Ryne Duren and the Integration of Minor League Baseball

Rinold George “Ryne” Duren, one of Wisconsin’s most famous baseball pitchers, passed away at his Florida winter home on January 6, at age 81.   Born in Cazenovia, Wisconsin in 1929, Duren was not permitted to pitch while a high school student out of fear for the safety of the other players; however, he did star in the amateur adult Sauk County League, where he averaged 22 strike outs per game.

He signed a professional contract with the St. Louis Browns in 1949, and later pitched for seven different major league teams between 1954 and 1965.  He is best remembered as a star relief pitcher for the New York Yankees from 1958 to 1961.  In that role, he was instrumental in the Yankees victory over his home state Milwaukee Braves in the 1958 World Series.

Although his career statistics were fairly modest, a 27-44 won-lost record with 57 saves and a life time ERA of 3.83, Duren was well-known to baseball fans of the late 1950’s and early 1960’s.  Perhaps the hardest thrower of that era and one of the first pitchers to have his fastball clocked at over 100 mph, Duren was a three-time all-star who averaged 9.6 strikeouts and 6.0 walks per nine innings for his career.

In 1958 and 1959, he was one of the best relief pitchers in major league baseball, but in most seasons, his lack of control limited his effectiveness.  In 1960, for example, he struck out an average of 12.3 batters per nine innings while holding opposing batters to a .160 batting average.  However, his lack of control, which led him to walk an average of one full batter per inning, caused his earned run average to balloon to 4.96.  Even though he pitched relatively few innings each year, he also several times ranked among league leaders in hit batsmen and wild pitches.

Although he was an accomplished pitcher for several years, Duren was best known as the original “Wild Man” relief pitcher.  (He was the prototype for the Charlie Sheen character in the movie Major League.) Although he was an athletic 6’2”, 190 lbs., Duren had extremely poor eyesight (20/200) and wore coke bottle thick eye-glasses.  He also had a severe drinking problem and frequently pitched while badly hung over and occasionally while intoxicated.  The combination of his wicked fastball, his lack of control, the coke bottle glasses, which he occasionally chose not to wear, and his well known penchant for drinking made him a very intimidating figure.

Duren’s inspirational autobiography, I Can See Clearly Now (2003), tells the story of his triumph over alcoholism in the years following his retirement from baseball.

What has not been mentioned in any of the tributes that have appeared since his death was Duren’s role in the integration of minor league baseball in the American South in the early 1950’s.  In his book  Brushing Back Jim Crow: The Integration of Minor League Baseball in the American South, historian Bruce Adelson tells several stories about Duren coming to the defense of his black teammates.

In 1955, Duren was pitching for the San Antonio Missions of the Texas League.  Even though the Texas League had been racially integrated in 1952, it still had very few black players and included several all-white teams.  Many of the league’s fans clearly resented racial integration.  That year, Shreveport Sports manager Mel McGaha regularly ordered his pitchers to throw at black batters.

According to Duren’s San Antonio teammate Willie Tasby, a black outfielder, Duren would retaliate on Tasby’s behalf by throwing 100-mph fastballs at Shreveport batters.  Apparently, Duren would sometimes take off his glasses and throw at Shreveport batters in the on-deck circle so that they would not be able to take first base when they were hit by his pitch.  Apparently, this tactic worked, and white pitchers stop throwing at Tasby.  The year before, Duren had also reportedly gone out of his way to befriend black San Antonio teammate Joe Durham who was not permitted to room or eat with his teammates in the Jim Crow South.

Playing minor league baseball in the South in the early 1950’s was no picnic for black baseball players, but the existence of sympathetic white teammates like Ryne Duren made it more bearable, and safer.

Duren spent most of his life in Wisconsin and his name appears on the Wall of Honor at Miller Park.  Hall of Famer Ryne Sandburg, born in 1959 in Spokane, Washington, during Duren’s best season, was named after Duren by his Yankee-fan father.

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Tort Reform 2011: True Science or Pure Mischief?

Well, that didn’t take long.  In its first week of political life, the new legislature has proposed sweeping “tort reform” legislation.  The compass of the 30-plus page bill is manifold, embracing punitive damages, fee shifting, product liability claims, and damages caps.  What interests me more, however, are proposed changes to the Wisconsin Rules of Evidence governing expert opinion testimony.  For years, some have bemoaned Wisconsin’s failure to adopt the so-called Daubert rule (see below), an often restrictive, ad hoc standard that ostensibly identifies those “reliable” expert methodologies worthy of consideration by the courts.  Unreliable methods, of course, are excluded.  And while courts and commentators still debate how one goes about reliably identifying reliable methodologies, Wisconsin will apparently make up for lost time by not only adopting Daubert, but also go it one better by requiring that expert methodologies be “true” as well as reliable.

True in what sense you ask?  Well, it’s unclear, although I concede it has a nice Old Testament ring to it and the idea that courts should use “true” evidence is appealing in all senses of that word.  While you’re pondering what “true” might mean (and I still am), let me offer some background.

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Simon to Speak on Punishment for Murder

I’m looking forward to the upcoming George and Margaret Barrock Lecture on Criminal Law.  Berkeley Professor Jonathan Simon will be visiting us on January 24 at 12:30 to speak on punishment for murder.  Here is the teaser:

Although the death penalty may be dying out in the United States, the end stage of capital punishment leaves us grasping more than ever for principles that could govern the power to punish those who are convicted of society’s most feared and loathed category of crime. This need is particularly acute in the United States, where the rise of general incapacitation as the dominant purpose of punishment has produced sentences that are far in excess of international and historic American standards. Professor Simon will suggest that these sentences help to anchor an overall structure of imprisonment that appears unjust and unsustainable, argue for a new version of selective incapacitation limited by dignity as the central purpose of imprisonment, and propose a restructuring of the law of murder to effectuate those goals.

More information about Simon’s lecture, including details about how to RSVP, is here

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