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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
EAN num: 9781574888706
ISBN number: 1574888706
Label: Potomac Books Ltd.
Manufacturer: Potomac Books Ltd.
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 316
Printing Date: October 15, 2005
Publishing house: Potomac Books Ltd.
Sale Popularity Level: 1614813
Studio: Potomac Books Ltd.
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Product Description:
The most storied rivalry in baseball is the Yankees and the Red Sox, despite what often seems like an annual exercise in disappointment in New England. Despite having a comparatively brief and less operatic history of losing to the Bronx Bombers than do the Sox, the Blue Jays were once the team to beat in the American League East. Now Boston and Toronto are again gunning for the top, led by a pair of young general managers. Theo Epstein of the Red Sox and J. P. Ricciardi of the Blue Jays represent a new generation of general managers, weaned on two decades of baseball analysis that started with the groundbreaking work of Bill James and Pete Palmer.
Without the Yankees’ financial advantages, both Epstein and Ricciardi contend by carefully building their organizations and their big-league squads with a blend of financial good sense, scouting know-how, and the kind of analysis that helped them reach their positions in the game today. Indeed, both GMs now have such people as Bill James and Keith Law (formerly of the Baseball Prospectus) to help them crunch numbers and take their best shots at beating the Yankees.
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Rated by buyers
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To be honest, I thought the actual content of this book was fantastic. It was really entertaining. I knocked it down to 4 stars because there are some grammatical mistakes, which I can't stand in published writing. The writing is overall pretty good, and there were only a few occasions where I had to stop and read a sentence 2 or 3 times to figure out what exactly was wrong with it so I could move on, but those times irritated me.
Rob Bradford provides a very involved look at the 2003 Red Sox and Blue Jays. A lot has happened since then, so the book is a little dated, but the close contact he had with Jays GM JP Ricciardi and Sox GM Theo Epstein is worth the price of the book alone. In terms of baseball analysis, there really isn't any, so if that's what you want, I'd recommend "Mind Game" or some other such Baseball Prospectus publication. But if you want an inside look at running a baseball team, replete with entertaining anecdotes (Theo's dad is a real piece of work), this is the book for you. Rob Bradford is not that great at involved sports analysis, but he's great at working with his subjects, which has me wondering why he's still stuck at the Lawrence Eagle-Tribune. After his exclusive interview with Sox owner John Henry last year, one would think the Herald or the Globe would come calling.
Rated by buyers
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Though the Red Sox finally "caught" Steinbrenner (for one year at least), the frustrations and challenges of being a franchise forever obsessed with the Bronx Colossus remain. This book is as relevant now that the Red Sox have won their World Series title as it was when the sting of Aaron Boone was fresh. Rob Bradford provides the reader an entertaining look into the sub-$200 millon world of Red Sox GM Theo Epstein and his Toronto counterpart J.P. Ricciardi, Massachusetts natives both, who work to overcome Yankee dollars with good old-fashioned Yankee ingenuity , and yes, luck. After all, Theo was heartbroken over losing Jose Contreras to the Yankees. It's all in the book.
A good read.
Rated by buyers
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I'm a huge Red Sox fan, so the idea of a behind the scenes look at the team really appealed to me. And, I read a lot of baseball books, so I'm used to tolerating mediocre writing in order to get my fix. This book, however, was just awful. Unreadable. Bradford's final product reads like a college freshman's very first draft. He simply doesn't have enough ability. You'll find yourself reading a paragraph and then stopping to wonder incredulously, who writes like that, and why didn't his editor stop him? Unfortunately, the problems didn't really show up in the excerpt available here, so now I'm out twenty-five bucks.
Before you disregard this warning and buy it anyway, ask yourself a couple questions. Why would a book that should have a similar appeal to Michael Lewis's bestseller, Moneyball, end up with a tiny publisher like Brassey's? Because the other publishers wouldn't take it, that's why. Why can't you find it in the brick and mortar bookstores? Because those stores won't stock it, that's why. And finally, have a look at Dan Shaughnessy's blurb on the back cover. Talk about damned with faint praise. I ignored the signs because I really wanted to like this book, but it really isn't worth your time or money. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news, but it's better for you to hear it now.
Rated by buyers
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I received Chasing Steinbrenner for Christmas and, being a 40-year fan of the Red Sox, I enjoyed the read immensely. Knowing the joyous outcome of the 2004 MLB season made reading about Theo's very first season as GM enjoyable. I don't think I could have read it had the Red Sox -gulp- lost to the Yankees in 2004. We know the amazing story of the 2004 season, and Bradford's entertaining and informative book gives us the inside story of the ups and downs of two franchises, the Blue Jays and Red Sox, that led to Aaron "What's the Big Deal?" Boone's 2003 ALCS Game 7 homerun. Bradford gives readers the stories-behind-the-stories of some of the deals that, in retrospect, led to the 2004 World Series championship. What if Theo had succeeded in signing Jose Contreras or did not obtain Kevin Millar? There's no Game 4 comeback in the ALCS. The details of the players' lives and the focus on certain 2003 games allow diehard fans to relive, without anguish, from whence the 2004 championship came. Bradford's chapter on Theo's very first game as GM makes me believe that one day Carl Crawford will be stealing bases and hitting walk-off HRs for the Red Sox.
Juxtaposing Toronto's general manager J.P. Ricciardi, his limited resources, and Blue Jay fans with Boston's young general manager, sizable yet still somewhat limited revenue, and the Red Sox maniacal fan base allows readers acess to the front office machinations about which newspapers, television, and radio shows only speculate.
For fans, Bradford opens the front office doors. He also opened my eyes that the GM's care as much if not more than many of the diehards. Read it and no longer weep!
Rated by buyers
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As a die-hard Sox fan, I am interested by any writing about the Red Sox under Theo Epstein, especially when it involves a new and different look at the managerial goings-on of a sabermetric franchise. And there are plenty of interesting tidbits and stories about sagas such as the Jose Contreras deal and the Kevin Millar signings that many Red Sox fans remember vividly. But I felt like there was too much background for certain players, too much focus on specific games. It's worth a read for die-hard Sox fans, but I can't really recommend it for most.
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