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re: What's the best sports book you've read?
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:25 am to Porter Osborne Jr
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:25 am to Porter Osborne Jr
For me, though:
Moneyball
The Teammates: A Portrait of a Friendship
Summer of '49
The Education of a Coach
Just off the top of my head.
Halberstam was the man. We lost him way too soon.
Moneyball
The Teammates: A Portrait of a Friendship
Summer of '49
The Education of a Coach
Just off the top of my head.
Halberstam was the man. We lost him way too soon.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:25 am to Porter Osborne Jr
The Soul of Baseball: A Road Trip Through Buck O'Neil's America
Good shite right there.
Good shite right there.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:26 am to Meursault
How Soccer Explains the World is also good.
Also, Among the Thugs was a great read.
Also, Among the Thugs was a great read.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:26 am to Porter Osborne Jr
This post was edited on 2/17/13 at 6:31 pm
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:29 am to Vicks Kennel Club
quote:
Scorecasting is first for sure.
Great read. As are Mathletics, Stumbling on Wins, and Baseball Between the Numbers.
I need to post on this thread from home where I can stand in my library and pull books off the shelves.
I just remembered Triumph and Tragedy in Mudville, which was by Stephen Jay Gould and forwarded by David Halberstam. Great fricking read.
This post was edited on 12/11/12 at 8:30 am
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:32 am to JDM1992
The ones I can remember off the top of my head that I enjoyed:
Moneyball
Blind Side
Soccernomics
Meat Market
Bruce Feldman's book about Miami
It Never Rains in Tiger Stadium (I knew going in it was melancholy, so I wasn't surprised by the tone that turned most people off)
Chuck Klosterman has a collection of his sports essays available for Kindle, I've read and enjoyed most of them.
One of the worst ones I've ever read was by Mike Lupica. It was fiction, but it was so bad I don't even remember the name. A fake NFL story.
Moneyball
Blind Side
Soccernomics
Meat Market
Bruce Feldman's book about Miami
It Never Rains in Tiger Stadium (I knew going in it was melancholy, so I wasn't surprised by the tone that turned most people off)
Chuck Klosterman has a collection of his sports essays available for Kindle, I've read and enjoyed most of them.
One of the worst ones I've ever read was by Mike Lupica. It was fiction, but it was so bad I don't even remember the name. A fake NFL story.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:33 am to Porter Osborne Jr
Boys Will Be Boys - Dallas Cowboys
When the Game Was Ours - Larry & Magic
Playing for Pizza
When the Game Was Ours - Larry & Magic
Playing for Pizza
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:35 am to Jcorye1
quote:
I'll go with the painfully obvious answer, Moneyball.
what is painfully obvious to me is that people view Moneyball as some sort of revelation in MLB. billy bean did not invent statistical evaluation of players as he infers. and scouts are not an inferior way to evaluate talent as he infers. i get that oakland doesn't have enough money to do both but the teams that actually win pennants and stuff do both. as far as taking college pitchers over hi-school kids he was lying. that's right, oakland got lucky with some draft choices as their stud pitchers in years they actually excelled. lastly, as far as valueing outs over the small ball strategem of advancing runners people completely ignore that he is in the american league. any perceived advantage (backed up by his own statistical choices) of that goes away in the NL. a manager in a one run game in the 9th inning with a runner on first with no outs is a fool not to advance that runner. if he hasn't practiced bunting he's fricked. i would be much more impressed with a book written by tony larussa than billy bean. he doesn't own the market on statistical evaluation of players and never has. he propelled a few good years of success (based on lucky pitcher selection) into an expose' of "how he is smarter than all the other gm's" and making big bucks from it. good for him.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:36 am to Tiger n Miami AU83
quote:
Gonna have to order this now. Did not even know it existed.
I've read most of Conroy's books and most were written decades ago. Last book I read of his was over 10 years ago. He is my favorite southern author and "The Lord's of Discipline" is one of my favorite books of all time.
Ed Conroy, basketball coach at Tulane, is a cousin of Pat Conroy and coached at the Citadel prior to coming to Tulane.
