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Jews in baseball

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Jews have been involved inbaseball since the sport's beginnings in the mid-19th century and have contributed to its evolution in many capacities, including players, agents, team owners, executives, umpires, broadcasters, and fans. In the United States, particularly, baseball played a large part in the assimilation ofAmerican Jews into American society at a time of rampantantisemitism and when Jews were immigrating to America to escape persecution. Today, it remains a very important part in Jewish American culture.

On the field, Jewish baseball players faced constantantisemitic heckles from opponents and fans, with many hiding their heritage to avoid discrimination in the league. Despite this, a number of Jewish players overcame such abuse and went on to become stars. Two such players,Hank Greenberg andSandy Koufax, were both elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame and are widely considered to be amongst the most important and iconic players in baseball history. Similarly, off the field, Jews were involved deeply in the evolution of the game with executiveBarney Dreyfuss, a Jewish immigrant who responsible for the founding of theWorld Series, the most prestigious event in baseball, andMarvin Miller who revolutionized the relationship between players and owners by unionizing players and helping usher in the era offree agency.

Players

[edit]
See also:List of Jewish Major League Baseball players
A smiling man in a white baseball jersey and dark baseball cap with an interlocked white "LA" on the front.
A baseball player smiles for the camera while posing with a bat, wearing a cap with a Old English "D".
Sandy Koufax andHank Greenberg, the only Jewish players elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame

Jewish players have played inprofessional baseball since its beginnings in the mid-19th century. With the surge of Jewish immigrants from Europe to the United States at the turn of the 20th century, baseball, then the most popular sport in the country and referred to as the "National Pastime", became a way for children of Jewish immigrants to assimilate into American life.[1] SportswriterJon Wertheim described baseball as being "interwoven with theAmerican Jewish experience".[2] Baseball historianJohn Thorn described it as an "agent of integration".[3]

The first Jewish baseball star would beHank Greenberg, the son of Orthodox Romanian-Jewish immigrants, who broke into the Majors with theDetroit Tigers.[1] Throughout his career, Greenberg faced verbal abuse from opposing benches and fans but never hid his Jewish identity.[4]

Late in the1934 season, Greenberg announced that he would not play on September 10, which wasRosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, or on September 19, which wasYom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. The move was not popular with Detroit fans. As a result, Greenberg discussed the matter with hisrabbi and his father; finally he relented and agreed to play on Rosh Hashanah.[5] On that day, Greenberg hit two home runs in a 2–1 Tigers victory over theRed Sox. The following day,Detroit Free Press ran the Hebrew lettering for "Happy New Year" across its front page.[6]

However, Greenberg refused to play onYom Kippur, a decision which was unpopular with the press and fans. However, he later recalled in his autobiography that he received a standing ovation from congregants atCongregation Shaarey Zedek when he arrived. With Greenberg absent from the lineup, the Tigers lost to the Yankees 5–2.[7]

Despite missing more time to military service inWorld War II than any other major league player, Greenberg would become the first Jewish player elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame when he was elected in 1956, finishing his career as a two-timeAL MVP with the Tigers.[8]

Alongside Greenberg, the most famous Jewish baseball playerSandy Koufax of theLos Angeles Dodgers, widely considered to be one of the greatest pitchers in baseball history. Finishing his injury-shortened career as a three-timeCy Young Award winner and two-timeWorld Series MVP, he became the second Jewish player elected to the Hall of Fame.[9] Like Greenberg, Koufax never pitched during theHigh Holy Days. Most famously, he sat out Game 1 of the1965 World Series because it fell on Yom Kippur, later saying, "There was no hard decision for me. It was just a thing of respect." He went on to win theWorld Series MVP Award, pitching two shutouts in Games 5 and 7, the latter on two days' rest, after losing Game 2 despite pitching well.[10]

RabbiRebecca Alpert stated that Koufax, who faced antisemitism as well, helped break stereotypes of Jewish men who were seen as being weak and bookish. His decision to sit out a World Series game became one of the most iconic moments for American Jews, making him "an important role model, and a real hero."[1]

Incidentally, both Koufax and Greenberg played important parts in baseball's labor movement. Before the 1966 season, Koufax, who had previous contract disputes with his team's front office, particularly with Dodgers general managerBuzzie Bavasi, played a leading role in thejoint holdout with teammate and fellow pitcherDon Drysdale. The team had, in the past, often played the two pitchers against each other during their individual negotiations. For thirty-two days, the pair held out to pressure their team to engage in fairer contract negotiations.[11]

