Fb2 Voices from Cooperstown: Baseball's Hall of Famers Tell It Like It Was ePub
by Anthony J. Connor
Category: | Baseball |
Subcategory: | Outdoor Sports |
Author: | Anthony J. Connor |
ISBN: | 1578660165 |
ISBN13: | 978-1578660162 |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | Galahad Books (March 1, 1998) |
Pages: | 333 |
Fb2 eBook: | 1842 kb |
ePub eBook: | 1269 kb |
Digital formats: | lrf azw lrf doc |
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Originally published: Baseball for the love of it. New York : Macmillan, c1982. New York : Collier Books. inlibrary; printdisabled; ; china.
Voices from Cooperstown book. Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Start by marking Voices from Cooperstown: Baseball's Hall O Famers Tell It Like It Was as Want to Read: Want to Read savin. ant to Read.
voices from cooperstown. Published by Thriftbooks. com User, 19 years ago. this book details the life and times of all the hall of famers that we know and love
voices from cooperstown. this book details the life and times of all the hall of famers that we know and love. from willie mays remembering the first time his father rolled him a ball, to ty cobb's views on how his rookie season molded him into the player that he was. this book has a little something for everyone and is definitely a must read.
Baseball Hall of Famers Jackie Robinson, Sandy Koufax, and Yogi Berra played it growing up, as did sports team owner Jerry . Voices from Cooperstown: baseball's Hall of Famers tell it like it was. Galahad Books. ISBN 978-1-57866-016-2. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
Baseball Hall of Famers Jackie Robinson, Sandy Koufax, and Yogi Berra played it growing up, as did sports team owner Jerry Reinsdorf, educator Frank Marascio, Senator Bernie Sanders, and former US Secretary of State and general Colin Powell. Major league outfielder Rocky Colavito, when asked if he played punchball, answered "Play. it? Man, that was my game. I liked to play that more than anything else.
Statement made in 1961, as quoted in Voices from Cooperstown: Baseball's Hall of Famers Tell It Like It Was (1998) by Anthony J. Connor, p. 286. Joe's swing was purely natural, he was the perfect hitter. He batted against spitballs, shineballs, emeryballs and all the other trick deliveries.
VOICES FROM COOPERSTOWN: Baseball's Hall of Famers Tell It Like It. .Replete with illustrations, his book (originally entitled ''Baseball for the Love.
VOICES FROM COOPERSTOWN: Baseball's Hall of Famers Tell It Like It Was, by Anthony J. Connor. Anthony J. Connor uses the words of 65 baseball Hall of Famers to create a ''mural of a century of baseball viewed from the inside.
Ty Cobb American baseball player 1886 - 1961 Context: I think if I had my life to live over again, I'd do things a little different
Ty Cobb American baseball player 1886 - 1961 Context: I think if I had my life to live over again, I'd do things a little different. I was aggressive, perhaps too aggressive. Maybe I went too far. I always had to be right in any argument I was in, I always had to be first in everything. I do indeed think I would have done some things different. And if I had I believe I would have had more friends. Statement made in 1961, as quoted in Voices from Cooperstown : Baseball's Hall of Famers Tell It Like It Was (1998) by Anthony J.
Statement made in 1961, as quoted in Voices from Cooperstown : Baseball's Hall of Famers Tell It Like It Was (1998) by. Jack Lambert American football player 1952 In his Hall of Fame induction speech.
Statement made in 1961, as quoted in Voices from Cooperstown : Baseball's Hall of Famers Tell It Like It Was (1998) by Anthony J. 0. Ошибка. „Now, before I begin, I'd just like to clear the air about that little controversy everybody was talking about a few weeks back. I have to tell you, I really thought this was much ado about nothing, but I do think we all learned an important lesson.
How the Babe, Casey, Willie, Mickey, Campy, and 64 other Hall-of-Famers feel about their decisions to become ball players, their rookie seasons, their spectacular feats, their disappointments, their October heroics, their twilights, and their own mortality-via 500 snippets (by his own counting) that Connor has culled from published memoirs or recent interviews.