

|
Loading... The Greatest Minor League: A History of the Pacific Coast League,… (original 2012; edition 2011)by Dennis Snelling
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.The Greatest Minor League, A History of the Pacific Coast League, 1903-1957 by Dennis Snelling is full of surprises for serious baseball fans who THOUGHT they knew all the baseball lore there was. My little home town of Tacoma, for instance, had a baseball championship before every western city except L.A. (That's the Tacoma squad on the cover.) Joe DiMaggio had a 61 game hitting streak in San Francisco before he had the famous 56 game hitting streak in New York. Babe Ruth wanted to play for San Francisco and tried to get manager jobs in Seattle and Oakland. A team in Hollywood experimented with baseball uniforms featuring shorts. The Black Sox scandal of 1919 involved the PCL. And everyone from Rogers Hornsby to Casey Stengel to Billy Martin to Tommy Lasorda had something to do with the "third major league" out west. There were impressive slugfests, no-hitters, pennant races, and a "Wrigley Field" in this largely forgotten story. There were even early team tours of Japan, spreading the game internationally. Yes, the people living in the western United States knew of Ruth and Gehrig and Greenberg, but those were stars from far away. The Pacific Coast League was a major league unto itself, scouting and growing talent, west coast stars, and attracting crowds. The Seattle Rainiers* had better attendance in the 30s and 40s than most major league teams back east! Snelling's research was thorough, including on-the-field AND off-the-field antics, successes, and tragedies. And he did a remarkable job telling the stories, year by year, in ways that make pull you into the team rivalries (e.g. Seals-Angels) as understandably as if he were writing about the more familiar Red Sox-Yankees. The personalities of owners and players thread through the decades with ease, too. Reading this book is like stepping into a parallel baseball universe where the names and struggles are familiar but all new. It's a history of baseball ... that has a different history than you've heard before. *Another book on the topic that I've read and would recommend: Pitchers of Beer by Dan Raley. It follows the history of the Seattle Rainiers, one of the best teams from the Pacific Coast League. Find more of my reviews at Mostly NF. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.For any baseball fan interested in the history of the game, this is an important chapter. The book reads well, but it isn't spell-binding. It is quite easy to read a chapter, put the book down and then come back to it days later. It is more a summary of the teams and managers from an organizational standpoint; rather than being about individual players and games. I had just finished readying Lefty: An American Odyssey by Vernona Gomez which actually begins with a mention of the Pacific Coast League and the Seals so I was interested in the League and also I wanted to see how Snelling's book would mention Lefty Gomez who played only one year for the Seals before being bought by the Yankees. But the Hall of Fame pitcher goes unmentioned and I suspect that many other great ball players are not mentioned as well as the book really isn't about the players. It is quite thoroughly researched and there are over 50 pages in the Appendix containing a lot of information. This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers. |
Google Books — Loading...RatingAverage: (3.75)
![]() LibraryThing Early Reviewers AlumnThe Greatest Minor League by Dennis Snelling was made available through LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Sign up to possibly get pre-publication copies of books. Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |
The Greatest Minor League, A History of the Pacific Coast League, 1903-1957 by Dennis Snelling is full of surprises for serious baseball fans who THOUGHT they knew all the baseball lore there was. My little home town of Tacoma, for instance, had a baseball championship before every western city except L.A. (That's the Tacoma squad on the cover.) Joe DiMaggio had a 61 game hitting streak in San Francisco before he had the famous 56 game hitting streak in New York. Babe Ruth wanted to play for San Francisco and tried to get manager jobs in Seattle and Oakland. A team in Hollywood experimented with baseball uniforms featuring shorts. The Black Sox scandal of 1919 involved the PCL. And everyone from Rogers Hornsby to Casey Stengel to Billy Martin to Tommy Lasorda had something to do with the "third major league" out west. There were impressive slugfests, no-hitters, pennant races, and a "Wrigley Field" in this largely forgotten story. There were even early team tours of Japan, spreading the game internationally.
Yes, the people living in the western United States knew of Ruth and Gehrig and Greenberg, but those were stars from far away. The Pacific Coast League was a major league unto itself, scouting and growing talent, west coast stars, and attracting crowds. The Seattle Rainiers* had better attendance in the 30s and 40s than most major league teams back east!
Snelling's research was thorough, including on-the-field AND off-the-field antics, successes, and tragedies. And he did a remarkable job telling the stories, year by year, in ways that make pull you into the team rivalries (e.g. Seals-Angels) as understandably as if he were writing about the more familiar Red Sox-Yankees. The personalities of owners and players thread through the decades with ease, too. Reading this book is like stepping into a parallel baseball universe where the names and struggles are familiar but all new. It's a history of baseball ... that has a different history than you've heard before.
*Another book on the topic that I've read and would recommend: Pitchers of Beer by Dan Raley. It follows the history of the Seattle Rainiers, one of the best teams from the Pacific Coast League.
Find more of my reviews at Mostly NF.