A Few Great Books on Sports (November/December 2004 | Volume: 55, Issue: 6)

A Few Great Books on Sports

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Authors: Roger Kahn

Historic Era: Era 7: The Emergence of Modern America (1890-1930)

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November/December 2004 | Volume 55, Issue 6

On a high Vermont hill, where Robert Frost liked to absorb the sound of trees, he and I talked through many afternoons, speaking, as Frost put it, “to some purpose.” He held forth on astronomy, mortality, baseball, poetry, and prose, displaying a command of phrase that I have never heard from anyone else. Frost ranged from Ben Jonson to John Lardner, bounded back to Emily Dickinson and stumbled against Ezra Pound, asserting more than once an unshakable ground rule: I was never publicly to quote him on writers or writing. When asked why, he was ready. “Because,” he said, a little triumph in his eyes, “I’m a poet, not a critic.”

I try to live under the general Rule of Frost, and that might seem to create a problem for us here. How can one select the 10 best nonfiction sports books written since the time of Thebes without sounding portentously like a critic? Fortunately, a practical solution lies at hand. If I list not the 10 best books—who truly knows what they are?—but my 10 personal favorites, I retain amateur status as a bibliophile, and march on still as an author, not a critic. A waffle? Not really. An ambiguity? Perhaps, but isn’t ambiguity the fabric of life? Anyway, in chronological order off we go.

Pitching in a Pinch by Christy Mathewson (1912; University of Nebraska). Mathewson, called Matty or “Big Six,” was the greatest of all pitchers, according to no less an authority than Branch Rickey, the Mahatma of baseball. Mathewson also had been, during three years at Bucknell, a member of Euepia, the campus literary society. After Mathewson abandoned college for the New York Giants, he settled in Manhattan and shared an apartment on Eighty-fifth Street with John McGraw, the innovative and ferocious manager whom sportswriters called “Little Napoleon.” This intriguing relationship, the literate, aloof Mathewson and the gutter brawler “Muggsy” McGraw, is at the core of Pitching in a Pinch. Reading it, one learns of signs and sign-stealing, umpires and close decisions, coaching good and bad, and jinxes and what they mean. The worst of jinxes was seeing a cross-eyed woman. The only way to kill that jinx was to spit in your hat—the ball cap on the field, the fedora, or bowler when not in uniform. A wise and often very funny look at baseball and America back when the Giants ruled the game and the twentieth century was young.

Match Play and the Spin of the Ball by William T. Tilden II (1925; Arno; out of print). Big Bill Tilden was seven times U.S. singles champion and ten times ranked the best tennis player in the country. He did not achieve court greatness until he reached his late twenties, getting there through hard work, discipline, and analysis. He described himself as a “made” player, rather than a natural one, and (like Mathewson) brought a remarkable intellect to his sport. The speed