Fifth in a Series on the Shameless Partisan Scandal at the National Baseball Hall of
Fame
I sent this letter to Dale Petroskey, president of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and
Museum, regarding his decision to cancel the 15th anniversary celebration of "Bull
Durham."
Stephen M. Repko
* * *
Mr. Petroskey:
I'm sure you don't remember meeting me, through Ernie Harwell, at a Tigers game a few
years back. I have been a sports writer/columnist/editor in the Detroit area for nearly 30
years, a member of the Baseball Writers Association of America (Detroit chapter) since
1979 and a Hall of Fame voter since 1989.
My love of baseball was nurtured, in part, by two visits to Cooperstown when I was a very
young boy. I distinctly remember one trip, when I was 9 years old and my parents -- now
both deceased -- took me to Cooperstown. Not only did we make a full day of the Baseball
Hall of Fame and Museum, but we went to Doubleday Field and I had a ball running around
the bases and pretending I was Babe Ruth and doing all the things that baseball allowed a
little boy's mind to imagine back in such a seemingly innocent time.
That was in the summer of 1961, now almost 42 years ago. Much has happened to all of us
since then, but one goal I always had in mind was that some year I'd go back to
Cooperstown. To make, as it were, a pilgrimage to baseball's Mecca. Finally I was planning
to do it this summer. But, in the wake of your recent action, I'm not so sure I want to make
the effort. It might be hypocritical of me to support, through admission fees and other
money I'd spend in Cooperstown, an organization that on one hand purports to celebrate
and honor America's pastime while on the other hand preemptively stifling the most basic of American rights.
I'm sure, given the other negative feedback you've received on the decision to cancel the Hall of Fame's "Bull
Durham" celebration, that you don't need yet another free speech argument from me. I would remind you,
however, that there was a reason free speech was the first right granted in the Bill of Rights.
You exposed your own hypocrisy when, in 2002, you welcomed Ari Fleischer to Cooperstown to, in your own
words, "hear his perspective on life in the White House and the current political scene" and then, a little more
than a year later, canceled the "Bull Durham" celebration because, again in your own words, "Given the track
record of Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon, and the timing – with our troops committed in Iraq – a strong
possibility existed that they could have used The Hall of Fame as a backdrop for their views."
You can't have it both ways. You can't welcome one perspective and silence the "strong possibility" that others
"could" speak a differing view.
Baseball has enough problems without the Hall of Fame sticking a political foot in its mouth. I wish you luck in
undoing the damage, but I wonder if anything less than your resignation would be sufficient.
You dropped the ball on this one, Mr. Petroskey. And you should be ashamed.
Sincerely,
Stephen M. Repko
Ypsilanti, MI