Monday, 9 May 2016
Babe Ruth's Called Shot: The Myth and Mystery of Baseball's Greatest Home Run by Ed Sherman
Posted by Tention Free on 11:59 in Historical Fiction Non-Fiction Books Sports and Games | Comments : 0
Game Three of the 1932
World Series between the Cubs and Yankees stood locked at 4-4. Some
50,000 fans had gathered at Wrigley Field that bright October day, but
above their roar Ruth heard insults pouring from the Cubs' dugout. He
watched a fastball from Cubs pitcher Charlie Root set the count at 2-2.
Agitated, the Bambino made a gesture, holding out two fingers—but what
did it mean? Lou Gehrig heard him call out: "I'm going to knock the next
one down your goddamn throat." Then the game's greatest showman pounded
Root's next pitch. The ball whizzed past the centerfield scoreboard and
began its long journey into history. In an instant, the legend of the
Called Shot was born, the debate about what Ruth actually did still
dividing fans and sports historians alike more than 80 years later.
Deftly placing the homer in the social and economic contexts of the
time, Chicago sportswriter Ed Sherman gives us the first full-length,
in-depth look at one of baseball's most celebrated and enduring
moments—including the incredible stories of two hand-held videos taken
by fans and rediscovered decades later—and answers the question: Did
Ruth really call his shot?
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