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  • MLB managers like Frank Robinson, Cito Gaston, and Dusty Baker broke barriers and achieved excellence.
National League Division Series - Los Angeles Dodgers v. Washington Nationals - Game One
Source: Rob Tringali / Getty

Black folks have always shaped baseball, even when the sport didn’t always want to give us the keys fully. For decades, Black players had to fight just to get on the field, so getting to the manager’s chair — the place where lineups are set, clubhouse culture is built, and real power lives —took even longer. Frank Robinson breaking through in 1975 as MLB’s first full-time Black manager was a major shift, because it proved what should’ve already been obvious: Black baseball minds belong in leadership too. Still, the pipeline has never moved as fast as it should, which is why the conversation about Black managers continues to matter so much today. And right now, those numbers sit at two: Dave Roberts and Will Venable.

Dave Roberts has become the standard. As the Dodgers’ manager since 2016, he’s built one of baseball’s modern powerhouses and helped make winning feel routine in Los Angeles. He also has the hardware to back it up, leading the Dodgers to World Series titles in 2020, 2024, and 2025. More than that, Roberts has become one of the most visible Black leaders in the sport, carrying the pressure, expectations, and spotlight that come with managing one of MLB’s biggest brands. He’s not just holding the door open — he’s showing what it looks like when a Black manager gets trusted with a powerhouse and delivers.

Dave Roberts - mlb black managers
Source: The San Diego Union-Tribune / Getty

Will Venable represents the next chapter. The White Sox hired him as manager ahead of the 2025 season, making him one of the few Black managers in the game and a fresh face in a role that still lacks sufficient Black representation. Venable came in with experience as a player, coach, and executive. While he does not have a World Series title as a manager (yet), his hiring still felt important because of what it signals. There is still Black leadership talent in the game, ready for the moment when organizations are willing to believe in it.

Will Venable - mlb black managers
Source: Michael Reaves / Getty

Even with only two Black managers currently in the big leagues, the history here runs deeper than the present moment. A few names especially deserve to stay front and center.

Frank Robinson is the blueprint. When he became MLB’s first full-time Black manager in 1975 with Cleveland, he stepped into a role that had been closed to Black leadership for far too long. That job came with pressure no one else before him had carried in the majors, and just by taking that seat, he changed the game. Robinson did not win a World Series as a manager, but his place in baseball history is permanent because he helped make future opportunities possible.

Frank Robinson mlb-black-managers
Source: Mitchell Layton / Getty

Cito Gaston took the breakthrough and turned it into championship hardware. With the Blue Jays, he became the first Black manager to win a World Series, then ran it back with a second straight title in 1993 after winning his first in 1992. That mattered on a huge level because it crushed the tired idea that Black managers could get opportunities but not lead teams all the way to the top. Cito didn’t just participate in history — he raised the standard.

Philadelphia Phillies vs Toronto Blue Jays, 1993 World Series
Source: John Iacono / Getty

Dusty Baker is baseball royalty at this point. Across multiple stops, he built a reputation as one of the game’s most respected leaders, and in 2022, he finally won his first World Series title as a manager with the Houston Astros. That championship added to a résumé that already included more than 2,000 wins and decades of respect across the league. Dusty’s legacy is about more than numbers, though. He became the kind of presence players trust, franchises lean on, and young Black baseball people can point to as proof that longevity and excellence in that chair are possible.

2022 World Series Game 3: Houston Astros v. Philadelphia Phillies
Source: Rob Tringali / Getty

Ron Washington brought a different kind of impact —energy, edge, and a deep love for teaching the game. He became the winningest manager in Rangers history and led Texas to back-to-back American League pennants in 2010 and 2011, showing that Black managers could build contenders and sustain success. Washington did not win a World Series as a manager, but his influence on the game and the respect he commands around baseball have long made him one of the most important Black dugout leaders of his era.

mlb-black-managers
Source: G Fiume / Getty

At the end of the day, Black managers matter because leadership matters. They matter because baseball has always benefited from Black talent, Black strategy, Black presence, and Black cultural influence — not just between the lines but in the dugout, too. Dave Roberts and Will Venable are carrying that legacy right now, while names like Frank Robinson, Cito Grayson, Dusty Baker, and Ron Washington remind us that this story didn’t start yesterday. The number may still be too small, but the impact has never been. Black managers haven’t just been part of baseball history — they’ve helped move it forward.

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Here Are All The Black Managers In The MLB was originally published on cassiuslife.com