No one on the Red Sox ever dreamed that McCarthy would choose Galehouse. Not even Galehouse figured he'd be picked. "He was dumbfounded," recalled Mel Parnell. "He was shagging flies in the outfield during batting practice when McCarthy ...
Baseball Hall of Famers have their Cooperstown . . . and now Baseball Hall of Shamers have their Blooperstown. Yes, the Boys of Blunder are forever enshrined in this madcap memorial to our national pastime . . . from The Hallowed Hall ...
The author of the popular The Baseball Hall of Shame give equal time to football's most shameful and hilarious moments, baring the blunders of football's hottest stars from the training table to the Super Bowl.
This fascinating book covers every era of baseball, position by position, and answers the question: Which players really belong in the Hall of Fame?
Bruce Nash, Allan Zullo. at the plate. ... Surely Martin had stolen the Orioles' signs, thought Wynegar, who ordered another pitchout which Bordi threw for ball three. ... "At first, I couldn't believe it when I saw the pitchout.
Presents historical photographs and original essays on Hall of Fame players by nine of the country's finest baseball writers.
Nash and Zullo turn their unique ability to ferret out the absurd, amusing and ridiculous to one of America's favorite pastimes--golf.
his time Bender wanted to be judged strictly as a pitcher, but he wasn't. ... how he stacks up numerically against his peers, and the natural place to begin such analysis is at his bronze bust at the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
Allan Zullo's newest book, Amazing but True Bird Tales, documents nearly 200 outrageous shenanigans and surprising feats performed by our feathered friends.
Lists some of the worst and wildest fouls, tricks, defeats, officiating, and stunts in basketball history