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Between December 28, 1975 and January 11, 1976, a groundbreaking
hockey event took place: Super Series '76. Eight National Hockey
League clubs each hosted a single exhibition game against one of
two touring teams from the USSR: Central Red Army or Wings of the
Soviet. Officially nothing was at stake, but serious hockey fans
realized that a Cold War clash of political ideologies was
occurring on North American ice surfaces. The top pro teams would
finally meet the best "amateurs" from the Soviet Elite League. The
reputations of the NHL and Soviet hockey were both on the line.
Canadians already knew how strong the Soviets were, based on the
eye-opening experiences of both countries' hockey stars in the 1972
and 1974 Summit Series. For many Americans, however, the talents of
the exotic, Eastern Bloc visitors provided a stunning revelation.
This book outlines the history of the intense Canada-USSR hockey
rivalry that preceded Super Series '76 and focuses on those eight
captivating games in New York, Pittsburgh, Montreal, Buffalo,
Boston, Chicago, Long Island and Philadelphia. Two of these
contests are still widely discussed today for vastly different
reasons. One may have been the greatest hockey game ever played.
The 1972 World Series was a terrific clash between two rising Major
League franchises, the Oakland A's and the Cincinnati Reds. Neither
had won the pennant in decades. Twice removed from their original
home in Philadelphia and unappreciated in Oakland, the A's quietly
played excellent ball, their long hair and mustaches symbols of
rebellion. Led by manager Sparky Anderson, the clean-cut
Reds--baseball's most conservative club--were becoming a powerhouse
and were the favorites entering the Series. This book chronicles
both the A's and the Reds' journeys to the memorable '72 Fall
Classic--where six of seven games were won by a single run--with
batter-by-batter coverage of the diamond exploits of Bench, Perez,
Rose, Rudi, Odom, Tenace, and others.
In October 1969, the New York Mets stunned the sports world by
defeating the heavily favored Baltimore Orioles in a memorable
World Series. Their five-game triumph capped off a true Cinderella
season, when the woebegone National League franchise rose from
laughingstock to popular champions. The histories of both the Mets
and Orioles are traced, along with their paths to the climactic '69
Series. A batter-by-batter recap of all five games gives a box seat
view to a storied moment in baseball history.
The 1969-70 season marked a turning point in the history of the
National Hockey League. The season began with a near fatality and
it culminated on a steamy Sunday afternoon in Boston with one of
the NHL's most iconic moments. In the interim, the 12 NHL clubs
staged thrilling and memorable playoff races that were not decided
until the final regular-season games were played. The three
traditional powerhouse teams from the Original Six era faltered
while former underdog clubs began to vie for top honors. Along the
way, Boston's Bobby Orr made history by becoming the first
defenseman to win the NHL scoring title, three aging veterans in
Detroit combined to form the most effective forward line in hockey,
and a rookie goalie, Tony Esposito, lifted the Chicago Black Hawks
from the basement to a divisional championship. Told here are the
numerous other wonderful, strange, and captivating incidents that
made the fun, fascinating, and free-wheeling 53rd NHL season one
for the ages.
The National Pastime's rich history and vast cache of statistics
have provided fans and researchers a gold mine of narrative and
data since the late 19th century. Many books have been written
about Major League Baseball's most famous games. This one takes a
different approach, focusing on MLB's most historically significant
games. Some will be familiar to baseball scholars, such as the
October afternoon in 1961 when Roger Maris eclipsed Babe Ruth's
single-season home run record, or the compelling sixth game of the
1975 World Series. Other fascinating games are less well known: the
day at the Polo Grounds in 1921, when a fan named Reuben Berman
filed a lawsuit against the New York Giants, winning fans the right
to keep balls hit into the stands; the first televised broadcast of
an MLB game in 1939; opening night of the Houston Astrodome in
1965, when spectators no longer had to be taken out to the
ballgame; or the spectator-less April 2015 Orioles-White Sox game,
played in an empty stadium in the wake of the Baltimore riots. Each
game is listed in chronological order, with detailed historical
background and a box score.
This work is a game-by-game account of the Philadelphia Athletics'
pitiful 1916 season, one where they won just 37 of 154 games. It
starts with a brief biography of the team's living symbol-A's
manager and coowner Connie Mack-through the birth of the franchise
and into its first era of glory in which the A's won world
championships in 1910, 1911, and 1913. Following the A's stunning
defeat in the 1914 World Series to the underdog Boston Braves, Mack
dismantled his championship club and finished last in the American
League for seven straight seasons. The 1916 campaign was the nadir.
