Saturday, November 27, 2010

From Acta Sports Publishers - Winners

"Traded" by Doug Decatur ($19.95,189 pages) is as its sub-title proclaims "Inside the Most Lopsided Trades In Baseball History." We are there for Nolan Ryan for Jim Fregosi, Rick Wise for Steve Carlton, Dave Kingman for Randy Stein and the worst of the worst Babe Ruth for cash. Loaded with insight, stats, concise reporting - if inside baseball is your game, this is the tome to treasure.

More limited in its scope but still a worthwhile read is "Go-Go to Glory" edited by Don Zminda ($19.95, 247 pages). The focus is the 1959 ChiSox - a team that featured speed and pitching, the peripatetic owner Bill Veeck and the brilliant manager Al Lopez and players like Luis Aparicio, Larry Doby, "Jungle Jim" Landis, Billy Pierce and Early Wynn.
"The Fielding Bible, Volume II" by John Dewan ($23.95, 400 pages) is a mother lode of facts and figures, analyses and observations - all focused on defense, an overlooked area of baseball efficiency and importance. The statistical sports analyst is at the top of his game in "The Fielding Bible, Volume II." HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

"After Many A Summer" by Robert E. Murphy (Union Square, $24.95,418 pages) is a book that has much content that is strangely familiar as it re-tells one more time the tale of the leave-taking of the Dodgers of Brooklyn and the Giants of Manhattan from their long time residence as baseball teams in the Big Apple.

For those with an interest in football (soccer), for those with an interest in a well told tale, "Carlo Ancelotti" by "Carlo Ancelotti" with Alessandro Alciato (Rizzoli New York, $25.00, 264 pages, 35 photographs) fits the bill. The former star player, the famed coach of top teams in Italy and England, the outspoken Ancelotti touches all bases in this illuminating autobiography. There is something to learn on each page about "the beautiful game" and the man some call "the ordinary genius." TOP DRAWER.

Baseball Names and How They Got That Way! - - S (Part I)

The words and phrases are spoken and written day after day, year after year - generally without any wonderment as to how they became part of the language. All have a history, a story. For those of you who liked Part I, Part II, Part III, X, XV and all the others and wanted more, here is more, just a sampling. As always, reactions and suggestions always welcome. And bear in mind - - this is by no means a complete list.

SAD SAM JONES The former pitcher earned the nickname "Sad Sam" or "Sad Sam the Cemetery Man," for his somber demeanor, SAILOR BOB Bob Shawkey spent most of 1918 in the Navy as a yeoman petty officer aboard the battleship Arkansas.


ST. LOUIS CARDINALS Originally, during the Gay Nineties, the St. Louis National League baseball entry was known as the Browns. Then they were known as the Perfectos. That was a misnomer, for in the years 1892-99 they finished 12th three times, 11th three times, tenth once, ninth once, and eighth once. In 1899 their owner, Chris Von Der Ahe, decided that perhaps a new look in uniforms might help. The team was outfitted in flashy new fabric accentuated with red trim and red stockings. From the new look came the new name--The Cardinals.

SAN DIEGO PADRES For the Spanish word for priest, inspired by the padres of the Roman Catholic Mission San Diego de Alcala.

SANITARIES Athletic hose.

