Lest we forget: Mike Flanagan

Lest We Forget

It’s still too early to get all the details, but the former Orioles pitcher is dead of an apparent suicide. Flanagan pitched for 18 seasons, all but two spent with Baltimore. He compiled a record of 167-143 and won the Cy Young Award in 1979 with a career-best 23 wins. Following his retirement as a […]

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Bookshelf review: Beaverball

2009 title

A (Winning) Season with the MIT Baseball Team, by Brooks C. Mendell. Aventine Press, 2009 This one has been sitting on the shelf for awhile, but with the 501 project in full swing, I’m trying to catch up with a vengeance, looking for little gems among the bigger fish. And we have a winnah! Beaverball […]

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Trio of Brewers on SI cover? Uh-oh.

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Ryan Braun? Too bad. Nyger Morgan? It’s been real, man.  Prince Fielder. Crowned. Sports Illustrated features Milwaukee’s finest on its Aug. 29 cover of Sports Illustrated. And you know what that means. Oh well, it was fun while it lasted.

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Literary birthday greetings: Ed Hearn and The Designated Hebrew

Autobiography/memoirs

Hearn, who played for the Mets and Royals in a career that lasted just three years to do health issues, turns 52 today. He published Conquering Life’s Curves: Baseball, Battles & Beyond, about his battle with kidney disease, in 1997. Also marking the date is Ron Blomberg, 63. I’ve written about him frequently over at […]

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501 update

Because I can...

No, not talking about jeans here. The book project is running apace, with almost 75 percent of the first draft done. By the way, feel free to drop me a line with suggestions. As I say in the intro (or will say), these are not necessarily the best books, but the ones I feel are […]

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The breaking point of a Mets fan

Because I can...

Because my TV is on my bookshelf… I’m not one of those fans who believes his team can do not wrong, that they should win every game (especially tough when you’re talking about baseball), crushing the opposition under their heel. My sanity does not hinge on how the Mets do. They were not expected to […]

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Because the fans should vote on this

Annoucements

After all, we are the audience, the “consumers” of the “product” so to speak. From the Baseball Hall of Fame: * * * Thousands of baseball fans have already used Facebook to stay connected to their heroes at the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum. Once again this year, baseball fans can nominate their […]

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National Pastime Radio: Catching up with a couple of catchers

Uncategorized

A couple of interesting pieces recently on NPR. Brad Ausmus was an extremely articulate guest on yesterday’s Fresh Air with guest host Dave Davies. In the half-hour interview, the former catcher (18 seasons) and current special assistant for the San Diego Padres discussed many of the finer points of the position, such as the interacting […]

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What I also did on my summer vacation

Because I can...

Actually, this should have preceded the earlier piece. WARNING: Family vacation photos ahead! Spent a pleasant few days visiting Boston and the environs earlier this month. Among the highlights: On Friday, Aug. 5, we took in the Yankees-Red Sox game. It was one of the few nice days, weather-wise, for the trip, so we lucked […]

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What I did on my summer vacation

Because I can...

The first two nights of the trip we spent in Newton with a vet-school friend of Faith’s. (By the way of you want a good veggie restaurant in the area, try the Red Lentil in Watertown.) We moved into our hotel on Saturday and just lazed. Sunday we were supposed visit the Museum of Fine […]

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Artistic blast from the past

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Babe Ruth passed away on this date in 1948. Words by Ogden Nash, painting by Graig Kreindler. ‘R’ is for ‘Ruth.’ To tell you the truth, There’s just no more to be said, Just ‘R’ is for ‘Ruth.’

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“Please don’t talk about me when I’m gone…”

Because I can...

Heading to Boston for some vacay. Talking in the Friday Yanks-Sawx game. Will try to keep current with the blog, but you never know. It will be interesting to see if the Boston book stores carry as any titles about their team as the NY stores do for the Yankees. We’ll also be taking in […]

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Summer reading for the New York beach crowd

2011 title

Greg Spira passed along this link to an NJ.com review of five New York-centric books, including (with a “symbolic” thumbs up-thumbs down): 1961: The Inside Story of the Maris-Mantle Home Run Chase, by Phil Pepe (-) Donnie Baseball: The Definitive Biography of Don Mattingly, by Mike Shalin (-) Baseball in the Garden of Eden: The […]

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Mental Floss: Back-to-School quizzes

"Oddballs"

I contributed a couple of pieces to Mental Floss (including the July-Aug. 2002 cover story for “The Spy Issue”) when they were just knee-high to more established magazines. So I have a soft spot for the publication even if they don’t answer my calls anymore (sniff, sniff). They’ve greatly expanded and now offer a bunch […]

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Bit and pieces

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The good news: More than half way to the goal of 501 books. The bad news: it takes me away from the blog. Oh well, hang around. It will be worth it in the end. In the meantime, here are a few items for your consideration: Out of Left Field, Rebecca Alpert’s history of Jewish […]

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National Pastime Radio: More “best” books

Autobiography/memoirs

As I continue to do research for my own project, I get a kick when I find some old material that confirms I’m on the right track with some of my selections. Hey, it’s nice to find validation rom time to time, right? So today’s blast from the past is this brief appearance by the […]

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Because you can put all sorts of legal documents on your bookshelf…

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

(The following is a re-blog of an item that appears on my other site, Kaplan’s Korner, regarding recent allegations made by Peter J. Nash in a New York Post story against the late Barry Halper, one of the biggest names in the sports memorabilia world.) I heard about this issue on WINS on Monday while […]

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Lest we forget: Hideki Irabu

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The Yankees free agent bust who caused no end of delight as the print media tried to figure out to relate an annoyed George Steinbrenner’s description of his overpriced pitcher as “a fat pussy toad,” was found dead in his suburban Los Angeles home yesterday. He was 42. In the New York Times obituary, the […]

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Of all the sad words of man and pen…

"Oddballs"

Actually, I take that back. If these authors had excelled on the diamond, they would have just been a few out of thousands. But as it turns out, baseball’s loss was literature’s gain. According a Mental Floss blog entry on “11 prominent authors who excelled in sports”: Prior to his career as New Journalist and […]

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In the “dumb things people say” category…

Uncategorized

From ESPN.com: WASHINGTON — The Washington Nationals’ director of player development has clarified remarks in which he compared No. 1 draft pick Bryce Harper to Hall of Famer Jackie Robinson. “My sole intent was to speak to the scrutiny that Harper faces on a daily basis,” Doug Harris said in a statement Tuesday. “The hardships […]

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