Saturday, 6 December 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-CANADIAN " FERGUSON JENKINS " IS A FORMER MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL RIGHT-HANDED PITCHER : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

      BLACK         SOCIAL          HISTORY                                                                                                          






























































































































 Ferguson Jenkins


Ferguson Jenkins
Jenkins 31.JPG
Pitcher
Born: December 13, 1942 (age 71)
Chatham, Ontario
Batted: RightThrew: Right
MLB debut
September 10, 1965 for the Philadelphia Phillies
Last MLB appearance
September 26, 1983 for the Chicago Cubs
Career statistics
Win–loss record284–226
Earned run average3.34
Strikeouts3,192
Teams
Career highlights and awards
Induction1991
Vote75.4% (third ballot)
Ferguson Arthur "Fergie" Jenkins, Jr.CM (born December 13, 1942)[1] is a Canadian former Major League Baseball right-handed pitcher. He was a three-time All-Star and the 1971 National League Cy Young Award winner. In 1991, Jenkins became the first Canadian to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. During a 19-year career, he pitched for four different teams, spending the majority of his career with the Chicago Cubs. Jenkins also played basketball in the off-season as a member of the Harlem Globetrotters, from 1967 to 1969.[2]
Early life
Jenkins was born and raised in ChathamOntario, the only child of Delores and Ferguson Jenkins, Sr.[2] His father, a chef andchauffeur,[3] immigrated from Barbados, while his mother was a descendant of American slaves who escaped through theUnderground Railroad, before settling in Southwestern Ontario.[2] Both of his parents were good athletes; his father was an amateur boxer and semi-pro baseball player.
A talented athlete, Jenkins competed in track and fieldice hockey, and basketball in his school years, lettering five times. When he began playing bantam baseball in his teens, he started out as a first baseman. He honed his pitching skills by throwing pieces of coal from a local coal yard, aiming at either an open ice chute or the gaps of passing boxcars.[2] He was also encouraged to continue working on his pitching by Gene Dziadura, a former shortstop in the Chicago Cubs minor league system, and a Philadelphia Philliesscout. Many training sessions between the two followed until Jenkins graduated from high school.

Career

Early years

In 1962, he was signed by Philadelphia Phillies scout Tony Lucadello.[2] Jenkins made his major-league debut as a 22-year-old in1965, as a relief pitcher. He was traded the following year to the Chicago Cubs, along with Adolfo Phillips and John Herrnstein, for pitchers Larry Jackson and Bob Buhl. Jenkins would become one of the best pitchers in the majors. In his first full year as a starter for the Cubs (1967), Jenkins recorded twenty wins while posting a 2.80 ERA and 236 strikeouts. He finished tied for second in the Cy Young Award voting, following Mike McCormick of the San Francisco Giants. He was also selected for the All-Star Game for the first time that season.
The following year his numbers improved; once again he won twenty games, his ERA dropped to 2.63 and his strikeout total increased to 260. Jenkins established a reputation for achieving his pitching feats and his statistics while spending most of his career pitching in a "hitter's ballpark"—Wrigley Field in Chicago.[4] Furthermore, in 1968, Jenkins lost five of his starts in 1–0 ballgames.

1971 season

Jenkins had his best season in 1971. On April 6, 1971, Jenkins started the Cubs' opening-day game. The Cubs defeated the St. Louis Cardinals 2–1 in 10 innings at Wrigley Field. Jenkins pitched a complete game for the Cubs, and Billy Williams hit a home run in the final inning for the victory.[5] On September 1, 1971, Jenkins threw another complete game against the Montreal Expos and had two home runs. The Cubs won the game 5–2.[6]
That season, Jenkins threw a complete game in 30 of 39 starts and received a decision in 37 of them, finishing with a 24–13 record (.649). He walked only 37 batters versus 263 strikeouts across 325 innings.[7] He played in the All-Star Game and finished seventh in MVP voting. Jenkins also posted a .478 slugging percentage, hitting six home runs and driving in twenty runs in just 115 at-bats.
Jenkins won the 1971 NL Cy Young Award. Jenkins was the first Cubs pitcher and the first Canadian to win the Cy Young Award (Quebec native Ć‰ric GagnĆ© is the only other Canadian to match the feat). He received 17 of 24 first-place votes. He was outpitched in several statistical categories by New York Mets pitcher Tom Seaver, but Jenkins pitched in hitter-friendly Wrigley Field and Seaver worked in pitcher-friendly Shea Stadium. Jenkins had a wins above replacement (WAR) total of 11.3,[7] compared to Seaver's 10.5. This number not only led all pitchers, it was the highest total in baseball that year. Joe Torre, who won the NL MVP Award that year, had a WAR of less than half of Jenkins' total.

