8 new baseball books to carry you through spring training

8 new baseball books to carry you through spring training

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The irony of the title of this book is that Gil Hodges has never been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, even though many close observers of his career have long contended that he deserves a spot in the Cooperstown shrine. Besides being an outstanding first baseman for the Dodgers, Hodges managed the 1969 Miracle Mets to a World Series championship. It was the class and integrity with which Hodges comported himself both in and out of baseball that elevates him in many eyes and is an underlying theme of this exhaustively researched biography.  Here's an excerpt from "Gil Hodges": “After games, [Jackie] Robinson and his white teammates went their separate ways. But at some point early in their friendship, and especially after Hodges married in 1948, the Robinsons and Hodges began to spend time together away from the ballpark. Like Hodges, Robinson was no night owl, and the two men had much in common. “‘Gil was one of the first and only ones we socialized with,’ Robinson’s wife, Rachel, told me. ‘He was quiet, friendly, warm – you could count on him. And you didn’t have to ask for help from Gil ... he anticipated what you needed and was there for you.’  ”

The irony of the title of this book is that Gil Hodges has never been elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, even though many close observers of his career have long contended that he


deserves a spot in the Cooperstown shrine. Besides being an outstanding first baseman for the Dodgers, Hodges managed the 1969 Miracle Mets to a World Series championship. It was the class


and integrity with which Hodges comported himself both in and out of baseball that elevates him in many eyes and is an underlying theme of this exhaustively researched biography. 


Here's an excerpt from "Gil Hodges": “After games, [Jackie] Robinson and his white teammates went their separate ways. But at some point early in their friendship, and


especially after Hodges married in 1948, the Robinsons and Hodges began to spend time together away from the ballpark. Like Hodges, Robinson was no night owl, and the two men had much in


common. “‘Gil was one of the first and only ones we socialized with,’ Robinson’s wife, Rachel, told me. ‘He was quiet, friendly, warm – you could count on him. And you didn’t have to ask for


help from Gil ... he anticipated what you needed and was there for you.’  ”