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Cleats from Jackie Robinson statue will be donated to Negro Leagues Baseball Museum

Una estatua de bronce del legendario pionero jugador del béisbol Jackie Robinson fue robada de un parque público en Wichita, Kansas, durante las primeras horas de la mañana del jueves 25 de enero de 2024. La estatua valorada en 75.000 dólares fue la figura dentral de las instalaciones deportivas de League 42, iniciada en 2015 para ayudar a niños de escasos recursos a tener acceso al deporte organizado. (Travis Heying/The Wichita Eagle via AP) (Travis Heying/AP)

League 42 will donate the bronze cleats from a Jackie Robinson statue to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum (Kansas City, Missouri), Bob Lutz, the founder and executive director of League 42, told ESPN on Friday.

The organization, which was founded in 2013 and named in Robinson's honor, was started by Lutz to promote the play of African American youths in baseball. Robinson's statue was erected in 2021, stolen in late January, and the remains of the statue were discovered on Jan. 26 in a trashcan fire.

Hundred of thousands of dollars poured in to help League 42 fund the creation of another statue after a swell of support from the community.

So the question then became what to do with the feet of the desecrated statue?

Donating them to the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum — the league Robinson played in before breaking baseball's color barrier — seemed like the most logical choice.

"We thought it was the absolute right thing to do," Lutz said. "It's looking like the cleats will be delivered by April 11, definitely before Jackie Robinson Day [April 15]."

Bob Kendrick told ESPN that there will be a ceremony when the cleats arrive at the museum.

Kendrick, the president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum, said the museum already has a historical marker from Cairo, Georgia, Robinson's birthplace, and the cleats will likely go in that section. In 2021, the marker was shot at with guns and donated in the aftermath.

"We have a story to tell," Kendrick told ESPN.

The statue was stolen from McAdams Park, where League 42 plays its games, on Jan. 24. The remnants of the statue, which was valued at $75,000, were discovered about seven miles away from McAdams Park.

News of the theft spread throughout the baseball community, which led to donations from supporters, fans, players and eventually Major League Baseball, too. Community leaders and League 42 immediately promised the creation of a new statue.

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