All the Babe's Men: Baseball's Greatest Home Run Seasons and How They Changed America

All the Babe's Men: Baseball's Greatest Home Run Seasons and How They Changed America book cover

All the Babe's Men: Baseball's Greatest Home Run Seasons and How They Changed America

Author(s): Eldon L. Ham (Author)

  • Publisher: Potomac Books, Inc.
  • Publication Date: 1 Mar. 2013
  • Edition: Illustrated
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 342 pages
  • ISBN-10: 1597979384
  • ISBN-13: 9781597979382

Book Description

Why are Americans obsessed with the home run in sports, business, and even life? What made the steroid era inevitable? Revisiting the great home run seasons of Babe Ruth through that of Barry Bonds, All the Babe’s Men answers these and other provocative questions.

Baseball evolved in a Darwinian study of fate, accident, necessity, and occasional subterfuge. Babe Ruth clubbed his record sixty homers with a heavier bat than what contemporary sluggers like Sammy Sosa used. Ruth batted low in the lineup, swung freely, and knocked balls over the fences. Other players noticed, like Rogers Hornsby, whose own home run totals went from nine in 1919 to forty-two in 1922. But bat speed has become more important in today’s game. Big league stadiums built in urban areas have compressed the field and sport shorter outfields, compared to the vast meadows where the game was born. The players, owners, and fans became hooked, but our addiction took us to excess.

All the Babe’s Men features the game’s special long ball seasons from Ruth to Bonds and divulges how baseball became king, America evolved into a home run society, and the contemporary game found itself trapped in a legal nightmare.

About the Author

Eldon L. Ham has taught sports law at Chicago-Kent College of Law since 1994 and was one of the first lawyers to challenge the NFL’s drug policy in court. He is the sports legal analyst for WSCR sports radio in Chicago and has appeared on dozens of radio stations coast to coast as a sports lawyer, expert, and historian. He is also the author of The Playmasters: From Sellouts to Lockouts―an Unauthorized History of the NBA, Larceny & Old Leather: The Mischievous Legacy of Major League Baseball, and Broadcasting Baseball: A History of the National Pastime on Radio and Television. He lives near Chicago.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“As a historian and law professor, Eldon Ham is uniquely positioned to show us why the home run has always meant something beyond the box score–and why it always will. All the Babe’s Men will prove both entertaining and informative for baseball fans, sports professionals, and history buffs alike.”–Stephen Veltman, player representative and general counsel, SFX Baseball Group

“No recurring event in American sports has ever captured the public’s imagination like the home run. And no athlete has ever quite matched the home run hitter in terms of fan fascination. From the Olympian Babe Ruth to the everyman Roger Maris to the tragically flawed Barry Bonds, baseball fans have treated the home run and the players who hit them in record numbers as the apotheosis of baseball. Eldon Ham has explored the origins and development of the ‘home run mystique’ and the reason why it gained such an exalted place in American popular culture. Part cultural history and part meditation on the deepest meaning of baseball, All the Babe’s Men provides a provocative interpretation of the national pastime’s signature event.”–J. Gordon Hylton, professor of law, Marquette University, and former director, National Sports Law Institute

About the Author

ELDON L. HAM has taught sports law at Chicago-Kent College of Law since 1994 and was one of the first lawyers to challenge the NFL’s drug policy in court (Richard Dent v. NFL, 1988). He is the sports legal analyst for WSCR sports radio in Chicago and has appeared on dozens of radio stations coast to coast as a sports lawyer, expert, and historian. He is also the author of The Playmasters: From Sellouts to Lockouts-an Unauthorized History of the NBA; Larceny & Old Leather: The Mischievous Legacy of Major League Baseball; and Broadcasting Baseball: A History of the National Pastime on Radio and Television. He lives near Chicago.

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