White Sox to hold annual game celebrating Negro Leagues

SHARE White Sox to hold annual game celebrating Negro Leagues
basdouble_cst_062812_2.jpg

Members of the East and the West shake hands after the East won in the Double Duty Classic Baseball All-Sra game at Cellular Field in Chicago. | Al Podgorski~CFhicago Sun-Times

The White Sox will hold the 10th annual Double Duty Classic game at Guaranteed Rate Field on Thursday to celebrate the history of Negro Leagues in Chicago and promote the next generation of inner-city baseball players.

The game begins at 1:05 p.m. and will feature the best inner-city high school baseball players dressed in retro East-West All-Star uniforms. Admission to the game is free and Comcast SportsNet will broadcast the game live. Fans must enter the ballpark through Gate 5.

‘‘This year’s event is particularly special as we mark the 10th Double Duty Classic event in our history,’’ said Sox vice president of community relations Christine O’Reilly in a news release. ‘‘Each year, we have seen young men participate in the event, learn and grow from the experience here – not only on the field, but in their careers away from the field and at home.”

There will also be a forum discussion before the game for invited guests on the history of the Negro Leagues and African-Americans in baseball. The forum will include Negro Leagues Baseball museum president Bob Kendrick, MLB senior vice president of youth programs Tony Reagins, Sox hitting coach Todd Steverson and Sox executive vice president Ken Williams.

‘‘It is so important to us that we continue to share the incredible legacy of the Negro Leagues with the next generation, so that we never take for granted the sacrifice and dedication of those men who played in order to give others a chance to play.’’

The DDC is named in honor of Ted “Double Duty” Radcliffe, who played for the Chicago American Giants of the Negro Leagues. Past alumni of the game include White Sox prospects Courtney Hawkins and Blake Hickman.

The Latest
On the locally made Apple TV+ series, skyscrapers can crumble, Lake Michigan can freeze and a power plant in Robbins can house an alternate reality machine.
One in five adolescents experiences a major depressive episode each year. Adults must understand how to get kids help, according to the CDC.
Bitter son has been insulting his mother for years and now seems determined to wreck her relationship.
Barbara Glusak, who was Washington Federal Bank for Savings’ chief financial officer, kept sounding the alarm about falsified loan records, court records show. But no one heeded the warning, allowing an embezzlement scheme at the bank to continue for six more years.
Robert Ellis convinced a Cook County judge to drop charges from his 2018 arrest on the South Side. But he still faces prosecution in separate cases charging him with impersonating an officer. Here’s the latest on this wild tale.