The holdout is considered the "first key event" in the baseball's labor movement which began a decade long change that led tofree agency being established inMajor League Baseball. After the 32-day holdout ended,Arthur Daley ofThe New York Times described it as being "baseball's first collective bargaining agreement. There are aspects of unionism to it and no one in this sport of rugged individualists ever was confronted with such a thing before."[12]

Similarly, in duringCurt Flood's fight Major League Baseball'sreserve clause, Greenberg was one of the former players to testify on behalf of Flood. Recalling how he was treated by his former team before his trade to thePittsburgh Pirates, he testified that the "reserve clause should be eliminated entirely, thereby creating a new image for baseball".[13] Koufax was also one of the few former star players to publicly express support for Flood's cause: "I have to give Curt the greatest amount of credit for believing in what he's doing. At the salary he's making, that's the kind of money which he's never going to get back."[14]

Other notable players

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A female baseball player wearing a dress-like uniform, swingin her bat.
Thelma "Tiby" Eisen, Jewish star in theAll-American Girls Professional Baseball League, with theGrand Rapids Chicks

Besides Koufax and Greenberg, other notable Jewish stars in Major League Baseball have been:Harry Danning,Sid Gordon,Al Rosen,Ryan Braun,Ken Holtzman,Shawn Green, andMax Fried. Rosen and Braun are the only otherMVP recipients to date, with Rosen being the first unanimous MVP winner in MLB history.[15] Green made headlines in 2001 when he followed the footsteps of Koufax and Greenberg and chose to sit outYom Kippur despite his team being in a tight divisional race.[16]

The first Jewish baseball player and one of the first professional baseball players wasLipman Pike who played in the 19th century and was amongst the game's first great hitter. Pike briefly held the career record and also led the league inhome runs four times.[17]

Another notable player wasMoe Berg. Though a solid but undistinguished catcher during his baseball career, Berg was graduate ofPrinceton University with a degree inmodern languages and learned to speak seven languages – one famous line on him being "He can speak seven languages, but he can't hit in any of them."[18] DuringWorld War II, Berg served as a spy for theOffice of Strategic Services, traveling around Europe to gather information on theGerman nuclear weapons program. For his service, PresidentHarry Truman awarded Berg theMedal of Freedom.[19]

Despite women being shut out from baseball, Jewish women have also played the game professionally. In theAll-American Girls Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL), which started duringWorld War II, there were at least three Jewish players:Thelma "Tiby" Eisen,Anita Foss, andBlanche Schachter.[20] Eisen in particular became one of the league's star players and would later spend her time advocating forwomen's sports and helped keep the memory of the AAGPBL alive.[21]

Management

[edit]
Black and white image of a man with a mustache, wearing a formal, Edwardian era suit and sitting with his legs crossed.
Barney Dreyfuss, founder of theWorld Series and owner of thePittsburgh Pirates

In addition to players, Jews have contributed as executives as well. Most notable was that ofBarney Dreyfuss, a Jewish immigrant from Germany and owner of thePittsburgh Pirates. In 1902, Dreyfuss helped broker a "peace accord" that recognized theNational League andAmerican League as the two major leagues. The accord instituted a single set of rules, established agreements with the minor leagues, and recognized each league's rights to its own players.[22]

It was from this deal that Dreyfuss suggested the idea of aWorld Series.[23] In 1903, when the Pirates were on their way to win theNational League pennant, he wrote toHenry Killilea, owner of the AL-leadingBoston Americans:

The time has come for the National League and American League to organize a World Series,” Dreyfuss wrote. “It is my belief that if our clubs played a series on a best-of-nine basis, we would create great interest in baseball, in our leagues, and in our players. I also believe it would be a financial success.[23]

Subsequently, the1903 World Series was held in which Dreyfuss' Pirates were beaten by Killilea's Americans five games to three.[24]

Beyond the World Series, Dreyfuss also financed the construction ofForbes Field, one of baseball's first modern steel and concrete baseball parks.[25] In the aftermath of theBlack Sox Scandal, he was instrumental in baseball hiring acommissioner to oversee the sport. For his contributions, he was elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame in 2008.[23]