SATCHEL The immortal pitcher Leroy Paige received his nickname when he was seven years old. Back then he carried passengers' small bags, known as satchels, at the local railroad station in his hometown of Mobile, Alabama. Paige was a long-time star in the Negro Leagues - there are estimates that he pitched for 33 years and won more than 2,000 games. Traveling all over the world to play baseball - by car, by bus, by train, some day also by horse and carriage - wherever there was a game the lanky hurler was there. His nick-name came from the fact that most of those years he lived out of his "satchel" or suitcase. Paige was proud of his nick-name and even wore it on his uniform.
A bone-thin 6'3" with size 12 flat feet, he billed himself as "The World's Greatest Pitcher." Paige claimed that his real secret of success stemmed from the fact that "even though I got old, my arm stayed 19." He was vigorously opposed to exercise. "I believe in training," he joked, "by rising up and down gently from the bench." Paige's rules for successful living were: 1-Avoid fried meats which angry up the blood. 2-If your stomach disputes you, lie down and pacify it with cool thoughts. 3-Keep your juices flowing by jangling around gently as you move. 4-Go very gently on the vices such as carrying on in society - the social ramble ain't restful. 5-Avoid running at all times. 6-Don't look back, something might be gaining on you. Through all the long and difficult years in the Negro Leagues, Paige Hungered for a shot at the majors. The Cleveland Indians needed extra pitching and their owner Bill Veeck was interested in Paige. As the story goes, Veeck wanted to test Paige's control before signing him to a contract. Allegedly Veeck placed a cigarette on the ground - a simulation of home plate. Paige took aim. Five fastballs were fired -all but one sailed directly over the cigarette. Paige got his contract! On July 9, 1948, Leroy Robert Paige arrived on the major league baseball scene as a rookie pitcher for the Cleveland Indians. He gave his official age as "42???" to owner Bill Veeck. His exact age was always clouded in mystery and rarely did he answer questions about it. And when he did, he quipped: "Age is a question of mind over matter. If you don't mind, it doesn't matter But he definitely was the oldest rookie ever to play in the majors.
On 1948, Satchel won six games lost only one, compiled a fine 2.48 earned run average and helped pitch the Indians to the pennant and World Series victory that year. Three years later Veeck was re-united with Paige this time with the St. Louis Browns. Satchel passed the time away relaxing in his own personal rocking chair in the bullpen when he was not pitching. There were appearances in the All-Star games of 1952 and 1953. And then he was done - for a time.
In 1965, a year that would have made him 59 years old based on his "official birthday" ( July 7, 1906 Mobile, Alabama) - he pitched three shutout innings for the Kansas City Athletics to become the oldest man to pitch in a major league game. It was the last time he took the mound. In 1971, on what he called the proudest day of his life, Leroy "Satchel" Paige was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame. He was the first player ever elected from the Negro Leagues.
Satchel Paige passed away on June 8, 1982 in Kansas City, Missouri. But stories of what he said and did have grown through the years, as the man has become both a myth and a legend. It is like the big fish story - the size of the fish caught grows bigger each time the teller of the tale speaks.
Nevertheless, Paige had the right stuff, hyperbole notwithstanding. Satchel reportedly began his professional career in 1926 and was an immediate gate attraction with his dazzling variety of pitches, and words for every occasion. He played baseball year round, often pitching two games a day in two different cities in the Negro Leagues. Joining the Pittsburgh Crawfords during the early 1930's, Satch was 32-7 and 31-4 in 1932 and 1933, respectively. But his time with the team was always interrupted by salary disputes. In those instances, Paige would go on barnstorming gigs for more money and compete against all levels of competition including top major league players.
He played in the Dominican Republic and then Mexico, where he developed a sore arm. In 1938, he signed with the Kansas City Monarchs and his arm was better than ever.
With the Monarchs, Paige had his complete pitching arsenal on display. He had a wide breaking curve ball, and his famous "hesitation pitch" that came out of a windup that looked like slow motion. He also had a "bee-ball," a "jump-ball," a "trouble-ball," a "long-ball" and other pitches without names that he made up as he went along. Satchel pitched the Monarchs to four-straight Negro American League pennants (1939-42), accentuated by a clean sweep of the powerful Homestead Grays in the 1942 Negro League World Series. Satchel won three of the games in that series. In 1946, he helped pitch the Monarchs to their fifth pennant during his time with the team. Satchel also pitched in five East-West Black All-Star games.
In his time he graced, and dressed up, the rosters of the Birmingham Black Barons, the Baltimore Black Sox, the Cleveland Cubs, the Pittsburgh Crawfords, the Kansas City Monarchs, the New York Black Yankees, the Memphis Red Sox, and the Philadelphia Stars.
His career spanned five decades. In his time he was acknowledged as the greatest pitcher in the history of the Negro Leagues. It was a time when he had a string of 64 consecutive scoreless innings, and a stretch of 21 straight wins. It was also a time when some saw Paige bring his outfielders in and have them sit behind the mound while he proceeded to strike out the side, and when some commented on how he intentionally walked the bases loaded so that he could pitch to Josh Gibson, black baseball's best hitter.
It was a time when there were the "out-of-thin-air-you-had-to-be-there-" stories: Paige and his habit of striking out the first nine batters he faced in exhibition games; Paige and his firing twenty straight pitches across a chewing gum wrapper - a very mini-home plate; Paige throwing so hard that the ball disappeared before it reached the catcher's mitt.
The man they called "World's Greatest Pitcher" had a lot to say about his craft.
"I never threw an illegal pitch. The trouble is, once in a while I would toss one that ain't never been seen by this generation. Just take the ball and throw it where you want to. Throw strikes. Home plate don't move."
"They said I was the greatest pitcher they ever saw...I couldn't understand why they couldn't give me no justice."
Joe DiMaggio called him "the best and fastest pitcher I've ever faced."


