Author interview: Marty Appel

2012 title

The author of the recent Yankees history, Pinstripe Empire: The New York Yankees from Before the Babe to After the Boss, was a guest on a recent installment of WNET’s MetroFocus.

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Game Two pays tribute to America’s veretans

2009 title

Tonight’s World Series game will honor America’s veterans. The New York Times ran this piece about Lou Brissie, who managed to have a brief Major League career despite being grievously injured in world war II. He was the subject of the 2009 biography The Corporal Was a Pitcher: The Courage of Lou Brissie, by former […]

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Another list of best baseball films

Baseball movies

Look, there are only so many flicks that could possibly fall into this category, so it’s just a matter of how they’re ranked. This list comes from The Hollywood Reporter, so they should know. No real surprises here. Damn Yankees leads off, followed by Bang The Drum Slowly, The (original) Bad News Bears, The Natural, […]

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“A, You’re Adorable, B, You’re So Beautiful…”

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

(Kids, ask your grandparents…) So I’m watching the game last night and Detroit reliever Al Albuquerque is pitching to San Francisco first baseman Brandon Belt. So I got to wondering: how often to batters and pitchers with alliterative names face each other? I just did a quick look at Baseball Reference and discovered there are […]

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Carnac the Magnificent predicts…

"Oddballs"

(Kids, ask your parents/grandparents.) One of my pre-season amusements is to purchase baseball magazines and study their predictions, especially for who will get to the post-season. Somewhere on my other blog is an analysis of how they’ve done in seasons past. This year PunditTracker has done the work for me. The San Francisco Giants get […]

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Golly, Mr. Science

baseball technology

Love to see the disciplines getting together, don’t you. Like Dr. Robert Adair’s classic TThe Physics of Baseball (3rd Edition) and Why a Curveball Curves: The Incredible Science of Sports (Popular Mechanics), et al. So that’s why I love stuff like this from Alan Nathan’s The Physics of Baseball website. Lots of great links. A […]

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Bits and pieces

2012 title

A semi-occasional attempt to catch up on various items of literary (and other) interest. ♦  Keith Eggener published this nicely-illustrated piece on “The Demolition and Afterlife of Baltimore Memorial Stadium” on designobserver.com. I love finding baseball items from sources that are about as far away from baseball as you can get. ♦  As mentioned in […]

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Thoroughly modern metrics

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Will Leitch published this piece on the reluctance of some sports pundits (as opposed to the hoi poloi of fandom) who are reluctant to embrace the new generation of baseball statistics. Of course this is the time of year when segments of the media that doesn’t normally cover baseball starts up as if they invented […]

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National Pastime Radio

2012 title

Saturday was a busy day for baseball news. One of the questions on Wait Wait Don’t Tell me involved a certain high-priced player on a certain recently-vanquished playoff team: PETER SAGAL: Right now, panel, time for you to answer some questions about this week’s news. Luke, Alex Rodriquez, the most highly paid player in baseball […]

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The Bookshelf Podcast: Joe Schuster

2012 title

Those who are regular readers of the Bookshelf know I rarely deal with fiction. It’s not that I don’t like it (although in many cases I feel the ability to  self-publish so easily and inexpensively leads to an overload of stimulation — just too much stuff); it’s simply that I feel inadequately educated to comment […]

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Coming to a Bergino Baseball Clubhouse near you…

2011 title

The Bergino Baseball Clubhouse (67 East 11 Street, NYC, 212-226-7150 keeps the hot stove going with another series of authors discussions. All programs begin at 7 p.m. Where applicable, I’ve included links to my reviews of the books or other pertinent information. Guests include:  Jim (“No Realtion”) Kaplan, author of The Greatest Game Ever Pitched: […]

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Because you can hang this lithograph above your bookshelf

2012 title

(Close enough for government work.) Artist Ron Lewis whose previous creations has celebrated living members of baseball’s 500 home run club, 3,000 hit club, and its 3,000-strikeout pitchers, among other sports icons, has completed a new lithograph presenting 26 living Jewish baseball players.   Copyright Art O Graphs (Of course, this little image doesn’t do […]

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Because you can keep “tickets” on your bookshelf

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

even if the games are never played. And even if they’re just paper printouts rather than traditional tickets. I don’t know why I expect pro sports businesses to “do the right thing.” It usually turns out to the bad. I guess I’m just too naive. My daughter decided at the last minute to go Game […]

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Because you can put a camera on your bookshelf…

Television

Well, perhaps not this camera, but a camera. While they are no doubt indispensable when examining close plays, there something about super slow-motion I’ve always found amusing. Perhaps it’s the ability to humble any athlete by presenting an unflattering picture. Anyway, technology always fascinates me. Although I’m not a fan of the cameraperson who runs […]

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Author appearances

2012 title

Katya Cengel will be sharing stories from her new book, Bluegrass Baseball: A Year in the Minor League Life, at the Players Sports Bar, 7061 Clairemont Mesa Blvd. in San Diego, Calif., on Friday, Oct. 19 at 7 p.m. She will be joined by John Billheimer, who will read from his mystery Field of Schemes, […]

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Because you can put this on a bookshelf, continued

2012 title

Add Don Larsen to the list of former players who are putting up pieces of their legacies up for sale. According to this piece in the NY Jewish Week, Larsen will auction off the uniform he wore when he pitched his World Series perfect game in 1956. According to the story by Steve Lipman, “Besides […]

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Lest we forget: Eddie Yost (updated)

Lest We Forget

I remember him primarily as one of Gil Hodges’ coaches for the 1969 NY Mets. It’s sometimes hard to believe that these old men (Yost was just 41 when he joined the Mets) were young once and had pretty solid careers as players. Prior to becoming a coach, Yost enjoyed an 18-year career as a […]

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All the baseball books that are fit to read

Classic title

(To borrow The New York Times‘ motto) Marty Appel recently revised his helpful list of baseball titles that have appeared on the Times‘ best-seller list. The article appears on the Sports Collectors Digest website. As Appel, a former PR director for the New York Yankees, notes there are several familiar books that are conspicuous in […]

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Because you can put these things on (or attach to) your bookshelf

Uncategorized

Say it ain’t so, Ozzie. According to this item on ESPN.com, the Hall of Fame shortstop “is selling his 13 Gold Gloves, 11 of his All-Star Game rings and more than 100 pieces of memorabilia from his personal collection in a November on-line auction.” Also offering stuff at auction: Curt Shilling, but for, sadly, different […]

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Review roundup, Oct. 12

2007 title

♦  The Washington Post published this piece on Tony La Russa’s memoir, One Last Strike: Fifty Years in Baseball, Ten and a Half Games Back, and One Final Championship Season. ♦  Better late than never: It seems the Seattle Post-Intelligencer finally got around to posting a review of Zack Hample’s 2007 publication, Watching Baseball Smarter: […]

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