Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Sour Grape Grower
2 Landing the Big One
3 Tarnished Stars
4 The Very Important Hero
5 Ty Swings Away
6 Baseball at the Abyss
7 Decision Day
8 The Red Faced Cardinal
9 Stealing the Show
10 Reinvigorating Babe Ruth
11 Digesting a Cobb Salary
12 That’s a Wrap
13 The Plan Goes Awry
14 A Different Babe
15 Dawn of a New Day
16 Move Over Babe
17 Reviews Are In
18 Rewrite the Record Book
19 The Greatest Season
20 From Disdain to Acclaim
Bibliography
About the Author
Dan Taylor is a sports historian, author, and a former award-winning television sportscaster who is currently the television broadcaster for the Fresno Grizzlies. He is the author of five books, most recently Lights, Camera, Fastball: How the Hollywood Stars Changed Baseball and Walking Alone: The Untold Story of Football Pioneer Kenny Washington. Taylor is a member of the Society for American Baseball Research and contributes to their biography project. He is also a member of the Pacific Coast League Historical Society. He resides in Fresno, California.
A fascinating look into an important time in baseball history. This
is a must read for every true baseball fan.
I can't think of a better choice for baseball reading just now....
you will be entertained by Taylor's narrative, surprised by some of
its revelations, and left with some questions to ponder about the
future of baseball just now.
Taylor offers a persuasive account of the game fixing, the
resulting scandal, and the key players involved in both--players
including the proud, stubborn pitcher, Dutch Leonard, who exposed
the alleged fix; the two great player-managers who fought the
allegations; and the gruff commissioner of baseball, Kenesaw
Mountain Landis, who sought to mitigate the impact of Leonard's
revelations by covering up the scandal. Other prominent players,
including the famously splenetic Cardinals superstar Rogers Hornsby
were drawn into the investigation. The Cobb-Speaker-Leonard scandal
provides the scaffolding for a more compelling story: the creative
friendship of Babe Ruth and his business manager, Christy Walsh.
Walsh was a struggling sportswriter, failed cartoonist and former
adman who became, in effect, the first sports agent. Highly
recommended.
The Great Bambino sucking it up and adapting to the shift by
hitting to the opposite field is one of many tasty morsels in Dan
Taylor's Baseball at the Abyss. It's the story of how the
rollicking home run chase between Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig in 1927
gave baseball a shot in the arm after multiple gambling scandals
had (supposedly) soured the public. The Yankees teammates went back
and forth all summer, with Ruth reaching the immortal 60 in the
season's penultimate game. But the heart of Taylor's book is the
relationship between Ruth and Christy Walsh, an adman who became
the Babe's personal manager before that sort of thing really
existed. In 1921, a flailing Walsh came up with the idea to
syndicate ghostwritten newspaper columns under Ruth's byline, a
sports first, to capitalize on the slugger's ever-expanding
popularity.... Taylor delivers the Ruthian goods. A particular
favorite detail was random fans sending Ruth weight-loss tips,
including a woman from Cleveland who "urged Ruth to eat ten
pineapples a day."
Who would have thought the first player in our sport to embrace
strength and conditioning was Babe Ruth? Dan Taylor reveals what
might be the Babe's greatest contribution to the game in a
fascinating story.
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