SAY HEY Both a greeting and a nickname--and also a condition--this term belonged to Willie Mays. Regarded by many as the greatest player baseball has ever known (and in 1979, voted into the Hall of Fame), Mays pounded 660 homers and over 3,000 hits (better than a hit a game), scored over 2,000 runs, drew nearly 1,500 walks, drove in nearly 2,000 runs, and compiled a lifetime batting average of .302. The image of Mays in a Giants uniform stealing a base, hitting the ball out of the park, racing back to make a sensational catch running out from under his cap--all underscore the verve of the man they called the Say Hey Kid. (Say Hey Kid) Willie Howard Mays was born on May 6, 1931 in Westfield, Alabama. The New York Giants called him up on the 15th of May in 1951 from Minneapolis in the American Association. He was bating .477 after 35 games.
Garry Schumacher, publicist for the Giants at that time, recalled the first time he ever saw Mays. "The Giants were on their way from Chicago to Philadelphia to conclude the last three games of a road trip," Schumacher said. "I was by the front door of the Giants' office on Times Square. Suddenly, this kid comes in. There were always a lot of kids coming around; some of them wanted tickets and some wanted tryouts. He was carrying a few bats in one hand and a bag in the other that contained his glove and spikes. He was wearing the most unusual cap I ever saw, plaid colored. When I found out who he was, we bought him some clothes and then sent him to Philadelphia to join the club. He was wearing the new clothes when he left, but funny thing - he refused to take off that funny cap.
He made his major league debut with the Giants on May 25, 1951. But his start in the majors after just 116 minor leagues games was a shaky one. He was hitless in his first 12 at-bats, cried in the dugout and said, "I am not ready for this". He begged manager Leo Durocher to send him back down to the minors.
But "Leo the Lip" refused to listen to the pleas of the rookie center fielder just as another Giant manager John J. McGraw had refused to send a youthful Mel Ott to the minors.
"You're my center fielder as long as I am the manager of this team," Durocher said. "You're the best center fielder I have ever seen."
Mays' first home run was off the great Warren Spahn. He hit it over the roof of the Polo Grounds.
"We had a meeting of the pitchers," Spahn recalls. "We knew Mays was having trouble. I'll never forgive myself. We might have gotten rid of Willie forever if I'd only struck him out."
In Pittsburgh's old Forbes Field, Rocky Nelson blasted a drive 457 feet to deep dead center. Galloping back, Mays realized as his feet hit the warning track that the ball was hooking to his right side. The ball was sinking and Mays could not reach across his body to glove the drive. So just as the ball got to his level, Mays stuck out his bare hand and made the catch. It was an incredible feat.
Durocher told all the Giants to give Mays the silent treatment when he returned to the dugout. But Pittsburgh's General Manager Branch Ricky sent the Giant rookie a hastily written note: "That was the finest catch I have ever seen ... and the finest I ever expect to see".
There is that catch and so many others. There are also the images of Mays playing stickball in the streets of Harlem with neighborhood kids, running out from under his cap pursuing a fly ball, pounding one of his 660 career home runs, playing the game with a verve, a gusto, and an attitude that awed those who were around him.
"Willie could do everything from the day he joined the Giants," Durocher recalled.
"Everybody loved him," notes his former teammate Monte Irvin. "He was a rare talent. Having him on your team playing center field gave us confidence. We figured that if a ball stayed in the park, he could catch it."
Mays was The Natural. He led the NL in slugging percentage five times. He won the home run crown four times. Twice, he won the NL MVP Award. "He lit up a room when he came in," Durocher said. The superstar of superstars, the man they called the "Say Hey Kid" was on the scene for 22 major-league seasons. He is all over the record book and in the memory of so many baseball fans.


SAY IT AIN'T SO, JOE This often-repeated question, used frequently in song and story, had its origins in the emotions of a little boy. After the 1919 Chicago "Black Sox" World Series scandal, a lad walked up to Shoeless Joe Jackson, one of the accused players. The boy posed the above question to his idol (see BLACK SOX and SHOELESS JOE).


