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The Cleveland Barons should never have existed. Born when the
National Hockey League's California Golden Seals-another team that
should never have existed-were transplanted to Cleveland in 1976
and greeted with apathy by the dwindling number of hockey fans in
northeastern Ohio, the Barons were an embarrassment to the city and
to the NHL. The only thing the team had going for them was the
state-of-the-art arena they played in, which was all but empty for
nearly every game they played. This book chronicles the Barons' two
regrettable seasons-a case study in what happens when an
ill-conceived professional sports team created in an expansion
splurge is moved, in an effort to save it, to a city that doesn't
really want it.
The book chronicles almost 300 in-season changes of managers in the
major leagues since 1900. It elaborates on the circumstances that
led to the change, whether it was a firing or a resignation and
includes, in many cases, remarks of the dismissed manager, the
manager who replaced him, and the executive (owner or general
manager) who orchestrated the change in managers. It then examines
how the team fared after the change. The purpose of the book is to
study the effects of the changes. How many had a positive impact,
how many had a negative impact, and how many had little if any
impact on the team's won-lost record.
The book is the day by day story of the 1954 Indians, whose .721
winning percentage is still the highest in American League history.
It tells how down the city of Cleveland was on the team following
three straight second place finishes, how little was expected of it
by its fans, and even some of its players, and how it exceeded all
expectations by winning a league-record 111 games and a pennant,
before flopping in the World Series.
During the Cleveland Indians' checkered 110-year history, only two
of its teams have brought home baseball's ultimate prize. While the
1948 team continues to be revered by Clevelanders, little has been
written about the 1920 team that won the city's first pennant and
World Series. Few, if any, World Series championship teams faced as
much adversity as did the 1920 Cleveland Indians. Among the
obstacles they faced during the season were the death of their star
pitcher's wife in May; the shadow of the Chicago ""Black Sox""
scandal; and the tragic deadly beaning of shortstop Ray Chapman,
the only fatal injury ever sustained by a major league player on
the field of play. This chronicle of that incredible season
highlights an overlooked chapter in history of one of baseball's
most beloved underdogs.
According to the National Football League, the 1972 Miami Dolphins
are the only undefeated, untied Super Bowl champions. But pro
football's first undefeated championship team was crowned in 1948,
when the Cleveland Browns won their third straight All-America
Football Conference title with a record of 15 victories, no losses
and no ties. They were led by Hall of Fame head coach Paul Brown,
whose methods revolutionized the game and influenced every coach
who followed. On the field, the '48 Browns' roster featured six
future Hall of Famers, including Marion Motley and Bill Willis, who
broke pro football's color barrier with the first snap of the 1946
season.
This book tells the story of the All-America Football Conference,
which was the only challenger to the NFL (except for the American
Football League of the 1960s) to survive more than two seasons in
competition with the established league. It takes a brief look at
all of the NFL's challengers (and would-be challengers) from
1926-1945, and then explains how the All-America Conference
overcame obstacles that proved too difficult for others and opened
the season of 1946 with teams on the east coast, in the Midwest, on
the west coast, and in the deep South, making it a truly
"All-American" enterprise. The story of each season, and
off-season, is told in detail. The AAFC ultimately failed to
achieve its goal of a peaceful co-existence with the NFL, and to
this day the establishment prefers to ignore its memory. But two of
the AAFC's teams, the Cleveland Browns and San Francisco 49ers,
which we absorbed by the NFL in 1950, are still in business. The
AAFC left behind four exciting seasons of football, some memorable
games, and many great players, whose legacies shouldn't be buried
beneath the sands of time.
This is the Full UK version of the popular young readers novel
Pasha and the Lost Mountain. Have you ever imagined while looking
at your pet, what if they had a secret life fighting evil magicians
in a mystical world. For Tiffany and Peter no imagination was
necessary. When they adopted Pasha and Harold they had no idea
their lovable hounds had an inherited destiny to fulfill. A Destiny
that would see them become warriors for a magical group of inter
dimensional overseers looking out for the human race. When their
pre-teen masters discover their secret life and magical powers
things really get interesting. One things for sure. This
globe-trotting high stakes adventure has plenty of bite. Filled
with mystical characters and spells a plenty. Follow the warrior
group as they battle to maintain the balance of good and evil in
this imaginative first entry in the Pasha series.
A report on the seasons of excavation at the site of Duos Nuraghes
in the Borore region of Sardinia. Chosen because it represented a
non-elite, typical village settlement, rather than one of the
large, impressive elite nuraghi that normally steal the limelight,
Webster presents the evidence from the site. The structures
uncovered represented a growth in the architectural complexity of
Borore settlements through time and Webster speculates on the
possible functions of the different building types.
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