This was a pretty good book that is about the New York Yankees 2006 season, though it was more about the personality traits of the team personnel than the actual games of in the season.
The book discusses what it was like in the Yankee clubhouse during the 2006 season from the perspective of a journalist from the New York Post. Throughout the pages the reader will hear about:
- What Brian Cashman thought when he was looking at the roster, and how he felt after finally wresting control of baseball operations from George Steinbrenner's Florida group, led by Randy Levine.
- How the team was affected by George Steinbrenner's health.
- How Joe Torre handled the clubhouse
- How the A-Rod and Jeter issue was handled by the two players
- What Randy Johnson, Gary Sheffield, Carl Pavano, and Jason Giambi were like
- How new players like Johnny Damon handled the pressure
- and a couple of series of games, namely the 5 game series against the Red Sox and the 2006 ALDS against the Detroit Tigers.
Basically this was a tell all book about the members of the Yankees in 2006. Though this was expected given the title of the book, I was hoping for more baseball and less drama. I know the author saw more than the average fan as he had greater access to the clubhouse than fans do. And there were a number of things that occurred during the 2006 season that from a fan's perspective the author was right in a number of his criticisms of the team. With that said, the book seemed to me to be written by a bitter newspaper baseball beat writer who was trying to get back at people in the clubhouse. It read like a supermarket tabloid and was essentially one long constant criticism of the team. It also seemed to me that the author was "ghost writing" for A-Rod. While he criticized everyone associated with the team, including A-Rod, the author seemed to be very forgiving of Alex while blasting Derek Jeter as a cold hearted player who will freeze out people whenever he felt like it who also did not deserve to have MVP consideration that year because A-Rod had better numbers, that Joe Torre was a clueless manager who did not know how to run a team, or did not care about how the team was run, did not support his star slugger and even hurt him by changing his position in the lineup, and how A-Rod was constantly harassed by the unrelenting fans and uncaring teammates.
Baseball fans will probably enjoy this book and not just for the story. I found it very interesting to read about the season 10 years after it was written. Hindsight made reading this book kind of fun. For instance, the author talks about how the Red Sox did not make any moves at the trade deadline in 2006 and that Theo Epstein was taken to task for it. Yet he seemed to had made the correct move as the Sox won the World Series in 2007. With that said, the book will probably be best enjoyed by fans of Alex Rodriguez, people who enjoy tell-all books, and Yankee fans,