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9780345485441

Jinxed : Baseball Superstitions from Around the Major Leagues; True Stories

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780345485441

  • ISBN10:

    0345485440

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2005-10-11
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books
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List Price: $21.95

Summary

In America's Pastime, sometimes talent and hard work aren't enough. Now, in Jinxed, some of the best baseball scribes in the business catalog the superstitions, rituals, eccentricities, routines, and just plain bizarre behavior of players who believe such actions will give them an edge on the diamond. Is baseball a numbers game? St. Louis outfielder Larry Walker seems to think so. Larry tries to organize his life in multiples of three: He takes three practice swings, got married at 3:33 p.m., and gave his ex-wife $3 million in a divorce settlement. Think a bad commute can wreck your day? Look no further than Cincinnati's Ken Griffey, Jr., who ditched his Mercedes because he never seemed to get a hit on the days he drove it to the ballpark. And the stories of curious devotions and odd customs just keep on coming. Legendary journeyman of the '60s and '70s Rico Carty floated five lit candles in the bathtub, sink, and toilet of his hotel room, confident that the rite would help him get five hits in that day's game. You are what you eat? Tell that to third baseman Wade Boggs, who believed in the power of poultry and ate chicken every day. And talk about a real jock, Rob Murphy, a left-handed relief pitcher in the 1980s and 1990s, wore women's black silk panties under his athletic supporter. (Any wonder that he pitched for eight different teams?) Even the all-time greats had their quirks. Babe Ruth stepped on second base every time he ran to his position in the outfield, while Willie Mays always kicked that same bag en route to his station in center field. Lefty Grove, like many before and after him, famously avoided stepping on the foul line on his way to and from the dugout. Just what is it about life on the diamond that reduces otherwise rational men to gratuitously strange habits? One possible answer is that in baseball, the odds are stacked against you. Just ten extra hits in a hundred at bats could mean the difference between a trip to A ball and a trip to Cooperstown; mere fractions of an inch can determine the course of a game, series, season, or career. Ballplayers, says Rich Donnelly, a major league coach, "are like trained animals. They come to the ballpark, and everything has to be the same. They don't like anything that knocks them off their routine." As if we needed additional evidence that elite athletes are, indeed, a breed apart, Jinxed offers fans a wild and oftentimes insightful excursion into the mind of a professional baseball player. Ken Griffey Jr. once got rid of a luxury automobile because, "It didn't have any hits in it." It seems that every time Griffey drove a particular Mercedes to the ballpark, he failed to get a hit in the game that day. Griffey became so disgusted with the car that he banished it from his Cincinnati fleet, shipping it to his Florida home. He later traded it in for another Mercedes. Presumably, that one came stocked with hitsGriffey still had it as the 2005 major league baseball season approached. Griffey's behavior might seem strange to many, but not in the baseball industry, where superstitions and rituals are as much a part of the game as beer vendors and the seventh-inning stretch.

Supplemental Materials

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Excerpts

Nothing in the world of sports and entertainment compares to the rhythm of a professional baseball season. There is no clock, play list, script or time slot. The game rolls along at its own pace through spring, summer and fall, ending just short of winter. Appropriately for a game that isn't over until the last out is made, baseball success is measured in terms of failure.

Combine the long roll of a season with the constant buzz of futility, and it is no wonder that a player's search for divine guidance, if not intervention, knows no bounds - even among the best of them. Ken Griffey Jr. sold a car because every time he drove it to a game he failed to a get a hit. What seemed obvious to Griffey, “The car had no hits in it " , might suggest something else for those outside the lines.

St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa sometimes prints the names on his lineup card and other times writes in cursive. His pattern? Simple. If he prints and the team wins, he continues to print until they lose. Only then does he switch to cursive.

Larry Walker does virtually everything in a multiple of three, all in the name of good luck. How seriously does Mr. Walker take his commitment to the number three? His ex-wife got $3 million in the divorce settlement.
Jinxed relates the attempt by baseball players to put order into a game that often appears to have none. Why does a line drive drop in front an outfielder one day, and sail directly into his glove the next? Is it just a game of inches, or are there metaphysical forces at play? No one knows, but most players look for evidence of the latter and act accordingly.

Jinxed is a compilation of the often strange but true routines carried out by ballplayers, managers and coaches to keep themselves on the right side of whatever god favors base hits over lazy fly balls, and pitches that catch the corners over those that just miss. Compiled by editor Ken Leiker and baseball writers Bob Nightengale, Paul Hagen, Scott Miller, Jack Etkin, Alyson Footer, Hal McCoy, Mike Berardino and Bob Elliott, Jinxed is about paying attention to detail in a sport based on survival.

It’s about hope.

It’s baseball.

Excerpted from Jinxed: Baseball Superstitions from Around the Major Leagues; True Stories
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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