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The Zen of Zim: Baseballs, Beanballs, and Bosses - A Must-Read for Baseball Fans, Coaches, and Sports Enthusiasts | Perfect for Game Day Reading & Sports Book Clubs
The Zen of Zim: Baseballs, Beanballs, and Bosses - A Must-Read for Baseball Fans, Coaches, and Sports Enthusiasts | Perfect for Game Day Reading & Sports Book Clubs

The Zen of Zim: Baseballs, Beanballs, and Bosses - A Must-Read for Baseball Fans, Coaches, and Sports Enthusiasts | Perfect for Game Day Reading & Sports Book Clubs

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Product Description

Don Zimmer is baseball. His first book, Zim-A Baseball Life , was a New York Times bestseller and one of the best baseball memoirs ever published. Now, in The Zen of Zim , one of baseball's most beloved figures offers readers an insightful look into the baseball of yesterday and today.Baseball fans will love hearing Zim's positions on such things as pitching inside, managing, bosses, and more.With more than fifty-six years in baseball, Don Zimmer had seen it all, or so he thought before he ran into George Steinbrenner. Here Zimmer provides a revealing account of his eight years as Joe Torre's right-hand man-and the jealousy, vindictiveness, and pettiness that ultimately destroyed a twenty-five-year friendship with Steinbrenner.Zim will also discuss the circumstances that led to his charging onto the field at Fenway Park and throwing a haymaker at Boston Red Sox pitcher Pedro Martinez. He'll share with readers what it was like to work for other baseball owners; shed new light on general managers like Branch Rickey and Dan Duquette; and critique the managing styles of some of the most famous and notorious skippers of the twentieth century, from Casey Stengel and Earl Weaver to Gene Mauch and Billy Martin.In a chapter called "What Have They Done to My Game?," Zim will offer a crash course in baseball anthropology, describing how the game and its players have changed over the past fifty years and showing how big money and free agency have destroyed clubhouse camaraderie and turned a team sport into a transient game. In contrast, he celebrates his close-knit teammates on the 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers team and the lifelong friendships that were made.Zim has seen it all, and here readers learn even more of his life and dreams and of baseball through a half century of experience. It is a story jam-packed with laughs and anecdotes, with excitement and comedy. And it is superbly told.

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

If I was a major league manager, I believe that my first move would be to put Don Zimmer right by my side. This is gentle man who knows more about baseball and the way it should be played than most managers in the game today. With a fist full of great stories about his time in the game, Zim spins great tales and just makes for a fun read. He starts with his confrontation with Red Sox pitcher Pedro Martinez,in the ALCS with the Sox, ending with him being tossed like a rag doll to the ground, when he was Joe Torre's bench coach and continues to tell about his 50+ years in the game. Great baseball book.

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