In eye-opening documentary The League, director Sam Pollard tells a fully-rounded tale of how Black baseball used to thrive
Sam Pollard inherited his love for baseball from his father, a fan of the St Louis Cardinals – Black America’s team in the 1960s. Growing up in New York just made it a long-distance affair. “They had some phenomenal players,” Pollard recalls to the Guardian. “Lou Brock, Curt Flood, Bob Gibson, Bill White. And then when I got to be 14, 15 years old, I really wanted to understand their lineage. Where did they come from?”
Decades later, the director retraces that Black baseball genealogy in The League – a new Questlove-produced documentary on the rise, fall and last impact of the Negro Leagues, the professional baseball association that sprang up in the long shadow of Jim Crow. It’s a history famously touched on in Ken Burns’s seminal docuseries Baseball. But in The League, the B-story becomes the main thread.
More Stories
Grassroots clubs hold key as Norway prepares for historic vote to scrap VAR
RFL warns clubs that planned coup will financially cripple the sport
Fifa’s Gianni Infantino defends ‘crucial’ relationship with Donald Trump