Hail and Farewell, Andy Pettitte

Biography

The long-time Yankee pitcher (with a brief diversion through Houston), will announce his retirement today. Pettitte was one of the Mt. Rushmore of Yankees who came up through the minor league system and brought a new dynasty in the mid 1990s, including Derek Jeter, Jorge Posada, and Mariano Rivera. Pettitte had that one PED bump […]

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“That’s a good question.”

Because I can...

This is a response that any interviewer loves to hear. It indicates the interviewee finds the query interesting and/or hasn’t heard it before (or is just buttering up the interviewer). So here’s a good one posed by TB Sports blog: “How many baseball books do you read each year?“

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In search of: Toronto used book store

Because I can...

About 20 years ago, I happened upon a used book store in Toronto that had an amazing selection of baseball titles. A) Does anyone know the name of the store, and B) is it still around these days? Merci.

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Nickname of the day: Live Oak Taylor

"Oddballs"

George Edward Taylor played two seasons in the Majors — seven years apart — in the late 1800s.

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People of the (baseball) book (clubs)

Because I can...

Came across an item about a book club created by a Tampa Bay Rays blogging outfit. The concept At the beginning of each month, we will pick a book. If you would like to participate, you go out and get a copy of the book and read it during the month. At the end of […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Red

Biography

Schoendeinst, that is. Another one of those baseball lifers, he turns 88 today. The Man Who Fought Back: Red Schoendienst was published in 1962, three years after he recovered from tuberculosis. Almost 40 years later, he released Red: A Baseball Life. Schoendienst, who managed the St. Louis Cardinals from 1965-76 (back-to-back pennants in 1967-68 and […]

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Rob Neyer: My idol and my curse

2008 title

After 15 years at ESPN, Rob Neyer is moving on to SB Nation. Neyer and I have exchanged occasional emails over the last few years, but I do not know him personally, so I can;t say if he’s being self-effacing when he makes note of his career change in a “oh, by the way” manner […]

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Broadcasting + scoreboard = Sportscasting?

2011 title

I quite enjoyed Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything (P.S.) and the follow-up, SuperFreakonomics. Not that I’m great at economics, but I love the analysis stuff. So it was kind of a “eureka moment” when I discovered Scorecasting: The Hidden Influences Behind How Sports Are Played and Games Are Won, by […]

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Hot thoughts on a “Cold” topic

Commentary

Since I don’t know if you folks get to the comments portion of the program, I thought I’d post these remarks  about the issue of memoirs submitted by Bill Lewers — whose book I reviewed in December — as a stand alone entry.It seems Genzlinger’s comments in the Times‘ Sunday Book Review on the relative […]

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Wait Wait, tell me again

Audio

The most popular post on this blog was one that resulted from listening to my favorite podcast, NPR’s Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me, hosted by the erudite Peter Sagal, a local hero ’round these parts (who just celebrated a birthday, I might add). That particular entry involved former Major Leaguer Moose Skowron, the guest for […]

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Hardball Times made easy

baseball statistical theory

is one of my favorite sites, offering a nice combination of through-provoking writing with statistical analyses (perhaps a tad heavier on the latter than I normally like, but what the hey…). They posted this today, which I’m reprinting as a public service, just in case you don’t get over there that much. It’s worth the […]

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Behind the Times

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Not sure what’s going on at the “paper of record” lately. Maybe it’s staff cuts. But here are two stories that appeared recently on the pages of the newspaper that appeared elsewhere some time ago. Gil Meche turned down the last year of a $12 million contract because he knew he wouldn’t be able to […]

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It may be cold, but that doesn’t make it less true

Uncategorized

Apropos to what James Bailey and I were going back and forth about last week, this piece by Neil Genzlinger on the merits — or lack thereof — of memoirs in the  Times’ Sunday Book Review caught my eye because one of the four authors included was Sean Manning, who had edited last year’s Top […]

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A bevy of literary birthday greetings

Autobiography/memoirs

I haven’t done the research, but I would venture to guess Jan. 31 has the record for most Hall of Famers born: Jackie Robinson, Ernie Banks, and Nolan Ryan. Robinson would have been 92 today. As befits his stature in American as well as baseball history, there are dozens of books written about him, for […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Davey Johnson

Biography

The man who led the Mets to the 1986 World Championship in 1986 turns 68 today. Just curious: how come no one raised much of a fuss when he hit 43 home runs in 1973 for the Atlanta Braves? He previous high had been 18 and he never hit more than 15 after that record-setting […]

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What we do: James Bailey’s comment

Because I can...

I wanted to give James Bailey’s well-stated comment on my post about reviewing “up front” treatment: Ron, Just to clarify, I do think we have a greater responsibility to the reader. A reviewer’s responsibility to an author is to be fair, not to be positive. The books I’ve passed on reviewing were typically bad books […]

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What we do

Commentary by Ron Kaplan

And by “we,” I mean book reviewers. My colleague/competitor James Bailey posted this entry about the dilemmas we face when writing about the blood, sweat, and tears of authors on his own baseball book blog: A great book will usually sink its claws into me pretty quick, pronouncing itself a cut above its peers within […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Bill White

2011 title

I was just looking his numbers. He broke in with the NY Giants in 1956, hitting 23 doubles, seven triples and 22 home runs in 138 games. He drove in 59 runs, batting mostly in the , and stole 15 bases. Impressive. Too bad he was a rookie in the same Year as Frank Robinson, […]

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TWIBB: Jan. 28, 2011

2010 title

The top baseball books, according to Amazon.com as of Friday, Jan. 28 at noon. Title Rank General Baseball Prospectus 2011 1 Baseball America 2011 Prospect Handbook: The 2011 Expert Guide to Baseball Prospects and MLB Organization Rankings (Baseball America Prospect Handbook) 2 The Last Boy: Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood, by Jane […]

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New sidebar links

Because I can...

Finally got a round to update my sidebar links. Some of the items marked as “new” weren’t, and some new one deserving of notice needed to be added. All new site entries will be preceded by an asterisk and followed by “(NEW)”, just to make it easy for you. Eephus League: A neat site, virtually […]

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