Drawing on interviews with dozens of Finley's players, family members, and colleagues, Green and Launius present "Baseball's Super Showman" ("TIME") in all his contradictions: generous yet vengeful, inventive yet destructive.
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Drawing on interviews with dozens of Finley's players, family members, and colleagues, Green and Launius present "Baseball's Super Showman" ("TIME") in all his contradictions: generous yet vengeful, inventive yet destructive.
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Seller's Description:
New in new dust jacket. Glued binding. Paper over boards. With dust jacket. 357 p. Contains: Halftones, black & white, Tables, black & white. Audience: General/trade. 1st US edition 2010 with DJ as pictured. Book is NEW
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Seller's Description:
Bill Ingalls (Author Photograph) Very good in Very good jacket. [6], 357, [5] pages. Illustrations. The Table of Contents include Prologue: October 14, 1973 and chapters S+S+S, The Savior of Kansas City? , IN the Doldrums, Endgame in Kansas City, Oakland A's Rising, On Top of the World, Repeat, Three-peat, Catfish Swims Away, Life After Catfish, Finley's Fire Sale, Finley vs. Kuhn, Charlie O. 's Last Stand, and Epilogue: Life (and Death) after Baseball. Also includes Acknowledgments, Notes, and Index. Before the "Bronx Zoo" of George Steinbrenner and Billy Martin, there were the Oakland Athletics of the early 1970s, one of the most successful, most colorful, and most chaotic, baseball teams of all time. They were all of those things because of Charlie Finley. Not only the A's owner, he was also the general manager, personally assembling his team, deciding his players' salaries, and making player moves during the season, a level of involvement no other owner, not even Steinbrenner, engaged in. Drawing on interviews with dozens of Finley's players, family members, and colleagues, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius present "Baseball's Super Showman" (Time magazine's description of Finley on the cover of an August 1975 issue) in all his contradictions: generous yet vengeful, inventive yet destructive. The stories surrounding him are as colorful as the life he led, the chronicle of which fills an important gap in baseball's literature. Charles Oscar Finley (February 22, 1918-February 19, 1996), nicknamed Charlie O or Charley O, was an American businessman who is best remembered for his tenure as the owner of Major League Baseball's Oakland Athletics. Finley purchased the franchise while it was located in Kansas City, moving it to Oakland in 1968. He is also known as a short-lived owner of the National Hockey League's California Golden Seals and the American Basketball Association's Memphis Tams. Derived from a Kirkus review: Two aerospace researchers examine the labyrinthine life of one of baseball's most notorious owners, displaying grudging respect for their subject. NASA senior planner Green and Smithsonian Air and Space Museum senior curator Launius do a creditable job pinning down both the mundane and the extraterrestrial aspects of Charles Oscar Finley's remarkable rise. From his humble roots in Gary, Ind., Finley ascended to become owner of the Oakland Athletics in the early '70s, a team that won three consecutive World Series and featured Vida Blue, Reggie Jackson, Rollie Fingers, Catfish Hunter and other All-Stars and future Hall-of-Famers. Born in 1918, Finley moved to Chicago for college, then entered the insurance industry and ignited the boom-or-bust pattern that zigzagged across his entire career. After finding great financial success by insuring physicians, Finley sought to buy a baseball franchise and found a failing one in Kansas City, where all his vagaries, innovations, insecurities, weaknesses, strengths and irascibility exploded like post-game fireworks into the Kansas sky. He hired, harassed, fired and even traded managers with stunning suddenness, befriended then alienated players, fought with the press, experimented with myriad marketing promotions and began lobbying for changes in the sport, including the designated hitter, night World Series games and interleague play. Thinking Oakland would be a lucrative baseball market, he moved his team there in 1968. He was wrong. Even in their championship seasons, the A's could not draw a million fans. Finley's fall ensued, caused by a complicated and ruinous divorce, losing battles with emerging free agency, mutual animosity with commissioner Bowie Kuhn, mismanagement and a kind of regal recklessness. Most readers will agree with the authors' final assessment that Finley was an innovative, infuriating jackass whose braying was sometimes sensible, even wise.