Ron Teasley

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Ronald Teasley

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Biographical Information[edit]

As of 2023, Ron Teasley was one of three surviving players to have played in the Negro Leagues during the period when they were major leagues, as recognized retroactively by Major League Baseball in 2020. The others were Willie Mays and Bill Greason. Both Mays and Greason were stars who later played in the National League or American League, so their status as major leaguers was never in doubt, which was not the case for Teasley, who was part of the rank-and-file of the Negro Leagues. He played for the New York Cubans of the Negro National League in 1948 as a utility player. While most of the players on the team had Latin American roots, not all of them did, as was the case for Teasley who was born and raised in Detroit, MI.

He did sign a contract with the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1948 and played 23 games for the Olean Oilers of the PONY League that year, hitting .267, but was released towards the end of the season, before signing with the Cubans. He spent two months with the team and while preliminary statistics credit him with only two game appearances, the reconstruction of the full records of Negro League players remains an ongoing project. He also played in the integrated Man-Dak League, an independent league, in 1950.

He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II, seeing action in the Pacific.

Further Reading[edit]

  • Anthony Castrovince: "The ongoing search through history to give Negro Leaguers their due: With 3 who played in Negro Leagues surviving, MLB works to incorporate stats into record", mlb.com, November 6, 2023. [1]

Related Sites[edit]