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DOCK ELLIS: THE FIRST ETERNAL (1945-2008)
The
passing of Dock Phillip Ellis, Jr. on December
19, 2008 marked a very sad moment in the history
of the Baseball Reliquary. Dock was in the first
class of inductees to the Reliquary’s Shrine of
the Eternals in 1999, along with Curt Flood and
Bill Veeck. That momentous occasion did not come
without considerable apprehension on the part of
the Reliquary’s staff and Board of Directors.
None of us was quite sure whether the concept of
the Shrine of the Eternals would be well
received. The idea of creating an alternative to
the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, where
statistical achievement was not the major
criterion for election, had never been put to
the test on this kind of scale. We were not at
all sure how the general public would view the
Shrine of the Eternals, let alone how the
baseball figures to be enshrined would take to
this honor.
Our
concern as to how
the inductees would view enshrinement was
quickly assuaged by Dock Ellis in 1999, when he
stepped to the podium in Pasadena, California to
become the first ballplayer inducted into the
Shrine of the Eternals. In his emotional
acceptance speech, Dock admitted that he had no
idea what the Baseball Reliquary was when he was
contacted with the news of his election, but he
genuinely liked the idea of a baseball
organization that honored those like himself who
had made contributions that often went
unrecognized. Not only did Dock validate the
Shrine of the Eternals by being present at his
induction, but he also filled at least half the
seats with friends and family. That validation
of the Shrine would continue over the next ten
years with many of Dock’s fellow electees
traveling from all parts of the country to
personally accept their inductions, including,
among others, Pam Postema, Bill Lee, Jim Bouton,
Minnie Minoso, Marvin Miller, Dick Allen, Lester
Rodney, and Bill James.
When the first Shrine election
results were announced in 1999, some people
mentioned that Dock was an unusual selection,
that somehow his life and achievements paled in
comparison to those of Curt Flood and Bill Veeck.
Some speculated that the only reason he was
elected was due to the infamous notoriety of the
no-hitter he pitched while under the influence
of LSD. In hindsight, Dock Ellis was an ideal,
perhaps even prophetic, selection for the first
class of the Shrine, in that he would embody the
core values and principles of many of the
electees to follow. He was an extraordinary
athlete, controversial and outspoken, loyal and
charitable; at the same time that he challenged
the baseball establishment, he battled his own
personal demons, eventually vanquishing the
alcoholism and drug addiction which shadowed him
throughout his professional career.
The Reverend Al Oliver, a former
teammate of Dock’s on the Pittsburgh Pirates,
delivered his eulogy at the Glory Christian
Fellowship International church in Carson,
California on December 27, 2008. Oliver
described Dock as being “a character with
character” and noted that there were very few of
those in baseball. I’d like to think that Dock
was the first of many such characters “with
character” that have made significant
contributions and that now reside in the Shrine
of the Eternals.
~ by Terry
Cannon, Executive Director, the Baseball
Reliquary ~
The
following article was submitted for posting on
the Baseball Reliquary Web site shortly after
the passing of Dock Ellis. The author, Rodger
Citron, is a law professor and a writer who
lives in New York City.
Dock
Ellis, the former pitcher for the Pittsburgh
Pirates and several other teams, died on
December 19, 2008. He was 63-years old and his
death was reported on sports pages across the
country. The obituaries recorded his 138-119
record as a major leaguer, recalled his 1970
no-hitter (which Ellis later said he threw while
under the influence of LSD), and paid tribute to
his tendency to speak freely. However, none of
the obituaries that I read noted Ellis’s
collaboration with Donald Hall on one of the
more intriguing baseball books of the modern
era, Donald Hall's Dock Ellis in the Country
of Baseball.
When I learned this summer of Ellis’s
medical problems – he had been diagnosed with
cirrhosis of the liver, which ultimately led to
his death – I was inspired to reread Dock
Ellis in the Country of Baseball ("Country").
Country had had been one of my favorite
books when I was growing up in Pittsburgh. Ellis
and the Pirates were part of my childhood: I
went with my parents to Three Rivers Stadium
when Roberto Clemente got his 3,000th hit –
Ellis pitched six innings to help shut out the
New York Mets that day – and still have the
photos of me with Ellis and other Pirates taken
by my mother on a number of "Camera Days" at
the ballpark.
