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As Lou Brock was chasing 3000 career hits late in the 1979
season-his last after 18 years in the majors-the St. Louis
Cardinals were looking for a new identity. Brock's departure
represented the final link to the team's glory years of the 1960s,
and a parade of new players now came in from the minor leagues.
With the Cardinals mired in last place by the following June, owner
August A. Busch, Jr., hired Whitey Herzog as field manager, and
shortly handed him the general manager's position, too. Herzog was
given free rein to rebuild the club to embrace the new running game
trend in the majors. With an aggressive style of play and an
unconventional approach to personnel moves, he catapulted the
Cardinals back into prominence and defined a new age of baseball in
St. Louis.
The era of free agency in Major League Baseball ensured that it
would be difficult to keep star teams together year after year. The
1976 Cincinnati Reds were one of the last to be considered a
"dynasty," and this book documents the season of one of the
greatest teams in baseball history. During the pursuit of a
second-straight world championship in 1976, the "Big Red Machine"
was fueled by all-time hits leader Pete Rose, slugger George
Foster, and all-stars Johnny Bench and Joe Morgan, as well as a
balanced pitching staff that had seven players notching
double-digit win totals. The 102-win regular season ended with
World Series sweep of the New York Yankees.
In 1953, August A. Busch purchased the St. Louis Cardinals for
nearly four million dollars. His dream included not only the best
players money could buy but a brand new Busch Stadium in downtown
St. Louis. The early sixties found Busch working on both, and by
May 1966, when the new Busch Stadium was opened, the St. Louis
Cardinals were on the cusp of greatness. A world championship would
follow in 1967, and in 1968 the Cardinals battled the Tigers in a
classic seven-game series, narrowly losing their bid for
back-to-back titles. This volume looks back at the outstanding
Cardinal teams of the 1967 and 1968 seasons. Beginning with the
ownership shift in the early 1950s, it examines the events leading
up to the opening of the new stadium and tracks the various player
trades, policy changes and inside dealings of baseball that
produced one of the era's great teams. The effects of Branch
Rickey's farm system on both the franchise's success and the sport
of baseball are discussed, as are the rumblings of labor trouble
that would directly involve one of the Cardinals' own. An appendix
contains detailed statistics from the 1967 and 1968 seasons. An
index and period photographs are also included.
With the recent success of the Gas House Gang as backdrop, the
National League prepared for the 1935 season. The United States was
still in the Great Depression, but executives in baseball predicted
a financial comeback during the year, and Chicago's ""windy""
politicians demanded a pennant-contending ballclub. Yes, there was
a time when the Cubs were expected to win. This book chronicles the
Cubs' 1935 season and the many on- and off-field events that
impacted the game for years to come: Fans who had once turned to
baseball for heroes and men of character now laughed at players'
uncouth antics and fun-loving carousing reported in the morning
newspapers; Babe Ruth debuted in the American League with the
Boston Braves, and retired soon after; the first major league night
game was played in Cincinnati; the chewing gum king was the first
to broadcast all of his team's games on the radio; and the Cubs won
21 games in a row in September to take the pennant - the last Cubs
team to win 100 games in a season.
Led by the colorful pitcher Dizzy Dean, the 1934 St. Louis
Cardinals personified Depression-era America. The players were
underpaid, wore uniforms that were almost always torn and dirty,
and had wandered into professional baseball from small towns in the
Midwest where other jobs were scarce. Despite their lack of
resources, however, and despite coming off two mediocre seasons,
the Cardinals emerged triumphant in '34, winning the pennant by two
games over the Giants and the World Series in seven games over the
Tigers. The book chronicles that championship team which came to be
known in baseball lore as the famous "Gas House Gang." This work
brings to life the legendary exploits of player manager Frankie
Frisch and the Dean brothers--Dizzy and Paul--who combined for 49
wins that season. The era, the team, the season, and the Series are
all fully covered.
For the St. Louis Cardinals and their fans, there was a great deal
of uncertainty going into the 1985 season. Only three years before,
the Cards had won the World Series, but were predicted to finish
last in the National League East Division by every major
publication. Manager Whitey Herzog was expected to rebuild his
team, drug abuse had cast a lingering shadow over the game, and a
players strike threatened to halt play. The situation looked bleak
for St. Louis but the season turned out to be nothing like the
predictions. The Cards found themselves in a battle for the
pennant. From beginning to end, that magical season is chronicled
here. The book recaps the 1982 championship season and provides
background information on Whitey Herzog and Gussie Buschs building
of the early 1980s Cards, Busch Stadium and its characteristics
particular to base running, and players of the era, including Ozzie
Smith and Willie McGee and pitchers Bob Forsch and Joaquin Andujar.
It then goes in-depth to discuss the Cards 1985 spring training and
season and the World Series.
Civil unrest at home, war abroad, and political uncertainty gripped
the nation as the 1970s approached. In the summer of 1969, as a
tumultuous decade of American history neared its end, Major League
Baseball presented sports fans with a thrilling distraction: a
pennant race that pitted the Chicago Cubs, those much-loved
perennial also-rans, against the defending National League champs,
the St. Louis Cardinals, and the upstart New York Mets. Miracle
Collapse is the story of how one of the most talented Cubs teams
ever to take the field-with Ernie Banks, Ron Santo, Billy Williams,
and ace pitcher Ferguson Jenkins among their ranks and led by the
irascible manager Leo Durocher-raced to an early division lead and
a seemingly certain pennant, only to unravel spectacularly at the
season's end. A time capsule in which baseball lore jockeys with
history, Doug Feldmann's book draws readers into the lives of these
legendary Cubs players and their fierce bond with the city of
Chicago. During this magical summer of baseball peaks and valleys,
life goes on: Durocher "disappears" for a few days before his
wedding; players leave the team midseason for National Guard duty;
play is interrupted to announce man's landing on the moon. It is
against this backdrop that Miracle Collapse captures a baseball
season for all time.
At the core of the educational transformation of American rural
schools in the early 1900s, there was the re-examination of the
rural school curriculum, preceded by the landmark meeting of the
Committee of Ten in 1893. Until 1900, formal education in most
rural areas was seen by many as an unneeded luxury, not necessary
for the manual labor of the farm, mill, mine, or other primary
employment sources of a given locale. Curriculum and the American
Rural School traces the origins of American school curriculum, and
subsequently contextualizes it within the history of rural school
curriculum in the United States since the mid-1800s. Doug Feldmann
examines modern issues pertinent to the rural school curriculum in
light of this history, and the actual solutions to these issues
that rural schools have discovered. Feldmann examines curriculum-
in all of its procedural and documentary forms- in a real-life,
contemporary rural school study, whereby the history and theory of
this discipline is revealed in a true-to-life form.
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