The team's few solid veterans had a supporting cast of
underachievers, college boys, raw rookies, no-hopers, and sub-par
pitching. The book chronicles the daily grind of a team that had no
chance to begin with and quickly became the laughing stocks of the
AL. It contains many humorous anecdotes!
Homer-by-homer, this heavily researched work recounts the
inimitable Babe Ruth's finest season. In that magical 1927 season,
Ruth blasted homers off 33 different pitchers and hit at least one
against every American League opponent. Two hurlers yielded four
homers each to the Bambino, while seven pitchers allowed at least
three. Interwoven with this recounting is the story of the budding
rivalry between Ruth and teammate Lou Gehrig, as the two Yankees
matched homers for much of the season. Fresh statistical analyses
are provided and boxscores are included for all games in which Ruth
hit a home run.
Entering the 1978-79 season, the Boston Bruins had been one of the
best teams in the National Hockey League for more than a decade-but
they could not shake the infuriating jinx the Montreal Canadiens
held over them in postseason play. Against all odds, the Canadiens
had ousted the Bruins in 13 consecutive playoff series dating back
to the 1940s. In 1979, the Bruin veterans and their passionate fans
wanted one more shot at their nemeses after coming up short in both
the 1977 and 1978 Stanley Cup finals. Colorful but embattled coach
Don Cherry's coterie of lovable, selfless, hard-working,
team-oriented players got their desired chance in the semifinal
round. The underdog Bruins battled the Habs in seven heart-stopping
games, and sweet victory seemed within their grasp-only to have it
snatched from them in the cruelest fashion imaginable: an untimely
penalty for too many men on the ice in the dying minutes of Game
#7. This book looks back at the Boston Bruins' 1978-79 season from
Opening Night at Boston Garden to the catastrophic conclusion seven
months later at the Montreal Forum. It is prefaced by the history
of the Bruins' frustrating playoff jinx versus the Canadiens that
dated back to 1930, the tribulations and events that marked
Boston's 1978-79 regular season, and a recap of the team's
quarterfinal playoff victory over Pittsburgh. Along with detailed
accounts of all seven of the Boston-Montreal semifinal games, it
also contains a post-mortem of what caused the infamous bench
penalty and provides glimpses of all the Bruin personnel who made
that season so memorable and heartbreaking.
Having played more than 7,500 regular-season and playoff games
since the franchise's inception in 1924, the Boston Bruins have
become an iconic National Hockey League team boasting a sizable fan
base well beyond Massachusetts. In a century of spirited play, the
Bruins have participated in numerous contests that have brought
great joy--and great disappointment--to their passionate legions of
followers across North America. Twenty-five of these games are
presented here, chronologically, in great detail. Most will be
known to hardcore followers of the Bruins, others may be on the
obscure side. All of them combine to create a tapestry of sorts,
one of triumphs, travails, cheers and tears. For the passionate
fans of the Black and Gold, it follows the club's fortunes from the
early days of Eddie Shore and Tiny Thompson, through the halcyon
seasons of the Kraut Line, forward to the dominant renaissance
years of the Orr-Esposito 1970s and into the third decade of the
21st century. Hockey followers, regardless of their allegiances,
will enjoy this tome of Boston Bruins nostalgia.
The world heavyweight championship once transcended boxing and
conferred global renown. This book gives detailed coverage to five
legendary championship bouts that captivated audiences worldwide.
Coaxed out of retirement by the press, former champ James Jeffries
challenged black titleholder Jack JohnsonaEURO"universally despised
by white audiencesaEURO"in 1910, in hopes of returning the title to
the white race. In 1921, dapper World War I hero and
light-heavyweight champion Georges Carpentier hoped to upset
heavyweight champ Jack Dempsey, widely considered a draft-dodger,
in a fight that garnered the first "million dollar gate." In
perhaps the most politically charged bout ever, "Brown Bomber" Joe
Louis, popular with both the white and black America, faced Nazi
Germany's Max SchmelingaEURO"the first ever to win the title by
disqualificationaEURO"at a sold-out Yankee stadium in 1936. A
relentless brawler, undefeated Rocky Marciano in 1952 sought to
bludgeon the title away from the stronger and savvier Joe Walcott,
at 38 the oldest heavyweight champ in history. In a monumental
clash of two undefeated world champions, Muhammad AliaEURO"on the
comeback trail after his title was stripped from him for refusing
to be drafted during the Vietnam WaraEURO"squared off with
titleholder Joe Frazier in 1971.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
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