Years after Dreyfuss, another influential Jewish executive wasBud Selig. Selig, a native ofMilwaukee, Wisconsin, played a major role as both the owner of theMilwaukee Brewers and asCommissioner of Baseball. As owner, after the move of theMilwaukee Braves to Atlanta, he was pivotal in baseball returning to Milwaukee, buying and the moving of the expansionSeattle Pilots to his home city after the team was declared bankrupt.[26] As both acting commissioner and commissioner, Selig helpedMajor League Baseball grow as an industry and implemented a number of changes, including:expansion of MLB playoffs, introduction ofinterleague play, consolidating the AL and NL–which had acted separately for nearly a century–into a single entity which allowed for rapid growth and easier rule changes.[27]

Though criticized for his handling of the1994–95 Major League Baseball strike and the cancelling of the1994 World Series as well as his handling ofsteroid usage around the league, both of which dealt a huge blow to the game's popularity, Selig also helped stabilize baseball's popularity after the strike ended and oversaw an unprecedented stretch of labor peace between the league and theMajor League Baseball Players Association.[27] When he left baseball in 2015, Major League Baseball had revenues around $10 billion compared to then $1 billion when he became commissioner. During his tenure, 23 new baseball stadiums were built and the league expanded to four teams, with two teams being added in each of the1993 and1998 expansions. Selig was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2017.[28]

Rebecca Alpert, author ofOut of Left Field: Jews and Black Baseball, also noted that Jewish owners and executives also played a significant role in theNegro leagues and its growth:

There was a fair amount of Jewish ownership of Negro League teams. They were in this business in part because they weren't allowed, as Jews, to be in other businesses. It's a similar story to the Hollywood story. And they were very supportive and helpful, they really helped a lot of the Negro League players make the transition to the major leagues and have a livelihood. The Negro Leagues did very well in the 1930s and '40s, and that was in part due to the influence of a lot of these Jewish owners.[1]

Other notable Jewish baseball executives includeTheo Epstein who, asgeneral manager, helped break the championship droughts of theBoston Red Sox (in2004) and theChicago Cubs (in2016);[29] and ownerTed Lerner of theWashington Nationals who brought baseball back toWashington, D.C. after a thirty-four year absence which began with theWashington Senators' move to Texas in 1971.[30]

Labor union movement

[edit]

One of the most impactful contributions is considered to be that ofMarvin Miller, the first executive director of theMajor League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA).[31] Before his work with the MLBPA, Miller was a principle advisor and negotiator for theUnited Steelworkers and gained a reputation for being a tough negotiator. Elected to his position in spring 1966, Miller negotiation MLBPA's firstcollective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the team owners in 1968. That CBA, covering the 1968 and 1969 seasons, won the players a nearly 43 percent increase in the minimum salary from $7,000 to $10,000, as well as larger expense allowances. More importantly, the deal brought a formal structure to owner–player relations, including written procedures for the arbitration of player grievances before the commissioner.[32]

Miller backedCurt Flood's fight against thereserve clause after he was traded from theSt. Louis Cardinals to thePhiladelphia Phillies. Flood felt the trade to be a punishment for asking for a raised throughout the 1969 season and hated Phillies fans who were, in Flood's eyes, racists due to their treatment towardsDick Allen, the Phillies star player for whom Flood had been traded. Flood refused to report to the Phillies, instead writing a letter toBowie Kuhn, the then-commissioner of baseball, stating that he did not view himself as "property" and instructed Kuhn to notify all teams in Major League Baseball that he was willing to consider financial offers to play for any team during the 1970 season. Despite Miller's backing and full support, Flood lost the case ofFlood v. Kuhn in theSupreme Court, destroying his career in the process but taking an important step towardsfree agency.[33]

In 1974, Miller encouraged pitchersAndy Messersmith of theLos Angeles Dodgers andDave McNally of theBaltimore Orioles to play out the succeeding year without signing a contract. He recognized that Flood's unsuccessful lawsuit opened up the possibility of other players challenging the reserve clause. Hence, after the year had elapsed, both players filed a grievance arbitration under the CBA. The ensuingSeitz decision declared that both players had fulfilled their contractual obligations and had no further legal ties to their teams. This effectively eradicated the reserve clause and ushered in free agency.[34]

During Miller's tenure as the executive director of the MLBPA, the average player's annual salary rose from $19,000 in 1966 to $326,000 in 1982. Miller taught MLB players the basics ofhuman capital as acommodity they were selling to club owners and educated them on trade-union thinking. The 1968 collective bargaining agreement was the first of its kind in pro sports. In 1970, players gained the right to have grievances heard by an impartial arbitrator. In 1973, they achieved a limited right to have salary demands subjected to arbitration. He also oversaw the first players strikes in MLB history, in1972 and1981, earning even more concessions for players.[35]