SCHONOZZ His given name was Ernesto Natali Lombardi, but all knew him as. Ernie. The Hall of Fame catcher had a big nose and liked to play bocci.

SCHOOLBOY WONDER Waite Hoyt made his major league debut in 1918 when he was a teenager. He struck out two of the three batters he faced.

SCOOTER, THE Phil Rizzuto pedaled about at shortstop for 13 years as a member of the New York Yankees. His small stature (5'6", 150 pounds) and his agile ways in the field earned him his nickname coined by Mel Allen the first time he saw the little man run he said, "Man, you're not running, your scootin'." (see "HOLY COW" ).

SCRAP IRON Former Houston player and current manager, Phil Garner, for his feisty ways.

SCRATCH FOR RUNS To have difficulty in scoring.

SCRATCH HIT A questionable hit that barely enables a runner to reach base safely.

SCREWBALL A seemingly straight pitch which unexpectedly swerves to the right (when thrown by a right-handed pitcher) or to the left (when thrown by a left-handed pitcher) (SCROOGIE)., Also oddball player.

SEATTLE MARINERS The franchise name reflects the nautical heritage of Washington State.

SECOND PLACE JOE Joe McCarthy's three straight second-place finishes prompted the nickname before the Yanks won four consecutive world championships, 936-39. The name was also used when he was manager of the Cubs and had some disappointing second place finishes.

SENATOR Steve Garvey projected his Mr. Clean image to the nation in a TV interview before the 1974 World Series when he explained that his nickname, Senator, referred to his post-baseball political aspirations.



In 2011, Harvey Frommer will be in his 36th year of writing sports books. A noted oral historian and sports journalist, the author of 40 sports books including the classics: "New York City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," his acclaimed REMEMBERING YANKEE STADIUM, an oral/narrative history was published in 2008 as well as a reprint version of his classic "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball." Frommer's newest work REMEMBERING FENWAY PARK: AN ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY OF THE HOME OF RED SOX NATION (Abrams) is set for March 2011.

FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a readership in the millions and is housed on Internet search engines for extended periods of time.

FOLLOW Harvey on Twitter: http://twitter.com/south2nd

Saturday, November 20, 2010

BOOK REVIEW: “Bill James Handbook” and Others for Hot Stove Reading

A sure sign of the baseball off-season is all of the moves – intelligent and ridiculous that take place. Case in point ESPN’s removal of two Hall of Fame broadcasters – Joe Morgan and Jon Miller. With all the C- types calling and analyzing sporting events in abundance (even on ESPN) Miller and Morgan were A+. Experienced, insightful, easy to love. Sunday nights during the baseball season will not be the same without them.

But we still have the worthy Bill James plying his trade. The newest “Bill James Handbook” (Acta Sports, $24.95, 500 pages plus, paper) is the essential annual wrap on all things baseball. James delivers the Fielding Bible award, Baseball Park indices, hitter and pitcher projections. A mother lode of national pastime material – go for it.

From Skyhorse Publishing comes yet another book on the old Yankee Stadium – “Lasting Yankee Stadium Memories” edited by Alex Belth ($19.95, 232 pages) with many of the usual suspects recounting their fav “House That Ruth Built” memories.

Still is a Yankee frame of mind is “Perfect” by Lew Paper (NAL, trade paperback reprint, $15.00, 421 pages). Larsen’s gem lives again in these pages.

“Rise of a Dynasty” ($24.95,293 pages) is another worthy from NAL. Penned by the esteemed Bill Reynolds, its focus is on the winning of the first banner by the 1957 Boston Celtics. Rewarding reading.

