Just an observation: Tampa Bay Rays

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The team has scored three runs in three games, one of those coming on a home run by Ben Zobrist. I know it’s very early, but only Zobrist and B.J. Upton have more than one hit. The Rays are dead last in the Majors in runs, on-base percentage, slugging average, and batting average, with an […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Gil Hodges, the Golden Eagle, the Goat, and Superjew

Autobiography/memoirs

Gil Hodges was born this date in 1924. While compiling my list of books about Hall of Famers, I couldn’t help but ask why some of these guys were in while someone like Hodges was out. Praying for Gil Hodges: A Memoir of the 1955 World Series and One Family’s Love of the Brooklyn Dodgers, […]

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A haul of Hall books: Rube Waddell to Robin Yount

Autobiography/memoirs

Intro: As previously stated, the recent election of Robert Alomar and Bert Blyleven got me to thinking: how many Hall of Famers have had books written about them or penned their own stories. Here are the results. Again, this is not an all-inclusive list; almost all juvenile titles have been omitted. * * * Rube […]

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Hoffarth’s One-a-Day: Day 3

2011 title

Just like the vitamins, only with baseball books. From Tom Hoffarth of the Los Angeles Daily News: Today: Baseball America Prospect Handbook 2011 Previous entries include: Day 2: A Band of Misfits: Tales of the 2010 San Francisco Giants Day 1: Donnie Baseball: The Definitive Biography of Don Mattingly

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One-a-day: Tom Hoffarth

2011 title

Just like the vitamins, only with baseball books. April is that time of year when our old friend Tom — who writes about sports and sports media for the Los Angeles Daily News — does his “30 baseball books in 30 days” bit. And, just like last year, we’ll be posting his considerations within these […]

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Lest we forget: Lou Gorman

2007 title

The longtime baseball executive died yesterday at the age of 82. Gorman was the general manager of the Boston Red Sox from 1984-93. Here’s Bruce Weber’s obit in today’s New York Times. He published High and Inside: My Life in the Front Offices of Baseball in 2007.

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Baseball Digest, now and then

History

I was at my local Barnes and Noble recently and noticed the new March/April edition of baseball Digest on the rack. Shows how long it’s been since I last picked up a copy. The design had changed from the standard “digest” size to a regular magazine. Boo! One of the nice, nostalgic things about the […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Le Grand Orange and Knucksie

Biography

Daniel “Rusty” Staub turns 67 today. Rusty Staub of the Expos, by Robertson, 1971. Hello, Mr. Met!, by Staub, 2006 (juvenile). Few and Chosen: Defining Mets Greatness Across the Eras, by Staub with Pepe, 2009. Also born this date, Hall of Famer Phil Niekro, who turns 72. Knuckle Balls, by Niekro with Bird, 1986. The […]

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Author announcement: Bill White at Yogi Berra Museum

Annoucements

The former Major Leaguer, broadcaster, and National league president will be at the Yogi Berra Museum in Little Falls, NJ, tomorrow at 7 p.m. to discuss his new book Uppity: My Untold Story About The Games People Play. A former All-Star first baseman with the New York Giants, St.Louis Cardinals and Philadelphia Phillies, White became […]

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Literary birthday greetings, belated

Autobiography/memoirs

Busy day yesterday, so I didn’t have a chance to post these. Billy Beane, the inspiration behind Michael Lewis’ Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, turned 49 yesterday. Denny McLain, the last 30-game winner and one of baseball’s “bad boys,” turned 67. He released I Told You I Wasn’t Perfect in 2007 (as […]

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Literary birthday greetings, new: Dave Baldwin

Biography

Baldwin, a “journeyman” pitcher in the 1960s-70s, turns 73 today. He published his memoirs, Snake Jazz, in 2008.Nothing sensationalistic here — no drugs or sex — just an honest, sentimental look at a young man’s journey through a brief section of his life. Dr. Baldwin has gone on to some major accomplishments, post-baseball. He earned […]

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You’re the Topps…

Baseball Cards

For those collectors out there, or anyone interested in the “backstory” of things, this is on the MLB Network tonight at 10 eastern/7 Pacific.

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What’s on Second: A literary recap

Audio

The topic on the March 28 Internet broadcast of What’s on Second included baseball anthologies, either by a single writer, or covering a specific topic, or just the game in general.  The only qualification was they could not be coffee-table books; they had to be something small enough to bring to the ballpark so they […]

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Shameless self-promotion: What’s on Second

Annoucements

Just wanted to let y’all know I’ll be back on the Internet radio show tonight. To mark the new season, I’ll be discussing Thomas Boswell’s Why Time Begins on Opening Day and similar collections of columns by the likes of Roger Angell, Shirley Povich, and Ira Berkow, among others. Show starts at 9 p.m. EST […]

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Lest we forget: Charlie Metro

Autobiography/memoirs

Metro, one of the all-time baseball lifers, passed away March 18 at the age of 91. Metro was a “wartime Player”; his playing career lasted from just 1943-45 during which he compiled a .193 batting average in 400 at bats. He also spent parts of two seasons as a manager (Cubs in 1962, Royals in […]

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A haul of Hall books: Ben Taylor to Bill Veeck

2007 title

Intro: As previously stated, the recent election of Robert Alomar and Bert Blyleven got me to thinking: how many Hall of Famers have had books written about them or penned their own stories. Here are the results. Again, this is not an all-inclusive list; almost all juvenile titles have been omitted. * * * Ben […]

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The Bookshelf Podcast: Richard Michelson

2011 title

Regular visitors know I rarely consider juvenile literature, but once in awhile an “important” book comes along that deserves attention. Previously it was Kadir Nelson’s We Are The Ship, an introduction to young readers about the Negro Leagues. This time it’s Richard Michelson’s Lipman Pike: America’s First Home Run King, a picture book about the […]

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A trip to the book store

2011 title

Went over to the local Barnes and Noble on my lunch hour. I always take a look at the “remainder” table to see if there’s a possibility I missed seeing some relatively recent baseball title. The answer is almost always “no,” unless it’s the occasional book produced especially for the store. These are usually coffee-table […]

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Two of my favorite things, combined

Television

Better than Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups. It doesn’t get much better than this: Lost and baseball. Of course, there was baseball on Lost. Whereas this must have been left on the cutting room floor:

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Shameless self-promotion: Bardball’s Greatest Hits

2011 title

Since I wasn’t on the What’s on Second Internet radio show this week, I had to get my “me” fix in somehow. My ode to [now former] Mets pitcher Ollie Perez was included in Bardball.com’s 2010’s Greatest Hits!, a collection of baseball poetry. So it’s Frost, Longfellow, Kaplan. End of story. That’s all you need. […]

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