* Because you can keep a batting helmet on your bookshelf…

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

This piece on a new generation of protective gear from The New York Times. The macho-ness of the athlete still prefers cool over safety. But ask some of the poor guys who were badly injured by bean balls to see if they might not have wanted one of these babies. …[I]t is hard to predict […]

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* The old ball game

2009 title

The current issue of American Heritage Magazine incldues this story on the early days of the game adapted from Baseball Americana: Treasures from the Library of Congress by Harry Katz, Frank Ceresi, Phil Michel, Wilson McBee and Susan Reyburn (HarperCollins Publishers).

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* Maybe this blog should change its name

Business of baseball

WallStCheatSheet ran this interview with former ML pitcher, now stock trader Todd Stottlemyre. With all the noise about steroids and Bernie Maddof, perhasp its time to think about the branding image they’re putting out. Damien: Since you were never pigeonholed as “Todd the baseball player” or “Todd the student,” when you moved through your baseball […]

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* New book on the Fritz

2009 title

As in Fritz Peterson, the former pitcher for the New York Yankees who caused a major stir back in 1973 when he and teammate Mike Kekich swapped families. Peterson, who finished an 11-year career with a record of 133-131 (including a 20-win season in 1970), has published his story in Mickey Mantle is Going to […]

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* Judges are like umpires, except when they're not

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

William Fisher takes umbrage with the anaology in his Aug. 10 Huffington Post column: But Republican Senators, evidently chagrined at being unable to hit a home run based on the nominee’s judicial record, turned to The Nation’s Pastime. The baseball analogy has become widely used by nominees ever since now-Chief Justice John Roberts famously stated […]

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* The steroids books backlash begins

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

According to a press release from the Gibson Law Firm, distributed by PR Newswire on Aug. 10: The publisher and authors of a book about steroid use in major league baseball were sued today by a Texas man who says they falsely claimed he was “pushing” steroids to professional athletes and using his gym as […]

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* A few of my favorite things

2009 title

Baseball, books on language, and Roy Blount, Jr. So how cool is it to combine all three? The sportswriter and frequent panelist on one of my favorite NPR programs, Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me (so make that four things, by extension), recently published Alphabet Juice: The Energies, Gists, and Spirits of Letters, Words, and Combinations Thereof: […]

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* Just out of curiosity… (cheating in baseball)

Commentary by Ron Kaplan

I was finishing up my run this afternoon. My thighs were clenching, still sore from yesterday’s workout. I started thinking about the latest product that Shaq endorses (the actual name of which escapes me at the moment): a combination ace bandage/heat wrap that you can cut to size. So I was thinking: if a professional […]

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* Is the honeymoon finally over for Moneyball?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

It is if you believe this piece in The New York Times.

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* CYA for NYT?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Last week, Charles McGrath had written about “The Red Sox Nation, Betrayed.” This week, In The Public Editor column in Sunday’s Week in Review section, Clark Hoyt seeks to explain how the Times did the correct thing in its reporting that David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez were part of the 2003 list of players that […]

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* RK reviews: Red Sox oldies but goodies

Biography

Wife and daughter are at the Sawx-Tigers game at the moment, so I thought it appropriate to haul these three reviews out of mothballs. All appeared in A Red Sox Journal, published by The Buffalo Head Society in the late 1990s. * * * Murder at Fenway Park, by Troy Soos. Kensington Publishing: NY. 1994 […]

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* Moneyball inspires an unlikely group

"Oddballs"

Such as Microsoft, according to this piece making the rounds. Microsoft’s Intellectual Property Group is building a financial model designed to value and predict prices for technology patents, allowing the company to better forecast and budget for intellectual property-related costs — all inspired by a best-selling book about baseball…. “I got this idea from reading […]

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* R-ad-io daze

Business of baseball

In this piece from the Hartford Courant, author Curt Smith (Voices of Summer: Ranking Baseball’s 101 All-Time Best Announcers)  recalls the classic days of baseball on the radio, replete with advertisements the broadcasters managed to squeeze in whenever they could. One of the neat things about minor league baseball is the advertising signage from local […]

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* Author interview: Marty Appel

2009 title

TheFowlBalls blog conducted this brief Q&A with the author of Munson.

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* There's no baseball in baseball

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Hee. Actually, this might be the case some day down the road.

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* "Oh, how I love to get up in the morning…"

Biography

(With apologies to Irving Berlin…) Earlier this week, The New York Times ran this piece about the life (or lack thereof) of  New York Mets groundskeeper Dan Cunningham. It reminding me of several interesting books about the people behind the scenes who are essential to the smooth production of a game on many levels, from […]

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* Now hear this: Gary Mitchem at the SABR convention

Academic/scholarly journals

Enjoyed many an interesting conversation at the recent SABR get-together in Washington, DC. Spent a lot of down time in the vendors room where publishers hosted some of their authors. The first interview is with Gary Mitchem, acquisitions editor for McFarland, which celebrates its 30th anniversary this year. Mitchem discovered the processes he goes through […]

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* Review: Forever Blue

2009 title

From journalists/sports guy Paul Oberjuerger, this considered assessment of the new Walter O’Malley/Brooklyn Dodgers book by Michael D’Antonio. Upshot: What makes this book important? The author had access to “tens of thousands of items” from the O’Malley family archive. And, naturally, that O’Malley-centric material tends to paint Walter O’Malley in a kinder light. If only […]

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* Review: Worth the Wait

2009 title

From Macho Row, a Phillies-centric outfit, this review on Jayson Stark’s recap of the 2008 season.

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* Review: As They See 'Em

2009 title

from the aptly-named New-Books-Review.com, this collection of reviews on Bruce Weber’s gem.

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