On this day

History

in 1995, Michael Jordan decides he might have made a mistake when he quit basketball at the height of his game to try his hand at baseball. He took advantage of the labor unrest to announce his plan to give up the diamond for the hardwood. The Amazon Report: Rookie: When Michael Jordan Came to […]

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Happy Birthday, Steve Howe

Birthday greetings

Born this day in 1958, the star-crossed pitcher died in 2006 as the result a car accident, and not, surprisingly, drug use. Howe was a sometimes brilliant reliever who played mostly for the Dodgers and Yankees. Suspended several times from substance, abuse, Howe got more second chances than just about any athlete in history. The […]

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Happy Birthday, Jim Bouton

Birthday greetings

Not the first — that honor went to Jim Brosnan — but perhaps the best of the genre he tackled, Bouton turns 69 today. “The Bulldog” enjoyed a couple of good years for the New York Yankees, winning 20 games in1963 and 18 more in 1964, the last good year the team had for more […]

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On this day

History

In 1941, ‘Losing Pitcher’ Hugh Mulcahy of the Phillies becomes the first major league player to be drafted into the Armed Forces. The newest member of the 101st Artillery at Cape Cod’s Camp Edwards on had lost 22 games last season and 20 in 1938 to lead the National League in defeats both years. (Thanks […]

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Happy Birthday, Jeff Burroughs

Birthday greetings

The burly slugger, born this day in 1951, was one of the few major leaguers who enjoyed “headliner” success in Little League as well. He wrote about such experience in a couple of books. The Amazon Report: Jeff Burroughs’ Little League Instructional Guide The Little Team That Could/the Incredible, Often Wacky Story of the Two-Time […]

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The Pride of the Yankees

2008 title

The 2008 seasons marks the beginning of the end for Yankee Stadium. The Bronx Bombers have always been fodder for baseball lit, but this watershed event opens a new sub-genre. A quick search on Amazon.com shows several titles devoted specifically to such nostalgic content, including Yankee Stadium: The Official Retrospective, by Al Santasiere and Mark […]

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Happy Birthday, Willie Stargell

Birthday greetings

Born this day in 1940, “Pops” died too young, at age 61 in 2001. Stargell was one of the stars of the Pirates “We Are Family” team in the early 1970s, a fearsome batter who had a trademark windmill-style of taking his practice swings. The Amazon Report: Willie Stargell: An Autobiography Out of left field: […]

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On this day

History

Former Pirate second baseman Bill Mazeroski is elected by the Veterans’ Committee into the Hall of Fame along. His walk-off home run in the 1960 World Series is still ranked as one of the most dramatic moments in the game. (Thanks to NationalPastime.com.) The Amazon Report: Twin Killing: The Bill Mazeroski Story

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Veteran sports photographer bats 400 — dollars, that is

2007 title

Would you pay $400 for a book of baseball photographs? One thousand bibliophiles did. Some didn’t even blink when the price rose to $700 for Ballet in the Dirt: The Golden Age of Baseball, a coffee table collection of lensman Neil Leifer’s best work, published in late 2007 by Taschen Books. Leifer, 65, got his […]

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Author Profile: Matthew Silverman

2008 title

Matthew Silverman has started his own cottage industry, writing about the Mets. This year alone he has three books out on the Amazin’s, including, Mets by the Numbers (with Jon Springer), Meet the Mets (with Greg Spira), and 100 Things Mets Fans Should Know and Do Before They Die. He has also contributed to such […]

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We Are the Ship in Sports Illustrated

2008 title

A feature piece on Kadir Nelson’s new children’s book on the Negro Leagues, as well as a slide-show of the author’s paintings of some of the legends of the era.

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Gelf magazine hosts two book events

Annoucements

Two programs of note, one tomorrow, March 6, the other April 3, sponsored by Gelf.com. Gelf’s Varsity Letters Sports Reading Series returns to New York on March 6 at the Happy Ending Lounge, 302 Broome Street. Authors presenting their work include Andy Mendlowitz (Ireland’s Professional Amateurs: A Sports Season at Its Purest), Spike Vrusho (Benchclearing: […]

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Lest we forget: W.C. Heinz

Lest We Forget

One of the great sportswriters passed away Feb. 27 at the age of 93. Among his other works was a little book, written under the pseudonym of “Richard Hooker” (and with a collaborator), that would later become a wildly popular TV show about the Korean War. You might remember it as M*A*S*H. From his obituary […]

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Review: Going, Going, Gone

2008 title

The Art of the Trade in Major League Baseball by Fran Zimniuch. Taylor Trade Publishing, 2008. Strictly speaking, Zimniuch’s new book should be “The Art of the Deal” since he considers not just the actual swapping of players, but other manners of transition as well, including, for the most part, free agency. The book starts […]

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On this day…

History

in 1912, Charles Ebbets breaks ground for his team’s new ballpark in the Pigtown section of Brooklyn. The Dodgers new home will be named for its owner after a reporter at the ceremony suggests the idea to Charley. (Thanks to Nationalpastime.com.) The Amazon Report: Hit Sign, Win Suit: An Irishman’s Tribute to Ebbets Field Greatest […]

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Happy Birthday, Dazzy Vance

Birthday greetings

The fireballing right-hander was born in 1891. He spent his best years with the Brooklyn Dodgers, winning more than twenty games three times. Vance had his best season in 1924, with a record of 28-6, completing 30 of 34 starts, pitching more than 308 innings and posting 262 strikeouts and a 2.16 ERA. The Amazon […]

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Happy Birthday, Lefty O'Doul

Birthday greetings

Born in 1897, O’Doul began his big-league career as a pitcher in 1919, but flamed out by 1923. He returned to the majors in 1928, reinventing himself as an outfielder. Over the next seven seasons, he batted .353, including a an NL-best .398 in 1929, the year he also had career highs of 32 homers […]

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Author interviews: Jonathan Mayo

2008 title

Apropos to my recent review of his book, Facing Clemens, here are a few interviews with author Jonathan Mayo. I’ll post my own later in the week. From Bluebird Banter, a Toronto Blue Jays blog From Was Watching, a Yankees blogger You can read more about Mayo on his own Web site.

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Review: Mets by the Numbers

2008 title

From Faithandfear, “the blog for Mets fans who like to read.” Upshot: “Mets By The Numbers … is perhaps the most incredible repository of Mets data, Mets trivia and Mets Zeitgeist you will ever find between two covers.”

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Revisionist history: How Castro's resignation impacts on baseball

History

In this 2002 article from Reason.com, we learn how the decision by the communist dictator to step down might open the door for baseball scholarship. According to the piece by Matt Welch, Cuban national Severo Nieto basically invented Cuban baseball research in 1955 when he co-authored the country’s first-ever baseball encyclopedia, laboriously reconstructing the statistical […]

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