was held accountable; attempts to integrate an amusement park in Cleveland where, amongst numerous examples of violence, senior police failed in their duty of care to African American police officers who were beaten up by so called park police in trying to maintain order; and the trajectory of racially restrictive housing covenants in America with a particular focus on developments in Los Angeles. In examining both the sports and broader segregation issues, Atwood wants to draw attention to the numerous activists who became involved in such struggles. The structural problem is that the book jumps backward and forward in time and within chapters, often mixes and matches the ‘pure’ football narrative with broader segregation issues. A more successful and engaging approach would have been to provide a conventional chronological account of developments with separate and lengthy chapters for the substantive segregation and race hatred issues. Especially with respect to the latter, a more straight forward presentation of material would have more successfully driven home the perfidy of America’s sad racial past. Atwood’s explanation of why Jackie Robinson has been afforded a prominent place as a civil rights champion and the four footballers not is linked to what she regards as an uncritical acceptance of a “Great Man Theory of History” (p. 228). According to Attwood, Robinson’s success …