Review: Juicing the Game

Reviews from other sources

From Mopupduty.com. Up-shoot: “All in all a slow read but deeply investigates the people and forces that have made baseball in the last 15 years a Juiced Game.”  

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Analyzing the annuals

Magazines

Hard to believe, but there are already sme fantasy baseball magazines on the magazine racks. Used to be Street and Smith’s was the only game in town; you knew the season was just a short time away when that became available. But time no longer matters when it comes to fantasy baseball. As soon as […]

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Lest we forget: John McHale

Bits and Pieces

Long-time baseball executive John McHale passed away recently. Furman Bishop recalled his old friend in this column from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. McHale, who played a few seasons for the Detroit Tigers in the 1940s, was also a driving force for the Montreal Expos, and is remembered in this piece by that city’s Gazette.  

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The All-Literary Team

Lists

I originally did this several years ago for Fastball.com, a now-defunct web site. Pitchers Roger “Samuel” Clemens, Josh “Samuel” Beckett, Craig “Larry” McMurtry,Jerry “Saint” Augustine, Casey “William” Blake Catcher Mike “F. Scott” Fitzgerald First Base Bud “Tom” Clancy Second Base Ed “Ernest” Hemingway Shortstop Bill “Bertrand” Russell Third Base Bill “James” Joyce Leftfield Buster “Henry” […]

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Happy Birthday, Curt Flood

Older title

Interesting that about the same time as the story comes out reporting that baseball salaries are at an all-time high, we note the birthday of Curt Flood, who was responsible for the situation, for better or worse. For better obviously would have been for the players to make a decent wage and extricate themselves from […]

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"Record" numbers

Bits and Pieces

Not for nothing, but I think we can eliminate the adjective “record” when describing how baseball salaries increase every year. Baseball’s average salary rose 4.6 percent last year to a record (emphasis added) $2.82 million, and the New York Yankees set a high for teams at $7.47 million. Like they’re ever going to go down? […]

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John Sayles on baseball and lesser matters

Movies

The director of Eight Men Out compares the Black Sox scandal of 1919 with the steroids scandal of “aught-eight” in this interview with the Village Voice. I particularly enjoyed the interchanges between Sayles, as sportswriter Ring Lardner, and Studs Terkel, as Hugh Fullerton, as they put their heads together to bring the whole sordid affair […]

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This Week (er, last week), in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

Don’t know what happened to my subscription to SI…I don’t remember any renewal notices/warnings…so I’ll have to kibbitz for awhile.In the wake of The Roger Clemens 60 Minutes/press conference, Richard Hoffer contributed this item on his outrage in the Jan. 14 issue. The illustration is especially appropriate, depicting Clemens firing his legendary fastball (at his […]

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A breath of fresh air

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

In a recent “Inside Baseball” column, Sports Illustrated‘s John Donovan gives fans something in which they can take comfort: The All-Clean Team. The list includes: Alex Rodriguez Ken Griffey, Jr. Albert Pujols Frank Thomas Vladamir Guerrero Greg Maddux Pedro Martinez Ichiro Suzuki He tosses kudos to a few more, including Jeter, Glavine, Smoltz, Vizquel, Randy […]

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Let the (Congressional) games begin

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From NPR’s Morning Edition, this report of Congressional hearings on baseball and steroids. Eric Fisher, a writer for the Sports Business Journal, previews the testimony of baseball officials with Renee Montagne.

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Now hear this: Podcasts to seek

Audio

Tommy Lasorda discusses his new book, I Live for This, on Barnes and Noble’s “Meet the author” series. Gotham Baseball, a New York-centric radio show/pod recently had Dana Brand, author of Mets Fans (McFarland). Political pundit James Carville and Luke Russert, so on TV newsman Tim Russert, cohost 60/20. a sports program on XM radio […]

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ESPN's Bill Simmons speaks for many of us

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

when he asks in his column of Jan. 28 issue, “How do you put an asterisk on the best moment of your life? For him, and many Red Sox/Clemens fans, it was the second time he struck out 20. It came in a mediocre season against the Detroit Tiers and he movingly recreates the emotions […]

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Canseco book, in and out

Annoucements

Publisher Out: Berkley/Penguin In: ? Collaborator Out: Don Yaeger, a former Sports Illustrated associate editor, who didn’t think there was much left that was newsworthy In: Pablo F. Fenjves, a former National Enquirer writer who was the ghost writer for O.J. Simpson’s latest, which brought down a publishing imprint (Regan Books)

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Author profiles: John and Rick Wolff, The Harvard Boys

2007 title

I had an opportunity to pose a few questions about Harvard Boys with the father and son writing team of Rick and John Wolff, about life in the minors, parental advice, and the process of putting the book together. Their responses, via e-mail. : Bookshelf: John, knowing what your dad went through, the difficulties he […]

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Review: Harvard Boys: A Father and Son's Adventures Playing Minor League Basebll

2007 title

Skyhorse Publishing, 2007 Rick Wolff hosts a straightforward radio show about youth sports on WFAN in the New York market. Many is the time I almost reached for the phone to put in my two cents on the topic of the day or ask advice concerning my own child’s situation. So it was with great […]

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Baseball Card Awards: The Gummies

Bits and Pieces

Since we’re heading into awards season, this seemed appropriate:The Gummies, picking the best and worst baseball card-related items of the year. Unfortunately, there’s no explanation for the picks, nor a list of the other nominees that were in the running.

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Review: First Class Citizenship: The Civil Rights Letters of Jackie Robinson

2007 title

Edited by Michael G. Long. Times Books, 2007. By now, everyone — baseball fan or not — knows what a remarkable man Jackie Robinson was. In addition to his superior ability on the diamond and the responsibilities inherent in being the first African-American to break baseball’s notorious color line, he continued his work for civil […]

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Happy Birthday, Ray Chapman

Bits and Pieces

A sad reminder of a man cut down in the prime of life, the only major leaguer to die as a result of an injury sustained on the field. Chapman was hit in the head by submariner Carl Mays on August 16, 1920. His story was chronicled in The Pitch That Killed, written in 1989 […]

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Lest We Forget: Don Cardwell

Lest We Forget

I first really started getting into baseball in 1966; my first live game was aday camp trip where the Mets played the San Francisco Giants. Still have the scroecard in the attic. Don Cardwell was one of those “old”players. Regardless of his age — and he was only 31-34 during his years with the Mets […]

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Oxymoron: Sports experts?

Because I can...

At the risk of appearing heretical, this may seem like a football piece, but it applies to the sports broadcasting industry as a whole. Over the weekend, the local all-news radio station predicted 4-6 inches of snow from Sunday night into Monday morning. My daughter was excited at the possibility of a snow day or, […]

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