Marvin Miller changed major league baseball and the business of sports.
Drawing on research and interviews with Miller and others, Marvin
Miller, Baseball Revolutionary offers the first biography covering the
pivotal labor leader's entire life and career. Baseball historian Robert
F. Burk follows the formative encounters with Depression-era hard times,
racial and religious bigotry, and bare-knuckle Washington and labor
politics that prepared Miller for his biggest professional
challenge--running the moribund Major League Baseball Players
Association.
Educating and uniting the players as a workforce, Miller embarked on a
long campaign to win the concessions that defined his legacy: decent
workplace conditions, a pension system, outside mediation of player
grievances and salary disputes, a system of profit sharing, and the
long-sought dismantling of the reserve clause that opened the door to
free agency. Through it all, allies and adversaries alike praised
Miller's hardnosed attitude, work ethic, and honesty.
Comprehensive and illuminating, Marvin Miller, Baseball Revolutionary
tells the inside story of a time of change in sports and labor
relations, and of the contentious process that gave athletes in baseball
and across the sporting world a powerful voice in their own games.