1951 : When Giants Played the Game by Kerry Keene (2001, Perfect)
DD Sports Books and More (19809)
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Est. delivery Mon, Aug 25 - Fri, Aug 29Estimated delivery Mon, Aug 25 - Fri, Aug 29
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Condition:
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Clean in excellent condition with slight shelf wear and slight edge wear of the covers. Text clean with no markings. 219 pages with bw photos and a lot more great information. All scans shown are of the actual item listed for sale.
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About this product
Product Identifiers
PublisherSports Publishing, LLC
ISBN-101582613095
ISBN-139781582613093
eBay Product ID (ePID)2002688
Product Key Features
Book Title1951 : When Giants Played the Game
Number of Pages235 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication Year2001
TopicBaseball / History
IllustratorYes
GenreSports & Recreation
AuthorKerry Keene
FormatPerfect
Dimensions
Item Height0.6 in
Item Weight13.2 Oz
Item Length9 in
Item Width6 in
Additional Product Features
Intended AudienceTrade
SynopsisFifty years have now passed, yet it remains a baseball moment frozen for eternity. New York Giants slugger Bobby Thomson will seemingly always be a 27-year-old ballplayer in his prime, blasting a home run against the archrival Brooklyn Dodgers to vault his team into the World Series against the neighboring New York Yankees. Servicemen and servicewomen stationed in Korea were able to share in the moment via radio, helping to make it famous as the shot heard 'round the world. It was the biggest baseball highlight in a year in which the game witnessed many significant moments and stories. Future superstars Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle would make their debuts with their respective New York teams early in the 1951 season, just as legendary Yankee hero Joe DiMaggio was embarking on his final big-league campaign. Baseball commissioner Albert Happy Chandler was being ousted from office, just as maverick owner Bill Veeck was bringing his entertaining antics back into the game as the new owner of the St. Louis Browns. All-time great hurler Bob Feller was tying a record for career no-hitters, while Yankee pitcher Allie Reynolds was tying a record for no-hitters in a single season. As baseball celebrates significant milestones in 2001 -- the American League's 100th anniversary and the National League's 125th -- there will be much reflecting on the game's glorious past. What better time to roll the clock back 50 years to 1951 and relive one of baseball's most noteworthy seasons, 1951: When Giants Played the Game., Fifty years have now passed, yet it remains a baseball moment frozen for eternity. New York Giants slugger Bobby Thomson will seemingly always be a 27-year-old ballplayer in his prime, blasting a home run against the archrival Brooklyn Dodgers to vault his team into the World Series against the neighboring New York Yankees. Servicemen and servicewomen stationed in Korea were able to share in the moment via radio, helping to make it famous as "the shot heard 'round the world." It was the biggest baseball highlight in a year in which the game witnessed many significant moments and stories. Future superstars Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle would make their debuts with their respective New York teams early in the 1951 season, just as legendary Yankee hero Joe DiMaggio was embarking on his final big-league campaign. Baseball commissioner Albert "Happy" Chandler was being ousted from office, just as maverick owner Bill Veeck was bringing his entertaining antics back into the game as the new owner of the St. Louis Browns. All-time great hurler Bob Feller was tying a record for career no-hitters, while Yankee pitcher Allie Reynolds was tying a record for no-hitters in a single season. As baseball celebrates significant milestones in 2001 -- the American League's 100th anniversary and the National League's 125th -- there will be much reflecting on the game's glorious past. What better time to roll the clock back 50 years to 1951 and relive one of baseball's most noteworthy seasons, 1951: When Giants Played the Game.