“The Greatest Game” by Todd Denault (McClelland and Stewart, $29.99, 336 pages) is nostalgic sports history at its best - -December 31, 1975, the Montreal Canadiens at the top o their game then matched against the touring Central Red Army team, most powerful entry from Russia. The game ended in a 3-3 tie, but more important triggered hockey’s global expansion. Must Read

For those with an interest in football (soccer), for those with an interest in a well told tale, “Carlo Ancelotti” by “Carlo Ancelotti” with Alessandro Alciato (Rizzoli New York, $25.00, 264 pages, 35 photographs) fits the bill. The former star player, the famed coach of top teams in Italy and England, the outspoken Ancelotti touches all bases in this illuminating autobiography. There is something to learn on each page about “the beautiful game” and the man some call “the ordinary genius.” TOP DRAWER

Harvey Frommer is in his 34th consecutive year of writing sports books. A noted oral historian and sports journalist, the author of 41 sports books including the classics: "New York City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," his acclaimed Remembering Yankee Stadium, an oral/narrative history (Abrams, Stewart, Tabori and Chang) was published in 2008 as well as a reprint version of his classic "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball." Frommer's newest work CELEBRATING FENWAY PARK: AN ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY OF THE HOME OF RED SOX NATION is next.
FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a readership in the millions and is housed on Internet search engines for extended periods of time.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Baseball Names and How They Got That Way! - - R



The words and phrases are spoken and written day after day, year after year - generally without any wonderment as to how they became part of the language. All have a history, a story. For those of you who liked Part I, Part II, Part III, X, XV and all the others and wanted more, here is more, just a sampling. As always, reactions and suggestions always welcome. And bear in mind - - this is by no means a complete list.

RAGIN’ CAJUN Ron Guidry, for temperament and Louisiana roots.

RAGS Dave Righetti, abbreviation for his name

RAJAH, THE Baseball Hall of Famer Rogers Hornsby had a lifetime batting average of .358 and was one of the few men in baseball history to bat .400 three times. Hornsby gained his nickname through what some claimed was a contemptuous pronunciation of his first name—a less-than-appealing reference to his petulant personality. One of the greatest hitters of all time, Hornsby would not go to the movies or read newspapers for fear of straining his keen vision and thus marring his ability to select the right pitches to swing at. He was a regal and special talent and personality.

RAPID ROBERT Hall of Famer Bob Feller pitched for the Cleveland Indians for 18 seasons, winning 266 games. In his major league debut, on August 23, 1936, the Van Meter, lowa, farm boy, then 17 years old, struck out the first eight men to face him and then seven more, for a total of 15—one short of the then-league record. The blazing speed and power he was able to put on his fastball earned him his nickname. The 12 one-hitters and three no-hitters that Feller recorded in his career helped earn him his reputation as one of baseball's premier hurlers.

READING RIFLE, THE Carl Furillo played 15 years for the Dodgers and for most of those years was a virtual fixture in right field. He was born in Stony Creek Mills, Pennsylvania, close to Reading, and this, coupled with the power of his throwing arm, earned him his nickname. He was also known as Skoonj, a corruption of the word scungilli, which was a favorite dish of the Italian-American player.

RED ROOSTER Doug Rader, for red hair and rooster-like behavior.

REG-GER-00 name given by Howard Cosell to Reggie Jackson, an endearing reference.

RHINO Roy Hitt, a squat, 5-10, 200-pound pitcher for Cincinnati in the early 1900s, his shape reminded people of a rhinoceros

ROAD GRAYS Away uniform, non white these days.

ROAD RUNNER II Even nicknames have been protected by the law. The Atlanta Braves signed an agreement with Warner Brothers that granted the Braves the right to call one of their baseball players by this name after the cartoon character. The agreement made it illegal for any other athlete to use the name.

ROCKET Roger Clemens, for the speed and power of his fastball.

ROOF SHOT Home run that lands in the upper deck of a ballpark.

ROOT Yankee owner Jake Ruppert's way of (mis)pronouncing Babe Ruth’s surname.

RUBBERARM As a starter and reliever, 1915-1919, Alan Russell never turned his back on a chance to pitch.

RUPPERT RIFLE The Yankees in owner Jake Ruppert's tenure.

RUTHVILE Yankee Stadium beachers in right-center where Babe Ruth hit home runs

RHUBARD Noisy or heated argument on the field.

ROCK Tim Raines, for his rock-solid build and dependability. Earl Averill earned this nickname for consistent play and a solid physical build. "Popeye," "Rockhead were other Averill nicknames for his physical appearance.

ROLAIDS RELIEF MAN AWARD given to a relief pitcher in each league for outstanding performance; sponsored by Rolaids since 1976.

