Ford C. Frick | |
|---|---|
Frick as commissioner in 1962 | |
| 3rd Commissioner of Baseball | |
| In office September 20, 1951 – November 16, 1965 | |
| Preceded by | Happy Chandler |
| Succeeded by | William Eckert |
| 11thPresident of the National League | |
| In office 1934–1951 | |
| Preceded by | John Heydler |
| Succeeded by | Warren Giles |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Ford Christopher Frick (1894-12-19)December 19, 1894 Wawaka, Indiana, U.S. |
| Died | April 8, 1978(1978-04-08) (aged 83) Bronxville, New York, U.S. |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 1 |
| Alma mater | DePauw University |
Baseball player Baseball career | |
| Member of the National | |
| Induction | 1970 |
| Election method | Veterans Committee |
Ford Christopher Frick (December 19, 1894 – April 8, 1978) was an Americansportswriter and baseball executive. After working as a teacher and as a sportswriter for theNew York American, he served as public relations director of theNational League (NL) and then as the league's president from1934 to1951. He was the thirdcommissioner of Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1951 to1965.
While Frick was NL president, he had a major role in the establishment of theBaseball Hall of Fame as a museum that honors the best players in baseball history. He extinguished threats of a player strike in response to the racial integration of the major leagues. During Frick's term as commissioner, expansion occurred and MLB faced the threat of having its antitrust exemption revoked by Congress. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1970. TheFord C. Frick Award recognizes outstanding MLB broadcasters.
Frick was born on a farm inWawaka, Indiana, and went to high school inRome City, Indiana.[1] He took classes atInternational Business College in Fort Wayne, then worked for a company that made engines for windmills.[1][2] He attendedDePauw University, where he played first base for the DePauw baseball team and ran track.[1] He graduated in 1915.[3] He had been a member ofPhi Kappa Psi fraternity.[4] Frick went to Colorado to play semipro baseball inWalsenburg.[5]
After his stint as a baseball player, Frick lived inColorado Springs. He taught English atColorado Springs High School and atColorado College. Frick moonlighted forThe Gazette, covering sports and news until he left to work for theWar Department near the conclusion ofWorld War I. When the war was over, Frick worked in Denver for theRocky Mountain News. Frick returned to Colorado Springs to take a job with theEvening Telegraph, which later merged withThe Gazette.[5] Around this time, he had given some thought to starting his own advertising agency.[6]
In 1921, a flood devastated much ofPueblo, Colorado. When other reporters had flown in to cover the flood their airplanes had become stuck in muddy conditions, leaving them stranded in Pueblo. Frick had a pilot fly him there, but instead of landing they circled low over the city while Frick took notes and photographs. He was able to file his story a day earlier than other reporters. The recognition from the flood helped Frick get a position with theNew York American in 1922.[5] Frick was also a broadcaster forWOR in New York.[7]
In1934, he became the NL's public relations director, and then became president of the league later that year.
In June 1937, Cardinals pitcherDizzy Dean began to publicly criticize the NL and Frick. In response, Frick said that he was suspending Dean until the pitcher issued a written apology. Dean indicated that he would not apologize and that he would boycott the1937 All-Star Game, suspended or not. The Cardinals made peace with Frick so that Dean could return to play. He appeared in the All-Star Game, but he sustained a toe injury in the game. The injury altered his delivery and he later injured his arm, never returning to All-Star form.[8]
ACommunist Party USA newspaper known as theDaily Worker asked Frick in 1937 about the feasibility of racially integrating baseball. Frick said that there was no rule discriminating against players on the basis of race. He said that professional baseball required ability, good habits and strong character, and asserted that he was not aware of a case in which race had played a role in the selection of a major league player.[9]
In the late 1930s, Frick played a central role in establishing theNational Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum inCooperstown, New York.[10] He gathered a team of representatives from the major news wire services, includingDavis Walsh of theInternational News Service,Alan J. Gould of theAssociated Press, andHenry L. Farrell ofUnited Press International. They took the idea to theBaseball Writers' Association of America and that organization became the voting body for Hall of Fame elections.[11]

When several members of theSt. Louis Cardinals planned to protestJackie Robinson's breaking of baseball'scolor barrier, Frick threatened any players involved with suspension.[12] While president of the NL, Frick served on DePauw University's board of trustees.[13] He was also president of the school's alumni association, helping to create the DePauw Alumni Fund.[14]
In1951, some baseball owners had become displeased withHappy Chandler's service as commissioner and did not want to renew his contract. In September, the owners elected Frick to replace Chandler in a twelve-hour meeting that theChicago Tribune called "their all-time peak in dilly-dallying".[15] The owners were able to quickly narrow the candidates down from five unnamed nominees to two frontrunners, Frick andWarren Giles. The owners deadlocked until Giles decided to remove his name from consideration.[15] Giles, who had been president and general manager of theCincinnati Reds, succeeded Frick as NL president.[16]
Frick agreed to a seven-year contract worth $65,000 each year. When he assumed the office, Frick said that he was surprised to be elected even though he knew he was a candidate for the position. Just before his announcement, the major league team owners voted that the commissioner's office should be located in a city with two major league teams. Frick decided to relocate the office from Cincinnati to New York.[17]
In 1957, Frick addressed an organized campaign ofballot stuffing for that year'sAll-Star Game in which most of the ballots originated fromCincinnati and had stacked the NL team withReds. In response, Frick overruled the fan vote, removed two Reds from the starting lineup and appointed two replacements from other teams. He then took the vote away from the fans and kept it that way for the remainder of his tenure.[18]
Frick presided over the expansion of the American and National Leagues from eight to ten teams. Faced with a Congress threatening to revoke baseball's antitrust exemption, Frick had initially favored the development of athird major league within organized baseball, but relented when the established league owners objected and pursued their own expansion plans. Following expansion, the regular season was extended to 162 games from 154 in order to maintain a balanced schedule.
