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Opere di Reggie Jackson

Opere correlate

The Fireside Book of Baseball (1956) — Introduzione — 130 copie

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An interesting but somewhat self serving autobiography chronicling Mr. Jackson's early years up through his two championship seasons with the New York Yankees. There is a wealth of great baseball insight and inside information but is there is a central theme it is the clashes that he had with manager Billy Martin and others. Every single perceived slight is told in graphic detail. In fact, sometimes it is hard to revel in great teams, players (other managers and owners) and Mr. Jackson's wonderful accomplishments when the author constantly has his antenna up for personal grievances that bring things down.… (altro)
 
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muddyboy | 1 altra recensione | Sep 7, 2015 |
This was a fun read for me, a baseball fan from the late 1960s. I liked the great Oakland Athletics teams Reggie played on before he went on to the larger stage with the Yankees. Reading lots of familiar baseball names helps to tide me over until spring training begins again.
 
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edlynskey | 1 altra recensione | Dec 12, 2013 |
One of baseball's greatest pitchers and one of baseball's greatest hitters - and ones known as great baseball thinkers - sit down and talk about baseball and you have a front row seat. Sounds like a great concept and Gibson and Jackson do tell a lot of great stories and offer some great insight and analysis of the game. Gibson even admits he used a spitball once in a game against the Mets (like he really needed too!). I found the book disappointing though because they seemed to fall back on old cliches and baseball accepted wisdom than really offering a unique perspective. And don't get me started on all the Yankees glurge and Jeter-love (especially from Jackson). I think this book would be better if there was a third person there - someone from outside the game, say, Bill James - to stir things up and keep Gibson & Jackson honest. Good but not great baseball writing, and baseball fans should enjoy reading it and enjoy critiquing it.… (altro)
½
 
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Othemts | 3 altre recensioni | Apr 1, 2011 |
Two baseball Hall-of-Famers, Bob Gibson and Reggie Jackson, talk about how the game should be played, how they approached it, and how the game differs now from their day. Given Gibson's head-hunter reputation, I was a bit surprised to learn that he had fairly rigid conditions for brushing the batter back, and that he would never go for the head. What's not a surprise is that Gibson and Jackson have much the same work ethic about the game, that involves taking their natural gifts and improving them as much as possible through hard work, practice, attention to fundamentals, and thinking intelligently about everything they did. These approaches are often sorely lacking today; Albert Pujols is probably the best proponent of their approach to the game. It's a fascinating book for the baseball fan, especially for a St. Louisan. Interesting to see the mutual respect Gibson and Jackson share, and their regret that the only times they faced each other was in an All-Star game. I'm curious about the format of the book; it follows the form of a conversation, but it's pretty tightly edited, and both authors call up an array of facts and statistics you wouldn't imagine them to have at their fingertips. My guess is that they were e-mailing each other, giving them the opportunity to polish their comments and look up facts and figures. A very interesting baseball book, and I'm grateful to my sister and her husband for snagging me a copy at Gibson's book-signing.… (altro)
 
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burnit99 | 3 altre recensioni | Mar 21, 2010 |

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Statistiche

Opere
6
Opere correlate
2
Utenti
219
Popolarità
#102,099
Voto
4.0
Recensioni
6
ISBN
28
Lingue
1

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