Branch Rickey lost that fight, but when he became the boss of the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1943, he felt the time for equality in baseball had come. He knew that achieving it would be terribly difficult. There would be deep resentment, determined opposition, and perhaps even racial violence. He was convinced he was morally right, and he shrewdly sensed that making the game a truly national one would have healthy financial results. He took his case before the startled directors of the club, and using persuasive eloquence, he won the first battle in what would be a long and bitter campaign. He was voted permission to make the Brooklyn club the pioneer in bringing blacks into baseball.
Winning his directors' approval was almost insignificant in contrast to the task which now lay ahead of the Dodger president. He made certain that word of his plans did not leak out, particularly to the press.
Which detail best supports the central idea that Branch Rickey understood the risks involved in integrating baseball?
"Branch Rickey lost that fight, but when he became the boss of the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1943, he felt the time for equality in baseball had come."
"He knew that achieving it would be terribly difficult. There would be deep resentment, determined opposition, and perhaps even racial violence."
"He was convinced he was morally right, and he shrewdly sensed that making the game a truly national one would have healthy financial results."
"He took his case before the startled directors of the club, and using persuasive eloquence, he won the first battle in what would be a long and bitter campaign."
Answer:
"He knew that achieving it would be terribly difficult. There would be deep resentment, determined opposition, and perhaps even racial violence."
Step-by-step explanation:
According to the given excerpt, it is stated that Branch Rickey set out to make a difference in baseball as he made way for blacks to be integrated into the game, in a period of intense racism and racial intolerance.
The detail that best supports the central idea that Branch Rickey understood the risks involved in integrating baseball was the fact that he knew that achieving his aim would be terribly difficult.