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Long Balls, No Strikes: What Baseball Must Do to Keep the Good Times Rolling
 
 
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Long Balls, No Strikes: What Baseball Must Do to Keep the Good Times Rolling [Hardcover]

Joe Morgan (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 7, 1999
Nobody loves baseball more than Joe Morgan. He's proved it with his hall-of-fame performance on the field and his brilliant color commentary in the broadcast booth. Bob Costas says, "There may not be anyone alive who knows more about baseball than Joe Morgan.

In his playing days, Morgan was a key cog in the Big Red Machine, and he saw the game at its zenith. From his perch in the broadcast booth he watched as baseball self-destructed, culminating in the devastating strike of 1994. And in 1998, he saw the game come back with baseball's electrifying resurgence in the season of McGwire, Sosa, and the Yankees.

But as great as '98 was, Joe knows that baseball still has a lot of problems. And while baseball may be back, Joe wants the fans, the players, and the owners to know that some serious changes still need to be made. In Long Balls, No Strikes, Morgan draws on three decades' experience and passion as he dissects what has gone wrong and right for baseball. Some of his insights may seem unorthodox, some will be controversial, but that's never stopped Joe Morgan before.

How do we improve the game on the field?
Raise the mound
Abolish the designated hitter forever
Make the umpires learn the strike zone
And that's only the beginning. . . .

How do we improve the game off the field?
Erase the invisible color line that keeps African-Americans from holding management positions
Expand the talent pool by sending more scouts to the inner cities
Have all teams share equally from the same profit pool
And that's not all. . . .
Joe Morgan doesn't believe in "the good old days." Tomorrow's game can be even better than yesterday's. But at the end of the century, the game stands at a crossroads. One path leads right back to the troubles that nearly destroyed the game forever in 1994. The other leads to a new Golden Age. If baseball wants to continue to thrive, some changes must be made. But before there are changes, we need to ask the right questions. And if Joe Morgan doesn't know the answers, then no one does.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The 1998 season was a year of wonders, to be sure, but attendance remained lower than it was before the '94 strike, 14 clubs suffered box-office declines, and the TV ratings for the World Series were in the tank. "Baseball is back," Hall-of-Fame second baseman Joe Morgan observes, "but it's not back all the way." One of the National Pastime's most engaging and entertaining explainers--as broadcaster, author, and spokesman--Morgan steps up in complexity from the basics of his last effort, Baseball for Dummies, to take some candid swings at what's right with the game these days, what's wrong with it, and how the wrongs can be righted. Naturally, he insists that baseball's owners and the players union put their house in order, and here he's not afraid to point fingers and name names. He hates that an owner like the White Sox's Jerry Reinsdorf can cry "about the lack of fiscal responsibility" in the game and then break the bank 18 months later to sign Albert Belle, a move that was so expensive he had to dismantle his team to pay for it. "Who," asks Morgan, "twisted his arm to do that?" Nor does he keep still about baseball's less-than-excellent record on minority hiring in executive and managerial positions. On the field, he strongly advocates a return to more base stealing and a higher mound, the dumping of the DH, and a less fluid strike zone. In a nice touch, he recruits the opinions of prominent baseball names--like union head Donald Fehr, manager Dusty Baker, executive Mike Veeck, and pitcher David Cone--and then comments on them. He presents a strong case for why former teammate Pete Rose's only admission to the Hall should be by ticket.

For Morgan, the 1998 season opened a window, but that's all it did. "How we utilize this opportunity," he writes, "will determine whether baseball can reclaim its title as the National Pastime, or will become a sport that has passed its time." --Jeff Silverman

From Publishers Weekly

"Baseball is back, but it's not all the way back," writes Morgan. Having proved himself one of baseball's shrewdest television analysts for both ESPN and NBC, the Hall of Fame second-baseman brings his intelligence and knowledge to this savvy state-of-the-game evaluation of where baseball is and where it should go. With the help of Lally, Morgan convincingly argues that baseball's magical 1998 campaign was an aberration and that the game needs to revamp itself if it is to retain the popularity thrust upon it last year by Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa and the remarkable success of the New York Yankees. Baseball junkies will appreciate his host of suggested improvements, ranging from raising the pitcher's mound (which was lowered after pitchers dominated the 1968 season) and standardizing the strike zone (which the league is trying to do this season) to a plea for more aggressive baserunning. They'll also find compelling his list of players who should be in the Hall of Fame (including two of his Big Red Machine teammates, Tony Perez and Davy Concepcion) and his criticisms of certain managerial chestnuts. Morgan intelligently discusses the game's labor issues, explaining the history that produced the players' union, while simultaneously arguing for a revenue-sharing plan that would give small-market teams a chance to compete. A provocative chapter notes the insidious ways in which raceAand racismAstill affect the game, both on and off the field. Tart and thoughtful, Morgan's opinions will be relished by anyone who knows and loves the game. Author tour. (Sept.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Crown; 1st edition (September 7, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0609605240
  • ISBN-13: 978-0609605240
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.9 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,634,265 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars I was hoping for something more informative and entertaining, November 2, 1999
By 
Lawrence Wood "Larry Wood" (Bowmanville, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Long Balls, No Strikes: What Baseball Must Do to Keep the Good Times Rolling (Hardcover)
Joe's book was eloquently written. Near the end of it he discussed racial issues, some of which were quite valid. Joe took it to another level, where, in my opinion, he was reading racial discrimination into just about everything associated with black players. I saw paranoia in it. I found him pontificating on several issues, treating the readerin a patronizing manner. I had hope for something better, more humourous, because baseball is, after all, a "Game". It's not desert storm, the Vietnam War, world poverty and/or peace.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The book was unfocused on its topic., October 25, 1999
By 
Ed Knapp (Colorado Springs) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Long Balls, No Strikes: What Baseball Must Do to Keep the Good Times Rolling (Hardcover)
I bought the book hoping to gain some added insight on how to preserve the game I love, but Joe would meander off on topics comparing The Big Red Machine to the Yankees and letting us know things he thought managers did wrong in last year's post season.

50% of the book was a good read, but it wasn't why I bought it. Consequently I was disappointed in what Joe did with such an important topic.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars There's more here than the subtitle indicates., January 12, 2000
This review is from: Long Balls, No Strikes: What Baseball Must Do to Keep the Good Times Rolling (Hardcover)
The time honored advice given to all aspiring writers is "Write what you know." Well Joe Morgan knows baseball, so a book from Mr. Morgan on the sport is bound to be insightful. "Long Balls, No Strikes" is subtitled "What Baseball Must Do to Keep the Good Times Rolling." If that were the only subject, we'd have, at best, a term paper rather than a book, so Mr. Morgan liberally injects additional topics to fill in the page count. Fortunately, this adds to the enjoyment of a pretty good baseball read for the modern era. He freely dispenses (and appropriately labels) his opinions on teams, players, officials and the atmosphere of modern-day baseball operations. One important word of caution: remember, Joe Morgan is first and foremost a PLAYER, so bear that in mind as you weigh his opinions and consider alternative points of view. That doesn't diminish the flavor in any way -- it's a good book for the fan. One interesting comparison he makes is between the 1998 Yankees and the Big Red Machine of 1975 (yes, he was a star member of that assemblage). Not surprisingly, he rates that Cincinnati group a shade above the New Yorkers and challenges them to repeat their ownership of the championship banner (as did the 1975 Reds). Well, they did. I wonder if he'd reconsider his rating?

One minor point: the book had too many very careless typos reflecting a poor editing job.

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