In 1992, broadcasterRed Barber remarked of "Marvin Miller, along withBabe Ruth andJackie Robinson, is one of the two or three most important men in baseball history", while former playersHenry Aaron andTom Seaver actively lobbied for his induction into the Hall of Fame.[36] Despite many attempts to get him elected during his lifetime, Miller would not be elected until seven years after his death, when he became the fifth Jewish member of theBaseball Hall of Fame in 2019.[37]

Miscellaneous

[edit]
Black and white full shot image of a baseball umpire standing on the baseball diamond.
Dolly Stark, the first Jewish umpire in MLB history

The music of "Take Me Out to the Ball Game", one of the best known baseball songs which is played during theseventh-inning stretch at each ballgame, was composed by Jewish composerAlbert Von Tilzer.[38][39]

The first modern-day Jewishbaseball umpire in MLB wasDolly Stark who worked in theNational League from 1928 to 1935 and from 1937 to 1940. Since then, there have been four more:Al Clark, the only Jewish umpire to work in theAmerican League before the two leagues merged into Major League Baseball,Al Forman,Al Cohen, andStan Landes.[40]

A number of Jewish baseballbroadcasters have been the recipients of theFord C. Frick Award, the Hall of Fame's award for broadcasting, including:Mel Allen, the inaugural winner,Bob Wolff, andAl Michaels. More recently, notable Jewish broadcasters areGary Cohen andHowie Rose of theNew York Mets,Suzyn Waldman andJohn Sterling of theNew York Yankees, andCharley Steiner of theLos Angeles Dodgers.[41]

Jewish sportswriters have played a major role in baseball as well, with many going on to be honored with theBBWAA Career Excellence Award, including:Murray Chass, longtime sportswriter withThe New York Times;Jerome Holtzman, creator of thesave and official historian of Major League Baseball;Shirley Povich, longtime writer withThe Washington Post;Ross Newhan, writer for theLong Beach Press-Telegram andLos Angeles Times; andLeonard Koppett, longtime New York-based sportswriter.[42]

Other notable Jewish sportswriters who contributed to baseball are:John Thorn, official historian of Major League Baseball and author of numerous baseball books;Jonathan Eig; biographer ofLou Gehrig;Jane Leavy, biographer forSandy Koufax,Mickey Mantle, andBabe Ruth;Ira Berkow, biographer forHank Greenberg;Roger Kahn, author ofThe Boys of Summer;Jeff Passan, baseball columnist forESPN.com; andMarty Appel, former Yankeespublic relations manager and author of several baseball books.[42]

Outside the United States

[edit]
See also:Israeli national baseball team andIsrael Baseball League
A black-and-white photograph of a group seven young campers posing in their baseball uniforms.
AYoung Judea amateur baseball team inAlberta, Canada,c. 1923

Baseball was first played in theBritish Mandate of Palestine on July 4, 1927.[43] In the 1970s, Jewish American immigrants started playing baseball in Israel, contributing to its growth. The first field in Israel was built in Kibbutz Gezer in 1979 and, in December 1986, theIsrael Association of Baseball (IAB) was formed as anon-profit organization to develop baseball in the country.[44]

TheIsraeli national baseball team has competed at theWorld Baseball Classic since the tournament's inception in 2005.[44] At the2017 World Baseball Classic championship, with a roster of Jewish American players, the Israeli team had what was called a "Cinderella run", advancing to the second round before being eliminated.[45] The team has also taken part in theOlympic Games, making its debut in at the2020 Summer Olympics.[46]

In 2007, theIsrael Baseball League was formed.[47] Though the league itself was unsuccessful and lasted only one season, mainly due to mismanagement, it was the first exposure Israel had to American players who made up the rosters of the league and allowed for the development of the national team.[44] In 2024, the Israel Baseball Americas launched an organization in the United States to help develop players and assist with the growth of the game in Israel.[48]

Additionally, Jewish community groups such asYoung Judea promote amateur baseball outside the United States, particularly in countries such as Canada and Israel.[49]

In media culture

[edit]

There have been a number of books and documentaries which go in depth about the involvement of Jews in baseball. The most notable of these isJews and Baseball: An American Love Story, a documentary film by Peter Miller which was written by sportswriterIra Berkow. The film discussed the relationship between baseball and American Jews in detail, including a rare interview bySandy Koufax.[50]