"ROOTING FOR THE NEW YORK YANKEES IS LIKE ROOTING FOR GENERAL MOTORS" During the 1950's the New York Yankees, powered by Mickey Mantle, Whitey Ford, Phil Rizzuto, Allie Reynolds, Jerry Coleman, Yogi Berra, Eddie Lopat, Elston Howard, Bill Skowron, and others, won eight World Series. They seemed to get better, to acquire more and more talent each year, to win with amazing regularity—even monotony. This line attributed to an anti-Yankee—and perhaps an anti-corporate Giant— fan, underscored the mechanical, profitable winning ways of the New York team.

RUBE Rube Waddell earned the nickname "Rube" because he was a big, fresh kid, country kid as a rookie. That was a term used to refer to farmboys. The lefthanded hurler went on to become a Hall of Famer.

THE RUNNING REDBIRD Lou Brock earned this for his base stealing skills as a member of the St. Louis Cardinals.

THE RYAN EXPRESS Nolan Ryan, star fastballer picked up the nickname from a movie of that name in his era. Strong fingers and wrists were part of the reason for Ryan's great success. A tremendous work ethic was another. Nolan had 992,040 votes to rank first among all pitchers on the All-Century team. He was followed by Sandy Koufax (970,434), Cy Young (867,523), Roger Clemens (601,244), Bob Gibson (582,031). That's elite company. One can only wonder what went through Nolan's mind out there on the field next to Bob Gibson, Hank Aaron, and Sandy Koufax. Aaron was one of Ryan's idols in his growing up years, and Koufax was a pitcher he truly admired.
"One Sunday between my junior and senior years in high school we went to see the Houston Colt .45's play the Los Angeles Dodgers. Sandy Koufax was pitching, and I was a big Koufax fan. It was the first time I had ever seen Sandy pitch. I was truly amazed at how fast he was and how good a curveball he had. I think he was the most overpowering pitcher I had ever seen."
The all time strikeout record belongs to Nolan now. But once upon a time, and for a long period, it belonged to Walter Johnson who finished in sixth-place in the voting for pitchers with 479,279 votes.

One day early in the 1969 season, Nolan was sitting in the Mets' dugout when Jim Bunning recorded his 2,500th strikeout. He asked Tom Seaver what the all-time record for strikeouts was and was told that it was 3,508 and held by Walter Johnson.
"That Johnson record will probably stand forever," Ryan told Seaver. Baseball fans know it didn't. Nolan broke it, and is the all-time strikeout leader with 5,714. That Ryan record will probably stand forever, as will a few other records Nolan picked up along the way.

He holds the record for most strikeouts in a major league season with 383, which he set while playing for the Angels in 1973. He struck out 100 in a season 24 times, another record. He also set the record for most consecutive seasons with 100 or more strikeouts, doing it 23 time in a row. He also holds the record for most career no-hitters with seven.

RYNO Ryne Sandberg, former star of the Chicago Cubs, an abbreviation of his given name and an acknowledgment of his grit.

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

"Bill James Handbook" and Others for Hot Stove Reading

BOOK REVIEW

A sure sign of the baseball off-season is all of the moves ­ intelligent and ridiculous that take place. Case in point ESPN's removal of two Hall of Fame broadcasters ­ Joe Morgan and Jon Miller. With all the C- types calling and analyzing sporting events in abundance (even on ESPN) Miller and Morgan were A+. Experienced, insightful, easy to love. Sunday nights during the baseball season will not be the same without them.


But we still have the worthy Bill James plying his trade. The newest "Bill James Handbook" (Acta Sports, $24.95, 500 pages plus, paper) is the essential annual wrap on all things baseball. James delivers the Fielding Bible award, Baseball Park indices, hitter and pitcher projections. A mother lode of national pastime material ­ go for it.

From Skyhorse Publishing comes yet another book on the old Yankee Stadium ­ "Lasting Yankee Stadium Memories" edited by Alex Belth ($19.95, 232 pages) with many of the usual suspects recounting their fav "House That Ruth Built" memories.

Still is a Yankee frame of mind is "Perfect" by Lew Paper (NAL, trade paperback reprint, $15.00, 421 pages). Larsen's gem lives again in these pages.

