Enshrinement in the Hall of Fame is the ultimate honor for major leaguers. This rousing oral history recounts stories of 17 players who came up just short: Virgil Trucks, Gene Woodling, Carl Erskine, and others.
Cooperstown, New York, in 1979 (the year Willie Mays was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame), is a close-knit community where gossip is sovereign and baseball is the great American religion.
Best known today as the Home of Baseball, Cooperstown and the Otsego Lake area are rich in history and, unlike many places, much of this heritage remains intact.
The Road to Cooperstown is a true story populated with colorful characters: a philanthropic family that launched the museum and uses its wealth to, among other things, ensure that McDonald's stays out of the turn-of-the-century downtown; ...
A memoir by the 1940s pitching sensation looks back at a career playing for thirteen teams in four countries from the 1940s to the 1960s.
Now, in The Cooperstown Casebook, Jay Jaffe shows us how to use his revolutionary ranking system to ensure the right players are recognized.
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Wecame up withtheidea to holdaspecial “AllStar Game,” like the one that was played each season between theAmerican and National Leagues, involving kidson the twomajor streets inour neighborhood—Ellsworth Drive and Daniel Boulevard.
The Chronicles of Cooperstown
The goal? To enshrine the first crowd-sourced artifact ever donated to the Hall. Part travelogue, part baseball history, part photo journal, this book tells the full story for the first time.
“I don't know if it's possible,” said Wilson, formerly the Mariners' team union representative. “I think baseballis in a lot of ways gifted by its traditions and how it holds onto its traditions. But sometimes it's cursed by that.