Out of print for more than 30 years, now available for the first time as
an eBook, this is the controversial story of John Wooden's first 25
years and first 8 NCAA Championships as UCLA Head Basketball Coach.
This is the only book that gives a true picture of the character of John
Wooden and the influence of his assistant, Jerry Norman, whose
contributions Wooden ignored and tried to bury.
Compiled with
more than 40 hours of interviews with Coach Wooden, learn about the man
behind the coach. The players tell their stories in their own words.
Click the book to read the first chapter and for
ordering information. Also available on Kindle.
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War on the Diamond (9/10)
90 minutes.
NR.
Prime.
As a lifelong rabid baseball fan, I of course
knew who Ray Chapman was. He was a 29 year old shortstop for the
Cleveland Indians who was killed when hit in the head by a pitch by Carl
Mays of the Yankees in 1920 at the Polo Grounds in New York. But that
was all I knew about him.
This fascinating documentary tells the story
of Chapman combined with a history of the rivalry between the Indians
and the New York Yankees over the years. But the rivalry takes second
place to the story of Chapman, who was a lovable, extremely popular
player who had a storybook marriage with a beautiful woman from a
wealthy family. At the time he was hit he was batting .303 and in the
middle of his best year, a pennant-winning and World Series-winning
(over the Dodgers) one for the Indians.
Directed by Andy Billman and based on the
book “The Pitch that Killed” by Mike Sowell, this contains archival
footage and interviews with a plethora of people, including Lesley
Visser, Senator Sherrod Brown, and players like Jim Abbott and Sandy
Alomar. It also includes archival sound bites from Carl Mays himself and
George Steinbrenner, the volatile Yankees' owner from 1973-2010,
Chapman's sister, Terry Francona, Bob Feller,
and others.
It also shows the various parks which the
Indians have called home, League Park, which was apparently small and
beloved, Cleveland Stadium, which was big and cold and wasn't, and
Jacobs Field aka Progressive Field.
There are a few glitches. One is where
someone describes the aura of the Yankees of the ‘30s and mentions Joe
DiMaggio as “married to a movie star.” DiMag didn’t marry Marilyn Monroe
until 1952, a year after he retired. Another describes one of DiMag’s
nicknames as “Splendid Splinter.” Sorry, but that was what people called
Ted Williams. Maybe someone sometime referred to Joe that way but
anytime anyone who knows anything about baseball hears "Splendid
Splinter," it's Ted Williams who comes to mind. It’s a little unsettling
when a good documentary is despoiled by basic errors of fact, calling
into question its credibility.
Regardless, I think they got most of it right
and it certainly, finally, brought Ray Chapman’s character into the
foreground and describes why his funeral in Cleveland was overflowing
standing room only. Whether you are a baseball fan or not, this is a
little known, but compelling, poignant, story, well told.
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