In 1980, after obtaining my
doctorate and leaving St. Mary’s, I organized Golden Gate Sports Management
Firm, with its headquarters in Oakland
and an office in the Transamerica Pyramid building in San
Francisco. My business partner, who was white, was
lawyer Andy Curtin, a graduate of Fordham and Marquette
Universities. He handled the
football-related business, and we shared the basketball business. My area of
expertise, of course, was baseball. Because of my 25 years of experience at the
highest levels of baseball, in the pros and the colleges, as a player, scout
and coach, I felt I had an excellent background in representing players. As an
African-American man – we were beginning to be known as African Americans by
then – I had to obtain the highest educational degrees to compete against the
white man in the sports management arena, which I have now done for more than
20 years as an agent.
One of the first players I
recruited to represent was my former St. Mary’s player, Broderick Perkins.
Among the other outstanding major-league players I recruited to Golden Gate
Sports and represented in their baseball and business dealings were Joe Morgan,
Dion James, Ernie
Riles, Mike Felder, Gary Pettis, Stacey Pettis, Danny Tartabull,
Eric Davis, Kevin Bass, Willie McGee, Eric Anthony, Leon “Bip”
Roberts, Charles “Chili” Davis, Johnny Rabb, Chris
Brown, Lloyd McClendon, Wade Boggs, Dan Gladden, Anthony Telford, Scott Bullett, Marquis Grissom, Arthur Lee Rhodes, Alan Mills and
Rickey Henderson. Among those players’ accomplishments were 47 All-Star
appearances, four Most Valuable Player awards, 16 World Series championships
and three current or future Hall of Fames. We represented many other players in
the major leagues and the minors as well. Most were African-American players,
including many who were natives of the San Francisco Bay Area; others, notably,
were white players, including some superstars.
A person looking at this list of
clients would believe that my firm was making millions of dollars after more
than two decades in the business. Everyone on my staff was, and is, a college graduate and highly qualified to do this kind
of work, African American and white; many white agents then and now have not
had the educational background that my staff and I have, and they certainly
have not had my background as a player, scout and coach. Yet I have learned
over the years that for African Americans, representing pro athletes as an
agent is a very difficult area in which to achieve. It has always been easy for
me to recruit African-American clients, but it has been extremely hard to
retain them. The white clients that I represent are much easier to continue
working with, because of “elements in baseball” that I will elaborate on in
this chapter.
My experience with Rickey Henderson,
however, is a good illustration of what African-American agents such as myself have to encounter in trying to attract and retain
African-American players, particularly stars-in-the-making, as long-term
clients.
I have known Rickey Henderson
since he was nine or ten years old. I was a friend of his mother and family. On
his way to school, he used to stop by the M&M Bottle Shop, the liquor store
Joe Morgan and I co-owned in Oakland.
Over the years, I saw him develop into a top baseball and football prospect at Oakland
Technical High School.
He also played semi-pro baseball with adults at a very young age, as I had done
in my younger years.
During Rickey’s senior year in
high school, while I was still coaching at St. Mary’s, one of the local scouts
for the San Diego Padres, whom I worked with and referred players to, came to
me and suggested I saw one of the Tech players and possibly recruited him for
developing at St. Mary’s. The player was Rickey Henderson. I saw him one Sunday
in a semi-pro game, and he had developed so much that I told the scout that
Rickey was ready to play professional baseball right then and there. On another
occasion I brought Rickey and one of his classmates, Fred Aikens,
to St. Mary’s. I picked them up at their school in my new green Mercedes Benz,
with the top down on a beautiful East
Bay day, and I took them out to St.
Mary’s. I talked to Rickey about the possibility of playing baseball at
college, for example at St. Mary’s for me – but also advised him that if he
were to get drafted, he should take the opportunity to play professional
baseball. Rickey admired the Benz so much and was so delighted to ride in it
that I said to him, “Rickey, if you work hard and develop yourself in
professional baseball, someday you will be able to own one of these, or maybe
two of them.”