I
first read Country when I was in high
school. Country is a distinctively 1970s
artifact. It features long conversations between
Ellis and Hall, usually lubricated by alcohol,
about nearly everything of interest to a
teenager: race, sex (and marriage), the
psychology of competition, voodoo in Haiti, the
Vietnam War (Ellis visited the troops with a
contingent from Major League Baseball, including
Bobby Bonds), and how to throw a curveball and
conceal a spitball.
Country,
published in 1976, also provides a detailed
portrait of a transitional era in major league
baseball. Major league baseball had been
integrated since 1947, when Jackie Robinson
broke the color line playing for the Brooklyn
Dodgers, and still held the interest of African
Americans. Country was written just as
salaries were due to skyrocket with the advent
of free agency. The lives of Ellis and other
players are fascinating because their lives were
more or less like everyone else’s and were not
exotic due to the extravagant salaries baseball
players are paid today. The Country of Baseball
described by Hall provides an approximate mirror
of society and is not an exclusive enclave.
Another sign of the times: when Hall discusses
drug use by baseball players, he is referring to
recreational drugs, not steroids.
I was
probably 15-years old the first time I read
Country and read it annually until I
graduated from high school. Ellis was
irresistible to any adolescent. He was an
intelligent and charismatic person and a
talented and accomplished athlete. Although most
of the baseball discussion in Country is
about pitching, Hall does not neglect Ellis’s
occasional stints as a pinch-runner and his
deserved reputation as a pitcher who could hit.
He also describes Ellis’s prowess as a high
school basketball point guard.
Ellis
also was a racial minority who – it’s not a
cliché the first time you hear the phrase as a
teenager – spoke truth to power. Hall dubbed
Ellis baseball's "Muhammad Ali" because he
freely spoke his mind. The "Ali" label doesn't
quite fit, partly because Dock never elevated
himself above his peers but more because he
never was an entertainer. The label is
nevertheless revealing because, circa 1976, it
signified that Ellis was an outspoken black
athlete who understood the consequences of his
words and actions but did not restrain himself
to conform to the expectations of the Pirates’
management or fans.
For a
teenager in Pittsburgh who enjoyed playing
baseball and basketball but was more adept at
reading books, there was something inspiring,
even heroic, about Ellis. He was a rebel with a
cause who lived according to his own code. Ellis
spoke freely to reporters, campaigned against
sickle cell anemia and visited prisoners in the
local penitentiary, and did what he believed was
the right thing to help his team – even throwing
at the first five Cincinnati Reds in a 1974
game, hitting three of them, in an attempt to
rally the Pirates, still sluggish after the
death of Roberto Clemente in 1972. (The Pirates
won the Eastern Division that year while the
Reds finished behind the Los Angeles Dodgers –
Q.E.D.) Ellis was authentic, and no quality in
an adult is more appealing to an adolescent than
being true to one’s self.
I was
a recent college graduate when an updated
version of Country came out in 1989. Hall
disclosed what has become Ellis’s signature
accomplishment: that Ellis threw his no-hitter
against the San Diego Padres in 1970 under the
influence of LSD (and Dexamyl and Benzedrine,
which Ellis swallowed in the clubhouse before
taking the mound). This revelation was
astonishing.
Beyond the obvious emotions – what hubris! What
a perverse triumph of the human will (and
amphetamines) over a powerful psychedelic drug!
– I marveled at Ellis’s ability to inspire a new
fan base, the druggies, more than a decade after
he had left baseball. A psychedelic rock band in
Cincinnati took the name “Dock Ellis,” no doubt
in homage to the LSD no-hitter. Among black
baseball players, Ellis has a singular crossover
appeal to the drug counterculture.
I
knew of Ellis’ recent medical ailments when I
reread Country this summer. This time, I
was most engaged by the epilogue added by Hall
to the 1989 edition entitled, “The Adjustment.”
This chapter is more than an update on Dock’s
activities since he was traded to the Yankees
after the 1975 season; it also includes a candid
account of Ellis’ successful efforts to sober up
and become a drug and alcohol counselor.
What
struck me most was the elegiac tone of the
epilogue. Like most professional athletes,
baseball players enjoy their fame and peak
earnings at an early age. They then have to live
the rest of their lives, inevitably defined by
their accomplishments as young adults. Ellis
left baseball when he was 34-years old and made
his adjustment, helping young men troubled by
the same problems with drugs and alcohol that
afflicted him. Long after fame had departed,
Ellis found his glory doing meaningful work and
caring about his family. I believe that is
Country’s enduring lesson for me as I settle
into middle age.
~ by Rodger Citron ~ |