Read Summer of '68: The Season That Changed Baseball--And America--Forever Online

Authors: Tim Wendel

Tags: #History, #20th Century, #Sports & Recreation, #United States, #Sociology of Sports, #Baseball

Summer of '68: The Season That Changed Baseball--And America--Forever (39 page)

86
“worst in the league”:
McLain, 84–85, 91–92.
86
“that was Denny McLain”:
Brown interview.
87
Key victory:
Jerry Green,
Year of the Tiger: A Diary of Detroit’s World Champions
, 123–124.
87
Fans tune in Harwell:
Lolich interview.
87
“ridiculous divisive gossip”:
Freehan, 94.
88
The Lost Son of Havana:
Luis Tiant, author interview, June 12, 2002.
88
Tiant’s background:
Luis Tiant, with Joe Fitzgerald,
El Tiante: The Luis Tiant Story
, 22–25;
http://www.baseball-almanac.com/players/player.php?p=tiantlu01
89
“I didn’t want him to come to America”:
Rob Ruck,
Raceball: How the Major Leagues Colonized the Black and Latin Game
, 71.
90
“still have nightmares”:
Howard interview.
90
“the ball last”:
Bob Dolgan,
Baseball Digest
, July 2002.
90
“finish what you started”:
Ryan interview.
90
“It’s the amount of money”:
Dick Bosman, author interview, June 22, 2009.
91
the Robinsons . . . complained:
Dolgan.
91
“never seen a fastball thrown so hard”:
Ibid.
91
“He’s a great pitcher”:
Tiant, 67.
92
McLain serenades Tiger Stadium crowd:
Green, 117.
92
Astrodome conditions:
“Tiant Claims Throw to 1st ‘Moved Away,’” July 10, 1968.
93
“No better example”:
“National League Wins All-Star Game, 1–0, on Mays’s Unearned Run in First,” Leonard Koppett,
New York Times
, July 10, 1968.
93
“I watched you on television”:
Tiant, 73.
94
“The Orioles are not winning”:
“Ousted Bauer Blasts Choice of Successor,”
Los Angeles Times
, July 12, 1968.
95
“a pennant contender”:
“Orioles Name Earl Weaver,”
Chicago Tribune
, July 1968.
95
Home run club:
Hank Aaron, author interview, October 2, 2000.
95
“huge block ‘S’”:
“Aaron, r.f.—Story of Superman in Flannels,” Jim Murray,
Los Angeles Times
, July 23, 1968.
96
“not sure I’ve mastered it yet”:
“Record Looms for Wilhelm By Birthday,”
Washington Post
, July 24, 1968.
96
Hansen triple play:
Associated Press, “Hansen in Triple Play Unassisted,” July 31, 1968.
97
“fighting for thirty wins”:
Tiant, 67.
97
“If Luis played for us”:
Ibid, 68.
97
“So all I want is twenty wins”:
Ibid.
97
“never have an easy inning”:
Tiant interview.
97
“hurt his arm”:
Tiant, 70.
98
Alvin Dark legacy:
Cepeda interview; Ruck, 164–165.
99
“It’s a different race”:
Daniels interview.
99
Balke’s involvement:
Ibid.
100
“No you’re not”:
Ibid.
100
“Chemistry”:
Horton interview.
101
Plane in Pool:
Cantor, 137–140; Lolich interview; Brown interview.
102
“patient at plate”:
Tim McCarver, with Phil Pepe,
Few and Chosen: Defining Greatness Across the Eras
, 98.
103
Flood background:
Brad Snyder,
A Well-Paid Slave: Curt Flood’s Fight for Free Agency in Professional Sports
. This remains the definitive work for anyone wishing to read more about Flood and his epic court battle.
103
“child of the Sixties”:
Ken Burns,
Baseball
(PBS, 1996).
104
Following in Lombardi’s footsteps:
If Snyder’s biography is the one to read about Flood, then certainly David Maraniss’s
When Pride Still Mattered
remains the standard on the football coaching legend.
104
“new regime”:
Maraniss, 443.
105
“not dead”:
Ibid., 444.
106
Chicago:
Tom Hayden, author interview, February 28, 2011, and May 28, 2011.
106
Lombardi VP choice:
Maraniss, 445.
106
Nixon then Kennedy:
Ibid, 446.
106
Kennedy telegram:
Ibid. Also cited in several other publications.
107
Harrelson at Tiger Stadium:
Ken Harrelson, author interview, August 16, 2011; Green, 94–95; McLain, 88.
108
“whole world gone crazy”:
Green, 74.
108
“doesn’t need . . . basic training”:
Ibid, 96.
108
No permits in Chicago:
Hayden interview; Kurlansky, 281.
108
16 million watched on television:
www.nielsenwire.com
; also available on
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KvebyWqLXeo&feature=related
.
108
Tigers-White Sox game rescheduled for Milwaukee:
Cantor, 136.
109
“pro-war stances”:
Kurlansky, 281.
109
“ We flew into Chicago”:
Larry Dierker, author interview, July 13, 2011.
110
“clubbing anyone they could find”:
Kurlansky, 282.
110
“amazed by what was going on”:
Dierker interview.
111
“guy who made us go”:
Brown interview.
111
“hard as I’ve ever been hit”:
McAuliffe interview.
112
“I’m dead”:
Green, 163.
112
McLain missed fight:
Ibid., 165.
113
McAuliffe suspended:
McAuliffe interview; Green, 166.
114
“I feel so funky”:
Cantor, 109.
114
blackboard in Yankee Stadium:
Green, 170; Cantor, 110.
115
Showdown with Dark:
Tiant interview; Tiant, 71.

