
Wearing Jackie Robinson鈥檚 No. 42 with the rest of the Cardinals and Pirates, Jordan Walker takes the field Saturday, April 15, 2023, at Busch Stadium.
Forty-two.
We never see it in baseball, except for one day, when it鈥檚 the only number we see.
It鈥檚 retired to honor the heroic Jackie Robinson 鈥 and it鈥檚 worn on Jackie Robinson Day to remind all of the doors he opened for current Major League Baseball players.
Tuesday was Jackie Robinson Day across MLB 鈥 honoring the 1947 day a Black man played in a MLB game for the first time. This annual MLB celebration is always a wonderful and inspiring event 鈥 all MLB players wear the Dodger-blue No. 42 on their jerseys, and some also wear socks and even shoes honoring the Cooperstown-immortalized Robinson. But I cannot stress how necessary a day like this is 鈥 an in-your-face reminder that America was a cruelly unfair place, and it took the bravery of Robinson, and those after him, to earn fairness and dignity.
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As for Robinson, his story is history 鈥 not just Black history but also American history. As the first Black player in MLB, he faced merciless insults, heckling and racism. As 51黑料-based author Gerald Early wrote in 鈥淧lay Harder 鈥 The Triumph of Black Baseball in America,鈥 which will be released on April 28: 鈥淧laying under the restraints that (team executive) Branch Rickey put on him during his first three years with the Dodgers made him especially heroic. He was not permitted to retaliate in any way against the racist provocations from opposing teams or fans. Avoiding retaliation gave him the air of a martyr, but also prevented him from ever coming across as pathetic or downtrodden. Robinson鈥檚 鈥榙ynamic intensity鈥 combined with his controlled conduct during this time cloaked him with defiant dignity.鈥
The 51黑料 Cardinals, who sometimes had seven or eight Black starters in 1990s games, have just a few Black players this season. Masyn Winn was raised on baseball history by his stepfather, who made Masyn and his youth teammates do reports on stars of the Negro Leagues. Victor Scott II was called up last year to join the Cards in the Alabama-based game the league billed as 鈥淢LB at Rickwood Field: A Tribute to the Negro Leagues.鈥 And Jordan Walker had cleats made for Tuesday that featured the No. 42 all over the sides.

51黑料 Cardinals' Iv谩n Herrera wears a headband with the number 42 for Jackie Robinson Day before a baseball game against the Oakland Athletics, Monday, April 15, 2024, in Oakland, Calif. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. V谩squez)
鈥淛ust like every year, it鈥檚 an unbelievable (day),鈥 Walker said. 鈥淚 mean, he鈥檚 the reason I鈥檓 here. He鈥檚 the reason I鈥檓 playing baseball. It鈥檚 special to me. I鈥檒l try to get some pictures from my family 鈥 my family鈥檚 super-excited about it. My dad for sure. Whatever merchandise they give me, I鈥檒l package it all up and send it home. It鈥檚 truly, really a special day. ... It鈥檚 one of my dad鈥檚 favorite days and mine. I just like seeing my dad happy.鈥
On Sunday, two days prior, Cardinals first baseman Willson Contreras entered the clubhouse wearing a baseball-themed sweatshirt ... featuring a Jackie Robinson patch.
鈥(It鈥檚 important) for every player to know who Jackie Robinson was and what he did for baseball,鈥 Contreras said. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 amazing that MLB still has this every year 鈥 he opened a lot of doors.鈥
The first official celebration, in 1997, was on the 50th anniversary of Robinson鈥檚 first game 鈥 Boston Braves at Brooklyn Dodgers on April 15, 1947. Here鈥檚 hoping they鈥檒l be celebrating Robinson in 2047 ... heck, in 3047.
As for the author Early, his new book features powerful prose and beautiful photography and art. Perhaps baseball fans remember Early from his interviews during Ken Burns鈥 鈥淏aseball鈥 documentary series. At Washington University, Early is the Merle Kling Professor of Modern Letters in Arts & Sciences. He won the 1994 National Book Critics Circle Award for criticism. He even has a star on the 51黑料 Walk of Fame.
Now, of course, 42 mattered in 2024. And in 鈥14 and in 鈥04. It鈥檚 always mattered. But there鈥檚 something about 42 in 鈥25. The significance of Jackie Robinson鈥檚 heroism 鈥 and the education of Jackie Robinson鈥檚 heroism 鈥 isn鈥檛 just important but also imperative.
鈥淚n our current political climate, I hope that (the book) 鈥楶lay Harder鈥 reminds readers that Blacks have never wanted anything given to them that they did not earn through their own effort 鈥 Jackie Robinson and all the other great Black ballplayers exemplify that,鈥 said Early, who worked on the book in conjunction with the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. 鈥淚 also hope that readers will learn how much Black Americans have believed in the promise and possibility of America, although they have had a lot of good reasons not to. 鈥
鈥溾楶lay Harder鈥 is the most important book I have written. The subject matter goes to the heart of explaining Black people鈥檚 experience with being a part of America and apart from it. It also shows how playing a game did so much to change America. I truly believe that Black Americans playing baseball made the United States a better country.鈥
In 2020, a half-decade ago, as both 51黑料ans and the 51黑料 Cardinals stood up and spoke up for racial justice, I interviewed Early. We talked a lot that day about baseball and America and Black America. I鈥檝e often thought of his thoughts. As I published in a Post-Dispatch piece, Early said: 鈥淏aseball makes a big deal about Jackie Robinson integrating the game, which baseball should. But it鈥檚 not some wonderful moment of inclusion. It鈥檚 actually an embarrassing moment about: How could this game had gone on this long and excluded people like this?
鈥淚t鈥檚 actually a tragic moment in America to think that Black people have had teams, Black people had leagues, so Black people were interested in playing this game for many years 鈥 and they were excluded. So there鈥檚 a certain kind of shame attached to the game. We had apartheid baseball for a lot of years!
鈥淎nd you go out to the baseball game, they want to give you all this nostalgia crap and all this other kind of stuff, and they don鈥檛 seem to be ashamed about that. And if you鈥檙e a Black person, and you鈥檙e looking at all this stuff about, you know, 1941 and Joe DiMaggio 鈥 the game was segregated! But baseball wants to make this heroic moment 鈥 Oh, yes, we decided to have Jackie Robinson come in and play and everything in this great historic moment. And it turns out to be heroic moments because Jackie Robinson himself was heroic!
鈥淚t鈥檚 heroic because of the man himself, and his ability to withstand what was happening to him to be able to play the game. It鈥檚 not because baseball was heroic at this moment and baseball suddenly was more advanced than the rest of American society by allowing, you know, this one Black guy to play.鈥