Reggie Smith had to deal with a lot of racial vitriol while with the Boston Red Sox in the late 1960s and early 1970s
Boston has a long history of racist tendencies that lasted well into the 1980s and frankly, it is still known to be one of the most racist areas in the United States today. African-American MLB players today still deal with racial slurs (there were seven known incidents of players being called the n-word in Fenway Park in 2019 alone).
So especially at the height of the Civil Rights Movement in the late 1960s with an owner who was a known racist, Reggie Smith was known to fight back. The Red Sox were the last MLB team to integrate racially and Smith was the first African American player for the Red Sox that was a star player.
In 2003, Smith said that he thought he was “never felt welcome in Boston,” and that he “believed it was a racist city.”
Smith fighting back against it is part of the reason why he was traded to St. Louis. He spent two years there before he went on to play with the Los Angeles Dodgers.
After his 1978 season, Smith struggled with injuries a lot, which cost him a lot of playing time. He only averaged 77 games per season in his final four seasons in the majors.
Smith later became the MLB hitting coach for the Dodgers in the mid-1990s. He was also a coach in the Pan-American Games and for Team USA in the Olympics in 2000 and he has been a minor league coach and in player development for the Dodgers since then as well. He is still in their organization as he is close to Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. For the 2021 All-Star Game, Roberts brought Smith with him on his coaching staff as “honorary manager.”
When Reggie Smith Smith spoke with Call To The Pen’s Kevin Henry in an exclusive conversation at the All-Star Game back in July, Smith said that since he joined the Los Angeles Dodgers and even through numerous ownerships, the Dodgers have always been “family” to him. He and Roberts first met when they were both with the Pan-American team and on Team USA (Roberts as a player and Smith as a coach).
In addition, they spend time together in the offseason in Jackson Hole, Wyoming as he, Roberts, and a few other current and MLB coaches and managers, including Rockies manager Bud Black, meet up there in the winter every year. Roberts was a coach under Black when he managed the Padres.
But for Smith’s playing career, when you compare his numbers to other right fielders and other Hall of Famers, it’s absolutely mind-boggling that he’s not in the Baseball Hall of Fame.