* Movie smackdown: Bull Durham vs. Field of Dreams

Baseball movies

In this corner, Kevin Costner. And in this corner, Kevin Costner. And the winnah, according to the Angels blog on the OC Register Web site, is ___.

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* Amazon's top baseball titles, week ending 7/19

2008 title

General: Yankee for Life: My 40-year Journey in Pinstripes, by Bobby Murcer. The passing of the former ballplayer puts this one on top. Yankee Stadium: The Official Retrospective, by Santasiere and Vancil. The closing of the ballpark makes this subgenre hot. But why don’t they wait until the final season is over, which would complete […]

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* Deceased memorabilia king keeps giving

Because I can...

The late Barry Halper was acknowledged to be perhaps the king of collectors. His holdings were sold at Sotheby’s, raising millions of dollars. One of his pet charities was the burn unit at St. Barnabas in New Jersey. In that spirit, there will be an auction for a “package” of Yankees goods and services for […]

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* There used to be a ballpark over there…

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

In today’s New York Times — and with the closing of both new York stadiums after the 2008 season — Nick Bunkley writes about the demolition of Tiger Stadium in his “Detroit Journal.” As the last game in the old Michigan ballpark drew near, Tom Stanton wrote about growing up an intergenerational Tigers fan in […]

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* I suppose Canseco will write about this now

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

“Canseco not the first slugger to strike out in the ring,” from ESPN.com.

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* Baseball (coverage) like it oughta be

Broadcasting

Many years ago, the New Yorks Mets operated a marketing campaign on the theme, “baseball like it ought to be.” Unfortunately, baseball ought to be good, or at least enjoyable, but if memory serves, this campaign ran at a time when they were stinko. I offer this as an introduction to this “Rites of Summer” […]

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* Would you believe…?

Bits and Pieces

Hard to believe that Ripley’s would find enough material to put together a whole book on baseball, but they have. Two comemnts on it from its page on Amazon.com: “A baseball hit 400 feet has twice the destructive energy as a bullet fired from a .8 calibur pistol. That, and other strange and unusual facts […]

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* Just what we need, another "triumphant" kids baseball movie

Baseball movies

Remember The Bad News Bears (the original one, not the disaster with Billy Bob Thornton)? Of course you do, it was a “revolutionary” film in that it presented kids as kids, not some Disneyworld animatronic beings. Now how about, Hardball, starring Keanu Reeves as a gambling addict sentenced to coach an inner city little league […]

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* Baseball for Peanuts

Annoucements

‘Peanuts at Bat: The Life and Art of Charles Schulz” at the Riverside (Calif.) Metropolitan Museum is an inside look at characters created by the master cartoonist and his take on a favorite American pastime. The exhibit runs through Sept. 14. The museum is located at 3580 Mission Inn Ave., Riverside, (951-826-5273).

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* What he did during the All-Star vacation

Classic title

From The Juice blog on Baseball Toaster: Let’s start with a baseball book. You should read Buzz Bissinger’s (yeah, that guy) Three Nights in August. It’s not a perfect book, as Bissinger’s dislike of Moneyball elements demonstrate. Even if you have a sabermetrical view of the game, it is hard to deny the charms of […]

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* Dodgy photos at LA library

Exhibits

The Los Angeles Central Library is hosting “Play Ball! Images of Dodger Blue, 1958-1988,” a photographic exhibition, through November 9. The curator for the exhibit is David Davis, a contributing writer to Los Angeles Magazine and The Times’ Book Review. “Since 1958, the Dodgers have been a vital, integral part of the social fabric of […]

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* The Bizarro Baseball Hall of Fame?

Memorabilia

This article from the Miami Herald heralds the Baseball Reliquary, a California-based organization “that trumpets itself as a ‘traveling museum of baseball curiosities and wonderments.”

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* A-Rod on the Radar

Bits and Pieces

From the on-line version of the pop culture magazine, the Yankees wandering third baseman is a member of a special all-star team.

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* A little slice of heaven from Roger Angell

Magazines

From the July 7 issue of The New Yorker, a piece about a statistical anomaly and the New York Yankees.

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* A tribute (?) to Yankee Stadium

Audio

In the Times’ latest on-line edition of Play, this piece about the old/new ballparks in the Bronx. Economist Andrew Zimbalist, author of Baseball and Billions, among other titles, recently discussed the same topic on WNYC’s Brian Lehrer show, which you can hear here: Amazon Report on Andrew Zimbalist: The Bottom Line: Observations and Arguments on […]

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* Back in town

Bits and Pieces

Just arrived back from Spain. It was an interesting cultural experience. To paraphrase that philosopher, Steve Martin, “It’s like they have a different word for everything!” Except for The International Herald Tribune, available in the hotel lobby in Barcelona, I had no access to media at all: no papers, TV, or radio. I had no […]

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* What the heck, one more: This week in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

Cover story on Tim “The Freak” Lincecum. Other baseball stories include: Tom Verduci’s mid-season report The latest MLB players’ poll: Who has the best raw power?

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* Adios, for now

Because I can...

Taking some well-needed vacation time to Spain. Wonder if I can use my electronic scoreboard to keep abreast while overseas? Anyway, back in a couple of weeks, just in time for the All-Star game. Be well, keep reading.

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* Lest we forget: Jules Tygiel

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

His name might not be as familiar as David Halberstam or Maury Allen or other prolific baseball authors, but Jules Tygiel was a master of the social importance of the game. He wrote several volumes about Jackie Robinson, but managed to keep his material fresh and pertinent. Tygiel passed away yesterday at the age of […]

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* Review: Rob Neyer's Big Book of Baseball Legends

Reviews from other sources

From Bleacherreport.com.

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