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Breaking the Slump: Baseball in the Depression Era by Alexander, Charles C. New edition (2004) Paperback

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"Reading Breaking the Slump is like being given a box seat on Opening Day. In vivid detail, Charles Alexander brings to life the Gas House gang and the many other luminaries who brightened the dark days of the Great Depression in baseball's greatest decade." -- William E. Leuchtenburg, William Rand Kenan Professor, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Paperback

First published April 16, 2002

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Charles C. Alexander

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
23 reviews
February 12, 2018
Excellent Book

Charles Alexander did a wonderful job in how baseball survived during the Great Depression. The A's, once a World Series champion, had to sell their star ballplayers to survive which it never recovered while the Yankees dominated the 1930's. What I found most interesting was Bonus Wagner's view on the current pitching of that era. He said managers are relying too much on relief pitching. He predicted starters will be pitching fewer innings and other will be fewer complete games. If this continues he predicted the game will take longer to complete and the fans will be bored. That prediction sadly has come true. This is a wonderful book for sports history fans.
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34 reviews21 followers
March 29, 2017
At times, the narrative reads like a recreation broadcast pulled from the boxscore. Breaking the Slump would have gone for extra bases if “Organized Baseball” had been better framed within the cultural experience of America during the Depression, and less like a forced march through every season using the same thematic structure. After a couple of times, it was clear that the loser of the World Series received a smaller players’ share and the “Negro Leagues” were poor tabulators of team standings. We get it. Even when Alexander balks, strikes out or throws at our head, how can you not like a day at the “Old Ball Game?”
2 reviews
March 13, 2019
I really enjoyed the book I found it very interesting because this book talks about the history of baseball and how it has risen in today's life and the difference of baseball from back in the day to today's every day baseball life.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews