On this day

History

Bob Uecker, the Brewers’ TV/radio play-by-play announcer, is chosen for induction into the broadcasters’ wing of the Hall of Fame as the recipient of the Ford C. Frick Award in 2003. The 68-year-old former back-up catcher, who joined the Milwaukee broadcast crew in 1971, is best known for the humor he has brought to the […]

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Happy Birthday, Kirby Puckett

Birthday greetings

The Minnesota Twins Hall-of-Famer was born this date in 1960. He died way too young, just shy of his 46th birthday in 2006. The Amazon Report for Kirby Puckett: I Love This Game!: My Life and Baseball Puck! Kirby Puckett: Baseball’s Last Warrior Be the Best You Can Be

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$21.95? Not $4.06?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From “My Grandma’s of New England“ Pure Dark chocolate morsels are sprinkled, along with fresh walnuts, throughout the middle and atop this already luscious rich and moist chocolate batter. This cake was tasted by Hall of Famer Ted Williams, the greatest hitter in the history of baseball, and deemed worthy enough to be named “The […]

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Another example of how everything connects to baseball

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From the on-line edition of the East Brunswick Home News Tribune: “Eight Men Out” is a book by Eliot Asinof about the eight members of the Chicago White Sox kicked out of baseball for their role in throwing the 1919 World Series. This week there are eight men wondering if they will be the next […]

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Happy Birthday, Home Run Baker

Birthday greetings

Almost didn’t get this one in today. John Franklin Baker was born on this date in Trappe, Maryland in 1886. I only mention his birthplace because it was also where he died 77 years later. I wonder how many people live and die in the town in which they were born? Baker spent his 13-year […]

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Review: Hammerin' Hank, George Almighty and the Say Hey Kid: The Year That Changed Baseball Forever

2008 title

Whenever a book — especially a sports book — includes the words “best” (or “worst”), “ranking”, or “forever,” you know the author is looking to start an argument. Take John Roengren, for example. His new title on the 1973 season carries the “forever” brand. Granted 1973 was an eventful season. The Mets, still mourning the […]

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Publisher profile: Sourcebooks Inc.

Industry/Literary Analysis

Sourcebooks recently released Hammerin’ Hank, George Almighty and the Say Hey Kid: The Year That Changed Baseball Forever. For my review of the book, see here. This piece appeared today on SuburbanChicagoNews.com.

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Baseball players are readers, too, y'know

Bits and Pieces

From umpbump.com: Baseball book club alert: Manny Ramirez has been reading (and even underlining passages of) The Secret, the best-selling New Age book by Rhonda Byrnes (via The Joy of Sox) as part of the left fielder’s new, Mannytating lifestyle. And according to Call of the Green Monster, Jonathan Papelbon picked up To Kill A […]

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Happy Birthday, Terry Leach

Autobiography/memoirs

The submariner journeyman pitcher turns 58 today. Leach was another of those players who came to the Majors relatively late (27). He had one great year, going 11-1 for the Mets in 1987, including a 10-innning, 1-0 shutout, but received relatively littl fanfare. Leach wrote about his experiences, including his sense of betrayal by “the […]

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Another "old rookie" title

2008 title

Akin to Jim Morris’ 2001 autobiography, this literary contribution from catcher Chris Coste is as much about the hopes of the publisher as the author. Dennis Quaid did a great and surprisingly convincing job as Morris, so who gets to play Coste in the movie? So when does The Hoyt Wilhelm Story come out?

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Author profile: Tammy Lechner

2008 title

From The Arizona Republic, this piece on the author of Our Team – Our Dream: A Cubs Fan’s Journey Into Baseball’s Greatest Romance. Upshot: ” Look up ‘patience’ in the dictionary and you’ll find a picture of a Chicago Cubs fan. “

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Baseball and comics: the great American pastimes

2008 title

Wilfred Santiago pays homage to his countryman Roberto Clemente in graphic novela form, due out later this year. According to the publication’s Web site, 21 is “a human drama of courage and dignity….Facing prejudice during times of change, his talent went unrecognized for most of his eighteen seasons. Clemente, however, never lost of sight of […]

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Happy Birthday, Darryl Strawberry

Birthday greetings

Potential is such as sad word when it comes to sports. It seems it more often used when an athlete fails to live up to the predictions. Strawberry, who turns 46 today, was one such player. When he burst on to the scene with the Mets in 1983, people started comparing him with Ted Williams […]

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In case you were wondering

Magazines

For a few weeks I was wondering when the Street & Smith’s new baseball annual would hit the newsstands. After all, the other publishers had released their magazines. I figured it would surely be available by now. Well. it’s not. And don’t call me Shirley. After a visit to my local Barnes and Noble proved […]

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Bits and Pieces

2008 title

From Umpbump.com, a Letterman-like list of alternate uses for the weighty 2008 edition of Baseball Prospectus. From a December entry on HardballTimes.com, an interview with the prolific John Thorn. Mary Ann Childers, medical editor for the CBS affiliate in Chicago, on Your Brain on Cubs in which she “takes a look at a new book […]

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On this day

Audio

in 1933, Rogers Hornsby returns to the Cardinals as a player after a six year absence (thanks to NationalPastime.com). Hornsby was not one of your happy, shining people. His reputation as a misanthrope preceded him, yet he was able to find a job because he was such an astute baseball ma who batted over .400 […]

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Happy Birthday, Dock Ellis

Birthday greetings

The man who claims to have pitched a no-hitter under the influence of LSD turns 63 today. Ellis played for 12 seasons (1968-79) with the Pirates, Yankees, A’s, Rangers and Mets, compiling a 138-199 record. He collaborated with author Donald Hall on his autobiography in 1976. The Amazon Report: Dock Ellis in the Country of […]

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Old man's baseball reference

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Stealing a thought from The Tony Kornheiser Show and his penchant for the “old man radio” intros for his segments… It probably won’t last long, but the new FOX program New Amsterdam will have a special place in my heart. The police drama stars Nikolaj Coster-Waldau (as opposed to Game of Shadows’ Mark Fainaru-Wada) as […]

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Bits and Pieces

Bits and Pieces

From Men’s Vogue, this review of Ballet in the Dirt, the pricey photography book by Neil Leifer. Another Leifer feature appeared in the Los Angeles Times. The Washington Post ran this review on the new biography on Bernard Malamud, author of The Natural, generally considered the first “adult” baseball fiction. Itsaboutthemoney, a blog “celebrating the […]

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Review: Diary of a Red Sox Season

2008 title

From FragileFreddy’s Red Sox blog, this review on Johnny Peksy’s Diary of a Red Sox Season. Upshot: Overall the book is a brief but fun read and one I definitely recommend. You won’t learn a lot that is new to you about the Red Sox but you will learn about Johnny Pesky and you will […]

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