* This week (May 3) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

Baseball takes center stage once again as Tom Verducci has a roundtable with the Yankees’ Mt. Rushmore: Jeter, Posasda, Rivera, and Pettitte. Also, Joe Lemire on Carlos Zambrano, the Cubs’ new middle relief man.

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* Because you can keep the Playbill on your bookshelf

"Oddballs"

If you happen to be in Cooperstown this weekend: National Pastime, a new musical comedy about a fictitious, unbeatable baseball team, will be presented during a special performance on Saturday, May 1, at 7 p.m. in the Hall of Fame’s Grandstand Theater. The play — written by Tony Sportiello, with words and music by Al Tapper — tells […]

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* Happy Birthday, Charlie Metro

Birthday greetings

Born this date in 1919. You can read (most of) this baseball lifer’s 2002 memoirs (527 pages worth), Safe by a Mile here.

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* Does this come in other colors?

2010 title

Man, I wish I had this type of article from Newsweek for other parts of daily life. Imagine: We eat it so you don’t have to. We go to work so you don’t have to. We argue with the wife so you don’t have to. We (fill in the blank) so you don’t have to. […]

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* Muscling in on the territory?

"Oddballs"

About fifty years ago, it was pretty much verbotten for ballplayers to lift weights. The managers thought it would make them too bulky and tight. Nowadays it’s not uncommon to find the athletes gracing the cover of fitness magazines. Case in point: Matt Holliday of the St. Louis Cardinals, who appears on Muscle and Fitness‘ […]

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* Reviews: Blockade Billy

2010 title

There’s something supernatural about a review of a book that hasn’t been published yet, but it doesn’t seem to be stopping anyone from opining on Stephen King’s upcoming baseball novella, Blockade Billy. From Publishers Weekly: A quirky baseball player with a past shrouded in secrecy is the tragic hero of this macabre tale from the […]

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* “My song’s better than your song.”

"Oddballs"

Great. Something else for Mets and Yankees fans to argue about. Now you can sing along. And I couldn’t help but add this one. A song about the Washington Nationals? How retro.

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* Author Q&A: Fred Stein

History

I challenge anyone’s imagination to think of a time before 24-hour cable sports coverage. Before the Internet. Before sports-talk radio. Before TV coverage (before color coverage). Fred Stein can. The author of Under Coogan’s Bluff: A Fan’s Recollection of the New York Giants Under Terry and Ott grew up in an age when newspaper ruled […]

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* Birthday Greetings: Rogers Hornsby and Enos “Country” Slaughter

Autobiography/memoirs

Rogers Hornsby 1896 Enos “Country” Slaughter 1916

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* Author profile: Doug Glanville

2010 title

Chicago Magazine published this profile of former Cub and current author/ESPN BBTN analyst Doug Glanville following the release of his excellent new memoir, The Game from Where I Stand, which it describes as “a blend of recast Times columns and new baseball-centric ruminations filed under broad chapter headings such as ‘The Stresses of the Game’ […]

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* National Pastime Radio: Buster Olney

Because I can...

“Olney make believe…” Sorry, I can never keep that name straight. The natural tendency is to dyslex it into “only.” ESPN baseball writer/broadcaster Buster Olney was the guest on the latest Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me‘s “Not My Job” segment. I felt kind of badly for him. There was zero response to Peter Sagal’s introduction. […]

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* Real baseball hero

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Hitting home runs and pitching no hitters are great, but they pale in comparison to what former big leaguer and current Tampa Bay Rays broadcaster Kevin Kennedy accomplished with some fellow passengers on a recent flight. According to an item in The New York Times punlished April 23, “…Kennedy, the former major league manager now […]

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* For every Willie Mays…

"Oddballs"

there are scores of guys with far less talent, but who make up the backbone of the game. Think about it: even if your favorite team is lucky to have, let’s say, seven or eight all-stars, that still leaves 18 regular Joes. Norm Miller was such a player. He managed to stick around for 10 […]

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* Birthday greetings

Biography

Born this day in 1917 Sal “The Barber” Maglie Virgil “Fire” Trucks

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* Sport of the Times … in books

2010 title

Before The New York Times went through all its cutbacks, the paper featured an occasional column called “The Sport of the Times.” Just so you know where the blog title comes from. In today’s paper, two books are selected for special attention. Following the brouhaha over Alex Rodriguez’s broken GPS against the As in the […]

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* TWIBB: Week of April 23, 2010

2010 title

This week’s best-selling baseball books, according to Amazon.com as of Friday, April 23. Title Rank General The Baseball Codes: Beanballs, Sign Stealing, and Bench-Clearing Brawls: The Unwritten Rules of America’s Pastime, by Jason Turbow and Michael Duca 1 The Bullpen Gospels: Major League Dreams of a Minor League Veteran, by Dirk Hayhurst 2 Moneyball: The […]

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* RK Review: 90% of the Game is Half Mental

2010 title

And Other Tales from the Edge of Baseball Fandom, by Emma Span (Villard, 2010) As much as I love baseball, there are times when I take a step back and wonder, “What am I doing with this nonsense? Surely, there are better ways to spend my time and energies.” And at the risk of being […]

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* This week (April 26) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

The NFL Draft takes center stage. Don’t know about you, but I’m tired of other sports — most notably football — turning into a year-round, attention-hogging entity. Not to get too philosophical, but there’s something to be said about absence making the heart grow fonder. Without darkness, there’s no light. Without sour, you don’t appreciate […]

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* A popular card set ends its run

"Oddballs"

This article appeared in the April 15 edition of the New Jersey Jewish News. Tempered with the excitement of Opening Day, some baseball fans have to contend with the end of a tradition, even if it was only a few years old: 2010 marks the final release of the Jewish Major Leaguer card set. According […]

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* RK Review: The Housekeeper and the Professor

2009 title

by Yoko Ogawa, translated by Stephen Snyder (2003; Picador Translation 2009) I can’t even remember where I heard of this title but I’m glad I did. Ogawa tells a touching story about a Japanese housekeeper, her 10-year-old son, and her professional charge, a former mathematics professor with an unusual disability, which was the result of […]

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