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Ted Williams is perhaps the most fascinating, the most
controversial - yes, and possibly the greatest - figure in American
sports history.A Only Babe Ruth, Muhammad Ali, and Michael Jordan
stand on a pedestal with him. It is sad that millions of young
people know only what they have read of his death.A This book is
not about his death.A It is about his life. Ted Williams was an
enigma, who just wouldn't fit into a mold.A The Boston press once
took a poll to name the least cooperative, most temperamental, most
generous, and most cooperative players on the Red Sox.A Williams
came in first in every category. I knew Ted Williams for 45 years,
beginning in 1957, and saw him play for 20, beginning in 1941.A
This has given me a unique box seat to this amazing chapter of
Americana.A To me he is the Beethoven and Monet of baseball. But
why another Ted Williams book? Ted is already the subject of a
large and growing hagiography of excellent and readable books.A His
own My Turn At Bat is one of the most engaging autobiographies in
sports literature.A I made a modest contribution in 1991 with The
Last 400 Hitter, about his magnificent season of 1941. Each
biography draws on different sources.A They are like the blind men
who clutch different parts of an elephant.A Each adds to the
mosaic, as each gropes to discover this ebullient yet elusive and
enigmatic man. In the present work I have tapped hitherto untapped
sources in hopes of presenting the most complete story yet
assembled of an amazing Renaissance man.A Based on half a century
of research, I have examined this many-sided genius from as many
new angles as possible, hoping to paint the Cromwellian portrait
that he himself would have wanted, warts and all. Ted and I spent
hours probing his memory for games and players now largely lost to
living memory. Beginning 20 years ago I also probed the memories of
dozens of men, many now gone, who played with and against
Ted Williams is perhaps the most fascinating, the most
controversial - yes, and possibly the greatest - figure in American
sports history.A Only Babe Ruth, Muhammad Ali, and Michael Jordan
stand on a pedestal with him. It is sad that millions of young
people know only what they have read of his death.A This book is
not about his death.A It is about his life. Ted Williams was an
enigma, who just wouldn't fit into a mold.A The Boston press once
took a poll to name the least cooperative, most temperamental, most
generous, and most cooperative players on the Red Sox.A Williams
came in first in every category. I knew Ted Williams for 45 years,
beginning in 1957, and saw him play for 20, beginning in 1941.A
This has given me a unique box seat to this amazing chapter of
Americana.A To me he is the Beethoven and Monet of baseball. But
why another Ted Williams book? Ted is already the subject of a
large and growing hagiography of excellent and readable books.A His
own My Turn At Bat is one of the most engaging autobiographies in
sports literature.A I made a modest contribution in 1991 with The
Last 400 Hitter, about his magnificent season of 1941. Each
biography draws on different sources.A They are like the blind men
who clutch different parts of an elephant.A Each adds to the
mosaic, as each gropes to discover this ebullient yet elusive and
enigmatic man. In the present work I have tapped hitherto untapped
sources in hopes of presenting the most complete story yet
assembled of an amazing Renaissance man.A Based on half a century
of research, I have examined this many-sided genius from as many
new angles as possible, hoping to paint the Cromwellian portrait
that he himself would have wanted, warts and all. Ted and I spent
hours probing his memory for games and players now largely lost to
living memory. Beginning 20 years ago I also probed the memories of
dozens of men, many now gone, who played with and against
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Maybe I'll Pitch Forever (Paperback)
Leroy Paige; Afterword by David Lipman; Introduction by John B. Holway
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R460
R431
Discovery Miles 4 310
Save R29 (6%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Satchel Paige was forty-two years old in 1948 when he became the
first black pitcher in the American League. Although the oldest
rookie around, he was already a legend. For twenty-two years,
beginning in 1926, Paige dazzled throngs with his performance in
the Negro Baseball Leagues. Then he outlasted everyone by playing
professional baseball, in and out of the majors, until 1965.
Struggle--against early poverty and racial discrimination--was part
of Paige's story. So was fast living and a humorous point of view.
His immortal advice was "Don't look back. Something might be
gaining on you."
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