While baseball’s postwar years are often called the “Golden Age” of the sport, it was also an era when the reserve clause bound players to their teams and suppressed their rights and wages. Into these conditions came Danny Gardella, who openly resisted this bondage and launched the legal fight against the reserve clause that set the stage for Curt Flood and Marvin Miller’s challenge two decades later.
In Dangerous Danny Gardella: Baseball’s Neglected Trailblazer for Today’s Millionaire Athletes, Robert Elias tells the story of this little-known yet remarkable ballplayer who stood up to Major League Baseball and laid the foundation for free agency. Elias recounts Gardella’s humble beginnings, his struggles to establish himself as a professional baseball player, his entertaining antics on and off the field, and his jump from Organized Baseball to the Mexican League that was the spark not only for challenging the reserve clause, but for creating America’s most powerful labor union, the MLB Player’s Association.
Gardella was an unlikely working-class hero: a Renaissance man who played ball and wrote poetry; who quoted Shakespeare, Freud, and Dewey; who was an acrobat and Golden Gloves boxer; who was an opera, vaudeville, and Broadway singer; and who became a weight training and nutrition pioneer. His remarkable life, full of twists and turns, tells the hidden history of the struggle against the reserve clause, delivering a new perspective on America’s Golden Age of Baseball and the origins of free agency.
Robert Elias is Dean’s Scholar and Professor of Politics and Legal Studies at the University of San Francisco. His most recent baseball books include Baseball Rebels: The Players, People, and Social Movements That Shook Up the Game and Changed America and Major League Rebels: Baseball Battles Over Workers’ Rights and American Empire (both with Peter Dreier). His baseball essays have appeared in Nine, Jacobin, Baseball Research Journal, American History Magazine, Pacific Historical Review, Diplomatic History, International Journal of the History of Sport, and the Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and American Culture. He is a longtime Society for American Baseball Research and Baseball Reliquary member. He lives in Mill Valley, CA, near San Francisco.