|
|
|
Detail Center Header Text Above Items |
 (Larger Image)
|
Pitching in a Pinch: or Baseball from the Inside (Bison Book)
by Christy Mathewson (Introduction: Eric Rolfe Greenberg)
Product Group: Book
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press (1994-03-01)
ISBN: 0803282125
EAN: 9780803282124
Dewy Decimal #: 796.35722
Paperback: 320 pages
SKU: T070934-6998
Condition: Good
Comments: Good overall condition. No writing, tight binding. A stain on upper corner of some pages. Ships same day or next in a bubble mailer. Enjoy.
|
Editorial Reviews
|
Product Description
Christy Mathewson (1880–1925) was the greatest baseball pitcher of his day, a hero with appeal reaching beyond sports. A college-educated player from Pennsylvania farm country, he restored respectability to a game tarnished by the rowdies who had dominated baseball in the 1890s. Pitching in a Pinch, originally published in 1912, is an insider’s account blending anecdote, biography, instruction, and social history. It celebrates baseball as it was played in the first decade of the twentieth century by famous contemporaries like Honus Wagner and Rube Marquand, managers like John McGraw and Connie Mack, and many others. Always sensitive to psychology as well as technique, Mathewson describes the “dangerous batters” he faced, the “peculiarities” of big-league pitchers, the “good and bad” of coaching, umpiring, sign-stealing, base-running, spring training, and the importance of superstition to athletes. Matty, as he was called, makes the reader feel that tense moment when a player in a pinch must use his head.
|
Amazon.com Review
One of baseball's more enduring classics and earliest memoirs, Christy Mathewson's primer, first published in 1912, has also become one of the game's foremost anthropologies. Mathewson was one of baseball's first immortals: he was a star on the field, winning 373 games between 1900 and 1916--all but one as a Giant; an educated gentleman off the field; and a legitimate war hero who died from the effects of being gassed in World War I. Pitching in a Pinch passes on Mathewson's substantial knowledge of the game in general, and the intricacies of the mound in particular. The book's continuing delight and value rests in Mathewson's facility for capturing--from the inside--the game's ethos in the early 20th century, and the generous combination of anecdote and insight with which he shares it.
|
Customer Reviews
|
Absolutely amazing reading
Rating (5)
Date: 2002-03-24
5 out of 5 customers found this reveiw helpful
What an amazing read. It makes you realize that not much has changed since Mathewson once ruled the roost on the pitching mound. The things he say, the wisdom of experience he imparts sounds so fresh, so immediately relevant to the game as it is played today that it might as well have been written yesterday.Particularly impressive is the idea that there are pitchers who are fabulous when there are no runners on base, but once the pinch is on (hence the title of the book) they become tentative shrinking violets. The pinch, Mathewson writes, is the true test of a pitcher's character. How right he is, in this true baseball classic. A must read for all who love the game.
|
|
mom, baseball and apple pie
Rating (4)
Date: 2000-05-10
11 out of 11 customers found this reveiw helpful
Reading a book like Pitching in the Pinch will stir an earnest yearning in my heart. It is Christy Mathewsons ghostwritten account of his career in major league baseball. It is a classic work of baseball writing. Mathewson was a 373 game winner in his career and had a lot of great thoughts on the game. He shares insight into John McGraws management skill and he delves into the psychology of the game. You can learn a lot about Americas past-time before Babe Ruth revolutionized the game.This is a highly entertaining and educational book.
|
|
Great inside view of how baseball used to be.
Rating (5)
Date: 1997-06-10
8 out of 8 customers found this reveiw helpful
If you want to have an insider's view of how the world of baseball was in the early part of the century, this is the book for you. Mathewson takes us there in all its glory. Well done
|
|
|
|
Detail Center Footer Text Below Items |
|
|