In the movie, 42, Branch Rickey tells Jackie Robinson that he is medicine. Actually, the exact quote is: “You’re the one living the sermon. In the wilderness . . . 40 days . . .all of it. Only you. . . .You can get out there and hit. You can get on base and score. You can win this game for us. We need you. Everybody needs you. You’re medicine, Jack.”

It’s true. Jackie Robinson was medicine. When Branch Rickey was trying to help Major League Baseball integrate, Robinson was the right man for the job. There have been many who felt it should have been Satchel Paige who was asked to leave the Negroe Leagues to play in Major League Baseball. However, everyone needs to remember the character and temperment of the individual players. Paige was an excellent pitcher, but he was hot-headed. Robinson had the right temperment and skill to show the world what African American baseball players could play in the MLB.

The world changes . . . sometimes for the better and sometimes for the worse. Luckily, sports has been there to help guide the changes. Sports figures have been medicine for nearily a century. Muhammad Ali was medicine. Billie Jean King is medicine. Amy Trask and Jeanne Buss are medicine. Pam Oliver, Jayne Kennedy and Lesley Visser are medicine. Willie O’Ree is medicine. The previous trailblazers showed the world that stereotypes weren’t necessarily the truth. They also taught us that the world may say no but there is still hope.

There is a hope that we can learn from each other about life inside and outside of sports. They taught us that we can take a stand for what is right . . . that women aren’t inferior to men . . . that African Americans, Hispanics, Asians, Arabs, Jews and Native Americans have and will continue to contribute to this world . . . that individuals with physical and mental disabilities are not helpless . . . that everyone is equal and fighting for one’s happiness and freedom is fighting the good fight.

Today, we have children fighting to survive a day in school. There are still little girls hoping to prove they are not inferior to boys overseas. Minorities face police brutality with little remorse. In these times, it seems like the world is changing for the worse. But we have new sports figures that are fighting to give us our medicine–You Can Play, Right To Play, the NFL players protest, and the Bell Let’s Talk as well as several athletes’ charities like Torrey Smith Family Fund, the Janis Foligno Foundation and Steve Nash Foundation.

Medicine is created to heal. In this case, it is listening, opening our eyes, and trying to understand one another. It is about the necessary discussions that need to take place to make the world better for our children as well as ourselves. It is about progress instead of the recent regress. These brave individuals and organizations are fighting to give us medicine, but the question remains whether we will take it and get well.


Source: Jason Grzybowski (From the movie, 42)

It’s not Thursday or Friday to have a throwback or flashback, but this article is necessary for the discussion which should take place after tomorrow’s article. It was not an article about racism but it is a side of the truth that needs to be presented based upon the incident that happened to Devante Smith-Pelley of the Washington Capitals in Chicago last week:

First, this article is not about racism. It is about the lack of interest of a minority group in a particular sport. And it is that lack of interest in the sport of hockey that leads to the question why don’t more minorities gravitate to the sport either as players or fans.

To start this theoretical exercise, let us begin with a peek inside of funny conversation that took place last night. It happens between several coworkers of which two are working and the other three are hanging out together at the game’s event upstairs. The exchange takes place after a Black, or African American, player from the home team is sent to the sin bin (penalty box) for slashing. We will call the player, Reagan.

The following communication takes place via text messages with the exception of the fan who is sitting behind the three coworkers hanging out in the stands:*

Fan: (yelling at ref) You can’t call that on him! That’s racist!
Coworker 1: (laughing with Coworker 2 & 3) Oh my God, did he just say that?
Coworker 2: Yeah, he went there.
So then, coworker 2 proceeds to text fellow coworkers 4 and 5 who are working to tell them about the fan.
Coworker 4: Well, what do you expect him to say? Reagan is a mythical being in the NHL.
Coworker 2: So, you’re saying he’s an unicorn?
Coworker 4: Yes. How many Black guys do you know play in the NHL?
Coworker 2: Three.
Coworker 1: There are more than 3 guys who play in the NHL.
Coworker 2: (laughing) Really. Name them.
Coworker 1: Okay, there’s the Blue Jackets, the Jets, the Predators, the Bruins. . . um, um, and then there’s the Duke for the ‘Yotes.
Coworker 2: (still laughing) So, there is five.
Coworker 1: (unamused by her lack of memory) There’s more than that. I just can’t remember them. I know there’s more.

Well, that converstation led to the thought that maybe we should investigate how many there really were playing currently in the NHL. It also led to the thought that why aren’t there more minorities of all races playing or attending NHL games.

There are more than five . . . actually several more. Akim Aliu, Justin Bailey, Nicholas, Pierre Edouard Bellemare, J.T.Brown, Dustin Byfuglien, Trevor Daley, Anthony Duclair, Emerson Etem, Mark Fraser, Christopher Gibson (New York Islanders), Seth Jones, Evander Kane, Oliver Kylington, Darnell Nurse, Johnny Oduya, Kyle Okposo, Ryan Reaves, Wayne Simmonds, Devante Smith-Pelly, Gemel Smith, Chris Stewart, Malcolm Subban, PK Subban, and Joel Ward.

In all, there are 26 Black NHL players approximately one for every team. The only teams that do not have a Black player on their team include New York Rangers, Las Vegas Golden Knights, Colorado Avalanche, Anaheim Ducks, Toronto Maple Leafs and the San Jose Sharks. However, both the Toronto Maple Leafs, Chicago Blackhawks and the New York Rangers have players of Arab descent (Nazeem Kadri, Brandon Saad and Mika Zibanejad, respectively). TJ Oshie of the Washington Capitals is of Asian descent.
Unfortunately, there are only 5 players of Latin, or Hispanic, descent. They include Al Montoya of the Montreal Canadiens, Scott Gomez of the St. Louis Blues, Austin Matthews of the Toronto Maple Leafs, Raffi Torres of the San Jose Sharks, and Bill Guerin of the Pittsburgh Penguins.

So, why is it there are so few Black or other minorities that play the game? Better yet, why are there so few Black fans of the sport? One could argue it is a cold weather sport and some folks don’t like the cold. That argument can be debunk with the layering of clothes when attending the event. A player will automatically get hot while playing.

For example, Atlanta which has the highest concentration of Blacks has had 2 NHL teams that have failed due to lack of popularity. Hockey is popular in areas of the United States where minorities tend not to live like the upper Midwest (Wisconsin, Michigan, etc.) and Northeast (Vermont, New Hampshire, etc.) regions. Further, hockey is an expensive sport to play. It costs a few hundred dollars to participate in baseball or basketball. Hockey costs can soar up to $1,000 without including the cost of gear.

There is diversity in the National Hockey League (NHL). The NHL is not placing token players on the teams it holds in its possession. The League and its teams have actively tried to engage those less fortunate into its ranks with its Learn to Play which is a free program and participates in other programs like You Can Play and Hockey in Harlem projects.

As Joel Ward of the Washington Capitals put it an interview, hockey is for everyone. The NHL has opened it arms to those beyond the standard regions who embrace hockey. With minorities now moving up the social ladder, it should eventually become easier for children of color to be able to participate. Perhaps, it is time that Black and other minorities seek to leave their comfort zone of basketball and football to learn something new.


*Names have been withheld to protect the individuals and their jobs and some passages are paraphrased as well for the same reasons.