Episode 149 (Re-run) - Damn Yankees Take Broadway
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
14h ago
With our heroes sidelined this week for one last time, why don't we all kick back, relax, and take in a show. Baseball has inspired dozens of films, but thusfar only one major Broadway musical, the classic Damn Yankees, which debuted 65 years ago this week. Mike and Bill, both theater fans, dig into its history, and the legendary artists who brought it life on stage and screen. Plus, happy birthday to Mike Cuellar and Patron request Lennie Merullo ..read more
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Episode 331 - Two Titans Fall
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
2w ago
Last week, we learned of the deaths of Whitey Herzog and Carl Erskine, both icons within the game of baseball and beyond, but for vastly different reasons. This week, Mike and Bill look back at their incredible lives and the impact those lives had on the sport and the world at large.   ..read more
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Episode 330 - The Rangers' Big Inning
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
3w ago
How many rakes do you have to step on before the spectacle of it goes from funny to unfunny to hilarious again? Unfortunately for Baltimore fans, the Orioles put this to the test 28 years ago this week when the allowed 16 runs in the 8th inning to the Texas Rangers. As they sometimes do, Mike and Bill dig into this extraordinary inning on a granular level, talking about the players and events that made it so bonkers. Plus, happy birthday to Jim Lonborg and Dan Cotter ..read more
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Episode 329 - Fox On The Sox
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
1M ago
Was Nellie Fox overrated by old school types who voted him into the Hall of Fame? Or is he undervalued by today's modern metrics that rank him as one off the weakest members of that exclusive club of players? The answer, most likely, is yes to both questions. But he was never more valuable than he was 65 years ago this week, when he collected five hits, including an uncharacteristic homer on Opening Day, kicking off the White Sox drive for the AL pennant in style. Mike and Bill look back at one of the more perplexing players in baseball history. Plus, happy birthday to Pythias Russ and Hippo V ..read more
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Episode 328 - His Grace, Duke Edwin Snider
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
1M ago
Overshadowed by the greatness of Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle, the third of the holy trio of Golden Age, New York-based center fielders, Duke Snider, was a marvel in his own right. A five tool player whose short peak rivaled Willie's for the title of the best player in the National League and pushed the Dodgers to their first championship. But all good things come to an end and, 61 years ago this week, the Dodgers sold him to the Mets. Mike and Bill look back at the incredible career of the Duke of Flatbush and his indelible imprint on baseball history. Plus, happy birthday to Jeff Heath and ..read more
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Episode 327 - Sammy Sosa Takes the Crosstown Express
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
1M ago
The Cubs might not be willing to acknowledge it today, but it was 32 years ago this week that they acquired one of the greatest players in franchise history, trading away aging slugger George Bell for a dynamic, young Sammy Sosa. Sosa would go on to challenge for the single season home run record, club more than 600 career bombs, and win an MVP. Mike and Bill look back at Sosa's incredible rise, somewhat inexplicable fall, and try to figure out why the Cubs still pretend that he never existed. Plus, happy birthday to Kip Selbach and Travis Fryman! And farewell to Tom Qualters and Jim Hannan ..read more
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Episode 326 - Judy Johnson Refuses To Go Gray Gracefully
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
1M ago
It was the most expensive trade in Negro League history. It was also specificallly designed to be the killing strike that finished off the Pittsburgh Crawfords. Finally, it ended the career of Hall of Fame third baseman Judy Johnson, who refused to report to the Homestead Grays when he and Josh Gibson were traded there 87 years ago this week. Mike and Bill look back at the Hall of Fame lives of Judy Johnson and Cumberland Posey, and the history of the Grays that brought about this historic deal. Plus, happy birthday to Vern Law and Hank Sauer! And farewell to Brant Alyea and Al McBean ..read more
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Episode 325 - Baseball Beyond Borders (with Michael Clair)
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
2M ago
From the very beginning of the National League, baseball's overlords have attempted to grow the sport beyond America's borders. These efforts have met with varying levels of success over the years, but it's clear that baseball has never been more popular abroad than it is in 2024. Our guest this week, MLB.com's manager of storytelling Michael Clair, has a new newsletter that highlights the international game wherever it's being played and is making sure we'll know where the next generation of great major league players is going to come from. Plus, happy birthday to Paul Schaal and Jeff Pfeffer ..read more
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Episode 324 - Baseball In the Little Big Apple (with special guest Kevin Baker
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
2M ago
For as long as it has existed, baseball has been intertwined with New York City, with the two developing alongside one another into American institutions. With special guest Kevin Baker, author of The New York Game: Baseball and the Rise of a New City, Mike and Bill trace the history of the sport in the greatest city in the world, how New York politics shaped it, and how some of the greatest players and managers in history found their way to New York and made it their own. Plus, happy birthday to Danny Cater and Shannon Stewart! And farewell to Don Lassetter and Steve Skaggs ..read more
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Episode 37 Rerun - Danny Gardella and the Mexican League Declare War
This Week In Baseball History
by Mike Bates and Bill Parker
2M ago
Major League Baseball rarely faces a realistic challenge to its hegemony, but, 72 years ago this week, Danny Gardella became the first American-born player to sign with Jorge Pasquel's Mexican League, touching off a short war that challenged the reserve clause, increased salaries at home and abroad, and wound up ending both Gardella's career and the Mexican League's independence. Mike and Bill examine Gardella's life, Pasquel's insurgency, MLB's response, and the court battle that followed ..read more
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