[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 161 (2015), Part 3]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page 3916]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




 HONORING THE LIFE, ACHIEVEMENTS AND CONTRIBUTIONS OF MINNIE MINOSO TO 
                           AMERICAN BASEBALL

                                  _____
                                 

                            HON. STEVE COHEN

                              of tennessee

                    in the house of representatives

                        Thursday, March 19, 2015

  Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor a great baseball player 
and human being who passed away on March 1, 2015, Saturnino Orestes 
Armas Arrieta who was better known as Minnie Minoso, the Cuban Comet 
and Mr. White Sox.
  Minnie Minoso was born November 29, 1925 in Cuba. He played baseball 
there and had the opportunity to play baseball here in the U.S. in the 
Negro Leagues, for, being a Black Cuban, he wasn't allowed to play in 
the Major Leagues. He played three years with the New York Cubans and 
then because of Bill Veeck, who was one of the leaders in integrating 
baseball--the American League's Branch Rickey, Minoso had the 
opportunity to play in the Major Leagues. He was originally signed to 
the Cleveland Indians but was traded to the Chicago White Sox in 1951, 
where, because of his unlimited exuberance and effort, he became known 
as the ``Cuban Comet.''
  Minoso was a great White Sox player, one of the greatest players of 
the 1950s and a great emissary of Latin American baseball players. He 
was the first Black Latin American player and superstar, the first 
black White Sox player and the third American League player of African 
descent.
  Minnie Minoso had a great career. He did everything in baseball. He 
hit for average, he hit for power, he had speed, he was a great 
fielder, and a great competitor. In his career, Minoso batted .300 
eight times, had a career batting average of .298 with 1023 RBIs and 
hit 186 home runs. He was a seven-time major league All-Star, a three-
time Gold Glove Award winner and was one of only two players to play in 
the Major Leagues for five decades. In 1990, the White Sox wanted him 
to play in his sixth decade, which would have placed him in a league of 
his own. At the time, I placed a call to MLB Commissioner Fay Vincent 
and argued for Minnie being allowed to play in just one game and 
accordingly have six decades under his belt. Unfortunately Commissioner 
Vincent respectfully declined.
  In addition to Minnie being one of the greatest baseball players of 
the 1950s, he was simply a great human being. In 1955, I lived in 
Memphis, Tennessee and was recovering from childhood polio. I went to 
an exhibition baseball game at Russwood Park where the White Sox were 
playing the Cardinals. I had a White Sox cap kind of like this one--
this is a Minnie Minoso cap--and I had a White Sox t-shirt. I was on 
crutches and getting autographs when a player came and gave me a 
baseball. I went to my dad and told him about it; we went down to thank 
the player. He was a white pitcher for the Cardinals named Tom 
Poholsky. He said, ``Don't thank me. Thank that player over there.'' 
That was number nine for the White Sox, Minnie Minoso. In the entire 
baseball field of 50 players or more, one cared about a young boy with 
polio who was a White Sox fan and wanted to do something for him. But 
in segregated Memphis, a black player didn't feel comfortable doing 
that, so he did it through a white player. The experience taught me at 
a very early age about the horrors of discrimination, prejudice and 
racism.
  After that, Minnie became my friend. I visited him in Chicago and 
went into the White Sox locker room where he gave me his bat and cap. 
When he came to Memphis in 1960, I visited him at the Lorraine Motel, 
which was where the black players stayed while the white players were 
at the Peabody--another lesson in discrimination that taught me well 
and has taught me to this day to be vigilant against all forms of 
racism and discrimination. The Lorraine was where Dr. King was killed 
and now is a great Civil Rights museum in Memphis.
  I followed Minnie my whole life. He was like a part of my family. We 
moved to Los Angeles and we went and visited him at Chavez Ravine. He 
came up to my dad, and he said ``Doc, how's the kid's leg, how's he 
doing?'' He always was concerned.
  Minnie was denied one of his life's goals of being voted into the 
Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. I tried to help him with that. 
Baseball made a mistake; they should have put Minnie in the Hall of 
Fame for his Sporting News Rookie of the Year season in 1951 and for 
all his great years on the diamond where he was unquestionably one of 
the premiere players of the game through 1961, in addition to being the 
first Black Latin American Major Leaguer and the first Latin American 
star. While he was not afforded this honor during his lifetime, 
Minoso's achievements were recognized through his induction into the 
Cuban Baseball Hall of Fame in 1983, the Hispanic Heritage Baseball 
Hall of Fame in 2002, the Latino Baseball Hall of Fame in 2010, and 
having had his number nine retired by the White Sox, his statue placed 
at U.S. Cellular Field as he was ``Mr. White Sox,'' and over 35 years 
of being the White Sox ambassador to Chicago. It is my hope that Minnie 
will soon be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum as it 
needs Minnie to remember this groundbreaking and popular diamond star.
  Minnie Minoso died Sunday, March 1, 2015. Visitation was Friday, 
March 6th at Holy Family Church in Chicago and the funeral was that 
Saturday. I'll miss Minnie Minoso. He is a lesson in why sports are 
bigger than runs, hits and errors. It is about human beings and 
humanity and young kids. Thank you, Minnie. Yours was a life well-
lived.

                          ____________________