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Curt Flood (January 18, 1938 - January 20, 1997) was an American baseball player. He was born in Houston, Texas.
A three-time All-Star and seven-time winner of the Gold Glove for his defensive prowess in center field, Flood hit more than .300 six times during a 15-year major league career that began in 1956. In the seventh game of the 1968 World Series, Flood misjudged a fly ball which ultimately led to the Detroit Tigers winning the series.
After the 1969 season, St. Louis traded Flood, Tim McCarver, Byron Browne, and Joe Hoerner to the Phillies on October 7, 1969, for slugger Dick Allen, Cookie Rojas, and Jerry Johnson. Flood disliked his trade to Philadelphia which then had a poor team and played its games in an old stadium, before usually belligerent and perhaps even racist fans.
He first asked Commissioner Kuhn to declare him a free agent in this letter:
Kuhn denied his request. He filed suit on January 16, 1970, stating that baseball had violated the nation's anti-trust laws. Even though he was making $90,000 at the time, Flood likened "being owned" to "being a slave 100 years ago." The case went to the Supreme Court, with former Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg pressing his case. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of organized baseball (Flood v. Kuhn 407 U.S. 258 1972, which upheld an earlier ruling, Federal Baseball Club v. National League, 259 U.S. 200 1922).
Even though Flood lost the lawsuit, the baseball reserve clause was mortally wounded. Within five years, the reserve clause was all but dead.
Flood wrote an autobiography entitled The Way It Is.
Flood died in 1997 of throat cancer in Los Angeles, California.