bachslunch wrote:Rozehawk wrote:So I don't think he was ever left off any all-pro teams unfairly, at least not due to his race. Whether his race played a factor in being relegated to second-team all-pro rather than the first team, as well as his omission from the 1920s All-Decade Team, is much more compelling. I do touch on that a bit in the book, so I won't spoil that for you.
It wouldn't surprise me if race were a factor in his 1st vs. 2nd team all pro selections. He has a profile of 3/-/none, but was named a second teamer 3 other times. And none of his 1st team selections were unanimous by organization.
Unless you see him as a mistake, Fritz Pollard is already in and has a profile of 1/-/none. If he's in, Slater certainly should be, too.
At the risk of spoilering TanksandSpartans' reading...
For a long time, the all-pro teams chosen by the
Green Bay Press-Gazette were considered the definitive word. That has changed in recent decades, as folks have taken a broader view of all-pro teams chosen by multiple sources from that era. But once upon a time, the
Press-Gazette all-pro teams were held in the same high regard as Camp's All-American teams.
Slater was named a second team all-pro by the
Press-Gazette FIVE times...and a first team all-pro by that organization ZERO times. (He was also named a third team all-pro by the
Press-Gazette in 1930.) So I went back and researched all the
Press-Gazette all-pro teams prior to 1945, and no player was named a second team all-pro on more than three occasions except Duke, who was put there five times. (And many of the players who were named second team all-pro three times also had numerous first team all-pro selections in other years.) It's pretty curious that Slater was so consistently one of the four best tackles in the sport - five times in the 1920s, or fully half the decade - but NEVER one of the top two.
But maybe he was just beat out by some great players, right? Well...Slater was denied a place at tackle on the
Press-Gazette all-pro first team by
Boni Petcoff in 1924,
Ed Weir in 1927, and
Bob Beattie in 1929. These were the only all-pro selections of these three men's careers. All were in their first or second year in the league when they were named all-pro over the more veteran Slater. All three were out of the NFL within two years. And their selections can't be contributed to team success, as none of their teams had winning records the year they were named all-pro.
Look...I'm just a nerdy white guy behind a keyboard, so I'm not going to channel my inner Whitlock and scream, "
RACISM!!" It's just not me. But it's worth noting that when Slater was snubbed for Weir in 1927 and Beattie in 1929,
Duke Slater was the only black player in the entire NFL. Wouldn't it have been a little uncomfortable for the
Press-Gazette to name the only black player in the entire league as the very best at his position?
So while I try not to attribute such "coincidences" to racism, I do like to point out things I find...curious. Like my favorite Red Grange story, for instance, which I'm sure I've told here before. In conjunction with the 40th anniversary of the NFL in 1959, Grange was asked to pick his personal all-time all-pro team, the 11 best NFL players in history to that point. Grange picked 13 players because, well, because he can (and he didn't pick himself, which is pretty modest, too.) Anyway, Grange picked 12 white players and Duke Slater. The 12 white players are all in the Hall of Fame...Slater is not. I'm not saying, I'm just saying. You know what I'm saying?
The more you really study Duke Slater's career, the more frustrating it is that this guy still can't get the call to Canton, that fans and voters just keep consistently letting people in line ahead of him year after year after year. But that's the process...all you can do is keep raising awareness and hope for the best.