PART V

117
“pins and needles”:
Hayden interview.
118
“a little guy, always arguing”:
Freehan, 22.
118
“good memory”:
Hayden interview.
118
“some of the best amateur baseball”:
Freehan, 21.
118
“ Wouldn’t it be funny?”:
Green, 173.
119
“It took a lot”:
McAuliffe interview.
119
“only four games ahead”:
Green, 174.
120
“it will just about be over”:
Ibid, 177.
120
“If we beat them tomorrow ”:
Ibid, 179.
120
“It’s first goddamn inning”:
McLain, 99.
121
“Fastball’s coming”:
Ibid, 100.
121
“flair for showmanship”:
Green, 179.
122
Ed Sullivan:
McLain, 102–103; Green, 187; Cantor, 144.
122
Winning No. 30:
McLain, 104–106; Green, 189–196; Cantor, 145–148.
122
“How could I be a thirty-game winner?”:
Green, 189–190.
124
Children’s Crusade:
Cantor, 145.
125
Gibson’s closing run:
“Gibson was great in ‘68,” Bill Deane, Baseball Analysts,
http://baseballanalysts.com/archives/2005/06/gibson_was_grea_1.php
126
“I mastered my craft”:
Gibson, 1. Ironically, this is the opening line, his “Call me, Ishmael,” of his second memoir.
126
“always gave you a ball to hit”:
Gibson and Jackson (this is Jackson’s opinion), 147.
127
Grooving one to Mickey Mantle:
McLain, 111–113; Green, 210, Cantor, 154–157.
129
Gibson’s reaction:
Gibson, 200.
129
“a nice guy like Roger”:
Pappas, 84.
130
Only fastballs to Maris:
Ibid., 84–85.
130
“To have any hope”:
Ryan interview.
131
Perry’s no-hitter:
Associated Press, “Perry Hurls No-Hitter,” September 18, 1968; United Press International, “Mom Misses No-Hitter by Perry,” September 19, 1968; United Press International, ‘“My Biggest Thrill,’ Says Veteran Perry,” September 18, 1968; Gaylord Perry, author interview, August 2001.
131
“They are not”:
Shirley Povich,
Washington Post
, September 20, 1968.
131
Washburn’s no hitter:
Associated Press, “Cards’ Washburn Hurls No-Hitter, Second Successive One at Giants’ Park,” September 19, 1968; Harry Jupiter, “Gay, Ray Play No-Hit Tit for Tat,”
Sporting News
, October 5, 1968.
132
“kind of summed that up”:
Perry interview.
132
Candlestick Park:
Gillette and Enders, 222–229.
133
“Prayer”:
Brett Butler, author interview, September 1990.
134
“culture of the new league”:
MacCambridge, 250.
135
Zimmerman on Namath:
Ibid., 251.
135
“It was redundant”:
Ibid., 262.
136
“meant to . . . pitch”:
Tiant interview.
136
“flared like a bull”:
Tiant, 69.
137
“bowing the neck”:
Ibid.
137
“watch TV ”:
Tiant interview.
137
“end of an era”:
Mead interview.
138
“I would not trade places with anyone”:
Associated Press, “Rose Doesn’t Walk, He Always Hustles,” June 30, 1968.
138
Look out for Lolich:
McCarver interview.

Other books

Barsk by Lawrence M. Schoen
Forbidden Fire by Heather Graham
Alliance Forged by Kylie Griffin
Dropped Names by Frank Langella
Seductive as Flame by Johnson, Susan
Kill Two Birds & Get Stoned by Kinky Friedman
A Medal for Leroy by Michael Morpurgo
The Dark Space by Mary Ann Rivers, Ruthie Knox


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024