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14+ oeuvres 688 utilisateurs 4 critiques

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Œuvres de Joseph Reichler

Oeuvres associées

Baseball rookies who made good (1958) — Avant-propos — 5 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Reichler, Joseph
Nom légal
Reichler, Joseph Lawrence
Date de naissance
1915-01-01
Date de décès
1988-12-12
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Manhattan, New York, USA
Lieu du décès
Roslyn Heights, New York, USA
Lieux de résidence
Roslyn Heights, New York, USA
Professions
sportswriter
Relations
Ricky (wife)
Organisations
The Associated Press
Major League Promotion Corporation
Prix et distinctions
J. G. Taylor Spink Award (1980)

Membres

Critiques

1 voter
Signalé
lateinnings | 3 autres critiques | Jun 11, 2010 |
This book weighs 4.5 pounds. Four-point-five pounds of mostly raw statistical data sans statistical analysis on over sized coffee-table style pages with teensy margins, font size at most 7, printed on something like rice paper, only the paper is not opaque; the flimsy type of paper comprising most Bibles. This edition approaches 2,300 pages. That's 2,300 pages of raw baseball statistics. Imagine reading all seven volumes of Proust's In Search of Lost Time, only instead of reading about bucolic introspective meanderings throughout the lovely French countryside as remembered by a sickly, housebound young Frenchman, you read about nothing but home runs and earned run averages and balks, on pages tissue-thin, the tiny text printed all the way out to the edge of distant margins, printed practically off the edge of the page like "bleeds" (that's printer's lingo for you).

I washed and waxed one Saturday afternoon in 1982 my father's twenty-five-foot long Itasca mini-motor home in order to earn the dough to pay for this $29.99 baseball behemoth of behemoths, on sale at -- it was either B. Dalton or Waldenbooks, I believe. I've never worked so hard or with such purpose in my life; I really wanted that book--and fast!

So what's the big deal about a book one could just as easily use as a clunky dumb-bell filled with nothing but arcane baseball numbers dating back to 1861; a book dealing with often obscure, obfuscating percentages such as slugging % (total bases divided by at-bats) versus on-base-average (walks, hits, reached base on error, but *not* hbp (hit by pitch) or fc (fielder's choice) divided by at-bats; the stats correlated and itemized to every player in the history of Major League Baseball who ever played the game (included even if that player played in only one game, one inning for that matter) he's itemized like a nominal tax deduction for all time and eternity; so again, the question is: what's the big deal exactly?....

To this day, I do not know. I know only that the numbers and statistics about baseball fascinated my then burgeoning thirteen year old brain (as they do to this day, minus many brain cells), and that I was willing to spend seven sweltering, ungodly humid summer hours scrubbing and waxing and rinsing and drying with a shammy...what in hindsight amounted to nothing more than a rectilinear-ten-ton-monstrosity-on-double wheels, in order to obtain it, The Baseball Encyclopedia, which, if my division is correct, comes out to working for $4.28 an hour for a book weighing 4.5 pounds, or rather, working for 95 cents a pound per hour.
… (plus d'informations)
13 voter
Signalé
absurdeist | 3 autres critiques | Mar 21, 2009 |
Not a reading book at all, rather a sit on the couch and peruse for hours while watching the nightly ball game.

I've resisted buying this for years. Its long out of print, the statistics end in 1995, and the statistical methods used were eclipsed by the new SABRmetric measures long ago, and it's quite a tome, taking up loads of space on a bookshelf. Even though I can access everything I want online through Baseball Almanac or whatever, there is something reassuring and comforting about balancing this mammoth volume on my lap, and looking up statistics for Jimmy Austin, Hal Trosky, or try to figure out just a little bit more about Sigmund Jakucki. God, I love baseball.

This book can be practically stolen price wise at a decent used book store.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ksmyth | 3 autres critiques | Apr 26, 2008 |
One of my proudest possessions: the first edition of the Baseball Encyclopedia, still regarded by many as the best (since they immediately started backtracking from the corrected records that upset so many people).
1 voter
Signalé
languagehat | 3 autres critiques | Dec 18, 2005 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
14
Aussi par
1
Membres
688
Popularité
#36,764
Évaluation
½ 4.3
Critiques
4
ISBN
36

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