Later career

In 1972, Jenkins completed his sixth consecutive season with 20 or more wins.[8] By the middle of the following season, Jenkins expressed that he did not feel like playing baseball anymore. Jenkins finished the season, but registered a 14–16 win-loss record. After that season, Jenkins was traded to the Texas Rangers. Texas manager Billy Martinwas pleased with the trade, describing Jenkins as a workhorse and a winner.[9] In 1974, Jenkins achieved a personal best 25 wins during the season, setting a Rangers franchise record which still stands.
Jenkins achieved his 250th win against the Oakland Athletics on May 23, 1980. Later that year, during a customs search in Toronto, Jenkins was found possessing 3.0 grams cocaine, 2.2 grams hashish, and 1.75 grams marijuana. In response, on September 8, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn suspended him indefinitely. However, Jenkins' suspension lasted only two weeks before, in an unprecedented action, an independent arbiter reinstated him and he returned to the league.[10] Jenkins was not further punished by MLB for the incident, as he remained active until his retirement following the 1983 season. It has been suggested that this incident delayed his induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame.[11]
After Jenkins retired from Major League Baseball in 1983, he pitched for two seasons for the London Majors of the Intercounty Major Baseball League, operating in London, Ontario. Jenkins ran for the Ontario Liberal Party in the 1985 Ontario general election, in the riding of Windsor—Riverside, but placed third behind the NDP's Dave Cooke.[12]

Legacy

Jenkins led the league in wins twice, fewest walks per 9 innings five times, complete games nine times, and home runs allowed seven times. His streak of six straight seasons with 20 or more wins (1967–1972) is the longest streak in the major leagues since Warren Spahn performed the feat between 1956 and 1961.
Jenkins, fellow Cub Greg MadduxCurt Schilling, and Pedro MartĆ­nez are the only major league pitchers to ever record more than 3,000 strikeouts with fewer than 1,000 walks.[13] Only Robin Roberts and Jamie Moyer allowed more home runs over a career. Jenkins achieved his 3000th strikeout on May 25, 1982 against Garry Templeton.
He is considered the anchor of the 12 Black Aces, a group of African American pitchers with at least twenty wins in one season.

Honors and awards

JenkinsRetiredFlag.png
Ferguson Jenkins's number 31 wasretired by theChicago Cubs in 2009.
In 1974 Jenkins, then with the Texas Rangers, became the first baseball player to win the Lou Marsh Trophy, an award given annually to Canada's top athlete. He was also named the Canadian Press male athlete of the year four times (19671968, 1971, and 1974).
Jenkins was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 1987, and in 1991, became the first Canadian ever elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame inCooperstown, New York.[14] The 1991 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, held in Toronto, was dedicated to Jenkins; he threw out the ceremonial first pitch to conclude the pregame ceremonies. Ferguson Jenkins was inducted into the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame in 1995.[15] Jenkins was inducted onto Canada's Walk of Fame in 2001. He was appointed the commissioner of the now-defunct Canadian Baseball League in 2003; the league's Jenkins Cup went missing when the league folded and has been missing ever since.[16] He was inducted into the Texas Rangers Hall of Fame in 2004. In 2011, the Ontario Sports Hall of Fame created the Ferguson Jenkins Heritage Award in his honour to commemorate those one-of-a-kind events or special moments in time that so embellish the long history of sports in Ontario.[17]
On December 17, 1979, he was made a Member of the Order of Canada for being "Canada's best-known major-league baseball player".[18] Governor General MichaĆ«lle Jeanofficiated at his investiture into the Order, which finally occurred on May 4, 2007: over 27 years after he was appointed.[19] On May 3, 2009, the Cubs retired jersey number 31 in honor of both Jenkins and Greg Maddux.[20] On December 13, 2010, Canada Post announced that Jenkins would be honoured in Canada with his own postage stamp. The stamp would be issued in February 2011 to commemorate Black History Month.[21]

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