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The original "Ball Four" was published 30 years ago and at the time I thought it was a valentine to The Pastime and that baseballs hostile reaction (particularly among officials, and journalists) was a sly way to make the book an all-time best seller. Or maybe the critics were jealous that it took a player, a 20-game-winning-pitcher at that, to give us real insight into life with the Yankees, the Astros and the long-gone Seattle Pilots. Time has only sweetened Jim Boutons smart and funny tales of Mickey Mantle and Steve Hov-ley. ("Religion is like baseball," said Steve, "great game, bad owners.") Three updates, 10 years apart, enhance "Ball Four: The Final Pitch" (Sports Publishing Inc., $24.95) and bring the Bull-dog to the settling that comes with grandfather-hood at 61; the death of his daughter, Luarie, in a traffic accident; and George Stinebrenners invita-tion in response to an article by Boutons son Michael in the Times to an old-timers game at Yankee Stadium. But Bouton has not lost the quirky flutter of his
knuckleball. In fact, he may have also regained the zip on his fastball.
Standing up for the current gen-eration, he writes: "Players today
are like thorough-bred horses. We were farm animals." |
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