Stealing Home: The Point of No Return | |
---|---|
Artist | Branly Cadet |
Year | 2017 |
Medium | Bronze sculpture |
Subject | Jackie Robinson |
Location | Dodger Stadium Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
34°4′29.9″N118°14′21.2″W / 34.074972°N 118.239222°W |
Stealing Home: The Point of No Return is a bronze statue of baseball great Jackie Robinson which was unveiled outside Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on April 15, 2017, marking the 70th anniversary of Robinson's breaking of the color line in professional baseball in 1947, when he became the first African American to play in Major League Baseball during the modern era.
Robinson played for the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1947 to 1956, and was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1962. His historic first is commemorated on Jackie Robinson Day each year. [1]
In 2015, the Los Angeles Dodgers announced that they would unveil the statue of Jackie Robinson at Dodger Stadium. Dodgers' president Stan Kasten commissioned what would become the first statue dedicated by the team and chose sculptor Branly Cadet to create the statue. [2]
The statue was unveiled on Jackie Robinson Day in 2017, 70 years after Robinson's debut, with Robinson's widow Rachel Robinson, then 97, and his children attending the ceremony. [3]
The sculpture weighs 800 pounds, and stands in the centerfield plaza of Dodger Stadium. It depicts Robinson stealing home plate, an act described by Cadet as "both real and symbolic; it required focused determination, courage and precise timing—synergistic qualities that were also present when the color barrier was finally broken in Major League Baseball, heralding a new era." [4]
There are three quotes by Robinson carved onto the base of the statue:
In front of the base, the inscription says:
JACKIE ROBINSON
On April 15, 1947, at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn, N.Y., Jack Roosevelt Robinson, at the age of 28, became the first African-American in the 20th century to play for a Major League Baseball team. A dynamic player who appeared in 6 World Series throughout his 10-year career, Robinson in 1947 was named baseball’s first Rookie of the Year, an award which today bears his name. Robinson won national MVP honors in 1949 after hitting a league best of 342 with 37 steals. In his career he stole home 19 times during the regular season, and once in the 1954 series against the New York Yankees. [4]
January 31, 1919 – October 24, 1972
Jack Roosevelt Robinson was an American professional baseball player who became the first African-American to play in Major League Baseball (MLB) in the modern era. Robinson broke the color line when he started at first base for the Brooklyn Dodgers on April 15, 1947. The Dodgers signing Robinson heralded the end of racial segregation in professional baseball that had relegated black players to the Negro leagues since the 1880s. Robinson was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1962.
The Los Angeles Dodgers are an American professional baseball team based in Los Angeles. The Dodgers compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the National League (NL) West Division. Established in 1883 in Brooklyn, New York, the team joined the NL in 1890 as the Brooklyn Bridegrooms and used several other monikers before finally settling on the name Dodgers in 1932. From the 1940s through the mid-1950s, the Dodgers developed a fierce crosstown rivalry with the New York Yankees as the two clubs faced each other in the World Series seven times, with the Dodgers losing the first five matchups before defeating them to win the franchise's first title in 1955. It was also during this period that the Dodgers made history by breaking the baseball color line in 1947 with the debut of Jackie Robinson, the first African American to play in the Major Leagues since 1884. Another major milestone was reached in 1956 when Don Newcombe became the first player ever to win both the Cy Young Award and the NL MVP in the same season.
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