* Home Run Derby, Old School

Television

Seems the Yankees and their fans are somewhat upset about MLB’s “Call Your Shot” promotion, in which a fan winning an online contest will choose a spot here he believes Red Sox slugger David Ortiz can park one. “Sacrilege,” they cry, to befoul the final season at the hallowed Yankee Stadium with such heresy. The […]

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* The problem with sports journalism? It's the athletes.

Industry/Literary Analysis

Pat Jordan, who wrote about the difficulties of trying to interview Jose Canseco on Deadspin.com, does it again for Slate.com, this time with Josh Beckett, who declined the honor of a New York Times’ profile. This has become the curse of modern sports journalism. Writers and fans alike no longer get to know the object […]

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* Nitpick of the day: Living on the Black

2008 title

(Don’t worry, this isn’t going to be a regular feature.) Reading the new book by John Feinstein. I’ve always enjoyed his work, especially on baseball and golf, but I came across this paragraph and it got my eyes rolling: On page 155, Feinstein writes: Joe Torre, who came up to the majors as a catcher, […]

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* Baseball book roundup: The Palm Springs (CA) Desert Sun

Mini-reviews

A set of mini-reviews, mostly of older titles, from the Desert Sun, including: Playing With The Enemy, A Baseball Prodigy, A World at War and a Field of Broken Dreams, by Gary Moore. Teammates, A Portrait of a Friendship, by David Halberstram. Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball’s Last Hero, by David Maraniss. The […]

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* Review: The Comeback Season

2008 title

From the Columbus Dispatch, this review of the new young adult fiction on love, loss, and baseball. Upshot: [Author Jennifer E. Smith] might be a rookie, but she hits a home run with a poignant and touching novel about hope, perseverance and the strength of the human spirit.

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* Will Leech, er Leitch in the Times

Commentary by Ron Kaplan

Funny how the editor of Deadspin.com has such disdain against traditional journalism except when he seems to benefit from it. Case in point, his article on the Chicago Cubs in the New York Times‘ “Play” supplement. On the other hand, is the newspaper just as “guilty” of providing the forum? I’m just askin’…

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* Ban the Boo-birds

Commentary

According to this op-ed piece in the May 25 New York Times, in which the writer claims booing the home town team is among the most traitorous of behaviors imaginable.

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* Review: The End of Baseball

2008 title

As reviewed on Stltoday.com, a St. Louis-based web site. The End of Baseball is a Bill Veeck-inspired historical fiction, which is on my shelf for near-future reading. Upshot: Mainly, as somebody in baseball puts it, “The End of Baseball” sails straight down central. As somebody else in baseball used to say, it’s a winner.

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* Curses, Haunted Baseball again

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The recent release of the Indiana Jones movie allows for the tangential connection with Haunted Baseball: Ghosts, Curses, Legends and Eerie Events, wherein coauthor Mickey Bradley is interviewed for this piece in Newsday.

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* Bits and pieces

2008 title

Catching up a bit: Bob Murcer’s autobiography as reviewed on MLB.com The Griddle on Baseballtoaster.com considers Peter Morris’ latest, But Didn’t We Have Fun? wickedlocal.com, a Massachusetts Web site, reports on an appearance by author Jim Collins at a Cape Cod high school. Collins is the author of The Last Best League: One Summer, One […]

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* Comic baseball

Bits and Pieces

Riffing on the cover of this week’s Sports Illustrated, “Richie Rich” on homerunderby.com, posts this entry on the sports as played by superheroes.

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* Column: The Real Jerry Coleman

2008 title

Not a review of the former big leaguer’s new autobiography, per se, but a testimony to the man by Tom Shanahan of the Voice of San Diego.

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* New title from Arcadia: Baseball in Long Beach

2008 title

According to Long Beach’s own Grunion Gazette. The publisher, Arcadia, covers hundreds of topics in a photo album motif, heavy on the illustrations, light on text.

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* What am I bid…?

Annoucements

According to this story in the Los Angeles Daily News, the court martial papers for Jackie Robinson are being auctioned by Memory Lane, a sports memorabilia dealer in Tustin, in public event that ends at 5 p.m. Saturday, May 24. So there’s still time.

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Review: But Didn't We Have Fun?

2008 title

A lengthy treatise of the Peter Morris book via Popmatters.com.

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* The skinny on Foul Balls

Older title

By Alison Gordon (left). Interesting concept, this “Blue Jays Library in a Box,” from battersbox.ca. Might catch on. Pity there aren’t a lot of books on the subject.

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* This Week in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

The cover story by Tom Verducci features the crazy way the season is shaping up so far. Up is down and down is up as the Rays and Marlins — aong other surprise franchises — are reading their divisions. A second feature profiles the Indians’ pitcher Cliff Lee.

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* Farewell, Mike Piazza

Bits and Pieces

The future Hall of Fame catcher called it quits on May 20. I felt bad for Piazza and the handful of veterans from last season who weren’t able to find a job in 2008. It’s not so much that they weren’t, as how they were basically ignored and just left to blow away in the […]

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* Athletes get the word out about reading

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From the weekly White Bear Lake (MN) Press, this article about the Twins’ Justin Morneau’s appearance at a local public school. Morneau said he liked reading about baseball. Shocker.

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* Baseball on NPR

2008 title

Brian Lehrer discusses The Zen of Bobby V with documentary filmmaker Andrew Jenks. Meanwhile, on Soundcheck, Tim Wiles, co-author of Baseball’s Greats Hit, discusses Take Me Out to the Ball Game. http://audio.wnyc.org/bl/bl051908bpod.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS

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