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The League That Failed
 
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The League That Failed [Hardcover]

David Quentin Voigt (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

American Sports History Series June 1998
The League That Failed cuts through the haze that surrounds 19th-century baseball history, and portrays a classic, colorful era when baseball was chaotic, struggled over by players, coaches, sportswriters, fans, and owners. It recounts the stormy atmosphere after the Inter-League Wars of 1890 and 1891, when the victorious National League made a bald-faced bid to monopolize major league baseball in the United States, succeeding for eight years with the self-styled "Big League," which dominated the game while simultaneously gaining infamous notoriety for such high-handed acts as unilaterally capping players' salaries, failing to protect umpires from physical abuse, and threatening city governments if ballpark attendance dipped.

By the turn of the century, weakening financial returns and internecine squabbles allowed an interloping upstart, the American League, to gain a toehold, forcing the National League to abandon its fantasies of monopolizing American baseball. An agreement between the two leagues in 1903 ushered in a long era of prosperity and stability under the umbrella of a familiar dual major league system.

Voigt explores the historical origins of baseball from stick-and-ball games, through the popular players, significant rules changes, and seedy business practices of the final years of the 19th century, years that were crucial to the formation of baseball as it is played today. The League That Failed scrutinizes the active promotion of a new, grandiose baseball atmosphere of the "Big League," that included improved stadiums and the increasing importance of until then unknown sports figures: the concessionaire and the sportswriter. The League That Failed convincingly insists that many of the vexing problems of contemporary baseball (falling attendance, embattled club owners, bitter player strikes, and tension between franchises over profitability) originate with the practices of the "Big League" years. Gloomy scenarios touted by many sportswriters today eerily resemble sentim


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Voigt (emeritus, sociology, Albright Coll.), who has authored seven books on baseball, including Baseball: An Illustrated History (1987), reminds us of the common themes that have run throughout the history of the sport. The largest theme, of course, is that baseball is a big business. Voight focuses on the 1890s, showing how the National League tried to assert an ultimately unsuccessful monopoly over the sport. Players and owners were often at loggerheads, and umpires railed against the lack of respect. Soon, the baseball establishment recognized that sports writers were needed to promote the game. In short, it was much like today. The addition of the American League in the early 20th century helped give baseball more stability; players had greater outlets for their talents, and there was a greater geographical representation. Written for knowledgeable baseball fans, this book would circulate best in libraries having comprehensive holdings on the subject.?Paul M. Kaplan, Lake Villa District Lib., Round Lake Beach, IL
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

...astonishingly insightful... (Vintage And Classic Baseball Collector )

...a superb book...it belongs in every serious baseball library, fans and public, spotlighting this era...Voigt's 1890s history lesson, The League That Failed, I heartily recommend reading. You will come away with a better understanding of the decade's impact in baseball's panorama. (Grandstand Baseball Annual )

...eye-opening... (Usa Today Baseball Weekly )

...brings alive the grandiose hopes and eventual failure ofThe League That Failed>>>> (Sports Collectors Digest )

It undoubtedly is an important and valuable contribution to an understanding of a particularly crucial period of the sport's evolution. (Journal Of Sport History )

Voigt...reminds us of the common themes that have run through the history of the sport...written for knowledgeable baseball fans, this book would circulate best in libraries having comprehensive holdings on the subject. (Library Journal )

...brings alive the grandiose hopes and eventual failure ofThe League That Failed (Sports Collectors Digest )

This is a valuable reference work...Voigt's grasp of the early history of professional baseball is clearly evident...a solid, useful contribution to the field, one that will be a welcome addition to public, university, and baseball historians' libraries alike. (Www.Haroldseymour.Com )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 354 pages
  • Publisher: Scarecrow Press (June 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0810833093
  • ISBN-13: 978-0810833098
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.8 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,991,946 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nice monograph on an obscure era of baseball history, May 16, 2000
This review is from: The League That Failed (Hardcover)
In this volume David Voigt, author of the standard three-volume history AMERICAN BASEBALL, turns his attention to the period from 1892 to 1900, when the National League stood alone.

The era opened with the NL absorbing four clubs from the now-defunct American Association to create a single, 12-team league. With no competition from other major leagues or other major team sports, the NL nonetheless ran itself almost into the ground within eight years.

Voigt nicely describes the action both on and off the field. More than half of the book deals with the era's leading players and pennant races; the rest focuses on managers, fans, owners, umpires, sportswriters and the rest of the baseball world. The tale culminates with the rise of the well-managed American League from an obscure minor league to the equal, if not superior, of the NL. Recommended!

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