Watching Baseball, updated & revised: Discovering the Game within the Game - Softcover

Jerry Remy

  • 3.62 out of 5 stars
    216 ratings by Goodreads
 
9780762737499: Watching Baseball, updated & revised: Discovering the Game within the Game

Synopsis

The Boston Globe's Number One bestseller is back, revised and updated for the 2005 season. Jerry Remy's name and face are already known to millions of fans. Every night during the baseball season, 400,000 or more households tune in to listen to his broadcast of the Red Sox game. But fans learned to love him years ago, when he was traded to the Red Sox in 1978, earning a trip to the All-Star Game in his first year with the team; Remy hit .278, scored eighty-seven runs, and stole thirty bases.

Injured in 1984, Remy never played another game. In 1988, he began his work as an announcer, working color commentary for Red Sox broadcasts on NESN, which is a basic cable channel throughout New England and available by satellite across the country. He covers more than 150 games per season for NESN and broadcast television, plus regular assignments on the national Fox Game of the Week. But the best part of Jerry Remy is his easy style: listeners feel like they're having a beer with a friend while they're watching the game.

If spectators just follow the ball, they are missing much of the game. Baseball is a lot more complex than that. Everyone talks about second-guessing the manager; and there's a lot of fun in that for everyone except the manager. Those opinions can be heard all day on the sports talk shows and read in the newspaper columns. But if the people are really going to get into the game, they need to start first-guessing. That's what this book is all about.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

About the Author

Jerry Remy is an extraordinary broadcaster, with an intimate knowledge of the game within the game of baseball that comes from more than a decade as a major league player and more than 2,000 games as the voice of the Boston Red Sox. He promotes his Web site, www.theremyreport.com, during his broadcasts, and the Jerry Remy chat room on Yahoo is one of the most popular baseball sites. He is well loved by the huge Red Sox Nation.

Corey Sandler is author of more than 125 books on entertainment, travel, and business topics. A lifelong baseball fan, he maintains the arcane art of scoring a baseball game from the stands or the press box.

From the Back Cover

A thoughtful and incisive guide to baseball from Jerry Remy, an All-Star second baseman and one of America's best sports broadcasters

Updated and Revised with the Story of the Boston Red Sox Historic World Series Victory

"This is a real baseball book, written by an alert, articulate veteran of the game." --Boston Globe
"It's filled with insights about the intricacies of the game and anecdotes about its players and managers." --Mineapolis Star Tribune
"Newcomers to the game couldn't get a better introduction, while lifelong fans will find new insights. Keep a copy next to the TV so you can refer to it during games." -- Eagle-Tribune, Lawrence, MA
"Jerry Remy is an extraordinary broadcaster. He makes the victories sweeter and soothes me when the Red Sox suffer a defeat. He's a great analyst. ..." --Thomas C. Werner, Chairman, Boston Red Sox

Go inside the minds of the players and the coaches with beloved Red Sox broadcaster and former second baseman Jerry Remy as he opens your eyes to the game within the game. Whether you are a casual viewer or an armchair manager, Watching Baseball is your ticket to America's national pastime.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

The Bold and the Restless
I guess listeners know that I have a not-so-secret addiction to "Days of Our Lives." For me, baseball is also like a soap opera.

In baseball, the soap opera starts opening day and continues to the final day of the season. There are going to be so many ups and downs over 162 games and six months of playing: wins, losses, injuries, players upset at the manager, the manager upset with the players, superstars who refuse to talk to the press, and superstars who talk too much.

In football, you have one game on Sunday and then it is all preparation until the next game a week later. Baseball changes every day.

During the off-season, people ask me all the time who's going to be in the lineup on opening day. First of all, I have no idea what kind of trades the team will make and who will look good in spring training. And then three days into the season, the opening day roster could be thrown out the window.

Over the course of a season, we don't know if our star shortstop is going to get hurt, or if our superstar pitcher's shoulder is going to fall apart. We don't know if a guy with a great career record as a hitter is inexplicably going to have a terrible season, or if some unheralded rookie is going to tear the cover off the ball for the entire season and take the job of a veteran. These are the days of the baseball soap opera.

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780762730759: Watching Baseball: Discovering the Game within the Game

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0762730757 ISBN 13:  9780762730759
Publisher: Globe Pequot, 2004
Softcover