/csb
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:38 am to dutchtiger
quote:
John Grisham and his other book called Bleachers
I forgot about this one. I read that too and I loved it, mainly because I could relate to the book.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:38 am to LSU GrandDad
quote:
LSU GrandDad
What's painfully obvious from your post is that you didn't read Moneyball.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:40 am to LSU GrandDad
quote:
what is painfully obvious to me is that people view Moneyball as some sort of revelation in MLB. billy bean did not invent statistical evaluation of players as he infers. and scouts are not an inferior way to evaluate talent as he infers. i get that oakland doesn't have enough money to do both but the teams that actually win pennants and stuff do both. as far as taking college pitchers over hi-school kids he was lying. that's right, oakland got lucky with some draft choices as their stud pitchers in years they actually excelled. lastly, as far as valueing outs over the small ball strategem of advancing runners people completely ignore that he is in the american league. any perceived advantage (backed up by his own statistical choices) of that goes away in the NL. a manager in a one run game in the 9th inning with a runner on first with no outs is a fool not to advance that runner. if he hasn't practiced bunting he's fricked. i would be much more impressed with a book written by tony larussa than billy bean. he doesn't own the market on statistical evaluation of players and never has. he propelled a few good years of success (based on lucky pitcher selection) into an expose' of "how he is smarter than all the other gm's" and making big bucks from it. good for him.
lolwut
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:41 am to Porter Osborne Jr
The Glory of Their Times
Ball Four
Distant Replay
The Unforgettable Season
Ball Four
Distant Replay
The Unforgettable Season
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:45 am to Sophandros
The Game by Ken Dryden
Ball Four by Jim Bouton
Those are still the gold standards for athlete memoirs.
Next Time Let's Not East the Bones by Bill James
Scorecasting
Soccernomics
How Soccer Explains the World
Loose Balls
Eight Men Out
Crazy '08s
Fantasyland
The Blind Side
Ball Four by Jim Bouton
Those are still the gold standards for athlete memoirs.
Next Time Let's Not East the Bones by Bill James
Scorecasting
Soccernomics
How Soccer Explains the World
Loose Balls
Eight Men Out
Crazy '08s
Fantasyland
The Blind Side
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:47 am to Baloo
Oh, and my bible is Earl Weaver on Strategy.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:50 am to Sophandros
quote:
What's painfully obvious from your post is that you didn't read Moneyball
He gets his opinions from Joe Morgan.
Posted on 12/11/12 at 8:56 am to Porter Osborne Jr
Breaks of the Game
Summer of 49
Seven Seconds or Less
Scorecasting
How Soccer Explains the World
Dream Team
Summer of 49
Seven Seconds or Less
Scorecasting
How Soccer Explains the World
Dream Team
Posted on 12/11/12 at 9:09 am to Sophandros
really liked this series as a kid:
Posted on 12/11/12 at 9:23 am to Porter Osborne Jr
In and out of the rough
John Daley
John Daley
Posted on 12/11/12 at 9:27 am to hashtag
Some very solid recommendations in here, some WTH ones.
I like the history of sports, so titles like 'Let Me Tell You A Story' and 'When Pride Still Mattered' really resonate with me.
If I'm looking for a fun read, the rollicking tales of wild man coaches (Season on the Brink, Bootlegger's Boy) really hit the spot.
If you want an excellent book that will make you think about sports, I recommend 'Taboo: Why Black Athletes Dominate Sports and Why We Are Afraid to Talk About It' -- it's getting hard to find, but it raises real questions about the underlying assumptions involved in race, sports, and how we organize competition.
I like the history of sports, so titles like 'Let Me Tell You A Story' and 'When Pride Still Mattered' really resonate with me.
If I'm looking for a fun read, the rollicking tales of wild man coaches (Season on the Brink, Bootlegger's Boy) really hit the spot.
If you want an excellent book that will make you think about sports, I recommend 'Taboo: Why Black Athletes Dominate Sports and Why We Are Afraid to Talk About It' -- it's getting hard to find, but it raises real questions about the underlying assumptions involved in race, sports, and how we organize competition.
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