HBO’s Real Sports features segment on Curt Flood

Documentary

Years ago, Vince Coleman made a jackass out of himself by forgetting the debt he and other African-American players owed to Jackie Robinson. I wonder if the same generalization could be made about today’s athletes when it comes to the man responsible for the millions of dollars they receive. HBO’s excellent  Real Sports program sounds […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Bill Werber

Autobiography/memoirs

Werber, who died in 2009 at the age of 100, was the last link to the 1927 NY Yankees, having spent a week on their bench while a freshman attending Duke. He played for five teams over 11 seasons, leading the Al in runs once and stolen bases three times. The Society for American Baseball […]

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Collectible birthday greetings: Andy Etchebarren

Baseball Cards

This card sticks out in my mind for some reason. Perhaps it’s the Neanderthal unibrow going on. Etch, who turns 68 today, was17th in American league MVP voting in 1966. His stats: .221 batting average (the lowest for any position player) with 11 home runs and 50 RBIs in 121 games. Slim pickings that year: […]

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Bookshelf review: Grantland

Bloggers

I was super-psyched when I heard about this new website — under the aegis of ESPN — that would feature some of my favorite writers opining on all sorts of sports topics and issues (man does not live by baseball alone). Goodness knows there was enough pre-release hype. Sadly, from what I’ve seen so far, […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Super Joe and The Shuffler

Biography

“Super Joe” Charboneau, one of those one-year wonders who won Rookie of the Year for the Indians in 1980 and was gone from the Majors after 1982, turns 56. Many Cleveland fans point to his as a prime example of the shortcomings of the franchise and their long-term failure to produce a winner (the curse […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Ron LeFlore

Biography

The swift Tiger/Expo/White Sox outfielder turns 63 today. The speedy Tiger presented an interesting story of getting that “one in a million” chance while in prison to try out for the Detroit team, which he turned into a book with Jim Hawkins with One in a Million: The Ron LeFlore Story. The two collaborated on […]

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Time-honored cliches

Because I can...

“There’s no tomorrow, so it’s one of those things where you go out there and leave nothing in the tank.” That was Boston Red Sox third baseman Kevin Youkilis. And virtually every athlete you will talk to about a Game 7 will say some variation of the same thing. So while we’re on the subject […]

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Ian Kinsler, literary “hero”

Uncategorized

Texas Rangers second baseman Ian Kinsler believes it’s never too early to get on the road to reading. Hometown Hero: Ian Kinsler: MyFoxDFW.com

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This week (June 20) in Sports Illustrated

2011 title

The SI curse returns? Maybe it’s a reformed curse, since Derek Jeter wasn’t actually on the cover, but Tom Verducci’s article starts, “Three Grand,” off “Sometime in the next week Derek Jeter could become the third-youngest player, and the first Yankee, to reach 3,000 hits. The road to that milestone was a simple one—until it […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Boggs, Butler, and Billy

2008 title

Hall of Famer Wade Boggs turns 53 today. Books on Boggs includes: Boggs!, by Boggs The Techniques of Modern Hitting, by Boggs Wade Boggs: Baseball’s Star Hitter (Taking Part) What, no chicken cookbook? Also celebrating today, Brett Butler, who turns 54. He published Field of Hope: An Inspiring Autobiography of a Lifetime of Overcoming Odds, […]

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Winner, winner, chicken dinner

2011 title

Congrats to Andrew Milner, this month’s winner of the Facebook friend giveaway: Baseball Is . . .: Defining the National Pastime, edited by Paul Dickson.

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My apologies

Because I can...

Now that I have this book deadline, I find I am spending even less time tending the garden that is this blog. I hope to remedy that shortly (sleep is overrated anyway). A taste of things to come: Back to the podcast: Look for interviews with Shawn Green, Bob Costas, Richard Goldstein, and Bill White. […]

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Bookshelf review: Pitching in the Promised Land

2011 title

A Story of the First and Only Season in the Israel Baseball League, by Aaron Pribble. University of Nebraska Press, 2011. 280 pages, $24.95 For one brief shining moment, it was known as… Well, depending on who you ask, the Israel Baseball League was either a miracle, a disgrace, an opportunity, or a pleasant diversion. […]

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Lest we forget: Jim Northrup, Jose Pagan, Paul Splitorff

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

I heard about Northrup and Pagan on the Mets radio broadcast last night. It’s one thing when a player of Bob Feller’s age passes; he was “before my time.” But when the guys I grew up with start to go, the mortality factor really sets in. Northrup, who died at the age of 71, was […]

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Good news/bad news

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The good news is that Time Magazine has seen fit to choose a baseball blog as one of its “Best of 2011.” The bad news is that it isn’t the Bookshelf. Curse you, MLBTradeRumors.com.

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Bits and pieces

2011 title

The semi-regular roundup of things I neglected to post previously. From DriveLineBaseball, this review of The Physics of Pitching: Learn the Mechanics, Science, and Psychology of Pitching to Success. Upshot: It “falls well short of [Robert K.} Adair’s classic text [The Physics of Baseball]. Sure, it looks a lot cooler (the photography is top notch), […]

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“Honey, have you seen my bookmark…? You WHAT?”

"Oddballs"

From Abebooks.com, a new twist on the old theme of losing one’s prized baseball card: Using it as a place keeper but forgetting to remove it when selling the volume to the local used book store. THE SPORTING “A Mickey Mantle rookie baseball card. It was the original 1952 Topps #311 baseball card and not […]

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Musical birthday greetings: Van Lingle Mungo (plus a selected short)

"Oddballs"

Van Lingle Mungo, born 100 years ago today,  pitched for 14 seasons (1931-43,1945) for the Brooklyn Dodgers and NY Giants. While he wasn’t a superstar, he did win 120 games, including four seasons of 16 or more victories. Somewhere I have a paper I delivered, deconstructing the out the Dave Frishberg song about players from […]

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Times-ly reviews

2011 title

Marc Tracy of Tablet.com contributed reviews for the NY Times Sunday book supplement on Shawn Green’s The Way of Baseball: Finding Stillness at 95 MPH. Upshot: “Those who do not share Green’s earnestness — or fondness for “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance,” ­“Siddhartha” and other namedropped works of dormitory Buddhism — may nonetheless […]

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R-E-S-P-E-C-T. Find out what it means, Bryce Harper

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Came across this video of wunderkind Bryce Harper — last year’s No. 1 Draft pick by the Washington Nationals — preening and strutting after hitting a home run (he doesn’t begin his trot four four seconds). Yes, we know he’s got a lot of potential (Sports Illustrated and ESPN the Magazine cover stories). But if […]

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