The Best Game Ever: Pirates 10, Yankees 9: October 13, 1960 | Jim Reisler | Best Game Ever----Best Baseball book ever!
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The Best Game Ever...
The Best Game Ever: Pirates 10, Yankees 9: October 13, 1960
Jim Reisler
Da Capo Press
, 2007 - 320 pages
average customer review:
based on 16 reviews
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highly recommended
October
13,
1960
: The hardscrabble
Pirates
were a hungry squad, led by Roberto Clemente, Bill Mazeroski, and a colorful bunch of overachi
ever
s who hit singles and rode solid fielding and pitching to the franchise's first World Series appearance in 35 years. The
Yankees
, lordly and corporate, were making their 12th trip to the World Series in 15 years and, through the managing of Casey Stengel, power hitting, and immense talent, usually found a way to win. Featuring such legends as Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra, Whitey Ford, and Roger Maris, the Yankees had outscored the Pirates 46?16 through six
game
s ? only to go down, 10?9, when Mazeroski became the only player ever to decide a World Series Game 7 with a walk-off home run. From extensive personal interviews with those who were there, along with newspaper, radio, and television accounts, Reisler reconstructs this fall classic pitch by pitch, from analysis of managerial tactics and the chatter of the players on the field to the lively atmosphere within the ballpark and throughout the country. The result is the feeling of being right there from the seemingly predictable start to the truly unbelievable finish of the
best
game ever.
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The Title Says It All! Highly Recommended!
Forget the complaints in prior reviews concerning a few minor errors in this book. They don't take away a bit from the story which is a very fascinating pitch by pitch chronology of one of the greatest World Series
game
ever
played. We all know the outcome but the highlights include a biographical sketch of the participants with information most baseball fans have never heard. (For example: before game #1 Harvey Haddix told the Pirate's radio announcer that the hero of the series would be Bill Mazeroski. When asked why, he said of the light hitting 2nd baseman "Because they'll pitch to him!". Also the author provides an inside look at the strategies of both Stengel and Murtaugh in a game that had enough twists and turns to qualify for a roller coaster ride. Enjoy!
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Best Game Ever----Best Baseball book ever!
This is a fantastic baseball book you MUST add to your sports library. It takes you inning by inning thru the 7th
game
of the
1960
World Series, but also includes a whole lot of background information about both the
Pirates
and
Yankees
....information about how each team reached the WS. It also includes some great photos like Tony Kubek lying on the infield ground after being hit in the throat by a wicked ground ball hit by Bill Virdon......This book deserves 6 stars on a 5-star scale!
Great game, good book.
No, I didn't see or hear the Maz homer. I did see the Kubek bad hop in school (6th grade), but when school was out, we were shooed away and by the time I'd pedaled home, it was over.
This book is a nice but not great recounting of that
game
. There were mistakes in the writing and proofing, I was able to get around them. I discovered things I didn't know about the game, such as that the Doctor was asked to come to the Stadium so Kubek could stay with the team. The play-by-play, many times, pitch-by-pitch accounting of the game added to my knowledge. I just wish it were better written and more accurate in it's details.
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A test to a reader's attention span
Using one
game
as a basis for a book, even if it is one of the greatest games
ever
, is a challenge for any writer. Author Jim Reisler takes an inning-by-inning approach to the seventh game of the
1960
World Series between the
Pirates
and
Yankees
. Of course, every serious baseball fan knows it's the game the Pirates' Bill Mazeroski hit a homer in the bottom of the ninth to win the Series.
Because the game is so well-known, there's little suspense. Like some other readers, I occasionally felt like just flipping ahead to the chapters about the eighth and ninth innings. Reisler sandwiches a lot of Pirates' history in between innings. But Reisler tests the reader's attention span as he sometimes writes 20-plus pages before returning to the account of the game.
Reisler includes some interesting nuggets, but he also commits a number of glaring errors, as noted by other reviewers. The book is heavily tilted toward the Pittsburgh perspective. Pirates fans will delight in the book, while others may find it less satisfying.
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