Black Aces


The Black Aces are a group of African-American and African-Canadian pitchers who have won at least 20 games during a single Major League Baseball season. The term comes from the title of a 2007 book by MLB pitcher Mudcat Grant, one of the members of the group. Through the 2024 MLB season, 14 different African-American and one African-Canadian pitcher have accomplished the feat.

Background

Following the desegregation of MLB in the late 1940s, and continuing through the establishment of the MLB draft in 1965, it was common for major-league teams to convert African-American pitchers into position players rather than allowing them to continue pitching. Through the 1950s, only two African-American pitchers were 20-game winners—Don Newcombe and Sam Jones. In 1965, they were joined by Bob Gibson and Mudcat Grant; the latter being the first African-American 20-game winner in American League history. One African-Canadian pitcher, Ferguson Jenkins and one African-American Earl Wilson, also accomplished the feat during the 1960s. Since then, there have been several additions to the list of such pitchers—referred to as Black Aces—three in the 1970s, three in the 1980s, one in the 2000s, and two in the 2010s.
In the mid-2000s, surviving members of the group organized to promote their successes and encourage the development of future black players. In 2007, The Black Aces: Baseball's Only African-American Twenty-Game Winners was published, authored by Grant. Some black pitchers from Latin America, notably Cuban-born Luis Tiant, have expressed disappointment that they were not included. Meanwhile, Canadian-born Ferguson Jenkins is included as a Black Ace.
In February 2007, during an event to honor Black History Month, President George W. Bush honored book author Grant and three of his fellow Black Aces at the White House. During the 2007 MLB season, the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum had a traveling exhibit honoring the Black Aces. The Black Aces were celebrated at Oakland's McAfee Coliseum during that season.
Three members of the Black Aces, Gibson, Jenkins and Sabathia, are members of the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

List of Black Aces

Grant's book, published in 2007, listed 13 pitchers as Black Aces. Subsequently, two African-American pitchers have also won 20 or more games in a single MLB season. Thus, there are currently 15 pitchers considered Black Aces, as listed in the following table.
PitcherName of the person who accomplished the feat
#Number of seasons the pitcher won 20 or more games
Season and recordSeason in which the pitcher won 20 or more games, and their win–loss record in each such season
TeamTeam the pitcher played for when he won 20 or more games
Pitcher is an inductee to the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum|Baseball Hall of Fame]
Pitcher accomplished the feat after the book was published in 2007

Pitcher#Season and recordTeam
31971, 1973, 1975 Oakland Athletics
11971 Los Angeles Dodgers
51965, 1966, 1968, 1969, 1970 St. Louis Cardinals
11985 New York Mets
11965 Minnesota Twins
71967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972
1974
Chicago Cubs
Texas Rangers
11959 San Francisco Giants
31951, 1955, 1956 Brooklyn Dodgers
11980 Oakland Athletics
12012 Tampa Bay Rays
11976 Houston Astros
12010 New York Yankees
41987, 1988, 1989, 1990 Oakland Athletics
12005 Florida Marlins
11967 Detroit Tigers