Of course not, Tom. But thankfully, that appears to be changing just in time and the result might be extraordinary.
I think in America it is beyond a doubt that Baseball has preserved its history and traditions better than any other sport, probably by a very wide margin. Baseball has always been a popular game enjoyed by all classes of citizens. The numbers (which many of us know by heart or have reference guides nearby), memorabilia, and traditions were constant for nearly all of its existence. Too bad today with too many teams (diluted pitching), steroids, cocaine and speed before that, a juiced ball and smaller areas of play there has been a disconnect to many of the records in the past. But the Hall of Fame and the thousands of collectors and preservers of the games history have done an outstanding job of administering the history and traditions of the sport.
The one area where Baseball fails miserably is in the players themselves. For the most part they have no sense of history or the events leading up to their pampered lifestyle where a .230 utility infielder makes more in one season than many post WWII Hall of Famers made in their lifetime. If you polled every African-American major leaguer, I don't think 20% would know who Jackie Robinson was. My father-in-law told me this. Remember when Nike had a commercial celebrating the 50th anniversary of Robinson's entry into the majors, there was only one white ballplayer in the commercial--Whitey himself (Rich Ashburn) because he was one of the few stars that honestly welcomed him into the league even though the Phillies were the worst National League team as far as the way they treated Robinson. They were the last National League team to have a black ballplayer while the Boston Red Sox were last in the majors.
Rich was interviewing Mookie Wilson of the Mets one year. Mookie also wore number 1 so my father-in-law asked him about history, Jackie Robinson (he had no idea who he was) and if he knew who the first Met was to wear number 1. Mookie said no, he didn't. Rich went on to say this player got the first hit for the Mets organization and batting over .300 was the team MVP. Mookie said he had no idea. Well Rich said, "It was me." Mookie Wison's response was "Who be you?"
Now, I'm sure an equal number of white and latino ballplayers don't know anything about the history of the game either. But given that people of color were excluded from the game for so long and they had to have their own league, you'd think some of the black players might recognize the trailblazers that paved the way before them. At least the Hall of Fame has devoted a wing to the history of the Negro Leagues and the story is preserved even if the players don't care. I've had the good fortune of getting to know Buck O'Neil over the years and it is fascinating to listen to that gentle man talk about the game and the terrific players that did not get to play under the bright lights of MLB but had careers and lives to be remembered by many.