Announcement: Bowie Kuhn memorabilia goes on auction block

Annoucements

According to an item in the Feb. 25 issue of Street & Smith’s Sports Business Journal, Hunt Auctions will include “more than 140 items” from the estate of the late Bowie Kuhn. The former commissioner’s collection includes several rings from baseball events, autographed balls, contracts, and various awards. The lot is expected to go for […]

Read the full article →

MLB to curtail on-line content

Industry/Literary Analysis

According to a report in the Feb. 25 issue of Street & Smith’s Sports Business Journal, Major League Baseball joins the NFL in limiting the amount of content news outlets can post on their on-line presences. “MLB is limiting news organizations from posting more than 120 seconds a day of audio or video from league […]

Read the full article →

Author interview: Tom Tango

Author Profile / interview

BrockforBroglio.com recently ran this interview with Tango, author of The Book and proprietor of Insidethebook.com. Upshot: “[N]o man combines the beauty of numbers and baseball more seamlessly.” The Amazon Report: The Book: Playing the Percentages in Baseball

Read the full article →

Announcement: New title chronicles history of baseball in Durham

Annoucements

From the Raleigh (NC) Chronicle: An exhaustive 400 page book coming off the presses in March will document the history of professional baseball in North Carolina and also features Durham’s pivotal role in Tarheel baseball. Entitled “Cradle of the Game”, the book’s author is Mark Cryan, who lives in Burlington. Cryan used to work in […]

Read the full article →

Kindle you believe it?

Annoucements

Amazon recently released it’s new e-book reader, the Kindle. Like many in this technology, it offers the ability to store numerous books on a unit the size of a medium hardcover. It also seems to be easier to load, not even requiring a computer connection. It is pricey though, so if anyone from Amazon is […]

Read the full article →

Happy Birthday, Old Pete

Birthday greetings

Grover Alexander Cleveland was born this day in 1887. Old Pete, who was indicted into the Hall of Fame in 1938, has his signature moment when he came in to fan Tony Lazzeri with the bases loaded and the Cardinals nursing a 3-2 lead in the seventh inning of Game 7 of the 1926 World […]

Read the full article →

New stadiums for old

Commentary

This will be the last season for the homes of both New York teams. Losing Shea Stadium is no big deal; it was a cold, cavernous ugly concrete structure from day 1. Good riddance to bad rubbish. But Yankee Stadium is a cathedral and the though of it being demolished is truly a sad one.

Read the full article →

Review: Mets by the Numbers

2008 title

As an unabashed Mets fan I’ll read anything about the team. Of course, this non-discriminatory policy can lead to some time-wasting clunkers. On the other hand, there are some time-wasters that can be lots of fun (you’re reading this, after all).  Mets by the Numbers: A Complete Team History of the Amazin’ Mets by Uniform […]

Read the full article →

Review: We Are the Ship

Reviews from other sources

The Washington Post picks this new title for kids about the Negro leagues as one of its Books of the Week

Read the full article →

Latest on Brijit.com: Dave Niehaus in ESPN

Bits and Pieces

Seattle’s Soothing Baseball Voice Headed to Cooperstown – If you’re lucky, your team’s baseball games are broadcast by an announcer like Dave Niehaus, voice of the Seattle Mariners since they first took the field 31 years ago. Neihuas was recently named recipient of the Ford C. Frick Award from the Baseball Hall of Fame. Caple […]

Read the full article →

Author profile: Pablo Fenjves

Author Profile / interview

Newsweek published this profile on the man who would be Jose Canseco, at least on paper. According to the article Fenjves met Canseco on Jan. 2—Fenjves’s work on Jessica Canseco’s “Juicy” hadn’t bothered her ex-husband—and had just four weeks to put together the 60,000-word manuscript to meet a March 31 publication date. “He knew what […]

Read the full article →

Making a different kind of pitch

New title

From an AP report that appeared on the Seattle Post-Intelligencer Web site on Feb. 22: “A budding author currently researching his second book, [Miguel] Batista was also selected to join the Major League Baseball Players Association’s executive board. Part of his duties included reviewing the Mitchell Report, an investigation into the use of steroids in […]

Read the full article →

Happy Birthday, Monte Irvin

Autobiography/memoirs

One of the true gentlemen of the game turns 89 today. When it comes to recognition, Irvin always seemed to play second second fiddle behind Jackie Robinson, Larry Doby, and Willie Mays, among others. He played only eight season, arriving with the New York Giants in 1949 at the age of 30. But he never […]

Read the full article →

Happy Birthday, Honus Wagner

Audio

The Flying Dutchman was born this date in 1874. Wagner was in the inaugural group elected to the Hall of Fame in 1936 based on his 20-year career in the dead ball era in which he collected 3,415 hits, 722 stolen bases (not bad for a 200-pounder) and a .327 batting average. His baseball card […]

Read the full article →

For you art afficianados out there…

Newspapers

(Hope I spelled that right). In recognition of spring training, the Week in Review Section of today’s New York Times has a series of sketches drawn in 1962 by Sports Illustrated‘s Robert Weaver. There’s a slide show of several these drawings — with text by illustrator and art teacher DB Dowd — of the marvelous […]

Read the full article →

Review: Cubs Titles

Older title

This piece originally ran in NINE. I thought, with all the buzz about the Cubs wining the 2008 pennant, and perhaps more, it was time to post it. Bear in mind that some new books on the team have been published since, including Glenn Stout’s The Cubs. The Million-to-One Team: Why the Chicago Cubs Haven’t […]

Read the full article →

And the Oscar goes to…

History

With the Academy Awards on the horizon, I thought it would be appropriate to mention some of the excellent books that discuss the twin American treasures of baseball and the movies. Baseball and the movies are like peanut butter and chocolate: they were meant to go together. Baseball is the eternal struggle of man seeking […]

Read the full article →

Happy Birthday, Elston Howard

Birthday greetings

The Yankees first African-American player would have been 70 today. One of Casey Stengel’s great — if not politically correct — lines was, “As Peter Golenbock noted in Dynasty, “When I finally get a [black player], I get the only one who can’t run.” After his death, Howard’s wife, Arlene, published Elston and Me: The […]

Read the full article →

On This day…

New title

In 2005, Jerry Coleman, the former Yankee star, military veteran, and broadcaster for the Yankees, Angels and Padres, was selected as recipient for the Baseball Hall of Fame’s Ford C. Frick Award. Coleman, the MVP of the 1950 world Series, was a Marine Corps fighter pilot during World War II and the Korean War, along […]

Read the full article →

New from Brijit.com

Review by Ron Kaplan

Page 2’s Preseason MLB Power Rankings – Three little words — pitchers and catchers — indicate that the pre-season predictions are on the way for Major League Baseball. ESPN provides their first in a long line of “Power Rankings,” but they seem to be shaking off the winter funk, too. To wit: The Kansas City […]

Read the full article →
script type="text/javascript"> var _gaq = _gaq || []; _gaq.push(['_setAccount', 'UA-5496371-4']); _gaq.push(['_trackPageview']); (function() { var ga = document.createElement('script'); ga.type = 'text/javascript'; ga.async = true; ga.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https://ssl' : 'http://www') + '.google-analytics.com/ga.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })();