Wednesday, August 2, 2023

1972 25TH ANNIVERSARY JACKIE ROBINSON SPECIAL: "COLLEGE STAR"

Today on the blog I begin a short yet fun 1972 sub-set honoring the 25th anniversary of Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier in 1947, celebrating different stages of his great athletic life, beginning with his fantastic college career at UCLA:


More than just a baseball player, Robinson excelled at many sports, and was actually the first in school history to letter in four varsity activities: baseball, basketball, football and track.
In football the Bruins went undefeated in 1939, his first year with the squad, as he led the NCAA in punt return average while also setting the (still) record of 12.2 yards per carry out of the backfield.
In track, he incredibly won the 1940 NCAA championship in the long jump at 24 feet, 10.25 inches, while funny enough, baseball was his "worst" sport, hitting only .097 in his one season.
Shortly after, he left school to work for National Youth Administration before embarking on a semi-pro football career, which was shortened due to the outbreak of World War II and the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The road to baseball was still a long way off, as Robinson would put in a military stretch that formed the path that would lead to the sport somewhat by "accident", as he would return to semi-pro football, put time in Samuel Huston College as Athletic Director, then as coach of the school's basketball team, until being contacted by the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro Leagues for a tryout after he wrote to the team at the encouragement of a former player that he met while stationed at Camp Breckinridge, Kentucky  a year or so earlier.
Next stage, and card in the series, the Negro Leagues.
Stay tuned!