While Greenberg and Koufax were the main subjects of the film, the movie also discussed how baseball was used to fight againststereotypes of Jews as non-athletic and bookish. It also talked about Jewish immigration and assimilation into American society as well as Jewish stars and notable players besides the two Hall of Famers, such asAl Rosen andMoe Berg.[51]

Baseball historianJohn Thorn noted that Jewish baseball fans have become known for paying close attention to Jewish baseball players, both upcoming stars and prospects, and that there are sets of Major League Baseball cards dedicated to every Jewish player who has played in theMajor Leagues, indicating the continuing importance of the game in the Jewish community.[52]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdLind, Dara (October 2, 2014)."The secret history of Jews in baseball".Vox.Archived from the original on May 3, 2024. RetrievedMay 3, 2024.
  2. ^Wertheim, Jon (March 13, 2014)."Forget Peanuts and Cracker Jack. What Jews Love About Baseball Is Jewish Players".Tablet.Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. RetrievedMay 6, 2024.
  3. ^Schuppe, Jon (May 15, 2016)."Exhibit Tells the Story of Baseball's Role in Jewish-American Life".NBC News.Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. RetrievedMay 6, 2024.
  4. ^Beschloss, Michael (July 26, 2014)."Hank Greenberg's Triumph Over Hate Speech".The New York Times.Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. RetrievedMay 6, 2024.
  5. ^Gurvis, Jacob (September 15, 2023)."The Jewish Sport Report: Hank Greenberg's 1934 High Holiday conundrum".The Forward.
  6. ^Keelean, Matt."September 10, 1934: Happy New Year, Hank Greenberg!".Society for American Baseball Research (SABR Games Project).
  7. ^Warikoo, Niraj (September 23, 2014)."Hank Greenberg left legacy for Jewish-Americans".USA Today.
  8. ^"The day Hank Greenberg became a soldier".The Detroit News. March 19, 2016. RetrievedMay 18, 2024.
  9. ^"Video: Dodgers icon Sandy Koufax retires at the age of 30".ESPN. July 24, 2019.
  10. ^Caple, Jim (October 9, 2015)."Sandy Koufax's refusal to pitch on Yom Kippur still resonates today".ESPN.com.Archived from the original on May 17, 2023. RetrievedMay 6, 2024.
  11. ^Shaikin, Bill (March 29, 2016)."50 years ago, Koufax and Drysdale's holdout changed baseball forever".Los Angeles Times.
  12. ^Beschloss, Michael (May 30, 2014)."How Sandy Koufax's Motel Helped Lead to Baseball's Big-Money Era".The New York Times.
  13. ^Frommer, Frederic J. (July 11, 2022)."When almost nobody else would, Hank Greenberg backed a Black player fighting for free agency".The Forward.
  14. ^Snyder, Brad (2006).A Well-Paid Slave: Curt Flood's Fight for Free Agency in Professional Sports. Viking Adult. pp. 122–123.ISBN 0-670-03794-X.
  15. ^Bernstein, Jesse (July 30, 2016)."The Greatest Jewish Baseball Players of All Time, by Position".Tablet. RetrievedMay 8, 2024.
  16. ^Merron, Jeff (September 26, 2001)."Green, Koufax and Greenberg -- same dilemma, different decisions".ESPN Classic. RetrievedMay 5, 2024.
  17. ^Michelson, Richard (September 15, 2014)."Remembering Lipman Pike".Moment.Archived from the original on May 6, 2024. RetrievedMay 6, 2024.
  18. ^Horwitz, Simi (May 24, 2019)."The Jewish Spy Who Kept Us Safe At Home".The Forward. RetrievedMay 3, 2024.
  19. ^Clary, Zachary (August 31, 2023)."The Baseball Player-Turned-Spy Who Went Undercover to Assassinate the Nazis' Top Nuclear Scientist".Smithsonian. RetrievedMay 6, 2024.
  20. ^Dreier, Peter (May 18, 2023)."Jewish women in baseball".St. Louis Jewish Light. RetrievedMay 19, 2024.
  21. ^Meyers, Melanie (September 8, 2023)."Tiby Eisen: Star Player of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League".American Jewish Historical Society. RetrievedMay 19, 2024.
  22. ^Miskowiec, Abigail."1902 Winter Meetings: A Peace Accord".Society for American Baseball Research.
