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The Ballad of Billy and George: The Tempestuous Baseball Marriage of Billy Martin and George Steinbrenner
 
 
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The Ballad of Billy and George: The Tempestuous Baseball Marriage of Billy Martin and George Steinbrenner [Hardcover]

Phil Pepe (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 1, 2008
The peculiar, often tempestuous, and always entertaining baseball relationship between manager Billy Martin and owner George Steinbrenner.

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Customers buy this book with 1961*: The Inside Story of the Maris-Mantle Home Run Chase (Rough Cut) $14.45

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“The author started covering the Yankees in 1970 three years before Steinbrenner bought the team and he was there through all the turmoil that marked the next two decades. . . . This [book] is easy and entertaining reading, just as Pepe's columns were in the New York Daily News.
Sports Collectors Digest

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From the Back Cover

They were compared to Mutt and Jeff, Hatfield and McCoy, and even Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton: two stubborn and driven men whose on-again off-again partnership entertained the nation for two decades.

When Yankees owner George Steinbrenner hired former player Billy Martin to manage the famous baseball franchise, they immediately won two American League pennants and the 1977 World Series. But Billy was a scrappy, defiant son to Steinbrenner’s role as fickle father. Feuds erupted and separations ensued when each accused the other of disrespect, and the dysfunctional house that Ruth built was frequently broken up when the two would part ways, only to reunite within weeks. Through a total of five partnerships and five firings, Steinbrenner and Martin  created great baseball drama and had some championship seasons along the way.

The Ballad of Billy and George is a blow-by-blow history of their combustible
chemistry, drawn from interviews with Billy Martin Jr., Mickey Mantle, Reggie Jackson, Ron Guidry, Sparky Lyle, Goose Gossage, Bucky Dent, Clete Boyer, Graig Nettles, Lou Piniella, Clyde King, and Gene Michael. Veteran sportswriter and author Phil Pepe also recalls one-on-one conversations with Billy Martin.
 
This story of the tumultuous love-hate relationship between Steinbrenner and Martin is affectionately presented by Pepe, who covered the Yankees every day during these rollicking times and who offers a first-hand account of what he remembers as “the best of times and the worst of times.”

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Lyons Press (April 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 159921282X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1599212821
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 5.8 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,514,460 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Bronx Zoo lives in Print!, April 15, 2010
This review is from: The Ballad of Billy and George: The Tempestuous Baseball Marriage of Billy Martin and George Steinbrenner (Hardcover)
As a lifelong Yankees' fan, having seen my first Yankees game at Shea Stadium (while the old Stadium was being renovated) during the first year of George Steinbrenner's ownership, this book brings back classic memories (Good, Bad, and Ugly).

Quotes from all my boyhood idols are here including the late great Thurman Munson, Graig Nettles, Lou Pinella, Sparky Lyle (who loved to sit naked in Birthday cakes), Goose Gossage, and of course Reggie Jackson. Nettles especially, with his great wit and one-liners made me laugh at loud.

Billy was a great manager, and was usually misunderstood. Billy's son sheds new light on his Dad (a devout Christian, but as #1 Billy puts it, "I'm not a perfect human being."). Additionally, we see the many sides of George, and all the Yankee Brass.

As a New Yorker growing up in the Hudson Valley, I was a big fan of Phil Pepe as well, who authored the book.

It's a good, fun, and quick read. If you're a Yankees fan and vaguely remember the 70's on, pick up this book. You will not be disappointed.

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars RICK "SHAQ" GOLDSTEIN SAYS: "THE HATFIELD'S & THE McCOY'S BOTH WORE YANKEE PINSTRIPES!", March 22, 2008
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This review is from: The Ballad of Billy and George: The Tempestuous Baseball Marriage of Billy Martin and George Steinbrenner (Hardcover)
On August 2, 1975 Yankee owner George Steinbrenner fired team manager Bill Virdon and hired Billy Martin to replace him. When Martin had played for the Yankees he was known as a scrappy regular season player, but in the World Series, which he and the Yankees were in almost every year, he rose to heroic levels, especially in the 1953 series when he hit 500 and set the record (12) for hits in a six game series. Prior to being hired to manage the Yankees, Billy had been hired by the Minnesota Twins in 1969 and transformed a team that had won 79 games the year before, into a juggernaut that won 97 games and along with it won the American League West. Despite such instant managerial success, off the field problems including an altercation with the Twin's traveling secretary, Howard Fox, on a chartered flight, and a brawl in a Detroit bar with one of his best pitchers, Dave Boswell, which landed Boswell in the hospital with a concussion, led to Billy being fired after one season. In 1970 the Detroit Tigers won 79 games finished in fourth place and their attendance dropped by 500,000 fans. In 1971 Detroit hired Billy Martin as their manager and with the fiery Martin at the helm they won 91 games, and finished in second place. In 1972 Detroit won 86 games finished in first place in the American League East and attendance increased over 300,000 fans. In 1973 the Tigers were 71 wins and 63 losses when Billy had a disagreement with upper management about disciplining players who didn't operate by his rules. He also told management he didn't agree with their assessment about some of their players, and Billy also picked this less than ideal time to ask for a 3 year contract, so with 28 games left in the season he was fired. Martin was out of work for six days when the Texas Rangers hired him for the last 23 games of the season. In 1974 Billy led a Texas team that had won 57 games the year before to 84 wins and second place. Midway through the 1975 season the Ranger ownership who hired Billy sold the team and Billy clashed with the new owners on personnel, and among other things, slapped the Ranger's 60-year-old traveling secretary. With 67 games left in the season Billy got fired.

Those were the "stable" years leading up to the nationwide soap opera that began on August 2, 1975, 2 ½ years after George Steinbrenner bought the New York Yankees, the most famous sports franchise in the world from CBS. That fateful day was when "The Boss", George Steinbrenner hired Billy Martin to manage the Yankees. From 1975 to 1988 "The Boss" would hire and fire Billy on the nation's biggest stage FIVE-TIMES! They were polar opposites: Billy came from a poor broken home, while Steinbrenner came from a family of privilege. Everywhere Billy went growing up they said he was too small, and because of that he carried a chip on his shoulder bigger than his body. Add to this combustible mixture, ego's like Reggie Jackson's, along with Steinbrenner interfering in the locker room with "RAH-RAH" speeches, with Billy's drinking and brawling, and you have a script playing out on the nations stage, that an Academy Award winning writer couldn't create!

One of the most famous quotes during this period was right before the end of one of Billy's many tenures with the Yankees, referring to Reggie Jackson and Steinbrenner: "HE'S A BORN LIAR," (Jackson) "THE OTHER'S CONVICTED!" (Steinbrenner) This was a reference to Steinbrenner's 1974 felony conviction for making illegal contributions to Richard Nixon's reelection campaign. If you lived through this time period you'll understand why the author compresses a lot of the data. Interspersed throughout the book are comments from Billy Martin Jr. looking back at his Father's life, since Billy (Sr.) died in a DUI accident on December 25, 1989.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Billy Martin, World Series, George Steinbrenner, New York, American League, Yankee Stadium, Reggie Jackson, Red Sox, The Boss, Kansas City, Gabe Paul, Thurman Munson, Yogi Berra, Graig Nettles, White Sox, Lou Piniella, Blue Jays, Ron Guidry, New Jersey, Mickey Mantle, Bob Lemon, Gene Michael, Chris Chambliss, Sparky Lyle, Dick Williams
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Front Cover | Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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