What’s up with The NY Times?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Opened the sports section this morning to find this story, “A Summer with  Uncle Casey In the Town He Owned.” It was written by veteran columnist George Vecsey, but you wouldn’t know it from the print edition; the byline was omitted. This is the second time in a few weeks such a gaffe has been […]

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Falling behind on the vitamins

2011 title

As in Tom Hoffarth’s one-a-day Book reviews: Day 7: The Baseball Hall of Fame Collection Day 8: Baseball — How to Play the Game Day 9: The Bill James Handbook 2011 Day 10: Baseball in the Garden of Eden Day 11: The Greatest Game Ever Pitched Day 12: Mexican American Baseball in Los Angeles Day […]

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A tad off-topic: Kobe Bryant’s Hurtful Words

Because I can...

But I feel it’s important enough to include my Huffington Post piece on Kobe Bryant and his anti-gay slur.

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Authors appearance: Gelf hosts Frommer, Keri, and Whitaker

2011 title

Harvey Frommer (Remembering Fenway Park: An Oral and Narrative History of the Home of the Boston Red Sox), Jonah Keri (The Extra 2%: How Wall Street Strategies Took a Major League Baseball Team from Worst to First), and Lang Whitaker (In the Time of Bobby Cox: The Atlanta Braves, Their Manager, My Couch, Two Decades, […]

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Major links dump, Volume 1

Bits and Pieces

Update: As an indication of just how far behind I am, this was originally created on Feb. 26. Didn’t feel like abandoning all the hard work so… * * * Because, yes, that’s how far behind I am. I use this neat little application, Read It Later, which allows me to, well, read it later. […]

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Baseball statistics for moronic idiots aspiring to merely be dummies: An annotated approach

"Oddballs"

So I was tooling around seeing what’s going on around the diamond today and came across an ESPN list of how this year’s rookies are doing. Just looking at the batters, there are three ways of judging their accomplishments: regular statistics, pretty much the kind of info you used to be able to find on […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Charley Lau and Addie Joss

Biography

Among baseball players, those who can, do. Those who can’t, teach hitting. Charley Lau was consider a master instructor, even though his lifetime batting average over 11 seasons as a part-timer was just .255. Lau’s theories on batting were published in several volumes, both by him and others, including: The Winning Hitter How to Win […]

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Winner winner, chicken dinner!

2011 title

Congratulations to Nathan Cordery of Stoney Creek, Ontario, this month’s winner of the Bookshelf Facebook prize: John Thorn’s Baseball in the Garden of Eden: The Secret History of the Early Game. The next book prize will be Neil Lanctot’s Campy: The Two Lives of Roy Campanella. In addition, as a special “season opener” bonus, another […]

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National Pastime Radio

2011 title

NPR has had several baseball segments in recent days on Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me, The Leonard Lopate Show, The Brian Lehrer Show, and Only a Game. Leading off (this isn’t in chronological order) is comedian Jessi Klein who was featured in WWDTM‘s “Not My Job” portion of the program. SAGAL: Well, Jessi Klein, we’re […]

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What if more of life was like fantasy baseball?

Uncategorized

A recent episode of Jeopardy featured these questions under the category “Presidential Fantasy Draft”: Like his dad, he made the Big Leagues and his 1749 appointment to the Netherlands pads his INTL stats. In saying there was no “right of secession” but not backing it up, his PTCWOL (Push the Civil War on Lincoln) is […]

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So long, Manny. Don’t let the door hit you on the fanny.

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Very sad, the end of Ramirez’s career. To have played as long as he did, only to have people look at you funny now that this information has come out. But in a bizarro way, you have to give him credit for not saying: “It was my teammate’s stuff. I didn’t know what it was.” […]

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Because you can put a courtroom sketch on your bookshelf

Baseball art

The Hall of Very Good website posted this interview with Norman Quebedeau, a San Francisco-based courtroom sketch artist in the Barry Bonds trial. You can more of Quebedeau’s sketches from his Facebook page here.

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Literary birthday greetings: Catfish, The Kid, and Kirby

Biography

Gary Carter turns 57 today. Among the books written by or about The Kid: Still a Kid at Heart: My Life in Baseball and Beyond, by Carter A Dream Season, by Carter Gary Carter, le “Kid” (French Edition) Catfish Hunter was born in 1946. Catfish, by Hunter Cooking with “Catfish” Hunter: Tasty recipes for people […]

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People of the book: New titles highlight Jewish legends of the game

2011 title

This originally appeared in the New Jersey Jewish News, March 31. It’s not quite one of the Four Questions, but Washington Post sportswriter Thomas Boswell devoted an entire best-selling collection of his columns to explain Why Time Begins on Opening Day. For long-chilled fans, time begins again today, baseball’s earliest start ever. Several new books […]

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This week in the weeklies: The Baseball Preview Issues

2011 title

Yay! The April 4 issues of Sports Illustrated and ESPN The Magazine finally gets down to bidness! Cover Cover price $5.99 $4.99 Can I read it on-line (no smartphone apps or iPads gizmos)? Yes, but without the images. Only if you’re an ESPN “Insider” (subscription) Main Features “Radar Love,” by Tom Verducci — An examination […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Bobby Doerr and the Little Napoleon

Biography

The Red Sox Hall of Fame second baseman turns 93 today. As my people say, ken ahora. Doeer was a nine-time All Star and one of the subjects of the late Dave Halberstam’s 2003 bittersweet book, The Teammates: A Portrait of a Friendship. Also born this date, John McGraw — the Billy Martin of his […]

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Authors appearance: Casey Stengel’s Baseball

Annoucements

The Casey Stengel Chapter of SABR hosts a program in honor of the Ole Perfessor on Thursday, April 14, at 6:30 p.m. at the Museum of the City of New York, 1220 Fifth Avenue (212-534-1672 or www.mcny.org Among the writers participating in the event: Marty Appel, former public relations director and television producer for the New […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Black Mike

Biography

Hall of Fame catcher Mickey Cochrane was born this date in 1903. According to Baseball-Reference.com’s “Bullpen” section, Cochrane earned his nickname because of his competitive nature and fiery temper. Mickey Cochrane: The Life of a Baseball Hall of Fame Catcher, by Bevis, 1998.

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More one-a-days

Reviews from other sources

The latest from Tom Hoffarth’s series of 30 baseball books in 30 days. Day Four: Baseball Prospectus 2011 Day Five: The Extra 2% Day Six: Uppity: My Untold Story About the Games people Play, by Bill White You can read about the the previous entries here.

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Team of the Times?

Magazines

A while back, The New York Times occasionally published Play, a sports supplement magazine. Sadly, that welcome Sunday extra disappeared, undoubtedly a victim of declining revenues. But the Times hearkened back to those flush days this week in its regular Sunday magazine. The excellent Pat Jordan opines — and not always favorably — on the […]

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