Major League Baseball was in crisis in 1968. The commissioner was inept, professional football was challenging the sport’s popularity and the game on the field was boring, with pitchers dominating hitters in a succession of dull, low-scoring games. The major league expanded for the 1969 season but the muddled process by which new franchises were selected highlighted the ineffective management of the sport. This book describes how baseball reached its nadir in the late 1960s and how it survived and began its slow comeback. The lack of offense in the game is examined, taking in the great pitching performances of Denny McLain, Bob Gibson, Don Drysdale and others. Colorful characters like Charley Finley and Ken Harrelson are covered, along with the effects that dramatic changes in American society and the war in Vietnam had on the game.
He denied betting on baseball even after the attorney John Dowd produced seven volumes of evidence that convinced Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti to ban Pete Rose for life. (Dowd would reemerge in the public eye three decades later as ...
The epic World Series between the Yankees and the Dodgers and the six men whose lives were changed forever.
Recounting his stormy tenure as coach of the Holmdel Athletic Association league's baseball team for children ages 6 to 8, a New Jersey family man discusses his adventures with lively kids and unpredictable parents. National ad/promo.
Novitzky tried and failed to make Lute Olson's University of Arizona basketball team, then came home to play backup forward and teammate to his big brother at San Jose State.
No one questioned Fielder, though. He had hit ninety-five home runs and won back-toback RBI titles in the two seasons since his return from the Land of the Rising Sun. Fielder was six feet three and weighed at least 240 pounds.
The inside story of how the Dodgers won their first championship in more than thirty years—but helped cripple the sport of baseball in the process After years of frustrating playoff runs, the Los Angeles Dodgers finally reclaimed the ...
As the country reached a boiling point, so did baseball - and after 1941, neither would ever be the same.Through extensive archival photographs and thrilling accounts of the game and the country that became obsessed with it, Martin W. ...
In June 1991 , the San Diego Padres ' first pick in the free agent amateur draft was a right - handed pitcher from Georgia Southern University named Joey Hamilton . He was represented by Scott Boras , the California - based agent and ...
A New York Times best-selling sportswriter takes readers deep within the secretive inner-workings of the minor leagues through the stories of eight men who are living on the cusp of the dream—some of who have tasted major league success ...
named Mike Dunn. He jogged in to warm up while the umpire called the two coaches together for a chat. Dunn threw his last warm-up pitch, and Matt stepped in. His first pitch was a breaking ball that was way outside, making the count 2–0 ...