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"Baseball's Greatest Drama,"

Author: Joseph J. Krueger
Publisher:
Total Pages: 454
Release: 1943
Genre: Baseball
ISBN:

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Sports Illustrated Baseball's Greatest

Sports Illustrated Baseball's Greatest
Author: The Editors of Sports Illustrated
Publisher: Sports Illustrated
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013-10-08
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 9781618930552

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Who's the greatest slugger of all time, Babe Ruth or Ted Williams? Where do Derek Jeter and Cal Ripken Jr. rank on the list of the best shortstops? At third base, would you rather have Mike Schmidt or Brooks Robinson? Is Fenway or Wrigley the better ballpark? This book will end many arguments-and start some new ones. Sports Illustrated's has polled its Major League Baseball experts to determine the ultimate Top 10 in more than 20 categories. The rankings appear alongside stunning photography and classic stories from SI's archives. This is the best of the best in the major leagues, or, more simply, Baseball's Greatest.


The Greatest Baseball Stories Ever Told

The Greatest Baseball Stories Ever Told
Author: Jeff Silverman
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2001
Genre: Baseball
ISBN: 9781585743643

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Twenty-seven essays, profiles, and stories about America's pastime.


Unhittable

Unhittable
Author: James Buckley, Jr.
Publisher: Triumph Books (IL)
Total Pages: 150
Release: 2006-03
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 9781572438293

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Looks at the history of the greatest performances by pitchers in the history of baseball including perfect games, near-misses, no-hitters, and the 20-strikeout games, highlighting such pitchers as Johnny Vander Meer, Nolan Ryan, and Roger Clemens.


Baseball's Greatest Hit

Baseball's Greatest Hit
Author: Andy Strasberg
Publisher: Hal Leonard Publishing Corporation
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2008
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781423431886

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This special-edition book/CD--authored by three baseball insiders and history experts--relates how Take Me Out to the Ball Game" has won a unique and permanent place in the cultural landscape.


Unhittable, Reliving the Magic and Drama of Baseball's Best-pitched Games

Unhittable, Reliving the Magic and Drama of Baseball's Best-pitched Games
Author: James Buckley (Jr.)
Publisher: Triumph Books (IL)
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2004
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 9781572436664

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Looks at the history of the greatest performances by pitchers in the history of baseball including perfect games, near-misses, no-hitters, and the 20-strikeout games, highlighting such pitchers as Johnny Vander Meer, Nolan Ryan, and Roger Clemens.


406

406
Author: Joseph J. Badowski
Publisher: Christian Faith Publishing, Inc.
Total Pages: 119
Release: 2024-03-18
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN:

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This book is a historical fiction that I have written about the 1960 baseball World Series, specifically about game 7 of that series, that many baseball experts feel was the greatest game ever played in the history of Major League Baseball. The seventh game of that World Series was played on a sunny fall day on October 13, 1960, at Forbes Field in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. On that date, around 3:00 p.m., Bill Mazeroski, the second baseman for the Pirates, hit a walk-off home run in the top of the ninth inning to win the game. On the second pitch thrown by Yankee pitcher Ralph Terry, Mazeroski hit a ball over the 402 sign in left field, which gave the Pirates an improbable and almost miraculous win over the heavily favored New York Yankees. This home run was the highlight of the many strange and dramatic plays that took place during game 7, which makes that game one for all ages and one that would make for an excellent script for any Hollywood movie. This book, however, is about more than the 1960 World Series. It is also about two nine-year-old boys who meet each other in the summer of 1960 and who become close friends, united by not only baseball but also by a crisis that plagues one of the main character's family. Daniel Pryzinski and Adam Brodziak are the two fictional characters in this book who meet each other by chance during the summer of 1960. Daniel lives in the Polish Hill section of Pittsburgh, while Adam lives in a small rural coal-mining town in western Pennsylvania, sixty miles from Pittsburgh. The two meet each other by chance when Adam's family is invited to stay with Daniel's family while they are attending a Polish Festival in Pittsburgh. While staying with the Pryzinski family, the Brodziaks discover a dark secret. Daniel's father, Peter, is an alcoholic whose drinking problems are so bad that it threatens to destroy the Pryzinski family. Daniel's mother, Pauline, is desperately trying to hold the family together but is on the verge of leaving her husband. She is a devout Catholic, so that decision was one that she did not want to make. Besides, she loved her husband so much that she was willing to do anything to help him recover from his drinking problem. Through the intervention of the Brodziaks and their family doctor, Tom Slevic, they are able to convince Peter to admit himself to an Alcohol Rehab Center in Somerset, Pennsylvania. Although the focus of this book is the seventh game of the 1960 World Series, it is the relationship of the fictional characters that will show the reader how reliance upon family and friends and hope in God and faith can serve to change the lives of so many whose loved ones are affected by alcohol or other types of addiction or substance abuse.


The Perfect Yankee

The Perfect Yankee
Author: Don Larsen
Publisher: Sports Publishing LLC
Total Pages: 253
Release: 2006
Genre: Pitchers (Baseball)
ISBN: 159670215X

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By all accounts, the perfect game pitched by New York Yankees right-hander Don Larsen in the 1956 World Series qualifies as a true miracle. No one knows why it happened, or why an unlikely baseball player such as Larsen was the one who tossed it. In The Perfect Yankee Larsen describes the facts surrounding one of the most famous games in baseball history and details the complete story behind the amazing "Walter Mitty" performance. A former Baltimore Orioles pitcher who lost 21 games in 1954, the freespirited Larsen reveals how comic book "Ghoulies" told him he should experiment with a no-windup pitching delivery just prior to the '56 World Series. Knocked out in Game Two, the man known as Gooney Bird to his teammates regrouped to record a miracle win that propelled the Casey Stengel-led Yankees to the world championship over the defending champion Brooklyn Dodgers.


Baseball's 50 Greatest Games

Baseball's 50 Greatest Games
Author: Bert Randolph Sugar
Publisher:
Total Pages: 204
Release: 1986
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 9780671083465

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Here are the dramatic stories and pictures behind baseball's 50 most memorable games. Full-color illustrations. An Exeter Book.


Baseball's Greatest Series

Baseball's Greatest Series
Author: Chris Donnelly
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Total Pages: 355
Release: 2010-01-15
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 0813549132

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Baseball's Greatest Series details what many believe to be the most exciting postseason series in baseball history: the 1995 Division Series between the New York Yankees and the Seattle Mariners. This division series was not simply about two teams playing five postseason games. It was about Ken Griffey Jr., Lou Piniella, Buck Showalter, Gene Michael, Jim Leyritz, Randy Johnson, Wade Boggs, Tony Fernandez, Pat Kelly, Dion James, Darryl Strawberryùand many others who changed the course of baseball history . . . A team playing to keep baseball alive in the Pacific Northwest A manager who was literally managing for his job A New York sports icon who for one week reminded everybody of the dominating player he had been a decade earlier Chris Donnelly's replay of this entire season reminds readers that it was a time when grown men cried their eyes out after defeat, and others, just a few hundred feet away, poured beer and champagne over one another while 57,000 people in Seattle's Kingdome celebrated. Five games they were. Five games that reminded people, after the devastating players' strike in 1994, how great a game baseball is because comebacks are always possible, no matter how great the obstacles may seem. From Don Mattingly's only postseason home run, which caused a near riot, to Edgar Martinez's legendary eleventh inning series-clinching double, Donnelly chronicles the earlier struggles of both teams during the 1980s, their mid-1990s resurgence, all five heart-stopping games of the series, and the dramatic and long-lasting effects of Seattle's victory. Simply stated, Baseball's Greatest Series hits a home run.