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The
Boston Red Sox
Frederick
G. Lieb
New
Foreword by Al Silverman
March
2003
paper,
0-8093-2493-8, $18.00
304
pages, 5 1/2 x 8, 27 illus.
Baseball
Writing
Baseball
Richard
Peterson, series editor
The
first World Series in 1903 pitted Boston against Pittsburgh. Celebrate the
centennial of that legendary encounter with the long-awaited reissue of
these rare team histories recounting the earliest exploits of the Red
Sox and the Pirates.
Through
their triumphs and downfalls, no major league club has had a more colorful
history than the Boston Red Sox. Originally published in 1947 as part of
G. P. Putnam’s Sons fifteen legendary major league team histories, and
aided by twenty-seven photographs of legendary players, Frederick G.
Lieb’s The Boston Red Sox chronicles the club’s early years
from its founding as the Pilgrims in 1901 through the 1946 season.
In
the American League’s infancy, Boston was a city of champions, winning
pennants in 1903, 1904, 1912, 1915, 1916, and 1918. In 1903, the underdog
Red Sox, still the Pilgrims at that time, prevailed against the Pittsburgh
Pirates in the first World Series, and went on to garner the title of
World Champions five more times by 1918. These were the prosperous years
when the roster included such luminaries as Babe Ruth, Tris Speaker, Duffy
Lewis, Harry Hooper, and Cy Young. Jimmy Collins was the club’s first
manager, while such players as Bill Dinneen, Buck Freeman, Lou Criger, and
Patsy Dougherty added to Boston’s rich baseball heritage.
But
glory proved fleeting in Boston. Following Ed Barrow’s World Series
championship of 1918, the Red Sox twice changed ownership, lost star
players to the wealthy Yankees in the process, and finished in the cellar
nine out of eleven years from 1922 to 1932. New hope came when
multimillionaire Tom Yawkey purchased the Red Sox in 1933. Through the
costly additions of such stars as Joe Cronin, Lefty Grove, and Wes
Ferrell, Yawkey restored the club to the first division.
But a pennant
victory eluded him until 1946 when a new set of stars—Ted Williams, Tex
Hughson, Bobby Doerr, Dave Ferriss, Johnny Pesky, and Dom
DiMaggio—emerged from the Red Sox farm system to regain glory for Boston.
“The
franchise in almost every one of its eras, as Lieb shows us over and over
in his richly documented narrative, relied on one magical ballplayer who
would rise above all others, flourish for a time, and then, for one reason
or another—money being the usual reason—be discarded,” says Al
Silverman in his new foreword to this edition. Through each era, covering
each champion, Lieb was in the press box documenting all of the action and
anecdotes now contained in this lively volume.
Longtime sportswriter and former editor of Sport Magazine, Al Silverman
has authored several baseball books and helped Gale Sayers write his
autobiography, I Am Third, the basis for the film Brian’s
Song.
Frederick
G. Lieb
became one of the first living writers to be inducted into the writer’s
wing of the Hall of Fame when he received the J. G. Taylor Spink Award
from the Baseball Writers of America in 1972. A journalist and author who
covered baseball for nearly seventy years, he wrote twelve books,
including six team histories for the Putnam team history series.
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