After Michael Lewis' "Moneyball," the book on how the Oakland As used Sabermetrics, on-base-averages and other stats to create a winning team, in 2003, several similar books have been published.
There's "Big Data Baseball" about the Pittsburgh Pirates and "Astroball"about the Houston Astros, and "The Best Team Money Can Buy" about the L.A. Dodgers.
"Homegrown," although about the Red Sox, which I'm not a fan of at all, is one of the better books, I think, in showing how luck plays into developing a championship team. It got down at one point, Alex Speier writes, of how the Red Sox team was able to pick above the Cubs in the 2015 draft because the Cubs had swept them in a series during the2014 season. Had the Red Sox won a game, they would have had a better record than Chicago and would have fallen below the Cubs in the draft order. Instead, the Sox chose Andrew Benintendi and he became a vital cog in Boston's World Series run last season.
Speier does an excellent job of writing about something many would find boring. He adds anecdotes, lively quotes, inside observations of his coverage of the team and nice game recaps. It all boils down to luck, either in the draft or by trusting scouting reports and Speier really shows that element in "Homegrown."
I can vouch for as being a good book. I am a Yankees' fan (Actually, a Minnesota Twins' fan first) and really don't like the Red Sox. But for Speier to be able to hold my interest in reading about the despised team shows just how well of a writer he is.