CHARLEY PRIDE WAS ONCE TRADED FOR A USED BUS IN THE NEGRO LEAGUES. THEN CASEY STENGEL THREW HIM OUT OF METS CAMP WITHOUT WATCHING HIM PITCH. SO HE PULLED A BUSINESS CARD FROM HIS WALLET AND TOOK A BUS TO NASHVILLE INSTEAD — AND BECAME THE BEST-SELLING RCA ARTIST SINCE ELVIS. In the Negro Leagues, Charley Pride and a teammate were traded to the Birmingham Black Barons — not for players, not for cash, but for a used team bus. “Jesse and I may have the distinction of being the only players in history traded for a used motor vehicle,” Pride later wrote. He kept chasing the major leagues anyway. In 1962, he showed up uninvited at the Mets’ spring training camp in Florida. He’d shipped six bats ahead with his name engraved on them. Casey Stengel took one look and growled: “We ain’t running no damn tryout camp down here. Put him on a bus to anywhere he wants to go.” So Pride reached into his wallet. Inside was a business card from country singer Red Sovine, who’d told him years earlier: “If you ever get serious about singing, come to Nashville.” He asked for a bus ticket to Tennessee. Within three years, Chet Atkins signed him to RCA Records. Within a decade, he had 29 No. 1 country hits and had outsold every artist on the label except Elvis Presley. His old Negro League teammate Otha Bailey remembered those bus rides: “He’d be in the back picking his guitar with two strings. We’d all laugh at him — but I think he knew where he was going.” So what would country music look like today if Casey Stengel had just let a sharecropper’s son from Mississippi throw a few pitches that morning?

When Baseball Closed the Door, Charley Pride Took a Bus to Nashville Before Charley Pride became one of the most…

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