The wildly entertaining narrative of the outrageous 1981 Dodgers from the award-winning author of Dynastic, Fantastic, Bombastic and The Baseball Codes In the Halberstam tradition of capturing a season through its unforgettable figures, They Bled Blue is a sprawling, mad tale of excess and exuberance, the likes of which could only have occurred in that place, at that time. That it culminated in an unlikely World Series win--during a campaign split by the longest player strike in baseball history--is not even the most interesting thing about this team. The Dodgers were led by the garrulous Tommy Lasorda--part manager, part cheerleader--who unyieldingly proclaimed devotion to the franchise through monologues about bleeding Dodger blue and worshiping the "Big Dodger in the Sky," and whose office hosted a regular stream of Hollywood celebrities. Steve Garvey, the All-American, All-Star first baseman, had anchored the most durable infield in major league history, and, along with Davey Lopes, Bill Russell, and Ron Cey, was glaringly aware that 1981 would represent the end of their run together. The season's real story, however, was one that nobody expected at the outset: a chubby lefthander nearly straight out of Mexico, twenty years old with a wild delivery and a screwball as his flippin' out pitch. The Dodgers had been trying for decades to find a Hispanic star to activate the local Mexican population; Fernando Valenzuela was the first to succeed, and it didn't take long for Fernandomania to sweep far beyond the boundaries of Chavez Ravine. They Bled Blue is the rollicking yarn of the Los Angeles Dodgers' crazy 1981 season.
Take someone like Hugh Casey, who was never able to become a fulltime starter over his nine-year big-league career in the 1930s and '40s, but was nonetheless one of the most feared pitchers in the game, a reputation owed mostly to his ...
Easler, Mike, 144 Ebel, 302 Eckersley, Dennis, xi, 6, 172, 232, 239, 242-60, 266, 282, 288, 304-5, 308-9, 312 Edwards Air Force Base, 191 Eisenreich, Jim, 257 El Segundo, 86, 265 Elias Sports Bureau, 132 Elster, Kevin, 222-23 Engel, ...
That brought up Ferguson, the fifth-place hitter, who did what he could to back up his ongoing claim that the Dodgers were the superior team, drilling a hanging slider into the second deck in left field, somewhere between 12 miles and 9 ...
In Cincinnati Red and Dodger Blue: Baseball's Greatest Forgotten Rivalry, Tom Van Riper provides a fresh look at these two powerhouse teams and the circumstances that made them so pivotal.
In Brothers in Arms: Koufax, Kershaw, and the Dodgers' Extraordinary Pitching Tradition, acclaimed Dodgers writer Jon Weisman explores the organization's rich pitching history, from Koufax and Drysdale to Valenzuela and Hershiser, to the ...
“It takes almost a miracle to beat him,” Casey pointed out. “You try to put the whammy on him. ... A journalist waylaid Sandy before the game to find out whether he could fathom Casey's trippingly surreal “Stengelese.
The sequel to Indigo Springs, "A psychologically astute, highly original debut—complex, eerie, and utterly believable." —Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review This powerful sequel to the A.M. Dellamonica's Sunburst Award–winning contemporary ...
25th ANNIVERSARY EDITION • An epic novel of the violence and depravity that attended America's westward expansion, Blood Meridian brilliantly subverts the conventions of the Western novel and the mythology of the Wild West—from the ...
Among the nearly eighty thousand fans gathered to watch the Dodgers beat their rivals, the Giants, who had moved to San Francisco, were Edward G. Robinson, Ray Bolger, Jimmy Stewart, Gregory Peck, Danny Kaye, Chuck Connors, ...
The various pieces of this book could not have come together as they did without the heroic efforts of Todd Portnowitz at Knopf assistant to my editor, Ann Close. Todd was unfazed by the demands of organizing hundreds of pages of text ...