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Noted baseball historian Norman L. Macht brings together a
wide-ranging collection of baseball voices from the Deadball Era
through the 1970s, including nine Hall of Famers, who take the
reader onto the field, into the dugouts and clubhouses, and inside
the minds of both players and managers. These engaging,
wide-ranging oral histories bring surprising revelations-both
highlights and lowlights-about their careers, as they revisit their
personal mental scrapbooks of the days when they played the game.
Not all of baseball's best stories are told by its biggest stars,
especially when the stories are about those stars. Many of the
storytellers you'll meet in They Played the Game are unknown to
today's fans: the Red Sox's Charlie Wagner talks about what it was
like to be Ted Williams's roommate in Williams's rookie year; the
Dodgers' John Roseboro recounts his strategy when catching for Don
Drysdale and Sandy Koufax; former Yankee Mark Koenig recalls
batting ahead of Babe Ruth in the lineup, and sometimes staying out
too late with him; John Francis Daley talks about batting against
Walter Johnson; Carmen Hill describes pitching against Babe Ruth in
the 1927 World Series.
The Philadelphia Athletics dominated the first fourteen years of
the American League, winning six pennants through 1914 under the
leadership of their founder and manager, Connie Mack. But beginning
in 1915, where volume 2 in Norman L. Macht's biography picks up the
story, Mack's teams fell from pennant winners to last place and, in
an unprecedented reversal of fortunes, stayed there for seven
years. World War I robbed baseball of young players, and Mack's
rebuilding efforts using green youngsters of limited ability made
his teams the objects of public ridicule. At the age of fifty-nine
and in the face of widespread skepticism and seemingly
insurmountable odds, Connie Mack reasserted his genius, remade the
A's, and rose again to the top, even surpassing his earlier
success. Baseball biographer and historian Macht recreates what may
be the most remarkable chapter in this larger-than-life story. He
shows us the man and his time and the game of baseball in all its
nitty-gritty glory of the 1920s, and how Connie Mack built the
1929-1931 champions of Foxx, Simmons, Cochrane, Grove, Earnshaw,
Miller, Haas, Bishop, Dykes-a team many consider baseball's
greatest ever.
Connie Mack (1862-1956) was the Grand Old Man of baseball and one
of the game's first true celebrities. This book, spanning the first
fifty-two years of Mack's life, through 1914, covers his
experiences as player, manager, and club owner and will stand as
the definitive biography of baseball's most legendary and beloved
figure. Norman L. Macht chronicles Mack's little-known beginnings.
He tells how Mack, a school dropout at fourteen, created strategies
for winning baseball and principles for managing men long before
there were notions of defining such subjects. And he details how
Mack, a key figure in the launching of the American League in 1901,
won six of the league's first fourteen pennants while serving as
manager, treasurer, general manager, traveling secretary, and
public relations and scouting director (all at the same time) for
the Philadelphia Athletics. This book brings to life the unruly
origins of baseball as a sport and a business. It also provides the
first complete and accurate picture of a character who was larger
than life and yet little known: the tricky, rule-bending catcher;
the peppery field leader and fan favorite; the hot-tempered young
manager. Illustrated with family photographs never before
published, it affords unique insight into a colorful personality
who helped shape baseball as we know it today.
Connie Mack (1862-1956) was the Grand Old Man of baseball and one
of the game's first true celebrities. This book, spanning the first
fifty-two years of Mack's life, through 1914, covers his
experiences as player, manager, and club owner and will stand as
the definitive biography of baseball's most legendary and beloved
figure. Norman L. Macht chronicles Mack's little-known beginnings.
He tells how Mack, a school dropout at fourteen, created strategies
for winning baseball and principles for managing men long before
there were notions of defining such subjects. And he details how
Mack, a key figure in the launching of the American League in 1901,
won six of the league's first fourteen pennants while serving as
manager, treasurer, general manager, traveling secretary, and
public relations and scouting director (all at the same time) for
the Philadelphia Athletics. This book brings to life the unruly
origins of baseball as a sport and a business. It also provides the
first complete and accurate picture of a character who was larger
than life and yet little known: the tricky, rule-bending catcher;
the peppery field leader and fan favorite; the hot-tempered young
manager. Illustrated with family photographs never before
published, it affords unique insight into a colorful personality
who helped shape baseball as we know it today.
In The Grand Old Man of Baseball, Norman L. Macht chronicles Connie
Mack's tumultuous final two decades in baseball. After Mack had
built one of baseball's greatest teams, the 1929-31 Philadelphia
Athletics, the Depression that followed the stock market crash
fundamentally reshaped Mack's legacy as his team struggled on the
field and at the gate. Among the challenges Mack faced: a sharp
drop in attendance that forced him to sell his star players; the
rise of the farm system, which he was slow to adopt; the opposition
of other owners to night games, which he favored; the postwar
integration of baseball, which he initially opposed; a split
between the team's heirs (Mack's sons Roy and Earle on one side,
their half brother Connie Jr. on the other) that tore apart the
family and forced Mack to choose-unwisely-between them; and,
finally, the disastrous 1951-54 seasons in which Roy and Earle ran
the club to the brink of bankruptcy. By now aged and mentally
infirm, Mack watched in bewilderment as the business he had built
fell apart. Broke and in debt, Roy and Earle feuded over the sale
of the team. In a never-before-revealed series of maneuvers, Roy
double-crossed his father and brother and the team was sold and
moved to Kansas City in 1954. In Macht's third volume of his
trilogy on Mack, he describes the physical, mental, and financial
decline of Mack's final years, which unfortunately became a classic
American tragedy.
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