  23. ^abcFrommer, Frederic J. (October 25, 2022)."The World Series? Invented by a Jewish guy".The Forward.
  24. ^Simon, Andrew (May 14, 2019)."Why is it called the World Series?".MLB.com. RetrievedMay 17, 2024.
  25. ^Baraff, Ron (June 17, 2021)."Dreyfuss's Folly: The Origins of Pittsburgh's Forbes Field".Rivers of Steel.
  26. ^Haudricourt, Tom (July 28, 2017)."Bud Selig never dared dream of Hall of Fame honor".USA Today. RetrievedMay 17, 2024.
  27. ^abAxisa, Mike (July 30, 2017)."The complicated legacy of Hall of Fame baseball commissioner Bud Selig".CBS Sports. RetrievedMay 17, 2024.
  28. ^Bryant, Howard (March 3, 2017)."In his twilight, Bud Selig won't alter his version of history".ESPN.com. RetrievedMay 17, 2024.
  29. ^Goldman, Steven (October 25, 2016)."The Curse Breaker".State. RetrievedMay 17, 2024.
  30. ^Kampeas, Ron (February 16, 2023)."Ted Lerner, real estate developer who brought baseball back to Washington, dies at 97".Jewish Telegraphic Agency. RetrievedMay 17, 2024.
  31. ^Ivry, Benjamin (February 25, 2015)."How Marvin Miller Led Players Union and Changed Baseball Forever".The Forward.
  32. ^Pappas, Doug."A Contentious History: Baseball's Labor Fights".ESPN.com.
  33. ^Barra, Allen (July 12, 2011)."How Curt Flood Changed Baseball and Killed His Career in the Process".The Atlantic.
  34. ^Chass, Murray (December 23, 2000)."Baseball's Transfer of Power".The New York Times.
  35. ^Wertheim, Jon (November 27, 2012)."Marvin Miller changed players' union -- and baseball -- forever".Sports Illustrated.
  36. ^Barra, Allen (November 27, 2007)."Hall of Shame: Once Again, One of Baseball's Greatest is Kept from Cooperstown".The Village Voice. Archived fromthe original on May 25, 2011.
  37. ^Baccellieri, Emma (September 8, 2021)."Marvin Miller: The Late, Reluctant Hall of Fame Inductee".Sports Illustrated. RetrievedMay 17, 2024.
  38. ^Rockaway, Robert (April 1, 2021)."No Opening Day Without Von Tilzer!".Tablet. RetrievedMay 19, 2024.
  39. ^Rodman, Edmon J. (July 6, 2010)."Rising for Albert and his famous baseball song".Jewish Telegraphic Agency. RetrievedMay 19, 2024.
  40. ^Horvitz, Peter S.; Horvitz, Joachim (2001)."Chapter 3: Jewish Umpires".The Big Book of Jewish Baseball: An Illustrated Encyclopedia & Anecdotal History. New York: S.P.I. Books.ISBN 978-1561719730.
  41. ^Ivry, Benjamin (August 17, 2021)."100 years of baseball on radio, a century of Jewish announcers".The Forward. RetrievedMay 19, 2024.
  42. ^abKuttler, Hillel (August 1, 2016)."Jews In the Press Box: Biggest Names, Innovators Shape Reporting on Baseball".Jewish Baseball Museum. RetrievedMay 19, 2024.
  43. ^"Recent History".Israel Baseball League. Archived fromthe original on July 13, 2011.
  44. ^abcMayo, Jonathan."The history of baseball in Israel".MLB.com. RetrievedMay 19, 2024.
  45. ^Dornberg, Natasha (March 7, 2017)."World Baseball Classic: Israel's Cinderella Run Forges Ahead After Upsetting Taiwan".Haaretz.
  46. ^Kilgannon, Corey; Kannapell, Andrea (July 28, 2021)."Israel's baseball team is making its Olympic debut".The New York Times.
  47. ^Wohlgelernter, Elli (June 24, 2007)."Israeli League Is Ready to Play Ball".The New York Times.
  48. ^Gurvis, Jacob (March 18, 2024)."Team Israel is launching an American organization to support baseball's growth in Israel".Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
  49. ^"Young Judaea baseball team".Ontario Jewish Archives. RetrievedSeptember 8, 2024.
  50. ^Sandomir, Richard (October 31, 2010)."Reluctantly, Koufax Steps Back Into the Light for a Film About Jewish Ballplayers".The New York Times.
  51. ^Anderson, John (October 31, 2010)."Jews and Baseball: An American Love Story – Film Review".Variety. RetrievedMay 6, 2024.
  52. ^Silver, Stephen (September 15, 2020)."Major League Baseball's official historian on Jews in baseball".Jewish Telegraphic Agency. RetrievedMay 6, 2024.

Further reading

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