Inaction was sometimes cited by Frick's critics as one of his weaknesses. Writers often derided Frick for his hands-off approach to baseball matters.[2] WriterJerome Holtzman described Frick's term as commissioner by saying that he "sailed a smooth course and seldom descended from his throne. When asked why he absented himself from the many battles below, he often said, 'It's a league matter.'... In retrospect, he understood his role. He was a caretaker, not a czar."[19] Frick's critics also accused him of favoring the NL in his rulings, such as how the 1960s expansion teams would be stocked.
Frick's most highly criticized decision as commissioner was to request baseball record-keepers to list the single-season home run records ofBabe Ruth andRoger Maris separately in1961, based on the length of the season played. Frick called a press conference to issue a ruling that a player must hit more than 60 home runs in his first 154 games in order to be considered the record holder, giving birth to a misunderstanding that anasterisk was placed next to Maris' record when Maris did so in a newly expanded 162-game season. Frick indeed called for some "distinctive mark"[20] next to it in the "record books"—the asterisk as a designation was immediately suggested byNew YorkDaily News sportswriterDick Young[20]—but MLB actually had no direct control over any record books until many years later. It all was merely a suggestion on Frick's part; while he and Ruth had been friends, enough for Frick to have been at Ruth's deathbed, he lacked any authority as baseball Commissioner to make any of it so. Within a few years, the controversy died down and all prominent baseball record keepers listed Maris as the single-season record holder.[20]
Early in the 1960s, the individual achievements of the batter impressively ruled. Highlighted in all of this was, undoubtedly, Roger Maris' aforementioned shattering of Babe Ruth's single-season home run record. Alarmed by such increased home run numbers across the Majors, Frick convinced the owners to agree to having the strike zone widened before the 1963 season. The change led to a significant decrease in batting averages and scoring. While it consequently resulted in a remarkable era for the decade's top pitchers, attendance stagnated. The trend reached its peak in 1968 when American League teams batted a collective .230. A year later, the strike zone was corrected back to its previous dimensions.[21]
In 1960, Frick said that he would probably retire when his contract expired in 1965. He said that his remaining goals for his term as commissioner were to complete the expansion process and to convince Congress to allow each baseball league to set its own television policies.[22]
He maintained involvement with the Baseball Hall of Fame, serving as chairman of the board in 1966 and serving on the Veterans Committee from 1966 to 1969.[23] Frick himself was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee in1970. He was said to have chastised Hall of Fame voters at a meeting of the Baseball Writers' Association of America after they elected no major league candidates in the1971 Hall of Fame balloting.[24]
The Baseball Hall of Fame created theFord C. Frick Award in1978, and presents the award annually to a baseball broadcaster for major contributions to the game. Frick was posthumously inducted into the DePauw University Athletic Hall of Fame.[14]
In the 2001made-for-television film,61*, Frick was portrayed by actorDonald Moffat.[25]
Frick married Eleanor Cowing in 1916.[26] His son Fred attendedFordham Preparatory School with future baseball executiveBuzzie Bavasi. Bavasi was planning to attend law school, but Frick introduced him toLarry MacPhail of theBrooklyn Dodgers and Bavasi was given a job in minor league baseball, where he began to work his way up the organization.[27]
Near the end of Frick's term as commissioner, he purchased a second home inBroadmoor, Colorado, though he maintained his primary residence in New York.[5]
Frick died on April 8, 1978, at age 83, at a hospital inBronxville, New York. He had suffered a series of strokes in his later years. Upon his death, commissionerBowie Kuhn said Frick "brought the game integrity, dedication and a happy tranquility far removed from the turbulence of today."[12] He is interred in Christ Church Columbarium in Bronxville.