Q3 2025 Permanent Discount
The third of four permanent 50% discounts that will be running throughout the 2025 MiLB/MLB. Thank you all for your support.
This is the third of four permanent 50% discounts that will be offered throughout each quarter of 2025. Thank you all for reading and supporting The Red Black Green Baseball Blog.
Discount Link: https://tangibleuno.substack.com/q3discount2025
The Red, Black, Green Baseball Blog focuses on the African diaspora’s past, present, and future relationship with professional baseball. Black baseball history is expansive, stretching from Nicaragua and Alabama to Japan and South Sudan. While many think that baseball is dying within the African-American community and across the entire African diaspora, the opposite is true. Baseball has made significant strides forward on the African continent during the 21st century. While not known for producing professional baseball players, the Anglophone Caribbean has had a relatively large contingent of millennial and Gen-Z baseball talent reach the upper minors and majors during the 2010s and 2020s. The Red Black Green Baseball Blog provides articles focused on Black baseball history, player evaluations, and commentary on significant current events involving active Black players in the sport. Some of my past work is available to view below.
My online portfolio: https://www.clippings.me/users/tangibleuno
Further Reading
The Show Notes #1: Examining Some of the Factors That Caused Black America’s Detachment With Baseball
The professional athletes that have played in Minor League Baseball are already the best in the world at the game of baseball. The almost twenty thousand individuals who have worn an MLB uniform are outliers in a world of hundreds of thousands who dream of but do not reach baseball’s most competitive stage. Shortstop Tim Anderson of the Chicago White Sox is one of these individuals, and he is an outlier among the outliers who happen to be his peers because of the extremely unique path he took to becoming a professional baseball player.
The Show Notes #7: Rambling About Andrew McCutchen's Reunion With The Pittsburgh Pirates
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania probably has the strongest argument to claim the title of being the epicenter of Black baseball culture in the United States, specifically from the early 1910s to the late 1970s. There are other cities with valid rights to that title during bits and pieces of those 60 years such as Cleveland, St. Louis, New York City, Philadelphia, Cincinnati, and Kansas City. The First African American Great Migration (1910s - 1940s) was the primary factor in setting up the necessary conditions for Black baseball culture to exist and thrive in these areas. It was the movement of millions of African Americans from the South to cities across the Northeast and Midwest to escape de jure, de facto, and economic racism that was embedded across the South as a replacement for chattel slavery.