"Rise of a Dynasty" ($24.95,293 pages) is another worthy from NAL. Penned by the esteemed Bill Reynolds, its focus is on the winning of the first banner by the 1957 Boston Celtics. Rewarding reading.
"The Greatest Game" by Todd Denault (McClelland and Stewart, $29.99, 336 pages) is nostalgic sports history at its best - -December 31, 1975, the Montreal Canadiens at the top o their game then matched against the touring Central Red Army team, most powerful entry from Russia. The game ended in a 3-3 tie, but more important triggered hockey's global expansion. Must Read

For those with an interest in football (soccer), for those with an interest in a well told tale, "Carlo Ancelotti" by "Carlo Ancelotti" with Alessandro Alciato (Rizzoli New York, $25.00, 264 pages, 35 photographs) fits the bill. The former star player, the famed coach of top teams in Italy and England, the outspoken Ancelotti touches all bases in this illuminating autobiography. There is something to learn on each page about "the beautiful game" and the man some call "the ordinary genius." TOP DRAWER




Harvey Frommer is in his 34th consecutive year of writing sports books. A noted oral historian and sports journalist, the author of 41 sports books including the classics: "New York City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," his acclaimed Remembering Yankee Stadium, an oral/narrative history (Abrams, Stewart, Tabori and Chang) was published in 2008 as well as a reprint version of his classic "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball." Frommer's newest work CELEBRATING FENWAY PARK: AN ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY OF THE HOME OF RED SOX NATION is next.
FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a readership in the millions and is housed on Internet search engines for extended periods of time.
Follow Harvey on Twitter: http://twitter.com/south2nd



Monday, November 01, 2010

BOOK REVIEW "Glory In The Fall," "When the Game Changed" and More . . .

Any book with the name Peter Golenbock on it has a special quality to it and "Glory In The Fall" is no exception (Union Square/Sterling, $22.95, 406 pages). The prolific Golenbock edited this collection of riveting reads by Roger Kahn, Eliot Asinof, Peter Gammons, Jim Murray and others on the greatest moments in World Series history. Timely, worth the price, historical and deserving of place on your sports bookshelf, "Glory In The Fall" homers.

Another worthy tome is "When the Game Changed" by George Castle (Lyons Press, $24.95, 327 pages). It is what the author calls "an oral history of baseball's true golden age." I would argue with him over that label but not over the contents of his book. Castle gives full disclosure acknowledging that some of his "testimony" goes back as far as 1994. "When the Game Changed" has a decided Chicago flavor ­ Ferguson Jenkins, Bruce Sutter, Lou Piniella, to name a few. Highly recommended reading ­ a time machine of a book.

"Jackie's Gift" by Sharon Robinson illustrated by E.B. Lewis (Viking, $16.99,coffee table sized and geared to Ages 3-5) is a grand slammer functioning as it does as a true story of Christmas, Hanukkah and Jackie Robinson. The author, the daughter of the man who broke baseball's color line, tells the story of her father getting ready for his first Christmas in Brooklyn in a house on Tilden Avenue that I knew well.

A couple of doors away from the Robinsons were the Satlows who befriended the new family on the block against the prejudice of other neighbors. To repay the kindness of that family, Jackie Robinson bought them a Christmas tree only to learn the Satlows didn't celebrate Christmas because they were Jewish. The Robinsons and the Satlows continue to maintain a lifelong relationship.That is the slim plot line of a book that is just perfect for the holiday season, one carefully crafted in its writing and expertly illustrated. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED

WORTH CHECKING OUT:
"Irish Thunder" by Bob Halloran (Lyons Press, $24.95, 296 pages) is as its sub-title proclaims about boxer Mickey Ward's hard life and times.

"Staubach" by Carlton Stowers (Triumph, $24.95, 256 pages) is an depth look at the life and times of the Hall of Fame quarterback.

"A Passion to Win" by Lou Nanne with Jim Bruton (Triumph, $24.95, 296 pages) is the in depth autobiography of the celebrated hockey icon in his various and highly successful roles on and off the rink.

And also from Triumph "You Can't Catch Sunshine" by Don Maynard and Matthew Shepatin is all about the noted wide receiver and Hall of Famer.




Harvey Frommer is in his 34th consecutive year of writing sports books. A noted oral historian and sports journalist, the author of 41 sports books including the classics: "New York City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," his acclaimed Remembering Yankee Stadium, an oral/narrative history (Abrams, Stewart, Tabori and Chang) was published in 2008 as well as a reprint version of his classic "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball." Frommer's newest work CELEBRATING FENWAY PARK: AN ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY OF THE HOME OF RED SOX NATION is next.
FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a readership in the millions and is housed on Internet search engines for extended periods of time.