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Ron Kaplan's Baseball Bookshelf
If it fits on a bookshelf, it fits here.
Previous post: Baseball in Vermont
Next post: Throwback Thursday: Vermont Baseball Redux


In a former life, I was the sports and features editor for a weekly New Jersey newspaper, where I hosted an award-winning bog about Jews and Sports.
I did a profile piece on the legendary cartoonist Arnold Roth and he was very generous in immortalizing me in this caricature.
In Forbes Magazine re: Baseball Business Books
On Will Carroll’s “Under the Knife” substack
Most recent books read updated 12/21/24:
Charlie Hustle: The Rise and Fall of Pete Rose, and the Last Glory Days of Baseball, by Keith O’Brien
Grade: A. The most in-depth bio to date, focusing on Rose's gambling addiction.
Sometimes You See It Coming, by Kevin Baker
Grade: B. I first read this one when it originally came out some 30 years ago. I must say I don't remember it being so raunchy in spots. Draws on lots of real-life events and characters that real fans will recognize.
The Last of His Kind: Clayton Kershaw and the Burden of Greatness, by Andy McCullough
Grade: A. I usually don't like titles with superlatives, but in this case the author might be right, although there are probably a couple of Kershaw's contemporaries (Verlander and Scherzer) who fit that description.
The Yankee Way: The Untold Inside Story of the Brian Cashman Era, by Andy Martino
Grade: B+. Even this non-Yankee fan found the deep background with its Moneyball-like machinations interesting
The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, by Kevin Baker
Grade: A. Well-researched, well-written. What else could you ask for? Baker has a lot of street cred writing about New York as well, both in fiction and non-fiction.
The Body Scout, by Lincoln Michel
Grade: C. Perhaps the ultimate performance enhancers -- interchangeable body parts -- help major leaguers of the future. But, as with all of these things, there's a price to pay.
Cardboard Gods: An All-American Tale Told Through Baseball Cards, by Josh Wilker
Grade: A. Re-read in preparation for a Bookshelf Conversation with the author. Had a deeper meaning than when I first read it more than a decade ago.
The Bookshelf Conversation
Discussions about all things baseball with authors, journalists, filmmakers, musicians, artists, et al
Subscribe to the "Bookshelf Conversations" podcast on iTunes and please leave a rating and/or review. Gracias!
Mike Shannon on "Diamond Classics II" ( video)
Todd Radom, Ellen Linder, and Brian Kong ( video)
Rick Cerrone (Baseball Digest, video)
Kevin Baker (Sometimes You See It Coming, video)
Curtis Pride and Doug Ward (video)
Dan Epstein on James Earl Jones (video)
Jim Gilmore and Tracy Holcomb (video)
"The Lost Tapes": Conversations prior to 2011 (audio)
My article on Sandy Koufax in the 1965 World Series appears in

My article on the later biographies of Babe Ruth appears in

My article on the Mets’ 1969 postseason appears in

Profiles of several Jewish baseball figures appear in


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Rooting for clothes?
April 23, 2026 · 0 comments
Why do fans root for a specific team?
Is it a generational thing? “My grandfather and father were Yankee fans, so that’s who I root for.” “My dad was a Yankees fan, so I root for the Mets, just to piss him off.”
So if a team decides to change its look, would that make a difference? Several clubs now have City Connect togs; in some cases, more than one version. The cynic in me thinks it’s just another way to make money.
The Dodgers recently added a corporate name to their home park: Uniqlo Field at Dodger Stadium. That kind of rattled some traditionalists who bemoan the selling out. There are a handful of teams that have retained their fields’ names through the years, including Fenway Park, Wrigley Field, and Yankee Stadium. What team is steeped in tradition more than the Yankees?
According to this article on the Sports Illustrated website, “The Yankees are the only team in MLB to never wear names on the backs of their jerseys, and they’re also the only team never to wear a regular alternate uniform.”
Not so fast.
The Yankees are considering a new look. Which translates into a new way to extract more cash from their fans from their fans.
From the SI article:
OMG!
Naturally, not everyone is happy about this. Chris Kirschner at The Athletic believes “Yankees’ alternate jerseys would be another damaging dent to storied tradition.”
What would George Steinbrenner say? For that matter, what would Jerry Seinfeld say?
There’s a great book, Baseball Uniforms of the 20th Century: The Official Major League Baseball Guide, by Marc Okkonen, which came out in the early 1990s, so that needs an update. (Todd Radom offers a more opinionated take in Winning Ugly: A Visual History of Baseball’s Most Unique Uniforms.)
The Hall of Fame offers this Uniform Data Base, based on Okkonen’s work, but it does not include City Connect or alternate unis.
In an amazing case of timing, I just received this: VegasInsider.com has updated its analysis of the most foul-mouthed MLB fandoms, analyzing over 1 million comments from the subreddits of all 30 MLB fandoms to find out which fans are the most polite and on the contrary, which fandoms are the most foul-mouthed. Additionally, the analysis also uncovered which MLB fandoms are the most positive and which fans are the most negative. You can find that study here.
A synopsis:
Tagged as: Uniforms