Willie Mays, who was born in a Jefferson County mill town that doesn't exist anymore, played his first professional baseball at Birmingham's Rickwood Field, and went on to top many a baseball expert's list of the greatest players of all time, died peacefully Tuesday afternoon, reports AL.com's Mark Inabinett. Thursday's MLB at Rickwood Field game between the St. Louis Cardinal and San Francisco Giants is an event that has the influence of Mays all over it. The choice to put the game near where Mays grew up, on the very ground he roamed as an outfielder for the Birmingham Black Barons in 1948, and the inclusion of the big-league franchise for which he became a legend all point to Mays' legacy. It was hoped that Mays would be able to attend the ballgame and/or events surrounding it that also are paying tribute to negro-league baseball from the days of segregation, but it was announced just this week he would remain in San Francisco. Mays grew up in Westfield, just west of Interstate 20 near what is now Fairfield. He graduated from Fairfield Industrial High School and joined the Black Barons the season after the major-league color barrier was broken by Jackie Robinson. He was playing with the New York Giants by 1951. He's sixth on the all-time home-runs list with 660. He was a rare undisputed five-tool player, meaning he was elite in hitting for average, hitting for power, running the bases, fielding and throwing. He's featured in pretty much every single compilation of all-time baseball highlights. You've probably seen what's known as "The Catch" in Game 1 of the 1954 World Series, when Mays made a spectacular over-the-shoulder catch of a fly ball but was just getting started. Maybe more impressive than the actual catch was a falling-down spin-and-throw to keep runners on first and second. Mays also took more than a year away from the game in 1952 and 1953 to serve in the Army. And in 2015 he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Willie Mays was 93 years old. |