Bottom of the Ninth: Branch Rickey, Casey Stengel, and the Daring Scheme to Save Baseball from Itself
Books / Paperback
Books › Sports & Recreation › Baseball › History
ISBN: 0805092366 / Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin, April 2010
Recounts how baseball in the late 1950s reached a critical point in the sport's history, as Branch Rickey and Casey Stengel--two larger-than-life figures--each embarked on a quest to reinvent baseball both on and off the field.
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"A fascinating look at an almost forgotten era . . . One of the best baseball books of recent seasons." —Cleveland Plain DealerIn Bottom of the Ninth, Michael Shapiro brings to life a watershed moment in baseball history, when baseball was under seige in the late 1950s. He reveals how the legendary executive Branch Rickey saw the game's salvation in two radical ideas: the creation of a third major league—the Continental League—and the pooling of television revenues for the benefit of all. And Shapiro captures the audacity of Casey Stengel, the manager of the Yankees, who believed that he could remake how baseball was played.The story of their ingenious schemes—and of the powerful men who tried to thwart them—is interwoven with the on-field drama of pennant races and clutch performances, culminating in the stunning climax of the seventh game of the 1960 World Series, when one swing of the bat heralds baseball's eclipse as America's number-one sport.
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